GB2396355A - Digital press printing composition and system - Google Patents

Digital press printing composition and system Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2396355A
GB2396355A GB0229711A GB0229711A GB2396355A GB 2396355 A GB2396355 A GB 2396355A GB 0229711 A GB0229711 A GB 0229711A GB 0229711 A GB0229711 A GB 0229711A GB 2396355 A GB2396355 A GB 2396355A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
toner
substrate
security
digital press
liquid toner
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
GB0229711A
Other versions
GB0229711D0 (en
Inventor
Richard David Saunders
Peter Sinclair
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Arjo Wiggins Fine Papers Ltd
Original Assignee
Arjo Wiggins Fine Papers Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Arjo Wiggins Fine Papers Ltd filed Critical Arjo Wiggins Fine Papers Ltd
Priority to GB0229711A priority Critical patent/GB2396355A/en
Publication of GB0229711D0 publication Critical patent/GB0229711D0/en
Priority to US10/539,687 priority patent/US20060240343A1/en
Priority to PCT/GB2003/005514 priority patent/WO2004057426A1/en
Priority to EP03796190A priority patent/EP1573404A1/en
Priority to AU2003298442A priority patent/AU2003298442A1/en
Publication of GB2396355A publication Critical patent/GB2396355A/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03GELECTROGRAPHY; ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY; MAGNETOGRAPHY
    • G03G9/00Developers
    • G03G9/08Developers with toner particles
    • G03G9/12Developers with toner particles in liquid developer mixtures
    • G03G9/122Developers with toner particles in liquid developer mixtures characterised by the colouring agents
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03GELECTROGRAPHY; ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY; MAGNETOGRAPHY
    • G03G9/00Developers
    • G03G9/08Developers with toner particles
    • G03G9/09Colouring agents for toner particles
    • G03G9/0928Compounds capable to generate colouring agents by chemical reaction

Abstract

A liquid toner digital press imaging composition and system comprises, in addition to the toner, a security ingredient interactable in use with a printable substrate so as to be detectably retained in or on the substrate in the event of fraudulent alteration or removal of the image produced by the toner. The security ingredient may be a reactant reactable in use with a complementary reactant carried by the substrate so as to generate a coloured, fluorescent or chemically-detectable image and may also be magnetic or conductive material.

