FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to a method for printing images on a substrate by depositing
toner particles on the substrate. In particular, but not exclusively, it relates to
a method for printing large area images by depositing charged toner particles on a
substrate via electrostatic or magnetic latent image bearing members.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION.
[0002] Printing methods wherein toner particles are used to form an image present several
advantages. The printing method is a dry method - in case dry toner particles are
used - and the toner particles, comprising a resin can be tailored so as to give weatherproof
images, etc. Other printing methods, e.g. ink-jet printing, thermal printing, etc.,
show, when compared to toner printing, one or more deficiencies. Up until now, large
format printing, using ink-jet is a well known technique, but the inks used in the
printing, show often problems with weatherability, especially regarding the water-fastness.
Therefore, in large format printing, e.g. poster printing, billboard printing, wherein
the weatherability of the print is very important, silk-screen printing is still a
dominant printing method. This method has however its own drawbacks. The method is
rather time consuming since for every colour a dedicated screen has to be made and
printed and the method is basically analogue.
[0003] More and more images to be printed are available in digital form, so that also in
the printing of large formats, digital addressable printing techniques become indispensable.
The use of toner based systems in such printing techniques is however not so straightforward.
All toner depositing means available today, be it electrophotographic means or direct
electrostatic means, are at least in one direction as large as the substrate to be
printed. This means that in printing on substrates where the dimensions are measured
in meter instead of in centimetre, as in, e.g., billboard printing, the toner depositing
means must be very large (page-wide), since the printing speed equals intrinsically
the speed of the digital printing process in the direction perpendicular to said page-wide
array.
[0004] In direct electrostatic printing, this means that a very large array of printing
apertures has to be provided, wherein each of the apertures has to be addressed separately.
Moreover, the distance of said printing apertures to the substrate to be printed has
to be controlled within tight limits, thus complicating the construction of a printer.
[0005] In electrophotography, ionography or magnetography, wherein an electrostatic or magnetic
latent image is developed by dry toner particles and the developed image transferred
to the substrate, a very wide latent image bearing member, without minute flaws that
can deteriorate the image quality must be provided. Providing a large printer with
such a latent image bearing member increases the costs of it to an almost unacceptable
level. In case dry toning particles are used, the stable supply of toner particles
to the development zone poses problems. The use of page wide applicators, e.g. based
on magnetic brush assemblies is technically difficult to achieve, due to the small
tolerances that are needed in the toning process.
[0006] Nevertheless, the use of the dry toning particles might have a very high value in
large format printing, since they have a low ecological impact in comparison to ink-jet,
liquid toning systems, and even the classical ink based systems as used in offset
printing, gravure printing or screen printing.
[0007] The use of dry toner based imaging technology to create output with a size larger
than the size of the imaging units (toner depositing means) themselves, in both dimensions,
has only scarcely been addressed in the past. In the UK-patent application
GB-A-2 106 453, there is disclosed an electrophotographic printer based on the use of a small printhead,
comprising as well a photoconductive drum and basic stations such as a charging unit,
an imaging unit, a toning unit and a cleaning unit, said printing head enabling the
toning of plain, normal paper supported on a backing plate. Said device is described
as an electrophotographic printer of the contactless type. It is described to be suitable
for the creation of different, complex characters, whereas it is described to contain
one line of characters as working width, leaving however open the possibility that
more than 1, e.g. 2 lines can be printed in one single pass. Possible extension to
colour is mentioned.
Another reference to a dry toner based imaging method implicitly capable of creating
larger size images can be found in the document "Shuttle print head, a TONERJET fact
sheet" published by Array Printers AB, Sweden, (1995), TONERJET is a trade name of
Array Printers. In this document an analogy is made between ink-jet printing and tonerjet
printing. A process currently used in ink-jet printing, namely using the shuttling
of the print head or print array is substituted by the shuttling of a toner jetting
print head or print head array. The same mechanism is used, enabling the contactless
projection of the toning material, in order to create images. This disclosure regarding
direct electrostatic printing does not address the problem of keeping the distance
between the printhead structure and the substrate within tight limits.
