FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to the formation of images directly from electronically composed
digital sources and is particularly concerned with the formation of images on lithographic
printing plate precursors. More particularly, the invention relates to lithographic
printing plate precursors which incorporate an imaging layer comprising metallic silver,
and a method of preparing lithographic printing plates which does not require the
use of chemical treatments.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Lithographic printing is a process of printing from surfaces which have been prepared
in such a way that certain areas are capable of accepting ink (oleophilic areas),
whereas other areas will not accept ink (oleophobic areas). The oleophilic areas form
the printing areas while the oleophobic areas form the background areas.
[0003] Plates for use in lithographic printing processes may be prepared using a photographic
material that is made imagewise receptive or repellent to ink upon photo-exposure
of the photographic material and subsequent chemical treatment. However, this method
of preparation, which is based on photographic processing techniques, involves several
steps, and therefore requires a considerable amount of time, effort and expense.
[0004] Consequently it has, for many years, been a long term aim in the printing industry
to form images directly from an electronically composed digital database, i.e. by
a so-called "computer-to-plate" system. The advantages of such a system over the traditional
methods of making printing plates are:
(i) the elimination of costly intermediate silver film and processing chemicals;
(ii) a saving of time; and
(iii) the ability to automate the system with consequent reduction in labour costs.
[0005] The introduction of laser technology provided the first opportunity to form an image
directly on a printing plate precursor by scanning a laser beam across the surface
of the precursor and modulating the beam so as to effectively turn it on and off.
In this way, radiation sensitive plates comprising a high sensitivity polymer coating
have been exposed to laser beams produced by water cooled UV argon-ion lasers and
electrophotographic plates having sensitivities stretching into the visible spectral
region have been successfully exposed using low powered air-cooled argon-ion, helium-neon
and semiconductor laser devices.
[0006] Imaging systems are also available which involve a sandwich structure which, on exposure
to a heat generating infra-red laser beam, undergoes selective (imagewise) delamination
and subsequent transfer of materials. Such so-called peel-apart systems are generally
used as replacements for silver halide films.
[0007] A digital imaging technique has been described in US Patent No 4911075 whereby a
so-called driographic plate which does not require dampening with an aqueous fountain
solution to wet the non-image areas during printing is produced by means of a spark
discharge. In this case, a plate precursor comprising an ink-repellent coating containing
electrically conductive particles coated on a conductive substrate is used and the
coating is ablatively removed from the substrate. Unfortunately, however, the ablative
spark discharge provides images having relatively poor resolution.
[0008] It is known to improve this feature by the use of lasers to obtain high resolution
ablation as described, for example, by P E Dyer in "Laser Ablation of Polymers" (Chapter
14 of "Photochemical Processing of Electronic Materials", Academic Press, 1992, p359-385).
Until recently, imaging via this method generally involved the use of high power carbon
dioxide or excimer lasers. Unfortunately, such lasers are not well suited to printing
applications because of their high power consumption and excessive cost, and the requirement
for high pressure gas handling systems. Recent developments have, however, led to
the availability of more suitable infra-red diode lasers, which are compact, highly
efficient and very economical solid state devices. High power versions of such lasers,
which are capable of delivering up to 3000 mJ/cm
2, are now commercially available.
[0009] Coatings which may be imaged by means of ablation with infra-red radiation have previously
been proposed. Thus, for example, a proofing film in which an image is formed by imagewise
ablation of a coloured layer on to a receiver sheet is described in PCT Application
No 90/12342. This system is, however, disadvantageous in requiring a physical transfer
of material in the imaging step, and such methods tend to give rise to inferior image
resolution.
[0010] Much superior resolution is obtained by means of the ablation technique described
in European Patent No 649374, wherein a driographic printing plate precursor is imaged
digitally by means of an infra-red diode laser or a YAG laser, and the image is formed
directly through the elimination of unwanted material. The technique involves exposing
a plate precursor, incorporating an infra-red radiation ablatable coating covered
with a transparent cover sheet, by directing the beam from an infra-red laser at sequential
areas of the coating so that the coating ablates and loses its ink repellency in those
areas to form an image, removing the cover sheet and ablation products, and inking
the image.
