US2299991A - Chart paper - Google Patents

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Publication number
US2299991A
US2299991A US37504241A US2299991A US 2299991 A US2299991 A US 2299991A US 37504241 A US37504241 A US 37504241A US 2299991 A US2299991 A US 2299991A
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United States
Prior art keywords
pressure
film
paper
dark
colored
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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.)
Expired - Lifetime
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Inventor
Wilmer F Kallock
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MC LAURIN JONES CO
MC-LAURIN-JONES Co
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MC LAURIN JONES CO
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Priority to US37504241 priority Critical patent/US2299991A/en
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Publication of US2299991A publication Critical patent/US2299991A/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41MPRINTING, DUPLICATING, MARKING, OR COPYING PROCESSES; COLOUR PRINTING
    • B41M5/00Duplicating or marking methods; Sheet materials for use therein
    • B41M5/124Duplicating or marking methods; Sheet materials for use therein using pressure to make a masked colour visible, e.g. to make a coloured support visible, to create an opaque or transparent pattern, or to form colour by uniting colour-forming components
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10S428/918Material abnormally transparent
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/31971Of carbohydrate
    • Y10T428/31975Of cellulosic next to another carbohydrate
    • Y10T428/31978Cellulosic next to another cellulosic
    • Y10T428/31982Wood or paper

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a novel pressuresensitive paper adapted to receive and record inkless or other impressions imparted by a stylus
  • the invention finds one principal application in the production of inkless recording charts for various recording instruments, though it is also useful in other applications wherein pressureor stylus-sensitive paper is utilized for the recording of data.
  • pressureor stylus-sensitive paper is utilized for the recording of data.
  • Such wax coated paper is also diiiicult to print with the graduations, lines, or designations which some recording charts require.
  • Fig. 1 is an enlarged perspective view of the chart paper of my invention involving a blushed lacquer coating, an intermediate dark-colored coating, and a paper backing layer;
  • Fig. 2 is an enlarged perspective view of a modified form of the chart paper of my invention involving a blushed lacquer coating and a darkcolored paper backing.
  • a dark-colored base or foundation layer which may be of dark-colored paper or paper of a light shade may be suitably colored or coated so as to form a relatively dark-coloredfoundation.
  • ordinary paper of the grade desired is coated with any suitable hardenable dark-colored coating by a reverse roll coater or other means, as well known dark-colored foundation, it is provided with an opaque surface layer of blushing lacquer, as well known in the art, for example, as in U. S. patent to Willkie, No.
  • 1,449,157 (which blushes to either white or some light tint or color) and which, it has been discovered, may, in accordance with this invention, be modified to render it stylussensitive so that, upon the application of pressure, the surface layer becomes transparent wherever such localized pressure has been employed.
  • the color of the base, where pressure has been applied thus appears in contrast to the color of the areas where no such pressure has been applied.
  • This blushing lacquer may be made up by adding a suitable softener to a blushing lacquer, for example, as follows (all parts being by weight) Parts Cellulose nitrate (5-6 see.) l0 Ace 25 Alcohol 68 Water 2 Glycerine 2.3 Butyl stearate 5-8. 'I
  • cellulose esters include cellulose butyrate, oleate, stearate, phthalate, naphthenate, laurate, aceto-butyrate, acetomaleate, and aceto-nitrate; of cellulose ethers,- ethyl cellulose, benzyl cellulose, and glycol cellulose; of cellulose ether-esters,ethyl cellulosenitrate, benzyl cellulose-acetate, ethyl celluloseacetate, and glycol cellulose-acetate.
  • the modifying or softening agent which functions by reason of its physical effect on the blushing lacquer, need not be butyl stearate, and, in lieu of all or a part of the butyl stearate there may be employed additional glycerine or equivalents or other salts or esters of various fatty acids or fatty acids themselves, or other hardenable oily, fatty, or waxy materials,all of which for convenience are herein termed softening agents.
  • softening agents for example, stearic and other fatty acids are also found to be useful as blushing lacquer softening agents which, like those just in the art. Following the provision of such a as referred to, will not inhibit or materially retard precipitation of the small discrete particles which render the lacquer opaque.
  • this surface layer provides a sumciently hard and abrasion-resisting surface so that there results a continuous film that can withstand handling without objectionable marring.
  • the film itself functions in the manner of normal blushing lacquer so as to provide a white or very light colored surface layer which will not melt or soften at ordinary atmospheric temperatures'
  • the backing material is referred to as paper, but it will be appreciated that any one of various other thin flexible backings may be employed as functionally equivalent backings. Also, by light-colored it is intended to include white as well as various light colors. c
  • a pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having thereon a relatively soft, stylus-pressuresensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film, said film being normally opaque but adapted tojbecome sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film.
  • a pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper hav-- ing a dark-colored coating thereon providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having on said foundation a relatively soft, stylus-pressure-sensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film, said film being normally opaque but adapted to aaeaoer 3.
  • a pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a colored backing layer of paper providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having thereon a relatively soft stylus-pressure-sensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film including printed lines and indicia on the exposed surface of said film, said film being normally opaque but adapted to become sumciently transparentto disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to 4.
  • a pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper having a dark-colored coating thereon providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having on said foundation a relatively soft, stylus-pressure-sensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film including printed lines and indicia on theJexposed surface of said film, said film being normally opaque but adapted to become sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film.
  • a pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having thereon a relatively soft, stylus-pressuresensitive blushed light-colored cellulosic lacquer film, said film being normally opaque but adapted to become sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film,
  • a pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper havbecome sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film.