[0008] In the case of the electrostatic printing as disclosed in
GB-A-2 106 453, the problem of image deterioration when the transfer of the toner particles from
the latent image bearing member to the substrate is done in contact mode has not been
addressed and moreover said GB application is concerned with providing an extremely
small printing device.
[0009] In
JP-A-61 146564 a serial printer is disclosed comprising pressure means to press a pressure receiver
on a picture-bearing material for transferring and fixing the picture developed on
the picture-bearing member to a recording material. The advantage of this design is
that there is no external force necessary to move the recording paper.
[0010] In
JP-A-61 152463 a serial electrophotographic printer is disclosed with a carriage including an image
holding body, an electrification unit , an exposure unit, a toner and a developing
unit. The carriage moves over an image receiving member that is larger than the carriage
and band-like portions of the image are printed on the image receiving member and
after the printing of several bands, the image is fixed. Also in
DE-90 13 772 U such a type of serial printer has been disclosed. In such a serial printer, wherein
the image is printed in band by a carriage moving over the image receiving member
in a direction perpendicular to the direction of movement of the image receiving member
through the printer, the image receiving member stops during the printing of a band
and moves after the printing of a first band to the position wherein a second band
is printed and so on. The fixing unit, being installed over the total width of the
image receiving member (i.e. over the dimension of the image receiving member perpendicular
to the movement of it), and operating continuously fixes stronger when the image receiving
layer is stopped for printing a band than when the receiving layer moves. Thus the
fixing does not proceed evenly which can result in a deterioration of the image quality.
[0011] Therefore, serial printer wherein the carriage includes also means for fixing the
image have been disclosed. In, e.g.,
JP-A-61 145649 a serial electrophotographic printer is disclosed with a carriage including an image
holding body, an electrification unit , an exposure unit, a developing unit, a toner
and a developing unit and a fixing unit. Also
JP-A-56 077167 discloses such a printer. In these printers, due to the different pressure exerted
on the image receiving member by the image holding body (a photoconductive drum) and
the fixing roller the image receiving member, the risk exist that the image receiving
member becomes wrinkled, and - due to this wrinkling - that the transport of the receiving
member does no longer proceed smoothly.
[0012] In
US-A-5 561 503 a serial printer with a carriage including an image holding body, an electrification
unit , an exposure unit, a developing unit, a toner and a developing unit and a fixing
unit is disclosed, wherein by a special design of the carriage and the bearing of
he fixing unit, the problem of the wrinkling is avoided.
[0013] However, in a printer according to
US-A-5 561 503, the temperature of the image receiving substrate can be high, since fixing temperatures
of toner particles are easily around 120 °C and even around 150 °C. This heating of
the substrate can result in dimensional changes of the substrate , e.g., an expansion
or a shrinkage in the first band that is printed and whereon the image is fixed. When
this occurs the exact registration of the band to be printed adjacent to the first
band is difficult and even impossible. Even a limited mis-registration between the
bands that are printed does deteriorate the image quality that can be achieved with
the printer. This is especially so when full-colour prints have to be made.
[0014] Therefore further improvements, to make the techniques mentioned above suitable for
printing with high image quality, both in small format printing and in large format
printing are needed.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
[0015] It is an object of the invention to provide a printing method using toner particles,
wherein the toner depositing means are smaller than both dimensions of the substrate
to be printed, making it possible to print images with high spatial resolution with
high speed.
[0016] It is a further object to provide a printing method making it possible to print large
format images by image-wise depositing toner particles with high resolution and high
speed.
[0017] Further objects and advantages of the invention will become clear from the detailed
description hereinafter.
[0018] The objects of the present invention are realised by providing a method for printing
an image on a substrate by image-wise depositing, toner particles on said substrate
comprising the steps of :
- image-wise depositing toner particles on said substrate forming a first band-like
portion of said image,
- conditioning said first band-like portion while keeping said substrate at a temperature
equal to or lower than 100 °C,
- further image-wise depositing toner particles on said substrate so as to form at least
one other band-like portion of said image, said at least one other band-like portion
of said image being adjacent to said first band-like portion and
- fixing said image to said substrate.
[0019] In a preferred embodiment said toner particles are dry toner particles deposited
from an electrostatic or magnetographic latent image bearing member whereon a developed
latent image is present or an intermediate toner receiving member whereon a toner
image is present, said developed latent image or said toner image being transferred
to said substrate in contact mode.