[0011] A heat mode recording material is disclosed in US Patent No 4034183 which comprises
an anodised aluminium support coated with a hydrophilic layer. On imagewise exposure
using a laser, the exposed areas are rendered hydrophobic, and thereby accept ink.
[0012] Japanese patent application laid open to public inspection No 49-117102 (1974) discloses
a method for producing printing plates wherein a metal is incorporated in the imaging
layer of a printing plate precursor which is imaged by irradiation with a laser beam
modulated by electric signals. Typically, the plate precursor comprises a metal base,
such as aluminium, coated with a resin film, which is typically nitrocellulose, and
on top of which has been provided a thin layer of copper. The resin and metal layers
are removed in the laser-struck areas, thereby producing a printing plate. The disadvantage
of this system, however, is that two types of laser beam irradiation are required
in order to remove firstly the copper (e.g. by means of an argon-ion laser) and then
the resin (e.g. with a carbon dioxide laser); hence, the necessary equipment is expensive.
[0013] Subsequently a method of printing plate production which obviated the requirement
for a second laser exposure was disclosed in Japanese patent application laid open
to public inspection No 52-37104 (1977). Thus, a printing plate precursor comprising
a support, typically aluminium, an anodic aluminium oxide layer, and a layer of brass,
silver, graphite or, preferably, copper is exposed to a laser beam of high energy
density in order to render the exposed areas hydrophilic to yield a printing plate.
The printing plate precursor is, however, of rather low sensitivity and requires the
use of a high energy laser for exposure.
[0014] An alternative heat mode recording material for making a lithographic printing plate
is disclosed in European Patent No 609941, which comprises a support having a hydrophilic
surface, or provided with a hydrophilic layer, on which is coated a metallic layer,
on top of which is a hydrophobic layer having a thickness of less than 50 nm. A lithographic
printing plate may be produced from the said material by imagewise exposing to actinic
radiation, thereby rendering the exposed areas hydrophilic and repellent to greasy
ink.
[0015] Conversely, European Patent No 628409 discloses a heat mode recording material for
making a lithographic printing plate which comprises a support and a metallic layer,
on top of which is provided a hydrophilic layer having a thickness of less than 50
nm. A lithographic printing plate is produced by imagewise exposing the material to
actinic radiation in order to render the exposed areas hydrophobic and receptive to
greasy ink.
[0016] In each of the two foregoing heat mode recording materials, however, difficulties
in printing will be encountered. On exposure of the materials to actinic radiation,
the energy is converted to heat in the image areas by interaction with the metallic
layer, thereby destroying the hydrophilicity or hydrophobicity - depending on the
material employed - of the topmost layer in those areas. Consequently, the surface
of the metallic layer becomes exposed, and the success of the printing operation is
dependent upon differences in hydrophilicity and oleophilicity between the metallic
surface and the hydrophilic or hydrophobic layer, as the case may be. Since the metallic
layer functions as the hydrophobic surface in one case, and as the hydrophilic surface
in the alternative case, it would be expected that such differences in hydrophilicity
and oleophilicity would not be sufficiently clearly defined so as to provide a satisfactory
printing surface. Furthermore, when a hydrophilic layer is present, and the metallic
surface functions as the oleophilic areas of the plate, image areas will necessarily
be printed from the metallic surface; such an arrangement is known to be unsatisfactory,
and to result in difficulties in achieving acceptable printing quality.
[0017] Subsequently, a series of PCT patent applications (WO 98/55307-WO 98/55311 and WO
98/55330-WO 98/55332) has disclosed heat mode recording materials comprising a grained
and anodised aluminium substrate and an ablatable metallic layer, said materials providing
lithographic printing plates showing high image quality and excellent printing properties.