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  • Color Printing (AREA)
  • Heat Sensitive Colour Forming Recording (AREA)

Description

' Patented Oct. 27, 1942 CHART PAPER Wilmer F. Kallock, Ware, Mass., assignor to Mc- Lanrin-Joncs 00., Brookfleld, Mass., at corporation of Massachusetts Application January 18, 1941, Serial No. 375,042 7 Claims. (01. 234-74) This invention relates to a novel pressuresensitive paper adapted to receive and record inkless or other impressions imparted by a stylus,
' typewriter, or other manually or mechanically operated writing or printing means. The invention finds one principal application in the production of inkless recording charts for various recording instruments, though it is also useful in other applications wherein pressureor stylus-sensitive paper is utilized for the recording of data. Heretofore, it has been common to provide a black-surfaced paper with a solventapplied waxy or soap-like coating with attendant disadvantages because such coatings are easily subject to even light abrasion in handling, are temperature sensitive so as to be brittle and stiff at low atmospheric temperatures, and soften objectionably at high atmospheric temperatures. Such wax coated paper is also diiiicult to print with the graduations, lines, or designations which some recording charts require.
The present invention avoids these disadvantages and provides a pressure-sensitive paper which can be handled with very much less chance of objectionable marking by abrasion or handling than the wax coated material, one that can be used at high temperatures, and one that can be readily printed. Moreover, a better and more uniform color can be provided in that white or other light colors can be employed in the surface coating providing a greater contrast between such surface coating and the relatively darker coating of the base layer. Also, the coating can be applied with greater uniformity and precision than coatings heretofore employed in the prior at pressure-sensitive inkless recording papers. Fig. 1 is an enlarged perspective view of the chart paper of my invention involving a blushed lacquer coating, an intermediate dark-colored coating, and a paper backing layer; and
Fig. 2 is an enlarged perspective view of a modified form of the chart paper of my invention involving a blushed lacquer coating and a darkcolored paper backing.
In the preferred practice of the present invention there is provided a dark-colored base or foundation layer which may be of dark-colored paper or paper of a light shade may be suitably colored or coated so as to form a relatively dark-coloredfoundation. For example, ordinary paper of the grade desired is coated with any suitable hardenable dark-colored coating by a reverse roll coater or other means, as well known dark-colored foundation, it is provided with an opaque surface layer of blushing lacquer, as well known in the art, for example, as in U. S. patent to Willkie, No. 1,449,157, (which blushes to either white or some light tint or color) and which, it has been discovered, may, in accordance with this invention, be modified to render it stylussensitive so that, upon the application of pressure, the surface layer becomes transparent wherever such localized pressure has been employed. The color of the base, where pressure has been applied, thus appears in contrast to the color of the areas where no such pressure has been applied. This blushing lacquer may be made up by adding a suitable softener to a blushing lacquer, for example, as follows (all parts being by weight) Parts Cellulose nitrate (5-6 see.) l0 Ace 25 Alcohol 68 Water 2 Glycerine 2.3 Butyl stearate 5-8. 'I
The above illustrates my preferred practice of the invention and includes a typical blushing lacquer modified by the addition of a substantial quantity of a suitable softening agent, and, as is well known in the art, various other cellulose derivatives, including cellulose esters, ethers, and/or ether-esters may be employed instead of cellulose nitrate, for example, cellulose acetate with or without the inclusion of a resin or resins. Examples of cellulose esters include cellulose butyrate, oleate, stearate, phthalate, naphthenate, laurate, aceto-butyrate, acetomaleate, and aceto-nitrate; of cellulose ethers,- ethyl cellulose, benzyl cellulose, and glycol cellulose; of cellulose ether-esters,ethyl cellulosenitrate, benzyl cellulose-acetate, ethyl celluloseacetate, and glycol cellulose-acetate.