[0020] In a further preferred embodiment said first band-like portion of said image is conditioned
before said at least one other band-like portion of said image is deposited.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0021]
Fig. 1 shows a schematical view of a shuttle for use in a printer performing the method
of this invention.
Fig 2. Shows schemattically how a shuttle as shown in Fig. 1 can be incorporated in
a printer performing the method of this invention.
DEFINITIONS
[0022] In this disclosure, the wording "adjacent band-like portions" is used to mean band-like
portions each with one edge very closely (leaving a small gap, i.e. a gap smaller
than 1 mm, preferably smaller than 0.250 mm) deposited near to or in exact contact
with at least one edge of the adjacent portion as well as to mean band-like portions
each with at least one edge that has a small overlap (at most 10 % of the dimension
of said band-like portion measured perpendicular to the edge that overlaps) with at
least one edge of the adjacent portion.
[0023] In this disclosure, the wording

toner depositing means
" is used to indicate the means for image-wise depositing toner particles especially
dry toner particles to the substrate.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION.
[0024] When at least a part of the toner depositing means contacts the substrate whereon
the printing proceeds, said toner depositing means contacts, in most cases, while
printing further band-like portions of the image, the previously deposited band-like
portion and risks to deteriorate the already deposited toner image.
[0025] Therefore it is preferred that the portions of the image that are printed are conditioned
as the deposition of said image portions proceeds. This conditioning results in making
the deposited portions of the image insensitive to damage caused by the mechanical
contact between the toner depositing means and said deposited image portions while
a further portion of the image is deposited.
[0026] It was found that the printing quality of printing devices using dry toner particles,
wherein the means for depositing toner are smaller than both dimensions of the substrate
to be printed, could be enhanced when, for forming an image, dry toner particles were
deposited on said substrate forming a first band-like portion of said image, and said
first band-like portion is conditioned in such a way that said substrate is at any
time of the process kept at a temperature equal to or lower than 100 °C. When several
bands of the image are printed, then a final fixing step is executed to finally fix
the image to the substrate. It was found that by printing by such a method, the risk
of deteriorating the already deposited, but unfixed toner image, - as in some of the
prior art methods, - is avoided. And by keeping the temperature during the conditioning
of the toner image low, the risk of dimensional changes of the substrate , e.g., an
expansion in the first band that is printed, - as with other prior art methods, is
also avoided.
[0027] This conditioning at low temperature has the advantage that the method can be used
with image receiving materials that have a support with a heat distortion temperature
lower than 150 ° C. Thus the usefulness of the printing method using a serial printer
is enhanced.
[0028] The conditioning, in a method according to this invention, can proceed during the
multiple subsequent contacts occurring when depositing one band-like image portion.
These multiple subsequent contacts in one band, occur in case that several layers
of toner particles are superposed in, e.g., full colour printing or in monochrome
printing wherein multiple layers of different toner particles are superimposed to
extend the printable density levels, such a monochrome printing has been disclosed
in
EP-A-768 577. When proceeding in this way the first band-like portion can be conditioned to such
an extent that a further conditioning between the deposition of said first band-like
portion of the image and a further adjacent portion is not necessary. This conditioning
is furtheron called "conditioning within". The conditioning of the first band-like
portion can also proceed before or during the deposition of an adjacent band-like
image portion. This conditioning is furtheron called "conditioning between". In a
preferred embodiment said conditioning is both a conditioning within a band and between
bands.
[0029] The conditioning can be either thermal, electrostatic or mechanical or a combination
thereof.
[0030] Although the type of conditioning used for conditioning within and/or for conditioning
between image can be of any type, it is preferred to combine different types of conditioning
such as a thermal conditioning in combination with an electrostatic conditioning,
the latter proceeding during the deposition of a band-like image portion (conditioning
within), the former proceeding before the deposition of further adjacent band-like
portions of the image (conditioning between).
Thermal conditioning, results in the adhering of the toning particles to each other
and to the substrate, in such a way that the already deposited image portion become
insensitive to possible damage caused by the mechanical contact between the toner
depositing means and said deposited image portions while a further portion of the
image is deposited.