Also described are imaging methods for the preparation of the said printing plates,
these methods relying on direct-to-plate exposure techniques and thereby obviating
the requirement for the use of costly intermediate film or processing developers after
exposure.
[0018] Individual specifications within this series of patent applications also disclose
various distinct additional features such as the inclusion of a further layer on top
of the metallic layer; for example, WO 98/55311 teaches the presence of a transparent
cover sheet or layer of material to collect ablated debris, whereas WO98/55308 describes
a hydrophobising layer comprising a proteolytic enzyme and an oleophilising agent,
this layer improving the ink-accepting properties of image areas and thereby increasing
the degree of differentiation between hydrophilic and oleophilic areas.
[0019] An area of concern with heat mode recording materials having an ablatable metallic
layer is that the high thermal conductivity of the metallic layer can result in thermal
losses into the substrate being very high. To minimise thermal losses the laser pulse
exposure time (laser spot dwell time) should ideally be very short. It is known from
the prior art (D. E. Hare, S. T. Rhea, D. D. Dlott, R. J. D'Amato, and T. E. Lewis,
"Pulse Duration Dependence of Lithographic Printing Plate Imaging by Near-Infrared
Lasers", J. Imaging Science and Technology, Vol. 42, no.2, March/April 1998, pages
187-193) that the reason that low-intensity sources do not image laser photothermal
media is that generally these media need to reach a rather high threshold temperature
T
th before the chemical or physical processes responsible for image formation begin to
occur. However, during exposure, laser heating of the medium must compete with thermal
conduction away from the heated region. For low-intensity sources, the extent of thermal
conduction ensures that T
th can never be reached, whereas for higher intensity sources that produce rapid heating,
the effects of thermal conduction can be overcome.
[0020] Laser devices for the exposure of thermally sensitive printing plates may be conveniently
divided into two types:
(1) Internal drum type; and
(2) External drum type.
[0021] With an internal drum-type laser, the printing plate is mounted on the inside of
a stationary drum. The modulated beam from a high power IR laser, usually a YAG laser,
is scanned across the plate by means of a galvanometer mirror or rotating prism and
the laser head traverses across the plate. The dwell time of the laser spot on the
plate is typically of the order of 0.02 microseconds. Examples of such exposure devices
are a Gerber Crescent C42T platesetter and an Agfa Galileo Talant platesetter.
[0022] In the case of an external drum laser, the printing plate is mounted on the outside
of a rotating drum. The modulated laser beam is typically from a diode laser; a diode
laser array may be used. The laser head traverses across the rotating drum to expose
the plate, but the dwell time of the laser spot on the plate is much longer than that
for the internal drum and is usually 0.5 to 20 microseconds, typically 5 microseconds.
One example of such an exposure device is a Creo Trendsetter.
[0023] In view of the short exposure times employed with internal drum lasers, these devices
are well suited to the exposure of heat mode recording materials having an ablatable
metal layer. However, it follows from the teaching of Hare et al that the longer exposure
times associated with external drum laser devices would lead to the expectation that
these devices could not be used to produce satisfactory images by ablation of the
imaging layer with such heat mode recording materials, in view of the competitive
effects of conduction which would lead to loss of heat into the substrate.
