US2741981A - Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof - Google Patents

Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof Download PDF

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Publication number
US2741981A
US2741981A US257178A US25717851A US2741981A US 2741981 A US2741981 A US 2741981A US 257178 A US257178 A US 257178A US 25717851 A US25717851 A US 25717851A US 2741981 A US2741981 A US 2741981A
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US
United States
Prior art keywords
manganese
solution
permanganate
paper
plate
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US257178A
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English (en)
Inventor
Frederick H Frost
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.)
Warren SD Co
Original Assignee
Warren SD Co
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
Priority to BE500047D priority Critical patent/BE500047A/xx
Priority to FR1031702D priority patent/FR1031702A/fr
Priority to NL74722D priority patent/NL74722C/xx
Priority to DEW4777A priority patent/DE940166C/de
Priority to GB30904/50A priority patent/GB686632A/en
Application filed by Warren SD Co filed Critical Warren SD Co
Priority to US257178A priority patent/US2741981A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2741981A publication Critical patent/US2741981A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41NPRINTING PLATES OR FOILS; MATERIALS FOR SURFACES USED IN PRINTING MACHINES FOR PRINTING, INKING, DAMPING, OR THE LIKE; PREPARING SUCH SURFACES FOR USE AND CONSERVING THEM
    • B41N3/00Preparing for use and conserving printing surfaces
    • B41N3/03Chemical or electrical pretreatment
    • B41N3/038Treatment with a chromium compound, a silicon compound, a phophorus compound or a compound of a metal of group IVB; Hydrophilic coatings obtained by hydrolysis of organometallic compounds
    • 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
    • Y10S430/00Radiation imagery chemistry: process, composition, or product thereof
    • Y10S430/136Coating process making radiation sensitive element