The modifying or softening agent, which functions by reason of its physical effect on the blushing lacquer, need not be butyl stearate, and, in lieu of all or a part of the butyl stearate there may be employed additional glycerine or equivalents or other salts or esters of various fatty acids or fatty acids themselves, or other hardenable oily, fatty, or waxy materials,all of which for convenience are herein termed softening agents. For example, stearic and other fatty acids are also found to be useful as blushing lacquer softening agents which, like those just in the art. Following the provision of such a as referred to, will not inhibit or materially retard precipitation of the small discrete particles which render the lacquer opaque.
In practice, it is found that the application of this surface layer provides a sumciently hard and abrasion-resisting surface so that there results a continuous film that can withstand handling without objectionable marring. The film itself functions in the manner of normal blushing lacquer so as to provide a white or very light colored surface layer which will not melt or soften at ordinary atmospheric temperatures' The hardness'can be increased by decreasing the amount of butyl stearate, increasing slightly the amount of water, or adding a small amount of ethyl acetate which increases the amount of unprecipitated film-forming material of the lacquer. It is found that suitable lines and indicia may be readily printed thereon, using ordinary inks and ordinary printing processes that heretofore have been employed in making paper charts with lines and indicia thereon. For all practical purposes, pressure-sensitive paper made in accordance with the above preferred formula provides a commercially satisfactory and much improved product.
In the foregoing specification and in the appended claims, the backing material is referred to as paper, but it will be appreciated that any one of various other thin flexible backings may be employed as functionally equivalent backings. Also, by light-colored it is intended to include white as well as various light colors. c
Having described my invention, what I wish to claim and secure by Letters Patent is:
1. A pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having thereon a relatively soft, stylus-pressuresensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film, said film being normally opaque but adapted tojbecome sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film.
2. A pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper hav-- ing a dark-colored coating thereon providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having on said foundation a relatively soft, stylus-pressure-sensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film, said film being normally opaque but adapted to aaeaoer 3. A pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a colored backing layer of paper providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having thereon a relatively soft stylus-pressure-sensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film including printed lines and indicia on the exposed surface of said film, said film being normally opaque but adapted to become sumciently transparentto disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to 4. A pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper having a dark-colored coating thereon providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having on said foundation a relatively soft, stylus-pressure-sensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film including printed lines and indicia on theJexposed surface of said film, said film being normally opaque but adapted to become sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film.
5. A pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having thereon a relatively soft, stylus-pressuresensitive blushed light-colored cellulosic lacquer film, said film being normally opaque but adapted to become sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film,
6. A pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper havbecome sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film.
ing a dark-colored coating thereon providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having on said foundation a relatively soft, stylus-pressure-sensitive blushed light-colored cellulosic lacquer film, said film being normally. opaque but adapted to become sumciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark surface upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film 7. A pressure-sensitive inkless recording medium comprising a backing layer of paper providing a relatively dark-surfaced foundation and having thereon a relatively soft, stylus-pressuresensitive blushed light-colored lacquer film con taining cellulose nitrate, said film being normally opaque but adapted to become sufiiciently transparent to disclose the underlying dark sur= face upon the application of stylus-pressure to said film.
US37504241 1941-01-18 1941-01-18 Chart paper Expired - Lifetime US2299991A (en)

