FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to an apparatus for making a printing master, which
carries a lithographic image on a substrate. More specifically the apparatus comprises
means for removing the lithographic image from the substrate of the printing master
and for coating the recycled substrate with a new image-recording layer that is capable
of forming a lithographic image upon exposure to heat or light and optional processing.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Lithographic printing presses use a so-called printing master such as a printing
plate which is mounted on a cylinder of the printing press. The master carries a lithographic
image on its surface and a print is obtained by applying ink to said image and then
transferring the ink from the master onto a receiver material, which is typically
paper. In conventional lithographic printing, ink as well as an aqueous fountain solution
(also called dampening liquid) are supplied to the lithographic image which consists
of oleophilic (or hydrophobic, i.e. ink-accepting, water-repelling) areas as well
as hydrophilic (or oleophobic, i.e. water-accepting, ink-repelling) areas. In so-called
driographic printing, the lithographic image consists of ink-accepting and ink-abhesive
(ink-repelling) areas and during driographic printing, only ink is supplied to the
master.
[0003] Printing masters are generally obtained by the so-called computer-to-film method
wherein various pre-press steps such as typeface selection, scanning, color separation,
screening, trapping, layout and imposition are accomplished digitally and each color
selection is transferred to graphic arts film using an image-setter. After processing,
the film can be used as a mask for the exposure of an imaging material called plate
precursor and after plate processing, a printing plate is obtained which can be used
as a master.
[0004] In recent years the so-called computer-to-plate method has gained a lot of interest.
This method, also called direct-to-plate method, bypasses the creation of film because
the digital document is transferred directly to a plate precursor by means of a so-called
plate-setter. In the field of such computer-to-plate methods the following improvements
are being studied presently :
(i) On-press imaging. A special type of a computer-to-plate process involves the exposure
of a plate precursor while being mounted on a plate cylinder of a printing press by
means of an image-setter that is integrated in the press. This method may be called
'computer-to-press' and printing presses with an integrated plate-setter are sometimes
called digital presses. A review of digital presses is given in the Proceedings of
the Imaging Science & Technology's 1997 International Conference on Digital Printing
Technologies (Non-Impact Printing 13). Computer-to-press methods have been described
in e.g. EP-A 770 495, EP-A 770 496, WO 94001280, EP-A 580 394 and EP-A 774 364. Typical
plate materials used in computer-to-press methods are based on ablation. A problem
associated with ablative plates is the generation of debris which is difficult to
remove and may disturb the printing process or may contaminate the exposure optics
of the integrated image-setter. Other methods require wet processing with chemicals
which may damage or contaminate the electronics and optics of the integrated image-setter
and other devices of the press.
(ii) On-press coating. Whereas a plate precursor normally consists of a sheet-like
support and one or more functional coatings, computer-to-press methods have been described,
e.g. in GB1546532, wherein a composition, which is capable to form a lithographic
surface upon image-wise exposure and optional processing, is provided directly on
the surface of a plate cylinder of the press. EP-A 101 266 describes the coating of
a hydrophobic layer directly on the hydrophilic surface of a plate cylinder. After
removal of the non-printing areas by ablation, a master is obtained. However, ablation
should be avoided in computer-to-press methods, as discussed above. US-P 5,713,287
describes a computer-to-press method wherein a so-called switchable polymer such as
tetrahydro-pyranyl methylmethacrylate is applied directly on the surface of a plate
cylinder. The switchable polymer is converted from a first water-sensitive property
to an opposite water-sensitive property by image-wise exposure. The latter method
requires a curing step and the polymers are quite expensive because they are thermally
unstable and therefore difficult to synthesize.
(iii) Thermal imaging. Most of the computer-to-press methods referred to above use
so-called thermal or heat-mode materials, i.e. plate precursors or on-press coatable
compositions which comprise a compound that converts absorbed light into heat. The
heat which is generated on image-wise exposure triggers a (physico-)chemical process,
such as ablation, polymerization, insolubilization by cross-linking of a polymer,
decomposition, or particle coagulation of a thermoplastic polymer latex, and after
optional processing, a lithographic image is obtained.
(iv) The development of functional coatings which require no wet processing or may
be processed with plain water, ink or fountain is another major trend in plate-making.
Such materials are especially desired in computer-to-press methods so as to avoid
damage or contamination of the optics and electronics of the integrated image-setter
by contact with the processing liquids. WO 90002044, WO 91008108 and EP-A 580 394
disclose such plates, which are, however, all ablative plates having a multi-layer
structure which makes them less suitable for on-press coating. A non-ablative plate
which can be processed with plain water is described in e.g. EP-A 770 497 and EP-A
773 112. Such plates also allow on-press processing, either by wiping the exposed
plate with water while being mounted on the press or by the ink or fountain solution
applied during the first runs of the printing job.