It has been found however that said thermal conditioning, in a printing method according
to the present invention, has to be performed in a very specific way, such as that
the substrate never reaches a temperature higher than 100 °C in the mass. If this
temperature is exceeded too much moist evaporation and thermal deformation takes place,
whereby the dimensional stability of the receptor is lost. This leads to mis-registering
between the different adjacent bands to be printed. In a further preferred embodiment
the heat is supplied by flash fusing, whereby the toning particles and the upper surface
of the substrate are heated sufficiently to gently fuse the particles and adhere them
to the surface, but whereby the overall temperature of the mass, (after the flash)
does not exceed 100 °C. Further a cold backing plate can be used in order to withdraw
thermal energy. In another possible embodiment the substrate is coated with a receptive
coating allowing adherence at low temperature, either by offering softening and/or
wetting properties. Said coating can be applied either on-line in the printer device
or off-line on the substrate. The thermal conditioning can also proceed by other means,
e.g., using hot air, taking special measures in order to cool the substrate and using
it in a short time frame.
The conditioning station can pass over the band after the deposition of the image
in an individual way, or can be associated with the last deposition station, or can
be integrated in more complex subsystems containing all used toning stations.
[0031] In an other embodiment of a printing method according to this invention, the conditioning
of the already deposited portions of the image can be done using electrostatic phenomena.
The already deposited toned image is treated with a flux of ionised material, such
as e.g. ions generated from a corona device, etc. By doing so the charge of the toning
particles is changed from their initial value. In a preferred embodiment the toner
particle are charged to a polarity and also a magnitude of charge such that the particles
already deposited do not become picked up by the contacting toner depositing means,
e.g., a photoconductor. This can be done by increasing their charge so that in the
next deposition step they remain or become strongly bound to the substrate. In a preferred
embodiment, where an electrostatic latent image bearing member, e.g., a photoconductor,
is used as toner depositing means, this portion of the toner depositing means contacting
the previous band, e.g., the photoconductor edge, can be charged and/or illuminated
in such a way that it gives rise to a strong repulsive field, pressing electrically
the particles to the substrate, and not allowing disturbance of the already deposited
image.
[0032] Also a pressure conditioning can be used. In this case a pressure roller is pressed
over the deposited image, pressing the toning particles together and in the surface
of the substrate.
This process can be effected by using a steel roller and some backing roller, exerting
pressure when rolling over the surface of the receptor. Here again some receptive
layer coated on the receptor can be used in a preferred embodiment. Coating can be
applied off-line or on-line.
[0033] In a method according to this invention, the temperature of the image receiving member
can be monitored by any temperature sensing means known in the art. The reading of
this temperature sensing means is used to control the conditioning so that in the
substrate the temperature of 100 °C is never exceeded. Therefore the readings are
coupled by a feed back loop to the means for conditioning the band-like portion and
if necessary to means for cooling the image receiving substrate. Said means for cooling
can in this invention be a cooling plate at the back-side of the image receiving substrate,
a fan blowing cold air over the substrate, etc..
[0034] The printing method according to the present invention is especially useful when
large format printing has to be performed. By large format printing is meant the printing
on a substrate having an area equal to or larger than 0.25 m
2.
[0035] The toner depositing means used in the method according to this invention, is preferably
an electrostatic latent image bearing member or magnetographic latent image bearing
member or an intermediate toner receiving member, whereon a toner image is deposited
and from which said toner image is deposited on said substrate. On said intermediate
toner receiving member, the toner image can be deposited from a latent image bearing
member or by direct electrostatic printing as described in, e.g.,
EP-A-743 572.
[0036] When the toner depositing means is a latent image bearing member or an intermediate
toner receiving member it is preferred that said toner depositing means contacts,
e.g., by rolling contact, sliding contact, etc., the substrate over whole the surface
to be printed; i.e. the transfer of the toner image to the substrate proceeds in contact.
[0037] The toner depositing means used in the method of this invention, can also be a direct
electrostatic printing device (a DEP device) as described in e.g.