Description

Digital Press Printing 5 This invention relates to digital press printing
using liquid toner compositions, often referred to as "inks" or "electroinks". Liquid toner digital presses have been extensively commercialized by Indigo N.V., now Hewlett-Packard, indigo and these presses are widely referred to simply as "Indigo"* presses.
l O Digital presses are particularly suited to short printing runs for which traditional printing, particularly colour offset printing, can be uneconomic and slow because of the high cost and time penalties involved in producing printing plates and setting up the press at the start of the run. By contrast, a digital press has no printing plates or comparable set-up costs. It therefore permits a rapid response to print orders ("fast turnaround"), and the 15 cost per impression is not significantly influenced by the total number of impressions being made. These factors make a digital press ideal for short-run printing, typically up to about 800 impressions, but sometimes up to about 3000 impressions. Since the information to be printed is stored in electronic form ("digitized"), rather than physically on a printing plate, initial and repeat print-runs can be made "on demand" without the 20 need for physical changes to the press. A further benefit is that variable and non-variable information can be merged between every consecutively printed copy, so that individual impressions within a print run can be personalised or customised so as to be specific to a particular recipient or reader.
25 Most digital press technology is based on non-impact printing or imaging technology of the same general kind as used in plain paper photocopiers and laser printers, i.e. on the use of an electrostaticallycharged roll and charged toner particles for image formation.
An electrostatically-charged photosensitive roll (the "photoreceptor") is exposed to light in an imagewise configuration such that the surface electrostatic charge on the exposed 3() areas of the photoreceptor is dissipated. Toner is then brought into contact with the photoreceptor, and adheres strongly to it in the unexposed (and thus still electrostatically
charged) areas of its surface, from which it can be transferred to the paper either directly or indirectly via an offset roll.
A single pass through the printing unit provides a monochrome image, but a colour print 5 of a quality comparable to that obtainable by traditional colour offset printing can be achieved either by multiple passes through a printing unit using differently-coloured toners or by a single pass through an array of printing units each of which applies a differently-coloured toner. Typically four passes or printing units are used, three of which apply coloured toners and the other of which applies a black toner. The coloured 10 toners are such that when used individually and in suitable combinations, they can provide a complete spectral range for the finished print, in much the same way as is achieved in conventional colour printing by the use of a black and three dilferently-
coloured inks.
15 Currently-commercialised digital presses can be divided into two groups according to the type of toner used, i.e. whether it is a "dry toner" or a "liquid toner". Dry toners are of a fine particulate nature, with each particle comprising pigment particles bound together in a thermally-fusible polymeric binder matrix. Once the toner has been applied to the paper, heat is used to melt the polymeric binder component of the toner and so "fuse" the 20 toner particles together and to the paper. By contrast, liquid toner compositions comprise very fine toner particles dispersed in a fairly high-boiling organic liquid vehicle, together with dispersed binder particles. During the printing operation, most of the vehicle is thought to be removed and the toner is heated to an elevated temperature (typically 70 -
90 C) sufficient to convert the binder particles to a liquid state. Removal of the vehicle 25 results in an increase in toner viscosity, which facilitates transfer of the toner to the offset roll (if used) and to the paper, with the paper surface absorbing the residual liquid vehicle. The binder reverts to a solid state after the toner has been applied to the paper and so fixes the image (there is no subsequent "fusing" of the toner after its transfer to the paper, such as occurs in dry toner processes).
A problem sometimes encountered with liquid toner digital press printing is that the toner does not bond firmly to the paper. As a result, it can become dislodged, so that the print
lacks permanence. This problem can be overcome for most applications by suitable choice of paper. For example pigment-coated printing papers generally give good results, whereas uncoated papers may not, unless they are specially treated (as disclosed for example in European Patent Application No. 879917A or International (PCT) Patent 5 Applications Nos. WO 96/06384A or WO 00/44568A). However, even with such papers, there is a risk that toner-printed characters can be removed from a printed document using a scalpel or other means and then replaced by other characters. As a result, liquid toner digital press printing has not been widely used for security printing purposes for which it would otherwise be well suited, particularly the printing of security documents lO containing variable or personal information such as a monetary amount, or the name or photograph of a payee, account holder, document owner or card owner. It will be understood that the expression "security documents" in this context includes not just complete documents but also inserts to be incorporated in such documents or in plastic cards with a security function, for example credit or charge cards, membership or identity 15 cards, etc. Although there may still be scope to improve the strength of the