[0005] A computer-to-press method that is characterized by most of the above advantages
has been disclosed in EP-A 698 488. An oleophilic substance is image-wise transferred
from a foil to a rotary press cylinder by melting said substance locally with a laser
beam. The strip-shaped transfer foil has a narrow width compared to the cylinder and
is translated along a path which is parallel to the axis of the cylinder while being
held in close contact with the surface of the cylinder so as to build up a complete
image on that surface gradually. As a result, this system is rather slow and requires
a long down-time of the printing press, thereby reducing its productivity.
[0006] EP-A 802 457 describes an on-press coating method wherein an aqueous liquid, comprising
a hydrophilic binder, a compound capable of converting light to heat and hydrophobic
thermoplastic polymer particles, is coated on the plate cylinder so as to form a uniform,
continuous layer thereon. Upon image-wise exposure, areas of the coated layer are
converted into an hydrophobic phase, thereby defining the printing areas of the printing
master. The press run can be started immediately after exposure without any additional
treatment because the layer is processed by interaction with the fountain and ink
that are supplied to the cylinder during the press run. So the wet chemical processing
of these materials is 'hidden' to the user and accomplished during the first runs
of the printing press. After the press run, the coating can be removed from the plate
cylinder by an on-press cleaning step. Such methods of on-press coating, on-press
exposure and on-press cleaning of the master attract attention because, contrary to
conventional lithographic printing, they can be carried out without specialized training
or experience. Such presses function more or less like a desktop computer printer
and require less human intervention than conventional presses.
[0007] A problem associated with the on-press coating, exposure and cleaning methods is
that the wet coating and cleaning steps involve a risk of damaging or contaminating
the optics and electronics of the integrated image-setter. In addition, the method
produces an insufficient coating quality, characterized by a low consistency and a
high frequency of coating artifacts, because the printing press is a hostile environment
to the application of defect-free coatings due to paper dust, ink misting, and temperature
or humidity variations. The quality of the wet-coating step can only be improved by
installing a complex and sophisticated coating apparatus on the press, which is difficult
to achieve due to space and cost limitations. Finally, during the on-press coating,
exposure and cleaning steps, the press is not printing and the press down-time needs
to be minimized in order to be economically viable.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0008] It is an object of the present invention to provide an apparatus which enables to
clean a printing master effectively and to apply a new, high-quality coating on the
recycled substrate without a long press down-time. This object is realized by a plate-making
apparatus as defined in claim 1 and a printing system comprising such a plate-making
apparatus as defined in claim 7. According to the present invention, an off-press
plate-making apparatus is provided which comprises means for removing the lithographic
image from the substrate of a used printing master and means for recoating the recycled
substrate thus obtained with a new image-recording layer. The press down-time is minimal
because during a press run, the printing master(s) of the previous print job can be
cleaned and the recycled substrate thus obtained can be recoated in the off-press
plate-making apparatus for use in a next press run.
[0009] The recoated substrate forms an imaging material which can be exposed either on-press
in a digital press comprising an integrated exposure apparatus or by an off-press
exposure apparatus, which can be integrated in the plate-making apparatus or mechanically
coupled thereto. On-press exposure offers the benefit of obtaining a prefect registration
of the masters in multi-color presses immediately after exposure, whereas off-press
exposure provides a shorter press down-time.
[0010] The plate-making apparatus can be mechanically coupled to a printing press so that
the used printing master and the recoated substrate are automatically transferred
between the press and the plate-making apparatus. By using an optional stacking apparatus
between the plate-making apparatus and the press, a single plate-making apparatus
can be combined with a multi-color printing press which requires more than one printing
master. Such a printing system enables a fully-automated workflow of coating, exposure,
printing and cleaning wherein the press down-time is minimal and which can be carried
out without special skills.
[0011] Further advantages and embodiments of the present invention will become apparent
from the following description and drawings. Preferred embodiments of the invention
are disclosed in the dependent claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] Fig. 1 shows schematically a preferred embodiment of a printing system according
to the present invention wherein an on-press exposure apparatus is used.
[0013] Fig. 2 shows schematically another preferred embodiment of a printing system according
to the present invention wherein an off-press exposure apparatus is used that is integrated
in the plate-making apparatus.
[0014] Fig. 3 shows schematically still another preferred embodiment of a printing system
according to the present invention wherein an off-press exposure apparatus is used
that is not integrated in the plate-making apparatus.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0015] In addition to the terms that have been defined in the background description, some
relevant terms used herein shall be understood as follows:
- off-press apparatus : an apparatus that is not integrated in the printing press but
located nearby the printing press and which may be mechanically coupled to the printing
press; the apparatus may operate while the press is printing.
- on-press apparatus : an apparatus that is integrated in the printing press; the operation
of the apparatus requires that the press is not printing.
- (mechanical) transferring means : means for moving, transporting or conveying a material
such as a substrate, an imaging material or a printing master from one apparatus to
another.
- color station : a unit of a printing press which is used for printing one color; a
lithographic color station normally comprises a plate cylinder for carrying a printing
master, a blanket cylinder which transfers the ink from the printing master to paper
and an impression cylinder which presses the paper against the blanket cylinder.