[0024] Commercially, however, external drum lasers are in much more common use than internal
drum lasers and it is, therefore, clearly desirable that it should be possible to
expose heat mode recording materials having an ablatable metal layer by means of such
external drum devices. Consequently, the present invention concerns exposure devices
of the external drum type and the invention seeks to provide a lithographic printing
plate precursor that can be satisfactorily exposed on an external drum type thermal
imaging device. Surprisingly, the present inventors have found that by providing a
plate precursor having a grained and anodised aluminium substrate with an anodic weight
which lies within a certain specific range, it is possible to obtain a plate which
does not suffer from these expected problems, thereby overcoming the prejudices resulting
from the teachings of the prior art and allowing for the efficient exposure of such
a recording material by means of an imaging device of the external drum type.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0025] Thus, according to the present invention there is provided a method of preparing
a lithographic printing plate, said method comprising:
(a) providing a lithographic printing plate precursor comprising:
(i) a grained and anodised aluminium substrate comprising an anodic aluminium oxide
film, wherein the anodic weight of the aluminium oxide film is between 6.0 and 20
g/m2, having coated thereon;
(ii) a metallic layer; and
(a) imagewise exposing said precursor on an external drum thermal imaging device.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0026] The aluminium substrate is brush grained or electrochemically grained with an alternating
electric current in a bath containing mineral or organic acids, or their mixtures,
to give a roughened surface with a Centre Line Average (CLA) of between 0.2 µm and
1.5 µm, preferably between 0.4 µm and 1.0 µm. Preferably the aluminium is electrochemically
grained in a mixture of acetic acid and hydrochloric acid according to the process
disclosed in British Patent No. 1598701.
[0027] The grained aluminium is then chemically cleaned in either mineral acid or aqueous
alkali to remove smut that may be present in the form of metal, metal oxides and metal
hydroxides. Phosphoric acid, sulphuric acid or sodium hydroxide may suitably be used
for this purpose. Typically, phosphoric acid is employed at a concentration of 50
to 250 g/l and a temperature of 40 to 50°C.
[0028] Subsequently, the aluminium is electrochemically anodised with a direct electric
current in a bath containing mineral or organic acids, or their mixtures, to provide
an aluminium oxide film with an anodic weight of between 6.0 g/m
2 and 20.0 g/m
2, preferably between 6.0 g/m
2 and 15.0 g/m
2. The preferred anodising medium is sulphuric acid. Typical conditions involve treatment
of the aluminium in 100 to 150 g/l sulphuric acid for 10 to 60 seconds at 40 to 50°C
and an applied potential of 10 to 30 V. It is preferable that the said aluminium oxide
film should be substantially porous, and that the pores should extend substantially
from the aluminium/aluminium oxide interface to the surface of the substrate, such
that in excess of 95% of the pores have a diameter which lies in the range between
5 nm and 100 nm. Optionally, the surface of the pores may be chemically treated in
order to partly or completely seal the substrate. Examples of such treatments are
described in PCT patent application No. PCT/EP98/03474, a preferred means of treatment
being with a solution comprising potassium hexafluorozirconate.
[0029] It appears that the provision of an anodic layer having the specific thickness required
by the present invention results in a significant reduction in the efficiency of heat
dissipation from the ablatable metal layer into the aluminium substrate, without compromising
the printing properties of the resulting plate. It is the ability to provide a balance
between satisfying commercial requirements in terms of the exposure of heat mode recording
materials of the type described, and their subsequent performance during lithographic
printing operations that lies at the heart of the present invention.
[0030] Optionally, the aluminium substrate material may be laminated to other materials,
such as paper or various plastics materials, in order to enhance its flexibility,
whilst retaining the good dimensional stability associated with aluminium.
[0031] The metallic layer, which is applied to the grained and anodised surface of the aluminium,
may comprise one or a combination of several metals, specific examples of which include
copper, bismuth and brass. Most preferably, however, the metallic layer comprises
a silver layer. The thickness of the metallic layer is preferably from 1 nm to 100
nm, most preferably from 10 nm to 50 nm.
[0032] Various techniques are available for the application of the metallic layer to the
grained and anodised aluminium substrate, including vapour or vacuum deposition or
sputtering. In the case where the metal layer comprises a silver layer, however, the
most preferred method for applying the layer involves the treatment of a silver halide
material according to the silver salt diffusion transfer process.
