WO1998052103A1 - Color control system for electrographic printer - Google Patents

Color control system for electrographic printer Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1998052103A1
WO1998052103A1 PCT/US1998/009671 US9809671W WO9852103A1 WO 1998052103 A1 WO1998052103 A1 WO 1998052103A1 US 9809671 W US9809671 W US 9809671W WO 9852103 A1 WO9852103 A1 WO 9852103A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
toner
solids
working strength
concentrate
liquid
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1998/009671
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Stewart H. Corn
Brett A. Behnke
Thomas A. Speckhard
Oyvind H. Iverson
Christopher J. Anton
Kenneth W. Olson
Original Assignee
Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company
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 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company filed Critical Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company
Priority to AU74821/98A priority Critical patent/AU7482198A/en
Priority to KR1019997010473A priority patent/KR20010012518A/en
Priority to JP54943898A priority patent/JP2002502505A/en
Priority to EP98922223A priority patent/EP0981782A1/en
Priority to BR9809622-2A priority patent/BR9809622A/en
Publication of WO1998052103A1 publication Critical patent/WO1998052103A1/en

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03GELECTROGRAPHY; ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY; MAGNETOGRAPHY
    • G03G15/00Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern
    • G03G15/01Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern for producing multicoloured copies
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03GELECTROGRAPHY; ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY; MAGNETOGRAPHY
    • G03G15/00Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern
    • G03G15/06Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern for developing
    • G03G15/10Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern for developing using a liquid developer
    • G03G15/104Preparing, mixing, transporting or dispensing developer
    • G03G15/105Detection or control means for the toner concentration

Definitions

  • IPC International Patent Classification
  • This invention relates to apparatus and methods for controlling the color density of a printed image in electrographic printing processes using liquid toners.
  • a liquid electrographic imaging system includes an imaging substrate onto which a developer liquid is delivered to develop a latent image.
  • the imaging substrate may be a permanent image receptor or, alternatively, a temporary image receptor, and may take the form of a drum, belt, or sheet.
  • a liquid electrographic imaging system may be an electrostatic system having a dielectric material as the imaging substrate, or may take the form of an electrophotographic system having a photoreceptor as the imaging substrate.
  • the latent image can be formed by selectively charging the dielectric substrate with an electrostatic stylus.
  • the photoreceptor includes a photoconductive material that is uniformly charged, for example, with a corona charging device. ⁇ latent image can be formed on the photoreceptor by selectively discharging the photoreceptor with a pattern of electromagnetic radiation.
  • a multi-color imaging system may include several imaging stations that form a plurality of latent images on the imaging substrate. Bach of the latent images in a multi-color imaging system is representative of one of a plurality of color separation images for an original multi-color image to be reproduced. ⁇ s a latent image is formed, a development station applies developer liquid to the imaging substrate to develop the latent image.
  • the developer liquid includes a carrier liquid and developer particles which may include charge director and a colorant, such as a dye or a pigment.
  • developer particles which may include charge director and a colorant, such as a dye or a pigment.
  • each of a plurality of development stations applies an appropriately colored developer liquid to the imaging substrate to form an intermediate representation of the corresponding color separation image.
  • ⁇ drying station dries the developer liquid applied by the development station or stations, leaving a film of developer material.
  • the transfer station then transfers the developer material from the imaging substrate to an output substrate, such as a sheet of paper, fabric, plastic, or film, to form a visible 2
  • imaging substrate may serve as the output substrate, such that transfer is not necessary.
  • a development station generally includes a development device such as, for example, a development roller or belt.
  • the operation of a development roller will be described for purposes of example.
  • the development roller is rotated by a drive mechanism and charged with a bias potential that contributes to an electric field between the roller and the imaging substrate.
  • the rotating, charged development roller delivers developer liquid to the surface of an imaging region of the imaging substrate to develop the latent image.
  • the development roller typically is positioned a short distance from the surface of the substrate, enabling a thin layer of developer liquid to be delivered across the resulting gap.
  • the development process is repeated with each of a plurality of development rollers applying differently colored developer liquids to the imaging substrate to develop different color separation images.
  • Consistency in color density in electrographic printing is important for minimizing plot to plot variability.
  • Several variables influence the color density in electrographic printing, with the formulation of liquid toner being most important.
  • liquid toner comprises pigmented resin particles, isoparaffinic hydrocarbon carrier liquid (such as IsoparTM), and charge control agent to affect electrical properties.
  • IsoparTM isoparaffinic hydrocarbon carrier liquid
  • charge control agent to affect electrical properties.
  • toner concentrate typically about 12-15% total solids
  • working strength toner typically about 2-3% total solids
  • Toner concentrate can be formulated with the proper relative concentrations of pigment, resin and charge control agent, but non-viable toner solids are always present in commercial toners.
  • non-viable toner solids comprising free charge control agent and charged, unpigmented resin particles, eventually build up to unacceptable levels, causing depletion as described above. At this point the toner is considered unreplenishable, and the entire fluid volume of the liquid toner must be discarded.
  • this method prevents the eventual depletion of the toner with repeated replenishment events. Also use of agitation to keep the toner concentrate from settling and the use of a motor-driven stirrer are disclosed.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 5,623,715 (Clark) teaches (A) the use of continuous circulation of toner concentrate, in order to keep the particles from settling and allowing more precise addition of toner solids to the premix; (B) the use of a combination of a piston pump and check valves to precisely add toner concentrate; and (C) a calibration procedure for (B) whereby an analytical balance is used to weigh both imaged and non-imaged paper to determine the amount of toner solids applied to the paper, and calculate the concentrate replacement rate.
  • Spence-Bate also describes an alternative mode whereby excess toner can be drained away, and recirculated. Therefore, depleted toner that is not carried out with the image returns to the working strength toner reservoir, and it is not removed from the system.
  • a benefit of the present invention is the ability to provide acceptable color densities for each of the four primary printing colors: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black ("CMYK" respectively), particularly for long print runs, as well as for process colors.
  • the present invention concerns maintenance of viable toner in electrographic toners during printing, by maintaining working strength solids and conductivity within ranges found to provide an acceptable range of color density as measured using a densitometer or colorimeter.
  • the present invention differs from the teachings of the Day patents in that liquid toner need not be purified and reused.
  • the present invention permits higher steady 6
  • the present invention also solves a problem of build up of all contaminants in liquid toners, not just ionic species of non- viable toner solids.
  • This invention concerns a means to achieve substantially consistent printed color density by adding concentrate and, optionally, diluent to working strength toner substantially continuously and by removing a portion of the working strength toner substantially continuously in order to prevent build up of conductivity and non- viable toner solids in the liquid toner.