bond between paper and liquid toner inks, we have conceived an alternative approach to the prevention of attempts at fraudulent alteration of security documents or the like which have been printed using 20 liquid toner digital presses. This approach is based on an appreciation of the possibilities offered by the liquid nature of the toner composition, and more particularly that the liquid vehicle in the composition can be used not just for toner and binder, as at present, but also for a novel security ingredient. More specifically, we propose to include a security ingredient in the toner composition which interacts with a complementary paper or other 25 printable substrate to produce a visual or other recognizable effect which will remain even if the toner itself is interfered with or removed, thereby making attempts at fraudulent alteration evident and consequently ineffective.
Accordingly, the present invention provides, in a first aspect, a liquid toner digital press 30 imaging composition, characterized in that the composition contains, in addition to the toner, a security ingredient interactable in use with a printable substrate so as to be
detectably retained in or on the substrate in the event of fraudulent alteration or removal of the image produced by the toner.
In a second aspect, the present invention provides a liquid toner digital press imaging 5 system comprising a liquid toner digital press imaging composition and a printable substrate, characterized in that the imaging composition contains, in addition to the toner, a security ingredient interactable in use with the printable substrate so as to be detectably retained in or on the substrate in the event of fraudulent alteration or removal of the image produced by the toner.
The security ingredient may take a variety of forms, for example it may be: (i) a reactant reactable in use with a complementary reactant carried by the printable substrate so as to generate a coloured, fluorescent or chemically-detectable image 15 on the substrate having the same configuration as the toner-printed image (by a "chemically-detectable" image is meant an image which can be revealed by application of a complementary reagent which reacts with the security ingredient to produce colour or a colour change); 20 (ii) a visible dye which is absorbed and/or wicked away by the substrate so as to produce a "halo" effect around the periphery of the toner image and/or an image on the opposite surface of the substrate as a result of "strike through", i.e. penetration, to the opposite surface of the substrate; or 25 (iii) a fluorescent material which acts in a similar way to the visible image just mentioned but which is invisible under normal lighting conditions but visible when illuminated with UV light.
The fluorescent systems referred to above provide covert security, in that the presence of 30 the security feature is not immediately apparent, in contrast to overt, i.e. visible, systems as in (ii) above or the colour image generation variant in (i) above.
The arrangement described in (i) above is currently preferred, in that the requirement for a reaction between a component in the toner imaging composition and a component carried by the substrate makes forgery or counterfeiting especially difficult and also serves as a means of verifying that both the imaging composition and the substrate are 5 genuine. The last-mentioned feature is particularly useful, in that digital printing technology can lend itself to counterfeiting as well as genuine production (dishonest press owners equipped with a scanner could fairly readily capture a design format from an original and then input their own images and personalized printing to produce a multiplicity of individual fakes).
Systems (i) to (iii) described above all have the advantage that authentication or verification is very simple, relying on visual examination or simple equipment such as a W lamp or a pen or other applicator to apply a complementary reagent. In principle however, systems relying on more complex means of verification could be used, for 15 example electronic sensors for detection of magnetic or conductive materials, or spectroscopic analysis to test for the presence of specific chemicals.
If desired, more than one security ingredient can be present in the imaging composition, to provide added security. In such a case, the security ingredients used can fall into one or 20 more of the categories described in (i) to (iii) above.
Apart from the presence of the security ingredient, the imaging composition can be conventional in nature. Typically it comprises a fine particulate toner dispersed in a liquid vehicle together with a binder.
The printable substrate is normally a natural or synthetic paper, but in principle could be any other material having a printable surface (a "synthetic paper" is a plastics sheet material manufactured so as to simulate the printability, stiffness, handling and other characteristics of natural cellulosic paper, for example a product as sold under the trade 30 mark "Polyart" by Arjobex Limited, Clacton-on-Sea, England). A natural paper offers a wider range of authentication or verification possibilities, since it is absorbent and therefore can permit strikethrough and/or wicking to produce a halo effect.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the colour generating reactant in the imaging composition is a colourless chromogenic material (often termed a "colour former") of the kind used for image generation in pressure-sensitive copying papers (often termed "carbonless" copying papers) and the complementary reactant in the printable substrate is 5 a colour developer of the kind used in such papers. In principle however, any colour generating combination of reactants can be used in the present invention, provided the reactant for inclusion in the toner is soluble or otherwise capable of reacting in the liquid vehicle used in the toner composition to an extent sufficient to facilitate a colour generating reaction in use, i.e. when the toner composition contacts the complementary 10 reactant carried by the substrate.