[0033] In the diffusion transfer process, a silver halide emulsion layer is transformed
by treatment with a so-called silver halide solvent, into soluble silver complex compounds
which are then allowed to diffuse into an image receiving layer and are reduced therein
by means of a developing agent, generally in the presence of physical development
nuclei, to form a metallic silver layer.
[0034] Two such systems are available: a two sheet system in which a silver halide emulsion
layer is provided on one element, and a physical development nuclei layer is provided
on a second element, the two elements are placed in contact in the presence of developing
agent(s) and silver halide solvent(s) in the presence of an alkaline processing liquid,
and subsequently peeled apart to provide a metallic silver layer on the second element;
and a single sheet system wherein the element is provided with a physical development
nuclei layer, a silver halide emulsion layer is provided on top thereof, the element
is treated with developing agent(s) and silver halide solvent(s) in the presence of
an alkaline processing liquid, and the element is washed to remove spent emulsion
layer and leave a metallic silver layer which is formed in the layer containing physical
development nuclei.
[0035] Alternatively, the diffusion transfer process may be used to apply a metallic silver
layer by overall exposing a positive working silver halide emulsion layer to form
a latent negative image which is then developed in contact with a physical development
nuclei layer to form a metallic silver layer. Again, the process may be carried out
using either a single sheet or a double sheet system.
[0036] The principles of the silver complex diffusion transfer process are fully described
in the publication "Photographic Silver Halide Diffusion Processes" by Andre Rott
and Edith Weyde, The Focal Press, London and New York, 1972, and further detail may
be gleaned by reference thereto.
[0037] Preferably a transparent cover sheet or a layer of material is present on the metallic
layer before exposure. This allows loosely bound debris that is produced in the image
areas on exposure to be trapped and thus prevented from being released to the atmosphere
and is disclosed in WO 98/55311. Preferably this top layer of material is water soluble
and contains thermal sensitising agents as described in European patent application
No. 00204272, stain-reducing agents as taught by European patent application No. 01000002,
proteolytic enzymes, silver oleophilising agents, and desensitising compounds.
[0038] Suitable enzymes for use in the above composition may include, for example, trypsin,
pepsin, ficin, papain or the bacterial proteases or proteinases. Oleophilising compounds
may be chosen from those disclosed on pages 105 to 106 of "Photographic Silver Halide
Diffusion Processes" by Andre Rott and Edith Weyde, but mercapto compounds and cationic
surfactants such as quaternary ammonium compounds are of particular value. Carbohydrates
such as gum arabic, dextrin and inorganic polyphosphates such as sodium hexametaphosphate
provide useful desensitising compounds in these compositions.
[0039] The plate may be directly transferred to a printing press following exposure, without
the requirement for any intermediate treatment, since the hydrophilic materials are
readily removable from the silver image in the printing areas by means of aqueous
washing; such washing is effectively achieved by the action of the typical aqueous
fount solutions and fount-ink mixtures commonly used on printing presses, and the
hydrophilic material is thereby replaced by a film of ink in image areas and fount
in background, non-image areas.
[0040] Alternatively after exposure, the plate may be subjected to a manual or automatic
scrubbing and/or soaking treatment with an aqueous solution in order to remove any
top layer; this procedure, which is described in WO 98/55309, additionally facilitates
removal of any silver particles remaining in exposed areas, and enables the cosmetic
appearance of the plate to be improved prior to press operations. Following, or concurrent
with, this cleaning step, the plate can be prepared for printing operations by further
treatment with an aqueous composition comprising at least one oleophilising agent
for the image areas and at least one compound capable of desensitising the non-image
areas to ink. In this way, it is possible to ensure good ink acceptance in image areas
and a high degree of hydrophilicity in background areas, thus enabling a good start-up
on press to be achieved.
[0041] The method of the present invention provides press ready plates showing high image
quality, good press properties and high durability on press without the requirement
for the use of costly intermediate film and developer chemistry, and the attendant
inconvenience resulting from the use of these materials.