  • This invention also concerns a system for substantially maintaining color density in liquid toners for electrographic printers, comprising means for substantially continuously supplying toner concentrate and, optionally, diluent to a printer and means for substantially continuously withdrawing liquid toner from a printer into a waste flowstream.
  • a feature of the present invention is the ability to control color density of a toner by maintaining viable toner solids throughout usage of the liquid toner.
  • An advantage of the present invention is the efficiency and assurance of controlled color density of each liquid toner color, in order that longer duration printer usage and larger volume toner usage provide increased printer productivity.
  • Another advantage of the present invention is the use of a waste removal rate that maximizes toner performance and minimizes toner waste.
  • predetermined toner removal can produce less waste than waste created by batchwise replenishment schemes.
  • the present invention provides a system for substantially maintaining color density in liquid toners for an electrophotographic printer, the system comprising means for substantially continuously supplying toner concentrate to liquid toner in a working strength vessel associated with a toning station in the printer, and means for substantially continuously withdrawing liquid toner from the working strength vessel into a waste flowstream.
  • the present invention provides a method to achieve substantially consistent color density of liquid toner in an electrophotographic printing system, the method comprising supplying toner concentrate to liquid toner in a working strength vessel substantially continuously, and withdrawing a portion of the liquid toner from the working strength vessel substantially continuously.
  • Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of flow of liquid toner through a printer according to the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a diagrammatic representation of flow of liquid toners of several colors through a printer according to the present invention.
  • Fig. 1 is a diagram of one embodiment of the present invention, showing the flow of liquid toner from concentrate in flowstream C into a vessel 10 which contains an appropriate formulation of liquid toner, comprising toner solids (typically itself composed of pigment, binder, and charging agent), and isoparaffinic solvents.
  • toner solids typically itself composed of pigment, binder, and charging agent
  • isoparaffinic solvents typically isoparaffinic solvents.
  • the appropriate "working strength" formulation of liquid toner can range from about 0.5 to about 10 weight percent toner solids, and from about 90 to about 99.5 weight percent solvent.
  • toner concentrates of toner solids and charging agents are suitable for use in accordance with the present invention.
  • Nonlimiting examples of suppliers of liquid toners for electrographic printers include: ScotchprintTM Electrostatic Toners (3M, St. Paul, MN); Raster Graphics Digital Inks (Raster Graphics, Sunnyvale, CA); Versatec Premium Color toners, ColorGrafX HiBrite toners and ColorGrafX Turbo inks (all sold by Xerox, San Jose, CA or Rochester, NY); and STC Weather Durable, STC High Saturation, and STC High Speed toners, all manufactured by ScotchprintTM Electrostatic Toners (3M, St. Paul, MN); Raster Graphics Digital Inks (Raster Graphics, Sunnyvale, CA); Versatec Premium Color toners, ColorGrafX HiBrite toners and ColorGrafX Turbo inks (all sold by Xerox, San Jose, CA or Rochester, NY); and STC Weather Durable, STC High Saturation
  • hydrocarbon solvents are suitable for use in accordance with the present invention.
  • hydrocarbon solvents include isoparaffinic solvents such as IsoparTM G, Isopar L, Isopar M and Isopar C; and normal paraffins such as NorparTM 12, all commercially available from Exxon Chemical Co. of Houston, TX; and mineral spirits, commercially available from, for example, Ashland Chemical Inc., of Columbus OH.
  • Commercially available toners can therefore be used without modification and 8
  • the working strength of liquid toner can range from about 0.5 to about 10 weight percent toner solids (the balance being diluent).
  • the working strength of liquid toner can range from about 1 to about 8 weight percent toner solids.
  • Vessel 10 has two entrance routes, 12, for toner concentrate, C, and 14 for optional diluent, D; and two exits for the liquid toner operating within working strength formulations.
  • Exit 16 is a route in a flowstream, P, to a toning station for a printer and onto output media such as paper, plastic, fabric, or film (from a drum, belt, or other toning station not shown).
  • Exit 18 is to a route, W, to a waste container.
  • the waste flowstream W may be directly from the working strength vessel. Alternatively, waste can be withdrawn, in effect, by removing waste liquid toner from the toner station, thereby preventing recovery of the waste liquid toner by the working strength vessel.
  • percent solids and conductivity of the liquid toner in vessel 10 is substantially consistent during printer operation based on a substantially continuous flow of liquid toner in flowstream P and a substantially continuous flow of liquid toner in flowstream W.
  • percent solids and conductivity of the liquid toner in vessel 10 may change, especially if the conductivity of the toner concentrate C, differs from that of the toner in vessel 10 when measured at the same percent solids.
  • C is the flowstream of concentrate
  • P is the flowstream to printing via the toner station
  • W is the flowstream to waste
  • x is the mass fraction of toner solids in flowstream P to the toner station
  • y represents the mass fraction of toner solids in the flowstreams C and W, respectively, of toner concentrate and waste, respectively.
  • the invention allows for the addition of diluent, if needed, which 9
  • C is the flowstream of concentrate
  • D is the flowstream of diluent to the working strength vessel
  • P is the flowstream to printing via the toner station
  • W is the flowstream to waste
  • x is the mass fraction of toner solids in flowstream P to the toner station
  • y_ , y 0 , and y d represent the mass fraction of toner solids in the flowstreams C, W, and D respectively, of toner concentrate, waste and diluent, if any, respectively.
  • the rates C and D are maintained high enough so that W is a positive value, i.e., that the flowstreams C and D more than satisfy P (and x). It will be evident upon review of the examples below that the rate P and solids fraction x (and therefore the controllable rates C, D and W) are affected by the printer, the graphic being printed, the speed of printing, the toner chemistry (and in particular the toner color), and the conductivity of the working strength liquid. The mass fraction of solids in the concentrate y ⁇ and conductivity of the concentrate also necessarily affect the rate P.
  • Acceptable color density ranges can vary from color to color, vary from toner to toner formulation, vary from printer to printer, and vary from media to media (receptor or output) being toned. Variation can be adjusted using print voltages to bring each color into the density range. However, the present invention provides a system to maintain control of color density values for each of the colors. 10
  • each of the primary printing colors has a minimum, target, and maximum color density value as follows in Table 1 :
  • the amounts of concentrated toner delivered in flowstream, C is controlled by the print controller which can count the data assigned to each color.
  • the amount of toner removed by printing flowstream, P can be determined according to the ranges shown in Equation I-II or III-IV above, established through experimentation for various 11
  • the present invention can provide unexpectedly superior consistent color densities within acceptable ranges that are substantially unvarying from established color densities relative to targets.