Chromogenic materials and colour developers as just referred to are very well known and are extensively disclosed in detail in the patent and other literature relating to pressure sensitive copying papers. A paper presented by Dr. J.C. Petitpierre at the 1983 Tappi 15 Coating Conference and entitled "Dyes and Chemicals for Carbonless Copying Paper: History, Present Situation, Problems and Trends" provides a useful introductory source of reference for this technology.
Preferred colour formers for inclusion in the liquid toner imaging composition include: 20 phthalides such as 3,3-bis (1-n-octyl-2methylindol-3-yl) phthalide as disclosed in British Patent No. 1389716 and commercially available as "Pergascript"* Red I-6B from Ciba Speciality Chemicals and 3,3-bis(4-dimethylaminophenyl)-6- dimethylaminophthalide, more commonly knows as Crystal Violet Lactone or CVL, and commercially available under the names "Pergascript"* Blue I-R from Ciba Speciality Chemicals, 25 "Copikem"*1 from BE Goodrich and as "CVL" from Yamada Chemical Co. Ltd., Kyoto, Japan; and fluorans such as 3diethylamino-6-methyl-7-(2',4 -dimethylanilino) fluoran as disclosed in British Patent No. 1339968 and commercially available under the name "Black XV" from Yamamoto Chemicals Inc., Osaka, Japan, and 3-diethylamino7 dibenzylaminofluoran, commercially available as "Pergascript"* Green I2GN from Ciba 30 Speciality Chemicals, "Green 300" from Yamada Chemical Co. Ltd., "Copikem"*5 from OF Goodrich and "Green 8-C" from Hodogaya Chemical Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan.
Preferred colour developers for use in the printable substrate include: acid-washed montmorillonite clays such as disclosed in British Patent No. 1213835 and commercially available under the names "Fulacolor"* from Rockwood Additives Ltd., Widnes, U.K., "Silton"* from Mizusawa Industrial Chemicals Ltd., Tokyo, Japan and "Copisil"* from 5 Sud Chemie A.G., Moosburg, Germany; phenolic resins, such as described in U.S. Patent No. 3672935 or No. 4612254; organic acids or metal salts thereof, e.g. as described in U.S. Patent No. 3024927, European Patent Application Nos. 275107A, 503443A or 521474A, or German Offenlegungsschrift No. 4110354A; or salicylated phenolic resins such as those disclosed in European Patent Application No. 194601A and 10 supplied under the trade mark "Durez" by Durez Corporation, Dallas, USA and N.V.
Durez Europe S.A., Genk, Belgium or as disclosed in European Patent Application No. 338 808A and supplied by Schenectady Chemicals, Schenectady USA.
To prepare the printable substrate, the colour developer material is first formulated into a 15 coating composition with a suitable binder, for example a styrene-butadiene or other latex and, optionally, other materials such as pigments to improve printability, fillers, viscosity modifiers and additives of various kinds. The coating composition is then coated on to the substrate using blade, rod, air-knife, metering roll, metered size press, or other conventional coating methods.
Conveniently, the coating composition is formulated in a similar manner to conventional colour developer compositions as used in pressure- sensitive copying paper, and the printable substrate can of course actually be a colour developer sheet as manufactured for use as a CF or "Coated Front" sheet in pressure-sensitive copying systems. This may 25 offer economic advantages, since such products are well-established and widely available. The organic colour developer materials referred to above are oil-soluble, and so if desired they may be used in a reverse arrangement to that just described, i.e. as the colour 30 generating reactant in the liquid toner composition, with solid colour former material present in the printable substrate as the complementary reactant.
Although the reactant in the printable substrate is typically present in the form of a surface coating, it could in principle be present as a loading or impregnant within the body of the substrate, particularly when the substrate is of paper.
5 The paper or other substrate used in the present invention may contain sensitisers or other conventional security chemicals as commonly used in security papers to provide an additional safeguard against attempts at fraudulent alteration using, for example, bleaches, solvents, proprietary ink removers and such like. Such security chemicals must of course be compatible with the security ingredient used.
The invention will now be illustrated by the following Example, in which all parts and percentages are by weight unless otherwise stated.
Example
0.1% and 1% solutions of a red-developing colour former ("Pergascript"* Red I-6B) were made up in an isoparaffinic solvent ("Isopar L*" supplied by Exxon Chemical). 8 parts of fine particulate toner formulated in a paste of a kind conventionally used for liquid toner digital press printing and sold as "ElectroInk"* by Hewlett Packard, Indigo 20 were then dispersed in 100 parts of each of the colour former solutions to produce a liquid toner "ink". The resulting inks were then separately applied to respective 49 g me carbonless CF sheets ("Idem"* CF, supplied by Arjo Wiggins Limited, Basingstoke, United Kingdom) using a laboratory gravure coating plate to simulate the action of a digital press. After the ink had dried, the toner could be removed from the papers by 25 scraping with a finger nail. A red residual developed image remained in each case and revealed that the originally-applied toner image had been tampered with and removed.
* In this specification, an asterisk indicates a proprietary trade mark.