- plate-making : as discussed below in the section regarding the substrate, the term
"plate" should be construed broadly, i.e. meaning not only sheet-like materials but
also cylindrical elements.
The plate-making apparatus of the present invention can be used according to the
following method :
(a) coating : making an imaging material by applying an image-recording layer on a
substrate by means of the off-press plate-making apparatus;
(b)exposing : making a printing master having a lithographic image by exposing the
image-recording layer to heat or light by means of an off-press or an on-press exposure
apparatus and optional processing;
(c)printing : supplying ink to the lithographic image and transferring the ink from
the lithographic image to paper or another receiver material by means of a printing
press;
(d) cleaning : removing the lithographic image from the substrate in the off-press
plate-making apparatus, thereby obtaining a recycled substrate;
(e) reusing the recycled substrate in a next cycle of coating, exposing and printing.
Between steps (a) and (c), the imaging material is transferred from the plate-making
apparatus to the printing press, either after or before being exposed and optionally
processed. Between steps (c) and (d), the used printing master is transferred from
the printing press back to the plate-making apparatus. These transfers of material
can be done manually, i.e. by an operator who carries the material from one apparatus
to another. However, according to a preferred embodiment, the transfer is performed
by transferring means which mechanically couple one apparatus to another. The transferring
means which transfer material from the plate-making apparatus to the printing press
are referred to herein as plate-loading means. The transferring means which transfer
the used printing master from the press back to the plate-making apparatus are referred
to herein as plate-unloading means.
[0016] The exposure apparatus can be integrated in the press (such an embodiment is shown
in Fig. 1), or integrated in the plate-making apparatus (Fig. 2), or be a separate
apparatus that may be mechanically coupled with the plate-making apparatus and the
printing apparatus (Fig. 3). In case the imaging material is sensitive to daylight,
the mechanical transferring means between the plate-making apparatus and the exposure
apparatus and between the exposure apparatus and the printing press should be light-tight,
unless the exposure apparatus is mechanically coupled to a processing apparatus wherein
the exposed imaging material is processed so as to form a printing master which is
no longer sensitive to daylight.
[0017] The plate-making apparatus is preferably a single apparatus which performs both steps
of cleaning and coating. Said single apparatus may comprise different sections for
cleaning and coating and then it is preferred that the apparatus further comprises
internal means for mechanically transferring the substrate from the cleaning section
to the coating section. Alternatively, the plate-making apparatus may be an assembly
of two distinct apparatuses, one for cleaning and one for coating. According to the
latter embodiment, the recycled substrate is transferred between steps (d) and (a)
from the cleaning apparatus to the coating apparatus either manually, but preferably
mechanically by transferring means which couple the cleaning apparatus to the coating
apparatus. During such transfer, the recycled substrate is preferably shielded from
the environment so as to avoid contamination or damage of its surface. Transferring
means which transfer the substrate between step (d) and (a) preferably shield the
substrate from dust, so as to avoid pinholes and other artifacts in the recoated image-recording
layer.
[0018] In a preferred embodiment according to the present invention, the plate-making apparatus
comprises means for coating, cleaning, exposing and optionally also processing so
that all the steps (a) coating, (b) exposure and (d) cleaning can be performed in
the same apparatus, e.g. by mounting a printing master on the external surface of
a rotating drum and cleaning the master by means of a cleaning head which travels
over the master in the axial direction of the drum which rotates in the angular direction,
then coating the recycled substrate by means of a coating head (travelling in a similar
direction over the substrate) and finally exposing the coated layer by means of e.g.
a laser head. The cleaning head, the coating head and the laser head may be coupled
to one another, so as to form a multi-functional head which enables to perform the
steps of cleaning, coating and exposing in a single pass of the multi-functional head
over the substrate. More details and other means for coating, cleaning and exposing
are given below.
[0019] Alternatively, the plate-making apparatus may contain a coating section, an exposure
section and a cleaning section with internal mechanical means for transferring the
material between the different sections of the apparatus. Such a plate-making apparatus
may handle three materials at once by the simultaneous operation of all sections :
coating a substrate, exposing an image-recording material and cleaning a printing
master.
[0020] The plate-making apparatus and the printing press form together a printing system,
which may optionally also contain one or more stacking apparatuses. The printing press
can be a single-color or a multi-color press, which comprises a plurality of color
stations (the number of color stations typically ranges from 2 to 6, or even 12 in
case of six-color duplex printing). Especially when the printing press is a multi-color
press, it is very advantageous to include a stacking apparatus in the plate-loading
means which transfer the imaging material from the plate-making apparatus to the printing
press, and/or in the plate-unloading means which transfer the used printing master
from the printing press back to the plate-making apparatus. Such a stacking apparatus
enables to coat, expose and/or clean materials for all the color stations with a single
plate-making and/or a single off-press exposure apparatus, because the stacking apparatus
acts as a buffer for temporary storage between one apparatus and the next apparatus
in the cycle. Alternatively, a stacking apparatus may be integrated inside an apparatus,
either at the entry and/or the exit thereof, rather than in the transferring means
between two apparatuses.