  • the amount of liquid toner removed to flowstream W can be a fixed ratio of the amount of toner concentrate added to flowstream C.
  • W can be allowed to vary to account for changes in P and x that may result from changes in working strength conductivity or in the media type being printed. Either way, a substantially consistent level of charge, toner solids, and liquid toner in the electrographic printing system is maintained, thus assuring substantially consistent color density for each toner color in the printing system to which the present invention is applied.
  • controlled flow rates are: C, determined for a particular concentrate (color, % solids, and conductivity) and flow rate D, determined by the particular graphic, D being highest for lightly toned images; and W is allowed to vary according to changes in P as described above.
  • the flow rate D can be maintained at a constant level.
  • Flow rates C (and D) can be shown to affect color density (see examples). Too high a rate of C results in overconcentration of the working strength toner (high percent solids and high conductivity), resulting in low color density of the image. Too low a rate of C or too high a rate of D results in underconcentration of the working strength toner (low percent solids and low color density of the image).
  • the use of concentrate that has a lower conductivity than the working strength toner can be used to allow for some amount of overconcentration.
  • Fig. 2 shows the present invention applied to a four-color printing system, such as a ScotchprintTM Model 9510, 9512, or 2000 electrostatic printer commercially available from 3M.
  • a ScotchprintTM Model 9510, 9512, or 2000 electrostatic printer commercially available from 3M.
  • any number of color toning stations in a printer can benefit from the present invention, especially such as a ScotchprintTM 2000 electrostatic printer that has an optional fifth toning station.
  • Toner module 20 comprises 5 storage containers 21, 23, 25, 27, and 29 for the 12
  • diluent 30 is stored in container 30.
  • the storage containers can be of any volume, but typically can be about 5 liters in volume to minimize the number of bottle changes required during printing.
  • Metering pumps 31, 33, 35, 37, and 39 are associated with each toner storage container, respectively.
  • a metering pump for addition of diluent from container 30 is provided for each of the toners, respectively, 30A, 30B, 30C, 30D, 30E.
  • These pumps 31-39 control the rate of flowstream C for concentrates
  • pumps 30A-30E control the rate of flowstream D for diluent, as needed.
  • Conventional liquid toner gathering equipment and tubing returns unused liquid toner to each mixing vessel 61 - 69, respectively.
  • each color liquid toner can enter tubing connected to pumps 91, 93, 95, 97, and 99, respectively, which are in turn connected to a common waste vessel 100.
  • These pumps 91 -99 control the rate of waste flowstream W to common waste vessel 100 for disposal.
  • a separate waste vessel can exist for each color and permit further processing, if possible, of the waste flowstream W for each color.
  • control valves can be used in place of pump assemblies for the diluent.
  • diluent and concentrate at other locations in the feedstream including at vessel 10 as seen in Fig. 1 or in vessels 61-69, respectively, in Fig. 2.
  • Example 1 Part A (Closed System) ScotchprintTM Electrostatic black liquid toner having 2% toner solids and 98% diluent was used. Liquid toner usage rate, P, and mass fraction solids, x, were determined for a ScotchprintTM 2000 electrostatic printer, printing at 3.05 m/min with 13
  • the toner solids concentration was measured at the beginning of the test (using freshly mixed toner) and again at the end of the test— when the density of the image fell below an acceptable value. Using mass balance calculations, the mass fraction of solids removed, x, was determined to be 0.33.
  • Example 2 (comparative') The Open System test in Example 1, Part B was repeated, except that concentrate, C was added at a somewhat lower rate of 27 g/min. All other controlled variables were held constant. A solid black image was printed for 250 square meters and the test was stopped because the image density had dropped from 1.48 to 1.28, an unacceptable level. Percent solids of the working strength was 1.0% and the observed waste flow rate was 18 g/min. (see Table 2 below). The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 1080 g, or approximately 4.3 g/m 2 .
  • Example 1 An Open System test was performed substantially as in Example 1, Part B, using magenta concentrate with a conductivity of 14 pMho/cm (measured al 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was added at a rate of 36 g/min. A solid magenta image was printed, for 837 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed.
  • Example 3 was repeated using a higher concentrate add rate. Concentrate with a conductivity of 14 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was added at a rate of 49 g/min. A solid magenta image was printed, for 335 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed. At the end of the test, color density of the image had varied by only 0.06 density units, from 1.37 to 1.42, a small but acceptable increase.
  • Example 2 An Open System test was performed as in Example 1. Concentrate with a conductivity of 233 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was added in a test of the present invention at a rate of 21.6 g/min. A solid yellow image was printed, for 1000 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed.
  • Example 5 was repeated except that the concentrate add rate was increased to compensate for the low conductivity of the working strength toner at the end of the test in example 5.
  • concentrate with a conductivity of 217 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was added at a rate of 23.3 g/min.
  • a solid yellow image was printed, for 1172 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed.
  • solid cyan image was printed, for 1000 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Color Electrophotography (AREA)
  • Wet Developing In Electrophotography (AREA)
  • Liquid Developers In Electrophotography (AREA)
  • Management, Administration, Business Operations System, And Electronic Commerce (AREA)

Abstract

A system and method for substantially maintaining color density in liquid toners for an electrophotographic printer substantially continuously supply toner concentrate to liquid toner in a working strength vessel associated with a toner station in the printer, and substantially continuously withdraw liquid toner from the working strength vessel into a waste flowstream. The acts of supplying and withdrawing may operate according to the equations: C = P + W, Cyi = Px + Wyo where C is the flowstream of concentrate to the working strength vessel, P is the flowstream of the liquid toner from the working strength vessel to a toning station in the printer, and W is the flowstream from the working strength vessel to waste; where x is the mass fraction of toner solids in flowstream P to the working strength liquid toner, and where yi and yo represent the mass fraction of toner solids in the flowstreams C and W, respectively, of toner concentrate and waste, respectively.

