(57) A method of making a secure printed document comprises printing a first coating onto
to selected areas of a substrate, laser printing a toner image onto the coated areas,
fusing the toner image, and printing a second coating onto at least part of the toner
image. The second coating is selected to allow the toner generated image to be scanned
through the second coating using machine reading techniques.
[0001] This invention relates to improvements in toner bonding and security.
[0002] It has long been recognised that toner deposition systems have a number of weaknesses
that make them unsuitable for use with data that is vulnerable to alteration.
[0003] Two of these weaknesses are related to the way the toner is bonded to the surface
of the paper and both affect the security of the document. A third is associated with
the material composition of toner.
[0004] The first is the effect that variations in paper surface have on the bond, it has
been shown that indentations i.e. watermarks and normal variation to surface characteristics
of the paper can reduce the strength of the bond between the toner and the surface.
This can result in the toner breaking off during the life of the document or in the
extreme cases not bonding at all. Documents with poor bonding or incomplete characters
from this problem impact upon the detection of deliberate alterations, as the persons
checking the document become use to seeing variations within the characters on genuine
data and therefore becomes less able to determine what is altered.
[0005] The second problem is that, as the bond of the toner does not penetrate the surface
of the paper it means that the bond can be broken by physical force alone and this
may mean that the level of distribution to the surface of the substrate is low which
means the detection by visual means is very difficult. The third problem is due to
the material used to produce the toner. Toner was never intended for use as a security
feature and therefore the majority of common toners do not contain materials that
lend themselves to detection by machine-readable techniques.
[0006] With the increasing demand for higher speeds in personalisation of security documents,
the use of toner deposition systems has increased and this process has been developed
to tackle these three major problems. It is a process that will give increased security
to toner produced data and will introduce a method by which the integrity of the coating
can be verified by machine-readable techniques.
[0007] The object of this process is three-fold the first is to produce a surface that gives
a stronger bond to toner than the surface of the paper. The second is to add a security
coating to selected areas of the document, that will improve the security of the toner
allowing the integrity of the data below to be validated by machine reading techniques.
This process also allows the materials to be applied only where the toner-generated
data may be applied, minimising the use of materials.
[0008] The invention provides a two-part security coating process, the first part being
a coating that improves the bonding of hot melt toner this is applied to the substrate
in selected areas, and the second part a coating applied to the fused toner in the
areas of data that are at high risk of alteration to be checked for integrity by machine
reading techniques. This coating may contain materials that allow the integrity of
the coating to be verified by machine-readable techniques.
[0009] The process is for coating a secure bond for toner deposition images and the application
of a secure coating and may comprise a selective coating applied to selective areas
of the fused toner.
[0010] The coating applied on to the fused toner may be machine readable by the use of transmission
and reflectance of any or a combination of visible light, Ultra violet light and/or
infra red light.
[0011] The material applied to the surface of the substrate may be cured by the use of one
or more external energy sources comprising any of IR, UV radiation, Electron beam
or any other suitable energy source.
[0012] The coating applied on top of the toner may be cured by the use of one or more external
energy sources comprising any of IR, UV radiation, Electron beam or any other suitable
energy source.
[0013] The coating to the substrate may be applied using a printing process i.e. a lithographic
process, a flexographic and Gravure process or any or any other printing process.
[0014] The coating applied on top of the toner maybe applied using a printing process i.e.
lithographic process, flexographic and Gravure process or any other printing process.
[0015] A separate coating may be applied to the substrate and a further coating then applied
on top of the fused toner.
[0016] The first step in the process is preferably to print a coating onto the surface of
the paper in at least the areas where the toner would be applied. This coating is
preferably applied on the top of any other printed designs. The coating can be applied
by a printing process such a lithographic, Gravure or flexographic or any other printing
process. The documents may then be processed in toner deposition system and the toner
is then fused as normal within the machine.
[0017] The fused images are than preferably coated with a material over all or some of the
toner generated marking. The coating may be applied by the flexographic lithographic
printing process or Gravure or any other printing process.
[0018] With the use of this process the toner bonding variations that occur naturally on
the surface of the paper can be reduced thus increasing the bonding of the toner to
the paper. The coating gives improved security against deliberate remove of toner
by physical means and a method by which the area of toner generated data can be scanned
using machine reading techniques.
[0019] A process according to the invention will now be explained by way of an example.
Example Laser Printing
[0020] In accordance with the invention, the first process step is to print a coating on
to the document to be laser (toner-deposition) printed in at least the areas where
the toner is to be deposited on to the substrate. This is done using a printing process
and the material is applied on top of any other printings on the document, in at least
the areas onto which the toner is to be applied. The second process is to laserprint
the variable details onto the document. The toner is then fused in the standard way.
[0021] The document with the fused toner is then coated with a second layer using a printing
process; the coating is used to cover at least the most sensitive toner generated
data. The document is then issued, once the document is used and returned for reconciliation
it can be passed along a track with a reader that checks if the coating is till intact
and therefore if the data safety has been compromised.
1. A document security coating process, characterised by applying a first coating to a substrate to cover selected areas of the substrate
to improve the bonding of a hot melt toner to the substrate, and applying a second
coating to said toner after fusing of the toner, in selected areas of the document.
2. A process according to claim 1 wherein said coating includes one or more materials
which allow the integrity of the coating to be verified by machine-reading techniques.
3. A process according to claim 2 wherein said second coating may be machine readable
by transmission and reflectance of any one or a combination of visible, ultra-violet
or infrared light.
4. A process according to any proceeding claim wherein said first coating is cured by
use of one or more external energy sources.
5. A process according to any proceeding claim wherein said second coating is cured by
use of one or more external energy sources.
6. A process according to claim 4 or 5 where said respective one or more external energy
sources comprise one or more of infrared, ultra violet or electron beam emitting devices.
7. A process according to any proceeding claim wherein said first coating is applied
to the substrate using a printing process.
8. A process according to any preceding claim wherein said second coating is applied
over the toner using a printing process.
9. A method of making a secure printed document comprising printing a first coating onto
selected areas of substrate, laser printing a toner image onto said coated areas,
fusing said toner image, and printing a second coating onto at least part of said
toner image, and the second coating being of material to permit the toner generated
image to be scanned using machine reading techniques through the second coating.