[0021] Particularly preferred configurations of the present invention comprise (i) a plate-making
apparatus which is coupled to a multi-color digital press (containing an integrated
exposure apparatus in each color station) via a stacking apparatus (Figure 1); (ii)
a plate-making apparatus with integrated exposure apparatus (and optional processor)
that is coupled to a multi-color printing press via a stacking apparatus (Figure 2);
and (iii) a plate-making apparatus coupled to an exposure apparatus (with optional
processor), which is coupled to a multi-color printing press via a stacking apparatus
(Figure 3).
[0022] As an example of configuration (i), a digital four-color press for printing the basic
colors Cyan (C), Magenta (M), Yellow (Y) and Black (K), is combined with a single
plate-making apparatus via a stacking apparatus. The plate-making apparatus first
prepares an imaging material for e.g. the C color station and that material is then
transferred to the stacking apparatus which temporarily stores the material while
the printing press is running a previous print job. Subsequently, the material for
another color selection, e.g. M, is coated and also stored in the stacking apparatus.
Similarly, the imaging materials for the Y and K stations are prepared and stored
in the stacking apparatus until the previous press run is finished. Then, the used
printing masters are removed from the press and mechanically transferred to the plate-making
apparatus for cleaning (also preferably via an intermediate stacking apparatus present
in the plate-unloading means), and finally, the materials for the next print job are
mechanically transferred from the stacking apparatus to the respective color stations
C, M, Y and K, where they are exposed by the integrated exposure apparatus.
[0023] In configurations (ii) and (iii), the printing system of the present invention comprises
a plate-making apparatus with an integrated exposure apparatus or which is coupled
to a separate off-press exposure apparatus. In such case, the stacking apparatus between
the exposure apparatus and the multi-color press and the plate-loading means between
the exposure apparatus and the press are preferably equipped with some intelligence,
e.g. driven by a microcomputer, to ensure that each color selection arrives at the
correct color station. In the most preferred embodiment of a printing system comprising
a multi-color press, a single stacking apparatus handles the image-recording materials
prepared by the plate-making apparatus (or the exposed materials in case of off-press
exposure) as well as the used printing masters which need to be transferred back to
the plate-making apparatus for cleaning.
[0024] Before turning to the detailed discussion of the various elements of the present
invention, it should now be clear to the skilled person that many variations of the
present invention are possible.
The substrate
[0025] The substrate used in the present invention may have any affinity for ink and/or
an ink-abhesive fluid such as dampening liquid. A driographic material can be obtained
by providing an ink-abhesive substrate with an ink-accepting image-recording layer,
or an image-recording layer which becomes ink-accepting after exposure, and optional
processing. Alternatively, a driographic material can also be obtained by providing
an ink-accepting substrate with an ink-abhesive image-recording layer, or an image-recording
layer which becomes ink-abhesive after exposure, and optional processing. A conventional
lithographic material can be obtained by providing a hydrophilic substrate with a
hydrophobic image-recording layer, or an image-recording layer which becomes hydrophobic
after exposure and optional processing. Alternatively, a conventional lithographic
material can also be obtained by providing a hydrophobic substrate with a hydrophilic
image-recording layer, or an image-recording layer which becomes hydrophilic after
exposure and optional processing.
[0026] According to still another embodiment, the affinity of the substrate for ink or for
an ink-abhesive fluid is irrelevant, more particularly when the substrate is coated
with a so-called switchable image-recording layer, which can be switched from one
ink affinity to another and remains on the substrate after exposure and optional processing
in the exposed as well as the non-exposed areas. In this embodiment, the printing
as well as the non-printing areas are mainly defined by the coated layer and not by
the substrate. More details about switchable layers, more particularly switchable
polymers, are given in the section "imaging material" below.
[0027] The substrate may be a sheet-like material such as a plate or it may be a cylindrical
element such as a sleeve. In the latter option, the printing plate may be soldered
in a cylindrical form, e.g. by means of a laser. Such cylindrical printing plate can
be slid on the print cylinder of a printing press instead of being mounted thereon
such as a conventional printing plate. More details on sleeves are given in e.g. "Grafisch
Nieuws" , 15, 1995, page 4-6.