[0042] The following examples are illustrative of the invention, without placing any limit
on the scope thereof:
EXAMPLES
Example 1
[0043] A sheet of aluminium was degreased in a 5% w/w aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide,
electrochemically grained with an alternating electric current in a mixture of acetic
and hydrochloric acids according to the method disclosed in British Patent No. 1598701,
cleaned with an aqueous solution of phosphoric acid and then anodised for various
times with a direct electric current in 100 g/l sulphuric acid solution at 45°C.
[0044] The sheet was rinsed with water to remove residual acid and a Carey Lea colloidal
dispersion of silver stabilised with ammonium polyacrylate was applied to the grained
and anodised surface to give a coating weight of 2.5 mg/m
2 of silver, and this was then further coated with a gelatino-silver chlorobromide
dispersion to give a coating weight of 2 g/m
2 and a silver coating weight of 0.8 g/m
2.
[0045] A diffusion transfer developer was prepared comprising an aqueous solution containing
11% w/w sodium sulphite, 2% w/w hydroquinone, 0.6% w/w Phenidone (1-phenyl-3-pyrazolidone),
1% w/w sodium thiosulphate and 3% w/w 2-methylaminoethanol. The pH of the developer
solution was adjusted to 12.8 by the addition of sodium hydroxide.
[0046] The above plate precursor was dipped into the developer at 20 °C for 20 seconds,
and then rinsed with warm water containing proteolytic enzyme to remove residual coating
and leave a physically developed silver layer, with 0.5 g/m
2 silver, on the grained and anodised aluminium substrate.
[0047] The silver layer was then coated with a solution containing sodium 1-octyl-5-mercaptotetrazole
plus desensitisers as in example 2 of European patent application No. 00204272 to
give a dry coat weight of 0.1 g/m
2.
[0048] The plate was exposed at different energies on a Creo Trendsetter external drum imagesetter.
The exposed areas were qualitatively assessed as detailed in Table 1.
TABLE 1
Score |
Observation |
0 |
No image visible |
1 |
Exposed areas darker than non exposed areas |
2 |
Exposed areas starting to turn gold in colour |
3 |
Exposed areas gold in colour |
4 |
Some ablation of silver in exposed areas |
5 |
Silver completely removed in exposed areas |
[0049] The exposed plate was then wiped over with a damp cloth and the plate re-assessed.
[0050] The above procedure was repeated but with the anodising time changed so as to give
the aluminium plates different anodic weights. The results obtained are shown in Table
2.
TABLE 2
Anodic weight, g/m2 |
Exposure energy, mJ/cm2 |
|
170 |
283 |
609 |
1.6 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
3.4 |
1 |
2 |
2 |
7.6 |
1 2 |
|
3 |
10.0 |
1 2 |
|
3 |
[0051] After wiping over with a damp cloth the ratings were as outlined in Table 3.
TABLE 3
Anodic weight, g/m2 |
Exposure energy, mJ/cm2 |
|
170 |
283 |
609 |
1.6 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
3.4 |
1 2 |
|
2 |
7.6 |
1 |
2 |
4 |
10.0 |
1 |
2 |
5 |
Example 2
[0052] The same procedure was followed as in example 1 except that after anodising the plate
was dipped in a 5 g/l solution of potassium hexafluorozirconate for 36 seconds at
45°C, washed and dried.
[0053] The results obtained are outlined in Table 4.
TABLE 4
Anodic weight, g/m2 |
Exposure energy, mJ/cm2 |
|
170 |
283 |
609 |
1.6 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
3.4 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
7.6 |
1 |
2 |
4 |
10.0 |
1 |
2 |
5 |
[0054] The plate was wiped over with a damp cloth to give the ratings shown in Table 5.
TABLE 5
Anodic weight, g/m2 |
Exposure energy, mJ/cm2 |
|
170 |
283 |
609 |
1.6 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
3.4 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
7.6 |
1 |
2 |
5 |
10.0 |
1 |
2 |
5 |