Description

A. CLASSIFICATION OF SUBJECT MATTER
IPC 6 G03G15/01 G03G15/10
According to International Patent Classification (IPC) or to both national classification and IPC
B. FIELDS SEARCHED
Minimum documentation searched (classification system followed by classification symbols)
IPC 6 G03G
Documentation searched other than minimumdocumentation to the extent that such documents are included in the fields searched
Electronic data base consulted during the international search (name of data base and, where practical search terms used)
Figure imgf000003_0001
Figure imgf000003_0002
Form PCT7IS V210 (second sheet) (July 1992) C(Continuation) DOCUMENTS CONSIDERED TO BE RELEVANT
Category ° Citation of document, with indication.where appropriate, of the relevant passages Relevant to claim No
WO 8705128 A (SAVIN CORP) 27 August 1987 see fi gure 1
& US 4860924 A ci ted i n the appl i cati on
Form PCT/ISA210 (continuation of second sheet) (July 1992) Patent document Publication Patent family Publication cited in search report date member(s) date
US 5530529 A 25-06-1996 JP 8254902 A 01-10-1996
WO 9626469 A 29-08-1996 AU _ 4848496 A 11-09-1996
US 3949703 A 13-04-1976 NONE
US 5155528 A 13-10-1992 JP 4240882 A 28-08-1992 JP 4070687 A 05-03-1992
WO 8705128 27-08-1987 AU 7083687 09-09- 1987 CA 1281763 19-03- 1991 DE 3788833 D 03-03- 1994 DE 3788833 T 11-05- 1994 DK 534487 A 09-12- 1987 EP 0259448 A 16-03- 1988 HK 179395 A 01-12- 1995 P 8030921 B 27-03- 1996 JP 63502855 T 20-10- 1988 KR 9511878 B 11-10- 1995 US 4860924 A 29-08- 1989
Form PCT/ISA210 (patent family annex) (July 1992) Color Control System for Electrographic Printer
Field of Invention
This invention relates to apparatus and methods for controlling the color density of a printed image in electrographic printing processes using liquid toners. Background of Invention
A liquid electrographic imaging system includes an imaging substrate onto which a developer liquid is delivered to develop a latent image. The imaging substrate may be a permanent image receptor or, alternatively, a temporary image receptor, and may take the form of a drum, belt, or sheet. A liquid electrographic imaging system may be an electrostatic system having a dielectric material as the imaging substrate, or may take the form of an electrophotographic system having a photoreceptor as the imaging substrate. In an electrostatic system that makes use of a dielectric material, the latent image can be formed by selectively charging the dielectric substrate with an electrostatic stylus. In an electrophotographic system, the photoreceptor includes a photoconductive material that is uniformly charged, for example, with a corona charging device. Λ latent image can be formed on the photoreceptor by selectively discharging the photoreceptor with a pattern of electromagnetic radiation.
A multi-color imaging system may include several imaging stations that form a plurality of latent images on the imaging substrate. Bach of the latent images in a multi-color imaging system is representative of one of a plurality of color separation images for an original multi-color image to be reproduced. Λs a latent image is formed, a development station applies developer liquid to the imaging substrate to develop the latent image.
The developer liquid includes a carrier liquid and developer particles which may include charge director and a colorant, such as a dye or a pigment. In a multi-color imaging system, each of a plurality of development stations applies an appropriately colored developer liquid to the imaging substrate to form an intermediate representation of the corresponding color separation image. Λ drying station dries the developer liquid applied by the development station or stations, leaving a film of developer material. The transfer station then transfers the developer material from the imaging substrate to an output substrate, such as a sheet of paper, fabric, plastic, or film, to form a visible 2
imaging substrate may serve as the output substrate, such that transfer is not necessary.
A development station generally includes a development device such as, for example, a development roller or belt. The operation of a development roller will be described for purposes of example. The development roller is rotated by a drive mechanism and charged with a bias potential that contributes to an electric field between the roller and the imaging substrate. The rotating, charged development roller delivers developer liquid to the surface of an imaging region of the imaging substrate to develop the latent image. The development roller typically is positioned a short distance from the surface of the substrate, enabling a thin layer of developer liquid to be delivered across the resulting gap. In a multi-color imaging system, the development process is repeated with each of a plurality of development rollers applying differently colored developer liquids to the imaging substrate to develop different color separation images.
Consistency in color density in electrographic printing, whether of the electrostatic or electrophotographic type, is important for minimizing plot to plot variability. Several variables influence the color density in electrographic printing, with the formulation of liquid toner being most important.
Conventional liquid toner comprises pigmented resin particles, isoparaffinic hydrocarbon carrier liquid (such as Isopar™), and charge control agent to affect electrical properties. Although pigment, resin, and charge control agent will each be present in the liquid toner, proper toning of the latent image occurs only when the toner particle is composed of all three components.
Only an effective range of toner formulation of appropriately charged, pigmented resin particles in liquid toner is considered a "viable" toner. A decrease in color density outside an acceptable range (also known as "depletion") commonly occurs when either: (a) the concentration of viable toner solids becomes too low; or (b) the conductivity of the working strength toner dispersion becomes too high.
The mechanism for weak image development caused by working strength conductivity is not well understood. For example, U. S. Pat. No. 5,278,615 (Landa) suggests that the conductivity of the toner becomes high enough that the charge on the imaging substrate is satisfied by "electrical leakage." U. S. Pat. No. 5,442,427 (Day) suggests that free floating charge control agent and charged, unpigmented resin 3
particles compete with viable particles for charged sites on the imaging substrate, resulting in a lower image density. In addition, Day also suggests that, as the conductivity of the toner becomes higher, the viable solids become charged to a higher degree, and fewer of them are needed to satisfy the charge on the imaging substrate, resulting in lower image density.
Common replenishment schemes add toner concentrate (typically about 12-15% total solids) to the working strength toner (typically about 2-3% total solids), usually monitored by a feedback mechanism such as optical transmissivity.
Toner concentrate can be formulated with the proper relative concentrations of pigment, resin and charge control agent, but non-viable toner solids are always present in commercial toners.
During electrographic printing, viable toner solids are carried onto the imaging substrate at a much higher rate than non-viable toner solids. Therefore, non-viable toner solids, comprising free charge control agent and charged, unpigmented resin particles, eventually build up to unacceptable levels, causing depletion as described above. At this point the toner is considered unreplenishable, and the entire fluid volume of the liquid toner must be discarded.
Increasing the applied voltage during electrographic imaging can increase image density, but can compensate for depleted toner only to a limited extent. Current replenishment schemes ultimately lead to depletion of the toner by either of the two methods discussed above, and a decrease in color density. Because a drop in color density can result in "cover over" by the next printed color, depletion is often accompanied by hue shift, compounding the problems caused by non-viable toner.
Several patents discuss liquid toner replenishment schemes for electrostatic or electrophotographic printing systems. U.S. Pat. No. 5,319,421 (West) and U.S. Pat. No.