[0028] The substrate may be an aluminum support. A particularly preferred substrate is an
electrochemically grained and anodized aluminum support. The anodized aluminum support
may be treated to improve the hydrophilic properties of its surface. For example,
the aluminum support may be silicated by treating its surface with a sodium silicate
solution at elevated temperature, e.g. 95°C. Alternatively, a phosphate treatment
may be applied which involves treating the aluminum oxide surface with a phosphate
solution that may further contain an inorganic fluoride. Further, the aluminum oxide
surface may be rinsed with a citric acid or citrate solution. This treatment may be
carried out at room temperature or may be carried out at a slightly elevated temperature
of about 30 to 50°C. A further interesting treatment involves rinsing the aluminum
oxide surface with a bicarbonate solution. Still further, the aluminum oxide surface
may be treated with polyvinylphosphonic acid, polyvinylmethylphosphonic acid, phosphoric
acid esters of polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinylsulfonic acid, polyvinylbenzenesulfonic
acid, sulfuric acid esters of polyvinyl alcohol, and acetals of polyvinyl alcohols
formed by reaction with a sulfonated aliphatic aldehyde It is further evident that
one or more of these post treatments may be carried out alone or in combination. More
detailed descriptions of these treatments are given in
GB-A- 1 084
070, DE-A- 4 423 140, DE-A- 4 417 907, EP-A- 659 909, EP-A- 537 633, DE-A- 4 001 466,
EP-A- 292 801, EP-A- 291 760 and
US-P- 4 458 005.
[0029] According to another embodiment, the substrate can also be a flexible support, which
is provided with a hydrophilic layer, hereinafter called 'base layer'. The flexible
support is e.g. paper, plastic film or aluminum. Preferred examples of plastic film
are polyethylene terephthalate film, polyethylene naphthalate film, cellulose acetate
film, polystyrene film, polycarbonate film, etc. The plastic film support may be opaque
or transparent.
[0030] The base layer is preferably a cross-linked hydrophilic layer obtained from a hydrophilic
binder cross-linked with a hardening agent such as formaldehyde, glyoxal, polyisocyanate
or a hydrolyzed tetra-alkylorthosilicate. The latter is particularly preferred. The
thickness of the hydrophilic base layer may vary in the range of 0.2 to 25 µm and
is preferably 1 to 10 µm.
[0031] The hydrophilic binder for use in the base layer is e.g. a hydrophilic (co)polymer
such as homopolymers and copolymers of vinyl alcohol, acrylamide, methylol acrylamide,
methylol methacrylamide, acrylate acid, methacrylate acid, hydroxyethyl acrylate,
hydroxyethyl methacrylate or maleic anhydride/vinylmethylether copolymers. The hydrophilicity
of the (co)polymer or (co)polymer mixture used is preferably the same as or higher
than the hydrophilicity of polyvinyl acetate hydrolyzed to at least an extent of 60%
by weight, preferably 80% by weight.
[0032] The amount of hardening agent, in particular tetraalkyl orthosilicate, is preferably
at least 0.2 wt. parts per wt. part of hydrophilic binder, more preferably between
0.5 and 10 parts per part, most preferably between 3 and 8 parts per part.
[0033] The hydrophilic base layer may also contain substances that increase the mechanical
strength and the porosity of the layer. For this purpose colloidal silica may be used.
The colloidal silica employed may be in the form of any commercially available water
dispersion of colloidal silica for example having an average particle size up to 40
nm, e.g. 20 nm. In addition inert particles of larger size than the colloidal silica
may be added e.g. silica prepared according to Stöber as described in J. Colloid and
Interface Sci., Vol. 26, 1968, pages 62 to 69 or alumina particles or particles having
an average diameter of at least 100 nm which are particles of titanium dioxide or
other heavy metal oxides. By incorporating these particles the surface of the hydrophilic
base layer is given a uniform rough texture consisting of microscopic hills and valleys,
which serve as storage places for water in background areas.
[0034] Particular examples of suitable hydrophilic base layers for use in accordance with
the present invention are disclosed in
EP-A- 601 240, GB-P- 1 419 512, FR-P- 2 300 354, US-P- 3 971 660, and
US-P- 4 284 705.
[0035] It is particularly preferred to use a film support to which an adhesion improving
layer, also called subbing layer, has been provided. Particularly suitable adhesion
improving layers for use in accordance with the present invention comprise a hydrophilic
binder and colloidal silica as disclosed in
EP-A- 619 524, EP-A- 620 502 and
EP-A- 619 525. Preferably, the amount of silica in the adhesion improving layer is between 200 mg/m
2 and 750 mg/m
2. Further, the ratio of silica to hydrophilic binder is preferably more than 1 and
the surface area of the colloidal silica is preferably at least 300 m
2/gram, more preferably at least 500 m
2/ gram.
The imaging material
[0036] The imaging material consists of at least one image-recording layer provided on the
substrate. Preferably, only a single layer is provided on the substrate. The material
may be light- or heat-sensitive, the latter being preferred because of daylight-stability.
In principle, any known direct-to-plate material is suitable, especially in the embodiment
comprising an off-press exposure apparatus. For materials which require processing
after exposure, the exposure apparatus can be mechanically coupled to or may comprise
a processor. Known materials which require processing are e.g. light-sensitive plates
such as photopolymer plates and silver diffusion transfer plates, or heat-sensitive
(so-called thermal) plates which rely on e.g. heat-induced solubilization of a polymer
layer or heat-induced release of an acid which triggers cross-linking of a polymer
layer (insolubilization).