EP-A-675 417, EP-A-712 056, etc. In this case the toner depositing means itself does not contact the substrate
to be printed, but it proved beneficial that in this case the toner depositing means
is provided with mechanical means to keep the distance between toner depositing means
and the substrate constant. Said mechanical means are in contact with the substrate,
e.g., by rolling or sliding contact.
[0038] When the toner depositing means is an intermediate member, it is possible, in a method
according to this invention, to image wise apply toner particles to said intermediate
member by means of an electrostatic or magnetic latent image bearing member or by
a DEP (Direct Electrostatic Printing) device. Suitable electrostatic printing devices,
for use in a method according to this invention, are disclosed in, e.g., EP-A 675
417, EP-A 712 056, etc..
[0039] In an apparatus for performing the method according to the present invention, the
toner depositing means is preferably a "shuttle", i.e. the toner depositing means
can be moved in a controlled way over the surface of the substrate to be printed.
When said "shuttling" toner depositing means comprises a latent image bearing member
or an intermediate toner image bearing member, it is preferred that the means necessary
to bring toner on the latent image bearing member or on the intermediate member shuttle
together with said toner depositing means and are located at fixed positions with
respect to the toner depositing means. E.g. when the shuttling toner depositing means
is an electrophotographic latent image bearing member, this latent image bearing member
is surrounded by cleaning means, a charging unit, an exposure unit and a toner source,
each of these being located in a fixed position with respect to said latent image
bearing means and shuttling together with said latent image bearing member without
any change in the relative positions of said latent image bearing member, said cleaning
means, said charging unit, said exposure unit and said toner source with respect to
each other.
[0040] In fig.1 a schematic view is given of a device for performing the method of this
invention with printing band-like portions and

conditioning within
" with conditioning means. A shuttle or carriage (101) moves over a image receiving
substrate (111) in the direction of arrow A. The shuttle includes a photosensitive
drum (102) moving in the direction of arrow B surrounded by means (104) for charging
said drum, means (103) for image-wise exposing the drum, a container for toner particles
(106) with a development roller (107) therein, and means for cleaning the photosensitive
drum(105). The shuttle further comprises means for conditioning (108). A temperature
sensor (110) senses the temperature of the image receiving substrate and by a feed
back loop (109) the temperature of the image receiving substrate is kept below 100
°C. Means for producing a backing potential (112), for enhancing the toner transfer
from the photosensitive drum to the image receiving substrate, are coupled to the
toner depositing means so as that both can be moved together without relative displacement
between both said means for producing said backing potential and said toner depositing
means.
[0041] The conditioning means (108) in an apparatus for implementing the method of this
invention can comprise, as said above, means for thermal conditioning. These thermal
means can be IR radiators, a flash, hot air, etc. The conditioning means (108) in
an apparatus for implementing the method of this invention can also comprise, as said
above, means for conditioning the deposited band-like portion by electrostatic phenomena.
These means include means for creating a flux of ionised material, e.g. a corona or
a backing roller (not shown in fig. 1). The conditioning means (108) in an apparatus
for implementing the method of this invention can also comprise, as said above, means
for conditioning the deposited band-like portion by pressure, in that case conditioning
means (108) is a pressure roller. The conditioning means (108) can comprise a combination
of means for thermal conditioning and means for electrostatic conditioning. It can
also comprise a combination of means for thermal conditioning and means for mechanical
conditioning
[0042] The feed back loop (109) can be connected to the conditioning means (108) and in
case these means are means for thermal conditioning, the feed back loop can be used
to adjust the energy out-put of the means for thermal conditioning. The feed back
loop (109) can be connected to means for cooling the substrate (111), e.g. can be
used to drive a fan.
[0043] The backing potential (112) behind the substrate creates an electrical field attracting
the toner particles to the substrate to be imaged. This can be done either by a uniform
backing pattern, or a more localised electrical connection, such as a backing roller
or bar or brush or ion emitting device such as a corona, a scorotron, etc.
[0044] In fig 2, it is very schematically shown how the shuttle, shown in figure 1, can
be used in a printer for performing the method of this invention. The shuttle (101)
can be moved (by a motor that is not shown in fig. 2) over guides (114a and 114b)
in the direction of arrow D. This movement is essentially perpendicular to the movement
of the image receiving substrate (111) that is moved in the direction of arrow C.