Definitions

  • This invention relates to paper plates, especially coated paper plates for planographic printing and to the preparation and treatment thereof.
  • Planographic or lithographic printing depends upon the immiscibility of water or aqueous wet-out solution and greasy lithographic printing ink.
  • To print by lithography there is afiixed to a suitable flat surface or plate an inkreceptive, water-repellent image, usually greasy, waxy, or resinous in nature.
  • To the plate so imaged is then applied wet-out solution, usually an aqueous solution of glycerine or similar substance rendered slightly acidic as by addition of a phosphate or equivalent acidifying material.
  • the wet-out solution wets all portions of the plate not already covered by imaging material, but it does not wet the Water-repellent image.
  • An inking roll coated with lithographic printing ink now passed over the plate leaves a film of ink upon the imaged areas but leaves no ink on the unimaged areas which already carry a film of the inkrepellent wet-out solution.
  • the inked plate when brought into contact with an ink-receptive surface transfers thereto the ink in a pattern reverse to that on the plate.
  • the surface so printed upon may be a paper sheet, but in most cases is an offset blanket which in turn transfers the print in form identical with that on the plate to a paper sheet which is the final printed matter.
  • the plate is repeatedly dampened, inked and printed from until the desired number of prints have been made.
  • such plates may besaid to comprise a paper base, with or without wet-strength properties, and usually on at least one side of said base a layer of coating comprising hydrophilic film-forming material containing dispersed therein some filling material, usually inert, such as clay, blanc fixe, or the like.
  • a light-weight wash coating of substantially clear hydrophilic film-former i. e. free from filling material, is applied over the before mentioned filled coating in order to prevent excessive penetration by wet-out liquid, i. e., to alford improved hold-up of water, Wet-out liquid or dampening solution.
  • the unimaged areas must be very easily and completely wet by water or aqueous wet-out or dampening solution and the latter should adhere tenaciously.
  • the unimaged surface should imply that while it tenaciously holds water applied thereto it will permit no penetration of water. It has been usually found, however, that as hydrophilic surfaces improve in ability to withstand penetration by water they also tend to become less and less adhesive to imaging material and may become useless as printing surfaces because images will not stay fixed thereon.
  • the present invention provides a treatment of lithographic printing surfaces on plates formed of paper which substantially improves the ability of said printing surfaces when wet to withstand or resist being soiled by greasy ink, while at the same time it also improves the ability of the plates to retain lithographic images applied to the dry surface thereof.
  • the invention comprises applying to a lithographic printing surface or plate comprising oxidizable organic matter an aqueous composition containing a dissolved compound of manganese of high valence (i. e., over 5 as for example in potassium permanganate) and reducing said manganese compound in situ to form a compound in which the manganese is in a lower state of valence (i e., under 5) than in the original compound.
  • a dissolved compound of manganese of high valence i. e., over 5 as for example in potassium permanganate
  • the compound of manganese having a valence below 5 is left distributed over the surface of the plate as a firmly adherent, water-insoluble, brownish residue the constitution of which is not known with certainty but which is presumed to be an oxide or hydroxide of manganese, e. g.
  • the aqueous composition besides the manganese compound also contains a soluble salt of a metal of valence greater than one, which is hereinafter referred to as a multivalent metal; and this is a preferred practice under this invention.
  • a multivalent metal a metal of valence greater than one
  • the reduced manganese seems to exist on the surface of the plate in the form of a water-soluble manganese salt and apparently an equivalent quantity of the other multivalent metal is left on the plate as an insoluble hydroxide or oxide.
  • maganese oxide or hydroxide formed by the reduction of the permanganate reacts withthe multivalent metal salt to the formation of the corresponding manganese salt and the corresponding multivalent metal oxide or hydroxide.
  • the multivalent metal salt may be used in quantity equivalent to or less than or more than equivalent to the reduced manganese compound.
  • salts of organic acids are unsuitable for such use, as are also sulfites, nitrites, and the like.
  • Such salts can be applied to the plate surface either before or after the permanganate treatment. Soluble chlorides, nitrates and sulfates are suitable for use in the permanganate solution.
  • the compound of high valent manganese applied may Q be any soluble salt of manganic or permanganic acid.
  • the most readily available salt of this nature is potassium permanganate, but other available salts such as barium, so-
  • a layer of reducing substance may be applied to the surface for the specific purpose of reducing the manganese compound; but such an application is not necessary in the case of paper base plates, nor ordinarily is it of any particular advantage.
  • an insoluble manganese compound When an insoluble manganese compound is formed by the reduction it adheres to or is bound by the organic reducing substance, or the oxidized product formed therefrom, so that the reduced insoluble manganese coma pound forms an integral part of the surface of the plate.
  • One action of the so-deposited insoluble manganesecompound is probably to plug to some extent the pores in the surface of the paper or coated paper treated. Another effect is a slight roughening of the entire surface which may provide a tooth" for anchorage of imaging material and adherence of water or dampening solution in the unimaged areasof the plate surface.
  • oxidizing action of the high valent manganese compound upon the organic matter serves to improve the hydrophilic properties of the surface so that it is more resistant to soiling by ink.
  • the coating material also becomes more water-insoluble as a result of the oxidizing treatment, at the same time that it becomes less liable to toning by ink.
  • a finely divided inorganic pigment in conjunction with the use of the permanganate and the soluble multivalent metal salt.
  • This pigment should not be enveloped in and bonded to the paper by means of an adhesive as in the case of the pigment in paper coating compositions but should be applied to the surface of the paper in the form of an aqueous dispersion, free of adhesive.
  • a preferred material for this purpose is a silica aquasol, i. e. an aqueous suspensionof colloidal silica such as is described in U. S. Patent No. 2,375,738. It seems probable that the pigment 4 especially the silica aquasol, also may contribute to the plugging of the pores and also to the provision of tooth on the surface of the plate to be helpful in holding the image as well as water on the surface thereof.