4,222,497 (Lloyd et al.) teach replenishment of toner solids by measuring optical transmissivity of the liquid toner as it passes between two clear windows and relating this measurement to proper toner concentration. Toner concentrate is then added to the working strength toner based on these optical measurements. U.S. Pat. No. 4,860,924 (Simms et al.) teaches the replenishment of toner based on measurement of working strength toner optical transmissivity and conductivity. Toner concentrate and charge control agent are added separately, and it is asserted that 4
this method prevents the eventual depletion of the toner with repeated replenishment events. Also use of agitation to keep the toner concentrate from settling and the use of a motor-driven stirrer are disclosed.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,369,476 (Bowers et al.) teaches replenishment of toner based on measurement of the image quality. Also, the use of agitation to keep the toner concentrate from settling and the use of a recirculation pump are disclosed.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,155,001 (Landa et al.) teaches the use of a charge control agent that maintains proper concentration in the liquid toner by maintaining a solid-liquid phase equilibrium. A build up of charge agent with repeated replenishment events is avoided.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,442,427 (Day) teaches the use of agitation of toner concentrate which allows the use of concentrate with a lower concentration of charge control agent in the liquid toner formulation. The agitation keeps the concentrate suspended, and the decreased amount of charge control agent allows more replenishment events before the toner must be discarded because of high conductivity. Day and U.S. Pat. No. 5,404,210
(also Day) both disclose a means of recirculating toner through a purification apparatus that removes ionic contaminants from the toner. The purified toner is then added back to the system.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,623,715 (Clark) teaches (A) the use of continuous circulation of toner concentrate, in order to keep the particles from settling and allowing more precise addition of toner solids to the premix; (B) the use of a combination of a piston pump and check valves to precisely add toner concentrate; and (C) a calibration procedure for (B) whereby an analytical balance is used to weigh both imaged and non-imaged paper to determine the amount of toner solids applied to the paper, and calculate the concentrate replacement rate.
Several patents teach various mechanical means of removing depleted liquid toner from the development area in electrophotography. U.S. Pat. No. 3,803,025 and U.S. Pat. No. 3,913,524 (both Fukushima et al.) discuss passing a developed image and its adjacent layer of depleted toner through nip rolls in order to squeeze away the depleted toner. U.S. Pat. No. 4,623,241 (Buchan et al.) describes a slotted surface for removal of depleted toner from the development area. British Printed Specification 2179274-A (Spence-Bate) describes an apparatus that, combined with metering pumps, 5
delivers a thin layer of liquid toner to the latent image in the exact amount used, so that excess toner need not be recirculated. In another embodiment, Spence-Bate also describes an alternative mode whereby excess toner can be drained away, and recirculated. Therefore, depleted toner that is not carried out with the image returns to the working strength toner reservoir, and it is not removed from the system.
These methods of eliminating depleted toner from the image surface and replacing it with fresh toner are essentially analogous to the toner applicator rollers used in multi-pass and single-pass electrostatic printers, such as those marketed by Raster Graphics of Sunnyvale, CA, the ColorgrafX division of Xerox Corporation of San Jose, CA, 3M Company of St. Paul, MN, and N S Calcomp Corporation of Tokyo,
Japan. Depleted toner is removed from the image surface, but is then mixed with the bulk of the working strength toner.
Several patents teach removal of liquid toner from electrographic printers in batchwise fashion. U.S. Pat. No. 5,396,316 (Smith) and U.S. Pat. No. 5,083,165 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,208,637 (both Landa) describe means of automating the step of discarding the depleted toner, by dispensing toner concentrate from a container or cartridge and removing excess depleted toner into the same container or cartridge. Summary of Invention
Whatever the exact mechanism that is involved in poor color density, it is clear that a build up of "non-viable" toner solids and conductivity in electrographic liquid toners is to be avoided. This invention describes a change in the way replenishment is performed so that toner properties in the liquid toner are maintained at an acceptable and constant level. A benefit of the present invention is the ability to provide acceptable color densities for each of the four primary printing colors: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black ("CMYK" respectively), particularly for long print runs, as well as for process colors.
The present invention concerns maintenance of viable toner in electrographic toners during printing, by maintaining working strength solids and conductivity within ranges found to provide an acceptable range of color density as measured using a densitometer or colorimeter.
The present invention differs from the teachings of the Day patents in that liquid toner need not be purified and reused. The present invention permits higher steady 6
state concentrations of toner solids and charge control agents than disclosed by Day, whereby the present invention can use commercially available toners, without modification, and without constant agitation of the toner concentrate.
The present invention also solves a problem of build up of all contaminants in liquid toners, not just ionic species of non- viable toner solids.
This invention concerns a means to achieve substantially consistent printed color density by adding concentrate and, optionally, diluent to working strength toner substantially continuously and by removing a portion of the working strength toner substantially continuously in order to prevent build up of conductivity and non- viable toner solids in the liquid toner.
This invention also concerns a system for substantially maintaining color density in liquid toners for electrographic printers, comprising means for substantially continuously supplying toner concentrate and, optionally, diluent to a printer and means for substantially continuously withdrawing liquid toner from a printer into a waste flowstream.
None of the patents concerning liquid toner removal describes operating removal procedures substantially continuously.
A feature of the present invention is the ability to control color density of a toner by maintaining viable toner solids throughout usage of the liquid toner. An advantage of the present invention is the efficiency and assurance of controlled color density of each liquid toner color, in order that longer duration printer usage and larger volume toner usage provide increased printer productivity.
Another advantage of the present invention is the use of a waste removal rate that maximizes toner performance and minimizes toner waste. Thus, predetermined toner removal can produce less waste than waste created by batchwise replenishment schemes.
In one embodiment, the present invention provides a system for substantially maintaining color density in liquid toners for an electrophotographic printer, the system comprising means for substantially continuously supplying toner concentrate to liquid toner in a working strength vessel associated with a toning station in the printer, and means for substantially continuously withdrawing liquid toner from the working strength vessel into a waste flowstream. 7
In another embodiment, the present invention provides a method to achieve substantially consistent color density of liquid toner in an electrophotographic printing system, the method comprising supplying toner concentrate to liquid toner in a working strength vessel substantially continuously, and withdrawing a portion of the liquid toner from the working strength vessel substantially continuously.
Brief Description of Drawings
Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of flow of liquid toner through a printer according to the present invention.
Fig. 2 is a diagrammatic representation of flow of liquid toners of several colors through a printer according to the present invention.
Embodiments of Invention
Fig. 1 is a diagram of one embodiment of the present invention, showing the flow of liquid toner from concentrate in flowstream C into a vessel 10 which contains an appropriate formulation of liquid toner, comprising toner solids (typically itself composed of pigment, binder, and charging agent), and isoparaffinic solvents.
In vessel 10, the appropriate "working strength" formulation of liquid toner can range from about 0.5 to about 10 weight percent toner solids, and from about 90 to about 99.5 weight percent solvent.