[0037] Highly preferred imaging materials for use in the present invention have an image-recording
layer which does not require any processing so that a printing master is obtained
immediately after exposure. This is especially advantageous in the embodiment using
on-press exposure. Alternatively, the material may be processed on-press, e.g. by
supplying an aqueous liquid, fountain and/or ink (so-called 'hidden processing').
[0038] Processless materials can be based on various mechanisms. Ablative plates typically
use layers which may be removed by high-energy infrared laser exposure, e.g. metal
layers, or thermally unstable layers which may contain self-oxidizing polymers such
as nitrocellulose. Typical ablative materials are disclosed in EP 628 409; WO98/55330;
US 5,401,611; DE 19 748 711; US 5,605,780; US 5,691,114, WO97/00735; US 4,054,094
and EP 882 582. Non-ablative processless plates comprise e.g. switchable polymers
(e.g. EP 924 102) which can be image-wise converted from a hydrophobic state to a
hydrophilic state (WO92/09934; EP 652 483) or vice-versa (US 4,081,572; EP 200,488,
EP 924 065). Other examples of processless plates are based on the thermally induced
rupture of microcapsules and the subsequent reaction of the microencapsulated oleophilic
materials (isocyanates) with functional (hydroxyl-)groups on cross-linked hydrophilic
binders (US 5,569,573; EP 646 476; WO94/2395; WO98/29258).
[0039] A most preferred composition of the imaging layer relies on the heat-induced coalescence
of hydrophobic thermoplastic polymer particles in a hydrophilic binder, as described
in e.g. EP 770 494; EP 770 495; EP 770 497; EP 773 112; EP 774 364; and EP 849 090.
These materials are especially designed for on-press ("hidden") processing by ink
and/or fountain. The coalesced polymer particles define a hydrophobic, printing area
and do not dissolve in ink or fountain whereas the unexposed layer readily dissolves
in ink and/or fountain. The components (thermoplastic polymer latex and hydrophilic
binder) of the latter embodiment will now be described in more detail.
[0040] Hydrophobic thermoplastic polymer particles preferably have a coagulation temperature
above 35°C and more preferably above 50°C. Coagulation may result from softening or
melting of the thermoplastic polymer particles under the influence of heat. There
is no specific upper limit to the coagulation temperature of the thermoplastic hydrophobic
polymer particles, however the temperature should be sufficiently below the decomposition
of the polymer particles. Preferably the coagulation temperature is at least 10°C
below the temperature at which the decomposition of the polymer particles occurs.
Specific examples of hydrophobic polymer particles are e.g. polyethylene, polyvinyl
chloride, polymethyl (meth)acrylate, polyethyl (meth)acrylate, polyvinylidene chloride,
polyacrylonitrile, polyvinyl carbazole, polystyrene or copolymers thereof. Most preferably
used is polystyrene. The weight average molecular weight of the polymers may range
from 5,000 to 1,000,000g/mol. The hydrophobic particles may have a particle size from
0.01 µm to 50 µm, more preferably between 0.05 µm and 10 µm and most preferably between
0.05 µm and 2 µm. The amount of hydrophobic thermoplastic polymer particles contained
in the image forming layer is preferably between 20% by weight and 65% by weight and
more preferably between 25% by weight and 55% by weight and most preferably between
30% by weight and 45% by weight.
[0041] The polymer particles are present as a dispersion in an aqueous coating liquid of
the image forming layer and may be prepared by the methods disclosed in US 3,476,937.
Another method especially suitable for preparing an aqueous dispersion of the thermoplastic
polymer particles comprises:
- dissolving the hydrophobic thermoplastic polymer in an organic water immiscible solvent,
- dispersing the thus obtained solution in water or in an aqueous medium and
- removing the organic solvent by evaporation.
[0042] Suitable hydrophilic binders are for example synthetic homo or copolymers such as
a polyvinylalcohol, a poly(meth)acrylic acid, a poly (meth) acrylamide, a polyhydroxyethyl
(meth) acrylate, a polyvinylmethylether or natural binders such as gelatin, a polysaccharide
such as e.g. dextran, pullulan, cellulose, arabic gum, alginic acid.
[0043] The imaging layer based on heat-induced polymer latex coalescence is preferably an
infrared-sensitive layer containing one or more compounds that are capable of converting
infrared light into heat. Particularly useful compounds are for example infrared dyes,
carbon black, metal carbides, borides, nitrides, carbonitrides, bronze-structured
oxides, and conductive polymer dispersions such as polypyrrole, polyaniline or polythiophene-based
conductive polymer dispersions.
Means for applying an image-recording layer on the substrate.
[0044] The plate-making apparatus comprises means for applying an image-recording layer
on the substrate. For obtaining the right coating thickness, it may be necessary to
repeat the coating several times on the same substrate.