  • a planographic plate treated according to the invention is improved both for direct lithography and for photolithography.
  • Paper base plates of quality so poor that they are entirely unsuitable for use may, when treated with permanganate solution, become quite satisfactory for use. Plates already of good quality may, when treated according to the invention, become considerably better so that they may then be rated as excellent or superlative in quality.
  • Example 1 A wet-strength paper Web weighing 30 pounds per 1000 square feet was prepared from a furnish containing paper-making fibers, rosin size, melamine-formaldehyde reaction product, and aluminum sulfate. The formed web was then surface-sized with a solution of ammoniacal casein made slightly acidic by addition of commercial formaldehyde solution. The web, when dry, was coated on each side with 6 pounds dry weight per 1000 square feet of a mixture containing 100 parts clay, parts casein, and 1 /2 parts dimethylolurea. The coated paper was dried and calendered. It was then washed on one side with a 5% aqueous solution of potassium permanganate, which when it had dried, left the treated surface quite brown in color.
  • the so-treated surface was then used successfully for offset printing on an office type offset duplicator both when a direct image was affixed to the treated surface and also when an image was affixed photolithographically by the use of chromate sensitized albumin.
  • the clay-and-casein coated paper before treatment with permanganate solution was not suited for use for planographic printing as it was soiled all over by lithographic ink almost immediately.
  • Example 2 A paper-base plate was prepared from a wet-strength base coated with a fairly thick layer of insolubilized sodium alginate. This surface was extremely resistant to soiling by ink when wet, but it was not sufficiently adhesive to a directly applied image to hold the image for more than a few impressions. The sheet was washed over with a 3% aqueous solution of potassium permanganate and dried. it was then found to hold a directly applied image Well, and gave excellent results when used as an offset plate.
  • Varnishable uncoated supercalendered paper is made according to the Gates U. S. Patent No. 2,088,893. Such paper is made from a furnish containing usual papermakingfibers, clay, rosin size, and alum, beaten until free from clumps of fibers. The furnish is formed into a web of close formation and the web is calendered heavily while the surface is wet. The resulting sheet has even formation, a high densometer value and a smooth surface. It ordinarily has no wet-strength properties.
  • the so-trcated sheet was typed upon by means of a typewriter and then was placed in an offset duplicator where it served as an offset planographic printing plate. Over good copies were made therefrom before the plate, not being of wet-strength quality, became torn.
  • Example 4 The process described in Example 1 was repeated with the substitution of a 3% sodium permanganate solution for the 5% potassium permanganate solution of said example. The results were similar to those reported in Example 1.
  • Example 6 The process described in Example ,1 was repeated with the substitution of a 3% zinc permanganate solution for the 5% potassium permanganate solution of said example. The results were similar to those reported in Example 1.
  • Example 7 The coated paper sheet of Example 1 after it had been treated with potassium permanganate solution and dried was washed over with a sensitizing solution containing egg albumin 30 parts, ammonium dichromate 16 parts, diammonium phosphate 11 parts, and water 540 parts with a little ammonia to ensure alkalinity of the solution.
  • the so-treated sheet was dried and exposed through a negative to actinic radiation. The exposed sheet was then Washed to remove unexposed albumin coating and then used as a plate on an offset press where it gave satisfactory results.
  • Example 8 The same clay coated paper used in Example 1, after being dried and lightly calendered, was wash-coated with about 0.8 pound, dry weight, per thousand square feet of a 1% aqueous solution of the sodium salt of low viscosity carboxymethylcellulose. The sheet was dried and then washed with phosphoric acid solution, rinsed and redried. At this point the sheet was fairly satisfactory for use as a planographic plate. When an image was typed on it with a typewriter, several hundred copies were printed from it before the background became too soiled for use. Part of the sheet before having an image affixed to it was washed with a 2% aqueous solution of potassium permanganate and dried. An image was typed on the permanganate treated surfaces as before, and the plate so made, before becoming soiled, gave over twice the number of good prints that the plate without permanganate treatment had given.
  • Example 9 Paper weighing 50-60 pounds per ream (500 sheets, by 38 inches) sized but not especially treated to give it wet-strength, was coated on one side with a starchclay-dimethylolnrea,coating, about 6 pounds of coating (dry weight) per 1000 square feet of paper, dried and calendered. It was then coated on the already coated side with an aqueous composition containing 4 parts by weight of potassium permanganate, 8 parts by weight of cupric chloride (anhydrous), 1.5 parts by weight of colloidal silica (dry basis), 86.5 parts by weight of water and then dried and supercalendered and was ready for use. The dry weight of the applied coating was about 1.8 pounds per ream (500 sheets, 25 by 38 inches). 7
  • Example 11 Example 10 and ferric nitrate may be substituted for ferric chloride in Example 11 with similar results.
  • concentrations of the solutions of permanganate and metal salts used in the foregoing examples may vary within a wide range. Generally the more concentrated are the applied solutions the better will be the results.
  • the multivalent metal salt is a salt of a metal of the group consisting of iron, copper, zinc, chromium and aluminum.
  • the multivalent metal salt is a salt of a metal of the group consisting of iron, copper, zinc, chromium and aluminum.
  • a planographic printing plate having a paper base and a preformed surface layer of a reducing organic material and uniformly distributed upon the surface only of said surface layer the reaction products of said organic material and a manganese compound in which the manganese has a valence greater than 5, said reaction products comprising a manganese compound in which the manganese has a valence of less than 5, said last named manganese compound having been formed on said surface from a solution of said manganese compound in which the manganese has a valence greater than 5 by the reducing action of the organic material in said surface layer upon the latter manganese compound.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Printing Plates And Materials Therefor (AREA)
  • Printing Methods (AREA)
US257178A 1948-06-28 1951-11-19 Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof Expired - Lifetime US2741981A (en)