Commercially available toner concentrates of toner solids and charging agents are suitable for use in accordance with the present invention. Nonlimiting examples of suppliers of liquid toners for electrographic printers include: Scotchprint™ Electrostatic Toners (3M, St. Paul, MN); Raster Graphics Digital Inks (Raster Graphics, Sunnyvale, CA); Versatec Premium Color toners, ColorGrafX HiBrite toners and ColorGrafX Turbo inks (all sold by Xerox, San Jose, CA or Rochester, NY); and STC Weather Durable, STC High Saturation, and STC High Speed toners, all manufactured by
Specialty Toner Corp of Fairfield, NJ. Likewise, commercially available hydrocarbon solvents are suitable for use in accordance with the present invention. Nonlimiting examples of hydrocarbon solvents include isoparaffinic solvents such as Isopar™ G, Isopar L, Isopar M and Isopar C; and normal paraffins such as Norpar™ 12, all commercially available from Exxon Chemical Co. of Houston, TX; and mineral spirits, commercially available from, for example, Ashland Chemical Inc., of Columbus OH. Commercially available toners can therefore be used without modification and 8
without eventual depletion.
Desirably, the working strength of liquid toner can range from about 0.5 to about 10 weight percent toner solids (the balance being diluent).
Preferably, the working strength of liquid toner can range from about 1 to about 8 weight percent toner solids.
Vessel 10 has two entrance routes, 12, for toner concentrate, C, and 14 for optional diluent, D; and two exits for the liquid toner operating within working strength formulations. Exit 16 is a route in a flowstream, P, to a toning station for a printer and onto output media such as paper, plastic, fabric, or film (from a drum, belt, or other toning station not shown). Exit 18 is to a route, W, to a waste container. The waste flowstream W may be directly from the working strength vessel. Alternatively, waste can be withdrawn, in effect, by removing waste liquid toner from the toner station, thereby preventing recovery of the waste liquid toner by the working strength vessel.
At steady state, percent solids and conductivity of the liquid toner in vessel 10 is substantially consistent during printer operation based on a substantially continuous flow of liquid toner in flowstream P and a substantially continuous flow of liquid toner in flowstream W. During non-steady state operation, percent solids and conductivity of the liquid toner in vessel 10 may change, especially if the conductivity of the toner concentrate C, differs from that of the toner in vessel 10 when measured at the same percent solids.
The mass balance equations I and II describe one embodiment of maintaining substantially consistent working strength in vessel 10:
total mass: C = P+W (I) total solids: C v; = Px + W y0 (II)
where C is the flowstream of concentrate, P is the flowstream to printing via the toner station, and W is the flowstream to waste; where x is the mass fraction of toner solids in flowstream P to the toner station, and where y; and y0 represent the mass fraction of toner solids in the flowstreams C and W, respectively, of toner concentrate and waste, respectively.
Alternatively, the invention allows for the addition of diluent, if needed, which 9
can be described by the mass balance equations III and IV:
total mass: C + D = P + W (III) total solids : Cyf + Dyd = Px + Wy0 (IV)
where C is the flowstream of concentrate, D is the flowstream of diluent to the working strength vessel, P is the flowstream to printing via the toner station, and W is the flowstream to waste; where x is the mass fraction of toner solids in flowstream P to the toner station, and where y_ , y0, and yd represent the mass fraction of toner solids in the flowstreams C, W, and D respectively, of toner concentrate, waste and diluent, if any, respectively.
It should be noted that with no diluent, D, Equations III and IV devolve to Equations I and II, respectively, and, typically, no solids are present in diluent D.
It is evident from the mass balance equations (I-IV) above that concentrate C (and diluent D, if applicable) must be delivered at such a rate and with high enough solids fraction, yif so as to satisfy the need for the flow stream P and in particular the mass fraction of solids, x, being delivered to the printed graphic.
It is an important aspect of this invention that the rates C and D are maintained high enough so that W is a positive value, i.e., that the flowstreams C and D more than satisfy P (and x). It will be evident upon review of the examples below that the rate P and solids fraction x (and therefore the controllable rates C, D and W) are affected by the printer, the graphic being printed, the speed of printing, the toner chemistry (and in particular the toner color), and the conductivity of the working strength liquid. The mass fraction of solids in the concentrate y{ and conductivity of the concentrate also necessarily affect the rate P.
Once total solids levels have reached a steady state level of working strength in vessel 10, color density will approach stability and remain within an acceptable range.
Acceptable color density ranges can vary from color to color, vary from toner to toner formulation, vary from printer to printer, and vary from media to media (receptor or output) being toned. Variation can be adjusted using print voltages to bring each color into the density range. However, the present invention provides a system to maintain control of color density values for each of the colors. 10
For example, for 3M Scotchprint™ Electrostatic Toners for 3M Scotchprint™ Electronic Imaging Media 8610 and for 3M Scotchprint™ Electronic Transfer Media 8601 et seq. (at 50-55% R.H. and 21 °C on a Scotchprint™ brand electrostatic printer), each of the primary printing colors has a minimum, target, and maximum color density value as follows in Table 1 :
TABLE 1
COLOR MINIMUM TARGET MAXIMUM
Black 1.35 1.45 1.50
Yellow 0.85 0.95 1.05
Cyan 1.25 1.35 1.40
Magenta 1.30 1.40 1.45
It is important for optimal printing to adjust three colors to reflect a variation of a fourth color from the target color density. For example, if yellow density is established at 0.99, then the other colors should also be adjusted to be 0.04 above their respective target density value.
Normally in the prior art methods, as toner is used, color density will decrease. Increasing print voltage will compensate for this loss up to the limits of the maximum available voltage or until spurious writing becomes unacceptable. Conventionally, to maintain color balance, each of the other colors must also be adjusted, making it quite difficult to maintain established color densities over any significant duration of electrography. Unexpectedly, use of the present invention can provide minimal variance from those established and adjusted color density values during electrography by maintaining the flowstream C (and optionally flowstream of diluent D) at such a rate so as to insure that flowstream W is positive.
The amounts of concentrated toner delivered in flowstream, C, is controlled by the print controller which can count the data assigned to each color. The amount of toner removed by printing flowstream, P, can be determined according to the ranges shown in Equation I-II or III-IV above, established through experimentation for various 11
images and printers. One skilled in the art can modify the ranges according to the particular needs of other printers now or hereafter developed.
For commercially available electrostatic printers, such as a Scotchprint™ Model 2000 Electrostatic Printer from Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company of St. Paul, MN ("3M"), the present invention can provide unexpectedly superior consistent color densities within acceptable ranges that are substantially unvarying from established color densities relative to targets.