Claims (1)

  1. q Claims:
    5 1. A liquid toner digital press imaging composition, characterized in that the composition contains, in addition to the toner, a security ingredient interactable in use with a printable substrate so as to be detectably retained in or on the substrate in the event of fraudulent alteration or removal of the image produced by the toner. 2. A liquid toner digital press imaging composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the security ingredient is a reactant reactable in use with a complementary reactant carried by the printable substrate so as to generate a coloured, fluorescent or chemically-detectable image on the substrate having the same configuration as 15 the toner-printed image 3. A liquid toner digital press imaging composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the security ingredient is a visible dye which is absorbed and/or wicked away by the substrate so as to produce a "halo" effect around the periphery of the toner 20 image and/or an image on the opposite surface of the substrate.
    4. A liquid toner digital press imaging composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the security ingredient is a fluorescent material which is absorbed and/or wicked away by the substrate so as to produce a "halo" effect around the periphery of the 25 toner image and/or an image on the opposite surface of the substrate which is or are invisible under normal lighting conditions but visible when illuminated with W light.
    S. A liquid toner digital press imaging composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein 30 the security ingredient is a magnetic or conductive material.
    6. A liquid toner digital press imaging composition as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein more than one security ingredient is present.
    7. A liquid toner digital press imaging composition as claimed in claim 1, 5 substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the Example.
    8. A liquid toner digital press imaging system comprising a liquid toner digital press imaging composition and a printable substrate, characterized in that the imaging composition contains, in addition to the toner, a security ingredient interactable in 10 use with the printable substrate so as to be detectably retained in or on the substrate in the event of fraudulent alteration or removal of the image produced by the toner.
    9. A liquid toner digital press imaging system as claimed in claim 8, where the 15 imaging composition is as claimed in any of claims 1 to 6.
    10. A liquid toner digital press imaging system as claimed in claim 8, wherein the security ingredient is a colourless chromogenic material of the kind used for image generation in pressure-sensitive copying papers and the printable substrate 20 carries a colour developer of the kind used in such papers for developing the colour of the chromogenic material.
    11. A liquid toner digital press imaging system as claimed in claim 10, wherein the printable substrate carries sensitizers or other conventional security chemicals.
    12. A liquid toner digital press imaging system as claimed in claim 10, substantially as herein before described with reference to the Example.
GB0229711A 2002-12-20 2002-12-20 Digital press printing composition and system Withdrawn GB2396355A (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0229711A GB2396355A (en) 2002-12-20 2002-12-20 Digital press printing composition and system
US10/539,687 US20060240343A1 (en) 2002-12-20 2003-12-17 Digital press printing
PCT/GB2003/005514 WO2004057426A1 (en) 2002-12-20 2003-12-17 Digital press printing
EP03796190A EP1573404A1 (en) 2002-12-20 2003-12-17 Digital press printing
AU2003298442A AU2003298442A1 (en) 2002-12-20 2003-12-17 Digital press printing

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0229711A GB2396355A (en) 2002-12-20 2002-12-20 Digital press printing composition and system

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB0229711D0 GB0229711D0 (en) 2003-01-29
GB2396355A true GB2396355A (en) 2004-06-23

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB0229711A Withdrawn GB2396355A (en) 2002-12-20 2002-12-20 Digital press printing composition and system

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US (1) US20060240343A1 (en)
EP (1) EP1573404A1 (en)
AU (1) AU2003298442A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2396355A (en)
WO (1) WO2004057426A1 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2017148533A1 (en) * 2016-03-04 2017-09-08 Hp Indigo B.V. Security liquid electrostatic ink composition

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WO2009103021A1 (en) * 2008-02-14 2009-08-20 Documotion Research, Inc. Tamper evident materials for securely carrying information
CN102067035A (en) * 2008-02-21 2011-05-18 巴斯夫欧洲公司 UV-dose indicator films
WO2017152963A1 (en) * 2016-03-09 2017-09-14 Hp Indigo B.V. Resin-free liquid electrophotographic ink
CN111345699B (en) * 2018-12-20 2022-06-28 九阳股份有限公司 Control method of cooking equipment and cooking equipment

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WO1993001528A1 (en) * 1991-07-04 1993-01-21 Spectrum Sciences B.V. Security toner and process for using same
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EP0794466A2 (en) * 1996-03-08 1997-09-10 Thomas De La Rue Limited Method and apparatus for providing security indicia on a substrate
WO2000078556A1 (en) * 1999-06-21 2000-12-28 Inksure Ltd. Security documents with visible and invisible markings
EP1087005A1 (en) * 1999-09-27 2001-03-28 Ciba SC Holding AG Fluorescent diketopyrrolopyrroles

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WO1993001528A1 (en) * 1991-07-04 1993-01-21 Spectrum Sciences B.V. Security toner and process for using same
WO1993004868A2 (en) * 1991-08-29 1993-03-18 Canadian Bank Note Company, Limited Security document with coating and method for making the same
EP0794466A2 (en) * 1996-03-08 1997-09-10 Thomas De La Rue Limited Method and apparatus for providing security indicia on a substrate
WO2000078556A1 (en) * 1999-06-21 2000-12-28 Inksure Ltd. Security documents with visible and invisible markings
EP1087005A1 (en) * 1999-09-27 2001-03-28 Ciba SC Holding AG Fluorescent diketopyrrolopyrroles

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2017148533A1 (en) * 2016-03-04 2017-09-08 Hp Indigo B.V. Security liquid electrostatic ink composition
US10591837B2 (en) 2016-03-04 2020-03-17 Hp Indigo B.V. Security liquid electrostatic ink composition

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP1573404A1 (en) 2005-09-14
GB0229711D0 (en) 2003-01-29
US20060240343A1 (en) 2006-10-26
AU2003298442A1 (en) 2004-07-14
WO2004057426A1 (en) 2004-07-08

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