The image receiving substrate is passed through fixing station (113) before the final
image is ready.
[0045] In a printer for performing the method of this invention, the image is thus printed
in bands by a carriage (101) moving over the image receiving member in a direction
perpendicular (arrow D) to the direction of movement (arrow C) of the image receiving
member (111) through the printer, and the image receiving member stops during the
printing of a band and moves after the printing of a first band to the position wherein
a second band is printed and so on. The fixing unit (113), is installed over the total
width of the image receiving member (i.e. over the dimension of the image receiving
member perpendicular to the movement of it), and is operating continuously. Basically
this is a printer with a configuration as described in the prior art, a.o. in
JP-A-61 152463 and
DE-90 13 772 U that both have been discussed in the background art section. In these prior art printers
the fixing was found to be uneven and deterioration of the image quality was observed.
It was surprisingly found that, in a printer for performing the method of this invention,
although have a fixing station that is operated as in the prior art printers, the
problem of uneven fixing and image quality deterioration, did not occur or did only
occur in a very low degree, probably due to the conditioning of the bands during their
deposition.
[0046] Thus the present invention also encompasses a printing device comprising :
i) means for moving toner depositing means over a substrate along a first dimension
of said substrate, wherein at least a part of said toner depositing means contacts
said substrate, such as to image wise deposit toner as a first band-like portion of
an image to be printed,
ii) means for moving said substrate substantially in a way perpendicular to said first
direction,
iii) means for moving said toner depositing means so as to image-wise deposit toner
as at least one further band-like portion of said image to be printed adjacent to
said first band-like portion,
iv) means for conditioning said image wise deposited toner particles either while
depositing said band-like portion of said image (conditioning within) or after depositing
said first band-like portion and before depositing said at least one further band-like
portion of said image to be printed (conditioning between), while keeping said substrate
at a temperature equal to or lower than 100 °C and
v) means for fixing said image wise deposited toner to said substrate.
[0047] Such a printing device according to the present invention is especially well suited
for printing substrate large area's, i.e. substrates with an area larger than 0.25
m
2.
[0048] The toning particles used in the present invention can be incorporated in a liquid
developer as well as in a dry developer. Preferably the method of the present invention
is performed with dry toner particles in a dry developer The toner particles can be
from different nature, whereby they can be present in the toning station solely as
is the case in mono-component developers or in combination with carrier particles
as is the case with 2-component, or can be electrically charged colloidal particles
as is the case in liquid developers. Depending on the nature of the developer the
conditioning can be adapted. The charge of the toner particles can be obtained either
by tribo-electrical phenomena between the toner particles or between the toner particles
and any other body, such as e.g. the carrier particles in the case of 2-component
developers, or tribo-electric friction with doctor blade or application roller as
is the case in mono-component-developers.
The toner particles can be colourless, monochrome or coloured, may have additional
functionalities, can be pigmented or coloured by dyes, by inorganic pigments, ceramic
pigments, magnetic or non-magnetic in nature, etc.
The toner particles can be manufactured by different techniques such as classical
melt kneading, pulverising and classification, polymerisation, coagulation, etc. Whereas
the form, method of production, etc. of the toner particles for use in the present
invention can be any form or method known in the art, the properties of the toner
particles are to be designed in a very proper way, with respect to charge, size and
thermal visco-elastic properties, in order to be of use in the present invention.
With respect to size it is found that too small particles give rise to rather inefficient
transfer and hence induce unstable image quality.
Since the image is built from the combination of adjacent bands, stochastic transfer
instabilities give a very unattractive image quality in the joint (where edge of adjacent
band-like portions of the image are deposited closely together or in a small overlap).
If the size of the particles is too large, they give rise to problems in order to
get appropriate conditioning and adherence to the receptor. The fusing is bad since
the flow of heat within the large particle is more difficult. Also the large size
will induce higher contact with the image deposition station, and hence larger disturbance.
It is found that the toner particles, useful in the method according to this invention,
have preferably a size expressed in d
v50 (µm) between 3 and 20 µm, more preferably between 5 and 15 µm, even more preferably
between 6 and 10 µm.