Priority Applications (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
BE500047D BE500047A (de) 1948-06-28
FR1031702D FR1031702A (fr) 1948-06-28 1950-12-12 Planche d'impression planographique et son procédé de traitement
NL74722D NL74722C (de) 1948-06-28 1950-12-14
DEW4777A DE940166C (de) 1948-06-28 1950-12-15 Verfahren zur Herstellung von Flachdruckplatten
GB30904/50A GB686632A (en) 1948-06-28 1950-12-19 Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof
US257178A US2741981A (en) 1948-06-28 1951-11-19 Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US3574348A 1948-06-28 1948-06-28
US257178A US2741981A (en) 1948-06-28 1951-11-19 Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2741981A true US2741981A (en) 1956-04-17

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US257178A Expired - Lifetime US2741981A (en) 1948-06-28 1951-11-19 Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof

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US (1) US2741981A (de)
BE (1) BE500047A (de)
FR (1) FR1031702A (de)
GB (1) GB686632A (de)
NL (1) NL74722C (de)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3211686A (en) * 1959-06-18 1965-10-12 Plastic Coating Corp Aqueous composition for prewetting a master carrying an image prepared by electrophotographic reproduction containing polyacrylic acid

Citations (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
NL60679C (de) * 1946-09-09
US66102A (en) * 1867-06-25 mowan
US147833A (en) * 1874-02-24 Improvement in the processes of waterproofing paper
GB275933A (en) * 1926-08-12 1927-11-24 Ig Farbenindustrie Ag Improvements relating to the manufacture of photographic plates or films
US1651011A (en) * 1924-02-08 1927-11-29 Arthur H Adams Method of reproducing drawings
US1871683A (en) * 1930-05-26 1932-08-16 United States Gypsum Co Chemical printing
US2104126A (en) * 1934-05-25 1938-01-04 Addressograph Multigraph Planographic printing plate and method of using same
US2156100A (en) * 1936-08-24 1939-04-25 Francis L Simons Planographic printing plate and method of making the same
US2302816A (en) * 1941-01-11 1942-11-24 Toland Planographic printing
US2302669A (en) * 1941-06-06 1942-11-24 Batcheller Clements Printing plate
FR878037A (fr) * 1942-02-10 1943-01-08 Ig Farbenindustrie Ag Procédé pour la production de clichés pour l'impression à la presse rapide
US2348943A (en) * 1943-01-08 1944-05-16 Addressograph Multigraph Planographic printing plate
US2373287A (en) * 1943-07-27 1945-04-10 Method of preparing printing plates
US2375210A (en) * 1941-01-03 1945-05-08 Batcheller Clements Alloy steel printing plate
US2534650A (en) * 1947-05-09 1950-12-19 Warren S D Co Planographic printing plate and method of making same
US2559610A (en) * 1947-12-12 1951-07-10 Warren S D Co Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof
US2582347A (en) * 1945-03-08 1952-01-15 Columbia Ribbon & Carbon Planographic printing

Patent Citations (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US66102A (en) * 1867-06-25 mowan
US147833A (en) * 1874-02-24 Improvement in the processes of waterproofing paper
US1651011A (en) * 1924-02-08 1927-11-29 Arthur H Adams Method of reproducing drawings
GB275933A (en) * 1926-08-12 1927-11-24 Ig Farbenindustrie Ag Improvements relating to the manufacture of photographic plates or films
US1871683A (en) * 1930-05-26 1932-08-16 United States Gypsum Co Chemical printing
US2104126A (en) * 1934-05-25 1938-01-04 Addressograph Multigraph Planographic printing plate and method of using same
US2156100A (en) * 1936-08-24 1939-04-25 Francis L Simons Planographic printing plate and method of making the same
US2375210A (en) * 1941-01-03 1945-05-08 Batcheller Clements Alloy steel printing plate
US2302816A (en) * 1941-01-11 1942-11-24 Toland Planographic printing
US2302669A (en) * 1941-06-06 1942-11-24 Batcheller Clements Printing plate
FR878037A (fr) * 1942-02-10 1943-01-08 Ig Farbenindustrie Ag Procédé pour la production de clichés pour l'impression à la presse rapide
US2348943A (en) * 1943-01-08 1944-05-16 Addressograph Multigraph Planographic printing plate
US2373287A (en) * 1943-07-27 1945-04-10 Method of preparing printing plates
US2582347A (en) * 1945-03-08 1952-01-15 Columbia Ribbon & Carbon Planographic printing
NL60679C (de) * 1946-09-09
GB648897A (en) * 1946-09-09 1951-01-17 Gevaert Photo Prod Nv Improvements in and relating to the production of planographic printing plates
US2534650A (en) * 1947-05-09 1950-12-19 Warren S D Co Planographic printing plate and method of making same
US2559610A (en) * 1947-12-12 1951-07-10 Warren S D Co Planographic printing plate and treatment thereof

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3211686A (en) * 1959-06-18 1965-10-12 Plastic Coating Corp Aqueous composition for prewetting a master carrying an image prepared by electrophotographic reproduction containing polyacrylic acid

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB686632A (en) 1953-01-28
NL74722C (de) 1953-12-15
BE500047A (de)
FR1031702A (fr) 1953-06-25

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