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Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2519660A (en) * 1947-09-06 1950-08-22 Little Inc A Recording material
US2686676A (en) * 1949-04-08 1954-08-17 Dictaphone Corp Recording progress indicator for magnetic records
US2710263A (en) * 1951-02-02 1955-06-07 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Heat-sensitive copying-paper
US2739909A (en) * 1950-06-29 1956-03-27 Nashua Corp Coated paper suitable for stylus inscription and method of making the same
DE1001890B (en) * 1953-12-28 1957-01-31 Molineus & Co Process for making a carbon copy paper
US2898112A (en) * 1954-09-01 1959-08-04 Dictaphone Corp Indicator slips with blushed lacquer coating
US2927039A (en) * 1957-03-07 1960-03-01 Labelon Tape Co Inc Heat sensitive copying sheet
US2939802A (en) * 1957-11-13 1960-06-07 Uarco Inc Pressure sensitive recording material and method of making same
US2961334A (en) * 1957-06-04 1960-11-22 Little Inc A Positive printing, pressure-sensitive material and method of making it
US3180752A (en) * 1961-11-06 1965-04-27 Interchem Corp Heat-sensitive copying sheets
US3320089A (en) * 1964-03-09 1967-05-16 Judson Bigelow Inc Method of making blush coated recording sheet, coated sheet and coating composition
US3534604A (en) * 1968-02-08 1970-10-20 Neptune Meter Co Watermeter with freeze protection and indication
US4299880A (en) * 1979-11-15 1981-11-10 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Demand and timed renewing imaging media
US4374889A (en) * 1981-12-07 1983-02-22 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Oil-repellent microvoid-imaging material
US4418098A (en) * 1980-09-02 1983-11-29 Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company Imaging media capable of displaying sharp indicia
US4428321A (en) 1981-11-16 1984-01-31 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Co. Thermally-activated time-temperature indicator
US4729687A (en) * 1985-02-20 1988-03-08 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Imaging device
US4877253A (en) * 1987-02-06 1989-10-31 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Reusable bingo card
US5667303A (en) * 1995-03-10 1997-09-16 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Time-temperature integrating indicator device
US8536087B2 (en) 2010-04-08 2013-09-17 International Imaging Materials, Inc. Thermographic imaging element

Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2519660A (en) * 1947-09-06 1950-08-22 Little Inc A Recording material
US2686676A (en) * 1949-04-08 1954-08-17 Dictaphone Corp Recording progress indicator for magnetic records
US2739909A (en) * 1950-06-29 1956-03-27 Nashua Corp Coated paper suitable for stylus inscription and method of making the same
US2710263A (en) * 1951-02-02 1955-06-07 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Heat-sensitive copying-paper
DE1001890B (en) * 1953-12-28 1957-01-31 Molineus & Co Process for making a carbon copy paper
US2898112A (en) * 1954-09-01 1959-08-04 Dictaphone Corp Indicator slips with blushed lacquer coating
US2927039A (en) * 1957-03-07 1960-03-01 Labelon Tape Co Inc Heat sensitive copying sheet
US2961334A (en) * 1957-06-04 1960-11-22 Little Inc A Positive printing, pressure-sensitive material and method of making it
US2939802A (en) * 1957-11-13 1960-06-07 Uarco Inc Pressure sensitive recording material and method of making same
US3180752A (en) * 1961-11-06 1965-04-27 Interchem Corp Heat-sensitive copying sheets
US3320089A (en) * 1964-03-09 1967-05-16 Judson Bigelow Inc Method of making blush coated recording sheet, coated sheet and coating composition
US3534604A (en) * 1968-02-08 1970-10-20 Neptune Meter Co Watermeter with freeze protection and indication
US4299880A (en) * 1979-11-15 1981-11-10 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Demand and timed renewing imaging media
US4418098A (en) * 1980-09-02 1983-11-29 Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company Imaging media capable of displaying sharp indicia
US4428321A (en) 1981-11-16 1984-01-31 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Co. Thermally-activated time-temperature indicator
US4374889A (en) * 1981-12-07 1983-02-22 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Oil-repellent microvoid-imaging material
US4729687A (en) * 1985-02-20 1988-03-08 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Imaging device
US4877253A (en) * 1987-02-06 1989-10-31 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Reusable bingo card
US5667303A (en) * 1995-03-10 1997-09-16 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Time-temperature integrating indicator device
US8536087B2 (en) 2010-04-08 2013-09-17 International Imaging Materials, Inc. Thermographic imaging element

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