With respect to charge also boundary conditions are important. If the charge is too
low the transfer is unstable. When the charge is too high, the particle induces a
too large image force on any contacting member, and tends to adhere to said member,
giving rise to image disturbance. Hence the charge (in µC) to mass (in g) ratio of
the toner particles, useful in a method according to this invention is, in absolute
value |q/m|, between 3 and 30 µC/g, more preferably between 5 and 25 µC/g even more
preferably between 7 and 20 µC/g.
Also for the visco-elastic properties boundary conditions are found. Since the thermal
treatment of a large substrate is done, as well in the general fusing step as possibly
in intermediate thermal conditioning steps, the dimensional stability of the substrate
poses some problems. If the temperature is too high a deformation can occur, leading
to mis-registration and even leading to failure of the smooth substrate movement,
resulting in faults, wrinkling, etc.. Therefore it is important that the fusing characteristics
of the toning particles are adapted for lower thermal treatment. If has been found
that a melt viscosity (η) at 120 °C, measured at 100 rad/sec of larger than 2,000
Pa.s starts to pose problems, therefore toner particles with a melt-viscosity lower
than 1,000 Pa.s are preferred. On the other hand too low melt-viscosity will result
in too long waiting time before the partially imaged substrate can be handled. Therefore
the melt-viscosity of the toner particles is preferably larger than 50 Pa.s, preferably
100 Pa.s. Thus the melt-viscosity of toner particles used in the present invention
fulfils the equation 50 Pa.s ≤ η≤ 2,000 Pa.s and preferably it fulfils the equation
100 Pa.s ≤ η ≤ 1,000 Pa.s.
[0049] A printing device according to the present invention is especially well suited for
printing substrate large area's, i.e. substrates with an area larger then 0.25 m
2.
1. A method for printing an image on a substrate by image-wise depositing, toner particles
on said substrate comprising the steps of :
- image-wise depositing toner particles on said substrate forming a first band-like
portion of said image,
- conditioning said first band-like portion while keeping said substrate at a temperature
equal to or lower than 100 °C,
- further image-wise depositing toner particles on said substrate so as to form at
least one other band-like portion of said image, said at least one other band-like
portion of said image being adjacent to said first band-like portion and
- fixing said image to said substrate.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein the toner particles are dry toner particles.
3. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein said conditioning is a thermal conditioning
4. A method according to claim 3, further comprising the step of measuring said temperature
of said substrate and adjusting said thermal conditioning to said measured temperature.
5. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein said conditioning is an electrostatic
conditioning.
6. A method according to claim 5, wherein said electrostatic conditioning proceeds by
means selected from the group of a flux of ionised material and an electrical backing
roller.
7. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein said conditioning is a combination of
electrostatic and thermal conditioning.
8. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein said conditioning is a combination of
thermal and mechanical conditioning.
9. A method according to any of claims 2 to 7, wherein said toner particles are dry toner
particles, having an average volume diameter dv50 between 5 and 15 µm.
10. A method according to any of the preceding claims, wherein said toner particles have
a melt-viscosity η, such that 50 Pa.s ≤ η ≤ 2,000 Pa.s
11. A method according to any of the preceding claims, wherein said toner particles have
a charge to mass ratio |q/m| such that 3 µC/g ≤ |q| ≤ 30 µC/g.
12. A method according to any of the preceding claims, wherein said toner depositing means
is a DEP (Direct Electrostatic Printing) device.
13. A method according to any of the preceding claims, wherein said substrate has an area
of at least 0.25 m2.
14. A printing device comprising :
i) means for moving toner depositing means over a substrate along a first dimension
of said substrate, wherein at least a part of said toner depositing means contacts
said substrate, such as to image wise deposit toner as a first band-like portion of
an image to be printed,
ii) means for moving said substrate substantially in a way perpendicular to said first
direction,
iii) means for moving said toner depositing means so as to image-wise deposit toner
on at least one further band-like portion of said image to be printed adjacent to
said first band-like portion,
iv) means for conditioning said image wise deposited toner particles either while
depositing said band-like portion of said image (conditioning within) and/or after
depositing said first band-like portion and before depositing said at least one further
band-like portion of said image to be printed (conditioning between).
v) means for fixing said image wise deposited toner to said substrate.