[0045] The coating can be applied by heat- or friction-induced transfer from a donor material
as described in EP 1 048 458, or by powder coating, e.g. as described in EP-A 974
455 and EP-A no. 99203682, filed on 03.11.99, or by coating a liquid solution according
to any known coating method, e.g. spin-coating, dip coating, rod coating, blade coating,
air knife coating, gravure coating, reverse roll coating, extrusion coating, slide
coating and curtain coating. An overview of these coating techniques can be found
in the book "Modern Coating and Drying Technology", Edward Cohen and Edgar B. Gutoff
Editors, VCH publishers, Inc, New York, NY, 1992. It is also possible to apply the
coating solution to the substrate by printing techniques, e.g. ink-jet printing, gravure
printing, flexo printing, or offset printing. Ink-jet printing as described in EP-A
no. 00202700, filed on 31.07.00, is highly preferred.
[0046] According to a most preferred embodiment, a coating solution is sprayed on the substrate
by means of a head comprising a spray nozzle. Preferred values of the spraying parameters
have been defined in EP-A no. 99203064 and EP-A no. 99203065, both filed on 15th September
1999. In a preferred configuration, the substrate is mounted on the external surface
of a drum and the spray head translates along the substrate in the axial direction
while the drum is rotating in the angular direction.
[0047] Coating by spraying or jetting are the preferred techniques for applying a layer
of the most preferred composition of the imaging layer, based on heat-induced coalescense
of thermoplastic polymer particles in a hydrophilic binder, referred to above.
Means for exposing the image-recording layer to heat or light
[0048] According to one embodiment of the present invention, the imaging material is image-wise
exposed by an off-press exposure apparatus and subsequently mounted on a print cylinder
of a printing press. According to another embodiment, the imaging material is exposed
on-press by an integrated exposure apparatus while being mounted on the print cylinder.
The imaging materials used in the present invention are exposed to heat or to light,
e.g. by means of a thermal head, LEDs or a laser head. Preferably, one or more lasers
such as He/Ne or Ar lasers are used. Most preferably, the light used for the exposure
is not visible light so that daylightstable materials can be used, e.g. UV (laser)
light or a laser emitting near infrared light having a wavelength in the range from
about 700 to about 1500 nm is used, e.g. a semiconductor laser diode, a Nd:YAG or
a Nd:YLF laser. The required laser power depends on the sensitivity of the image-recording
layer, the pixel dwell time of the laser beam, which is determined by the spot diameter
(typical value of modern plate-setters at 1/e
2 of maximum intensity : 10-25 µm), the scan speed and the resolution of the exposure
apparatus (i.e. the number of addressable pixels per unit of linear distance, often
expressed in dots per inch or dpi; typical value : 1000-4000 dpi).
[0049] Two types of laser-exposure apparatuses are commonly used:
internal (ITD) and external drum (XTD) plate-setters. ITD plate-setters are typically
characterised by a very high scan speed up to 500 m/sec and may require a laser power
of several Watts. XTD plate-setters having a typical laser power from about 200 mW
to about 1 W operate at a lower scan speed, e.g. from 0.1 to 10 m/sec.
[0050] The known plate-setters can be used as an off-press exposure apparatus in the present
invention. This offers the benefit of reduced press down-time. XTD plate-setter configurations
can also be used for on-press exposure, offering the benefit of immediate registration
in a multi-color press. More technical details of on-press exposure apparatuses are
described in e.g. US 5,174,205 and US 5,163,368.
Means for processing the exposed image-recording layer
[0051] As mentioned above, the need for a processor depends on the choice of the imaging
material. Materials which require processing are preferably used in an off-press exposure
apparatus, which may be mechanically coupled to or may comprise a processing apparatus.
More preferably, processless materials are used or materials which can be processed
on-press by supplying ink and/or fountain to the image-recording layer.
[0052] The materials which rely on heat-induced coalescence of hydrophobic thermoplastic
polymer particles in a hydrophilic binder, as discussed above in the section "imaging
material", are preferred examples which allow such 'hidden on-press processing' by
ink and/or fountain. Such materials can be mounted on the press and, then, while the
print cylinder with the imaging element mounted thereon rotates, the dampener rollers
that supply dampening liquid are dropped on the imaging element and subsequent thereto
the ink rollers are dropped. Generally, after about 10 revolutions of the print cylinder
the first clear and useful prints are obtained. According to an alternative method
for processing such materials, the ink rollers and dampener rollers may be dropped
simultaneously or the ink rollers may be dropped first.
[0053] Suitable dampening liquids that can be used in connection with such materials are
aqueous liquids generally having an acidic pH and comprising an alcohol such as isopropanol.
[0054] In combination with other materials, e.g. ablative imaging materials, it may be advantageous
to wipe the image-recording layer of an image-wise exposed imaging material (to remove
ablation debris) with e.g. a cotton pad or sponge soaked with water before or after
mounting the imaging material on the press or at least before the printing press starts
running.
[0055] Besides the optional processing step which may be necessary to obtain a lithographic
image, other post-imaging treatments can be useful, such as a fixing step, a post-bake
step, a gumming step, a rinsing step, etc. Means for carrying out these steps can
be integrated in the processor. Before starting the printing press, the results from
(optical) measurements carried out on the lithographic image of the printing master
can be used for correction of the registration of the masters in a multi-color press
or for adjusting the ink keys of the press.