The amount of liquid toner removed to flowstream W can be a fixed ratio of the amount of toner concentrate added to flowstream C. Alternatively, W can be allowed to vary to account for changes in P and x that may result from changes in working strength conductivity or in the media type being printed. Either way, a substantially consistent level of charge, toner solids, and liquid toner in the electrographic printing system is maintained, thus assuring substantially consistent color density for each toner color in the printing system to which the present invention is applied. In one embodiment of the invention, controlled flow rates are: C, determined for a particular concentrate (color, % solids, and conductivity) and flow rate D, determined by the particular graphic, D being highest for lightly toned images; and W is allowed to vary according to changes in P as described above. In an alternative embodiment, for simplicity, the flow rate D can be maintained at a constant level. Flow rates C (and D) can be shown to affect color density (see examples). Too high a rate of C results in overconcentration of the working strength toner (high percent solids and high conductivity), resulting in low color density of the image. Too low a rate of C or too high a rate of D results in underconcentration of the working strength toner (low percent solids and low color density of the image). The use of concentrate that has a lower conductivity than the working strength toner can be used to allow for some amount of overconcentration.
Fig. 2 shows the present invention applied to a four-color printing system, such as a Scotchprint™ Model 9510, 9512, or 2000 electrostatic printer commercially available from 3M. However, any number of color toning stations in a printer can benefit from the present invention, especially such as a Scotchprint™ 2000 electrostatic printer that has an optional fifth toning station.
Toner module 20 comprises 5 storage containers 21, 23, 25, 27, and 29 for the 12
four colors of black, yellow, cyan, and magenta in solids content of about 12% and optional fifth station toner, respectively. Further, diluent 30 is stored in container 30. The storage containers can be of any volume, but typically can be about 5 liters in volume to minimize the number of bottle changes required during printing. Metering pumps 31, 33, 35, 37, and 39 are associated with each toner storage container, respectively. A metering pump for addition of diluent from container 30 is provided for each of the toners, respectively, 30A, 30B, 30C, 30D, 30E. These pumps 31-39 control the rate of flowstream C for concentrates, and pumps 30A-30E control the rate of flowstream D for diluent, as needed. Concentrate vessels 41, 43, 45, 47, and 49 with associated pumps 51, 53, 55, 57, and 59, respectively, exist in the printer and provide concentrate when toner module 20 is not in use. Mixing vessels 61, 63, 65, 67, and 69, respectively, accumulate the toner concentrates for each color and diluent which are then pumped using conventional toner pumps 71, 73, 75, 77, and 79, respectively, to conventional developing apparatus such as a drum, belt, or other toning station (shown here as 81, 83, 85, 87, and 89, respectively). Conventional liquid toner gathering equipment and tubing, returns unused liquid toner to each mixing vessel 61 - 69, respectively.
Instead of returning to each accumulator for recovery (mixing vessels 61, 63, 65, 67), each color liquid toner can enter tubing connected to pumps 91, 93, 95, 97, and 99, respectively, which are in turn connected to a common waste vessel 100. These pumps 91 -99 control the rate of waste flowstream W to common waste vessel 100 for disposal. In the alternative, a separate waste vessel can exist for each color and permit further processing, if possible, of the waste flowstream W for each color.
Other flow diagrams are possible within the scope of the present invention. For example, control valves can be used in place of pump assemblies for the diluent.
Further, one could mix diluent and concentrate at other locations in the feedstream including at vessel 10 as seen in Fig. 1 or in vessels 61-69, respectively, in Fig. 2.
Further embodiments and variations are indicated in the following examples. Example 1— Part A (Closed System) Scotchprint™ Electrostatic black liquid toner having 2% toner solids and 98% diluent was used. Liquid toner usage rate, P, and mass fraction solids, x, were determined for a Scotchprint™ 2000 electrostatic printer, printing at 3.05 m/min with 13
the standard toner concentrate add system disabled for a solid black image. Media for all examples was Scotchprint™ Electrostatic Imaging Paper 8610. No concentrate was added and no toner was removed during this part of the experiment. Therefore, the only toner removed was by printing. Flowstream P's rate was about 9 g/min. and was calculated simply by weighing the bottle of working strength liquid toner before and after the test and dividing by the run time.
The toner solids concentration was measured at the beginning of the test (using freshly mixed toner) and again at the end of the test— when the density of the image fell below an acceptable value. Using mass balance calculations, the mass fraction of solids removed, x, was determined to be 0.33.
Equations I and II were applied (because no diluent was used), using the above values for P and x and the following values: (12% concentrate), and yo=0.022 (maintaining the solids slightly elevated above the initial 2% solids level),
The equations I and II were solved simultaneously for C and W to obtain C = 28.3 g/min and W = 19.3 g/min. Example 1- Part B (Open System
The values of C and W obtained from the Closed System Part A above were then used to confirm the utility of the present invention. In this open system test, concentrate with a conductivity of 120 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids and using a Scientifica Model 627 conductivity meter from Scientifica Instruments of Princeton, NJ, USA) and 12% solids concentration was used.
A solid black image was printed, for about 1000 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed. At the end of the test, color density of the image had dropped by only 0.04 density units, from 1.48 to 1.44, a very small drop considering the area of image printed (see Table 2 below). Observed flow rates and final concentrations varied only slightly from the values of the Closed System Part A of Example 1.
For example, concentrate, C, was added at 28.5 g/min instead of 28.3 g/min, percent solids of the working strength were 2.3%, not 2.2%, waste stream, W was 21 14
g/min not 19.3 g/min, and the observed rate for P was 8 not 9 g/min. The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 5040 g, or approximately 5 g/m2 of graphic area printed.
Example 2 (comparative') The Open System test in Example 1, Part B was repeated, except that concentrate, C was added at a somewhat lower rate of 27 g/min. All other controlled variables were held constant. A solid black image was printed for 250 square meters and the test was stopped because the image density had dropped from 1.48 to 1.28, an unacceptable level. Percent solids of the working strength was 1.0% and the observed waste flow rate was 18 g/min. (see Table 2 below). The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 1080 g, or approximately 4.3 g/m2. Example 3
A Closed System test was performed as in Part A of Example 1, only using magenta toner and a solid magenta image. Values for P and x were determined experimentally to be 13 and 0.3, respectively. Solving equations I and II simultaneously for C and W yielded 36.9 and 23.9 g/min, respectively.
An Open System test was performed substantially as in Example 1, Part B, using magenta concentrate with a conductivity of 14 pMho/cm (measured al 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was added at a rate of 36 g/min. A solid magenta image was printed, for 837 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed.
At the end of the test, color density of the image had varied by 0.07 density units, from 1.30 to 1.37, a small but acceptable increase. Observed flow rates and final concentrations varied somewhat from the values calculated in the closed system test: percent solids of the working strength were 3.4%, not 2.2%, waste stream, W, was 25 g/min not 24 g/min, and the observed rate for P was 11 not 13 g/min. The higher percentage of solids in the working strength toner at the end of the test may reflect a lower amount of viable toner solids in the magenta toner here compared to the black toner used in Example 1 . The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 5000 g, or approximately 6 g/m2. Example 4 15
Example 3 was repeated using a higher concentrate add rate. Concentrate with a conductivity of 14 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was added at a rate of 49 g/min. A solid magenta image was printed, for 335 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed. At the end of the test, color density of the image had varied by only 0.06 density units, from 1.37 to 1.42, a small but acceptable increase.
As can be expected from increasing the concentrate add rate, observed flow rates and final concentrations varied somewhat from the values calculated in the Closed System test: percent solids of the working strength increased to 3.5%, waste stream, W, increased to 31 g/min, and the observed rate for P was 11 not 13 g/min. The higher percent solids in the working strength toner at the end of the test again may reflect a lower amount of viable toner solids in the toner compared to Example 1. The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 2480 g, or approximately 7.4 g/m2. The increase in the waste/square meter shows that the flow rate was not optimal even though the present example resulted in acceptable values of color density. Example 5 (comparative)
A Closed System test was performed as in Example 1 , only using yellow toner and a solid yellow image. Values for P and x were determined experimentally to be 7 and 0.34, respectively. Solving equations I and II simultaneously for C and W yielded
22.7 and 15.7 g/min, respectively.
An Open System test was performed as in Example 1. Concentrate with a conductivity of 233 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was added in a test of the present invention at a rate of 21.6 g/min. A solid yellow image was printed, for 1000 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed.
At the end of the test, color density of the image had dropped by 0.13 density units, from 1.03 to 0.90, which was accompanied by cyan cover over. "Cyan cover over" means an inadequate charge satisfaction on the imaging substrate with compensation provided by the next color in the printer, in this case, cyan. The cyan toner bath fulfilled what the yellow toner was unable to fulfill. 16
Observed flow rates and final concentrations varied somewhat from the values calculated in the Closed System test: percent solids of the working strength were 3.1%, not 2.2%, waste stream, W, was 1 g/min not 15.7 g/min, and the observed rate for P was 6.6 not 7 g/min. The higher percentage of solids in the working strength toner at the end of the test may reflect a lower amount of viable toner solids in the yellow toner here compared with the black toner of Example 1. The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 3600 g, or approximately 3.6 g/m2. Example 6
Example 5 was repeated except that the concentrate add rate was increased to compensate for the low conductivity of the working strength toner at the end of the test in example 5. In an Open System test, concentrate with a conductivity of 217 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was added at a rate of 23.3 g/min. A solid yellow image was printed, for 1172 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed.
At the end of the test, color density of the image had dropped by only 0.04 density units, from 0.99 to 0.95, a truly excellent result considering the usage of almost 7 rolls of electrostatic paper of about 120 linear meters each, printing a constant color over the entire printing surface of the media. As could be expected from increasing the concentrate flow rate, percent solids of the working strength increased from Example 5 to 3.3%, and waste stream, W increased to 17.3 g/min. The observed rate for P was 6 not 7 g/min. The higher percentage of solids in the working strength toner at the end of the test again probably reflects a lower amount of viable toner solids in the toner compared to example 1 . The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 4844 g, or approximately 4.1 g/m2.
Example 7
A Closed System test was performed as in Example 1 , only using cyan toner and a solid cyan image. Values for P and x were determined experimentally to be 9 and 0.2, respectively. Solving equations I and II simultaneously for C and W yielded 16.3 and 7.3 g/min, respectively.
In an Open System test, concentrate with a conductivity of 96 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids) and 12% solids concentration was at a rate of 16.1 g/min. A 17
solid cyan image was printed, for 1000 square meters, while regularly monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed.
At the end of the test, color density of the image had decreased by only 0.08 density units, from 1.41 to 1.33, again atruly unexpected yield of consistent color density for a large area. Observed flow rates and final concentrations varied slightly from the values calculated in the Closed System test: percent solids of the working strength was 2.9%, not 2.2% and waste stream, W was 7.8 g/min not 7.3 g/min, and the observed rate for P was 8.3 not 9 g/min. The somewhat higher percentage of solids in the working strength toner at the end of the test may reflect a lower amount of viable toner solids in the cyan toner here compared with the black toner of Example 1. The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 1872 g, or approximately 1.9 g/m2. Example 8
This example demonstrates the use of the present invention on a printer other than used in the previous examples. In a Closed System test like Example 1 , liquid toner usage rate, P, and mass fraction solids, x, were determined for a Scotchprint™ 9512 electrostatic printer, printing at 0.76 m/min with standard Scotchprint™ Electrostatic magenta toner. The standard toner concentrate add system was disabled. As in the Example 1 , no concentrate was added and no toner was removed during this part of the experiment, except by printing. P and x were determined for a solid magenta image to be 1.6 g/min and 0.26 respectively. Equations I and II were applied (no diluent was used), using the above values for P and x and using the following values: y( = 0.1125, and
The above values were selected to account for a viable toner/total toner solids ratio of about 0.75 for concentrate having a concentration of 15% (.15 X .75 = .1125). The equations when solved predicted C and W on a viable toner solids basis, and did not predict what the total solids would be. The equations were solved simultaneously for C and W to obtain C = 3.9 g/min and W = 2.3. In an analogous Open System test like Example 1, concentrate with a conductivity of 80 pMho/cm (measured at 2% solids) and 15% solids concentration was used. A solid magenta image was printed, for 2100 square meters, while regularly

Claims

18
monitoring all flow rates, the working strength toner conductivity and percent solids, and the color density of the image being printed. At the end of the test, color density of the image had dropped by only 0.09 density units, from 1.45 to 1.36, a very small drop considering the area of image printed (see Table 2 below). In this test, flow rates C and W were controlled by metering pumps and held constant. Total solids concentration increased considerably, measured at the end of the test at 7.6%. Conductivity did not appreciably increase, however, perhaps indicating that most of the solids in the toner were non- viable (no analysis was performed, however). The total amount of waste accumulated for this test was 5040 g, or approximately 5 g/m2. To affirm the unexpectedness of the present invention, Examples 1-8 (Open
System) are summarized below.
Table 2 — Open System Summary Results
Figure imgf000024_0003
Figure imgf000024_0001
Figure imgf000024_0002
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DE69724155D1 (en) 2003-09-18
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US5832334A (en) 1998-11-03
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US5963758A (en) 1999-10-05
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BR9714664A (en) 2000-07-11
AU746128B2 (en) 2002-04-18

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