Means for removing the lithographic image from the substrate.
[0056] In the plate-making apparatus, the ink-accepting areas of the used printing master
are removed from the substrate by cleaning means. The cleaning step is preferably
characterised by a low risk of deteriorating the lithographic surface of the substrate,
yet also by an effective removal of the ink-accepting areas, which may be a difficult
compromise to achieve. The cleaning means may be means for treating the surface of
the substrate scan-wise, e.g. a laser head for cleaning by ablation or a cleaning
head comprising a nozzle for jetting or spraying a cleaning liquid on the substrate.
Alternatively, the cleaning can be done in dip-tanks holding a cleaning liquid wherein
the printing master is dipped. The above means for cleaning can be combined with means
for ultrasound treatment or mechanical cleaning means. Suitable mechanical means for
cleaning the substrate are e.g. means for scraping the substrate, means for rubbing
the substrate, e.g. a rotating brush, a cloth or another absorbing medium, which may
be moistened with a cleaning liquid, or means for jetting water or a volatile medium
such as air, a solvent or dry ice pellets.
[0057] A preferred cleaning liquid should be sufficiently effective, e.g. should be able
to avoid the appearance of any ghost image after several cycles (preferably >10, most
preferably >20) of coating, exposing, printing and cleaning. Other preferred characteristics
of the cleaning liquid are a low volatile organic content to avoid environmental contamination
and inertness towards the hardware of the plate-making apparatus, e.g. it is preferably
a liquid which does not affect rubber, seals or other materials used in the plate-making
apparatus. Suitable cleaning liquid compositions which comply with the above requirements
have been disclosed in EP-As no.
00200176, 00200177 and
00200178, all filed on 18-01-2000.
[0058] For the cleaning of the most preferred imaging material, discussed above, which comprises
hydrophobic thermoplastic polymer particles in a hydrophilic binder, the cleaning
liquid is preferably an emulsion of an organic liquid in an aqueous liquid. The preparation
of this emulsion is preferably carried out in the plate-making apparatus, which may
comprise means for mixing an organic liquid with an aqueous liquid so as to form said
emulsion, e.g. by stirring a mixture of a cyclic organic compound containing at least
one double bond, an alcohol, water and an emulsifying agent. Preferably, the plate-making
apparatus also comprises means for separating the emulsion (after use) into an organic
phase and an aqueous phase, e.g. by heating the emulsion to induce phase-separation.
The recycled water thus obtained can be used for preparing fresh emulsion or for rinsing
the substrate after cleaning or prior to recoating.
[0059] The plate-making apparatus preferably also comprises means for rinsing the substrate
after the cleaning step, e.g. means for supplying, e.g. spraying or jetting, water
or an aqueous solution onto the substrate. The plate can then be dried by e.g. hot
air, vacuum extraction or an absorbing medium such as a cloth.
The transferring means
[0060] The transferring means comprise a mechanism that is capable of moving, transporting
or conveying the substrate, the imaging material or the used printing master from
one apparatus to another. Such mechanisms are known in the art and widely used in
plate-handling equipment. The transferring means may comprise conveyor belts, grippers,
suction caps, rollers, chains, etc. When visible light-sensitive materials are to
be transferred, the transferring means are preferably light-tight, i.e. capable of
transferring the material while it is kept shielded from light (the same specification
is valid for any other apparatus used in the present invention).
[0061] The plate-loading means preferably contain a mechanism which mounts the printing
master to the plate cylinder. The plate-unloading means preferably contain a mechanism
which removes the printing master from the plate cylinder. Plates are normally fixed
to the cylinder by clamps, whereas sleeves are slid over the cylinder.
The stacking apparatus
[0062] The stacking apparatus acts as a buffer for temporary storage of a substrate, an
imaging material or a printing master between one apparatus and the next apparatus
in the cycle. Various characteristics of such an apparatus have already been discussed
above. A stacking apparatus may be used in the means for mechanical transfer means
from the plate-making apparatus to the exposure apparatus (which may be on-press or
off-press), from an off-press exposure apparatus to the press and from the press back
to the plate-making apparatus.
[0063] When used in the plate-loading means of a multi-color press, the stacking apparatus
is preferably driven by a system that directs the right color selection at the right
time to the right color station of the press. The stacking apparatus may also comprise
means for adjusting and controlling the temperature and/or humidity in the apparatus
and should be light-tight when handling light-sensitive materials.
[0064] The stacking apparatus between the off-press exposure apparatus and the press or
between the plate-making apparatus and a digital press may also comprise means for
bending and/or punching the substrate so that the material is ready for being mounted
on the printing press. Also means for de-bending the substrate may be included in
the stacking apparatus between the press and the plate-making apparatus. Such means
for bending and de-bending may also be included in another apparatus of the present
invention.