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Title:
TWO-SIDED THERMAL PAPER
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2007/106160
Kind Code:
A9
Abstract:
Imaging elements for dual-sided direct thermal printing are described, generally comprising a substrate and a thermally sensitive coating on each side. Calendering is provided to produce a smoothness of 75 Bekk or greater on each side of the media product. A subcoat or base coat, e.g., of calcium carbonate or clay, may be provided on paper substrates to enhance smoothness of finish and the quality of thermal printing.

Inventors:
VANDEMARK MICHAEL (US)
MULLEN GERARD (US)
WEHR MARY ANN (US)
Application Number:
PCT/US2006/046745
Publication Date:
September 10, 2010
Filing Date:
December 07, 2006
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
NCR CORP (US)
VANDEMARK MICHAEL (US)
MULLEN GERARD (US)
WEHR MARY ANN (US)
International Classes:
B41J11/00; B41J2/325
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
MANEY, Charles, Q. (1700 S. Patterson Blvd.Dayton, OH, US)
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Claims:
What is claimed is:

[Claim 1 ] 1. An imaging eiement, for dual-sided direct thermal printing, comprising a substrate and a thermally sensitive coating on each side, calendered on each side and having a finished smoothness on each side of 75 Bekk or greater. [Claim 2] 2. The imaging element of claim 1 in which said thermally sensitive coating comprises a developer, a sensitizer and a dye and undergoes a color change upon transfer of heat.

[Claim 3] 3. The imaging element of claim 1 including a subcoat on one side of said substrate and wherein the composition of said substrate comprises paper. [Claim 41 4. The imaging element of claim 3 having a subcoat weight of about 1 -10 Ibs/33OOSFR. [Claim 5] 5. The imaging element of claim 4 having a subcoat weight of about 2-5

Ibs/33OOSFR.

[Claim 6] 6. The imaging element of claim 5 in which the thermally sensitive coating on said one side overlies said subcoat and has a weight of about 1 -3 lbs/3300SFR.

[Claim 7] 7. The imaging element of claim 3 including a subcoat on both sides of said substrate.

[Claim 8] 8. The imaging element of claim 3 including a subcoat on both sides of said substrate and a subcoat weight of about 2-5 lbs/3300SFR on each side of said substrate.

[Claim 9] 9. The imaging element of claim 8 in which the thermally sensitive coating on each side of said substrate overlies the subcoat on the respective substrate side and has a weight of about 1 -8 Ibs/33OOSFR,

[Claim 1 0] 10. The imaging element of claim 9 in which the thermally sensitive coating on each side of said substrate overlies the subcoat on the respective substrate side and has a weight of about 1 -3 lbs/330OSFR. [Claim 1 1 ] 11. The imaging element of claim 3 in which said subcoat is disposed beneath said thermally sensitive coating on said one side of said substrate, said one side of said substrate having a finished smoothness of 300 Bekk or greater.

[Claim 12] 12. The imaging element of claim 10 including a subcoat both sides of said substrate, disposed beneath said thermally sensitive coating on each side of said substrate, each side of said substrate having a finished smoothness of 300 Bekk or greater.

[Claim 1 3] 13. The imaging element of claim 1 in which the thermally sensitive coating has a different thermal sensitivity on each side of said substrate.

[Claim 1 4] 14. The imaging element of claim 1 in which the thermally sensitive coating has a different chemical composition on each side of said substrate.

[Claim 1 5] 15. The imaging element of claim 1 in which the thermally sensitive coating on one side of said substrate comprises a sensitizer.

[Claim 16116. The imaging element of claim 1 in which the thermally sensitive coating on one side of said substrate does not comprise a sensitizer.

[Claim 1 7] 17. The imaging element of claim 1 in which the thermally sensitive coating on each side of said substrate comprises a sensitizer.

[Claim 1 8] 18. The imaging element of claim 1 in which the thermally sensitive coating on each side of said substrate does not comprise a sensitizer.

[Claim 19] 19. The imaging element of claim 3 in which said subcoat comprises calcium carbonate and a binder on said one side of said substrate.

[Claim 20] 20. The imaging element of claim 6 in which said subcoat comprises calcium carbonate and a binder on each side of said substrate.

[Claim 21 ] 21. The imaging element of claim 3 in which said subcoat comprises clay and a binder on said one side of said substrate.

[Claim 22] 22. The imaging element of claim 7 in which said subcoat comprises clay and a binder on both sides of said substrate. [Claim 23] 23. The imaging element of claim 1 in which the thermally sensitive coating on at least one side of said substrate comprises a spot, strip or pattern coating.

[Claim 24] 24. The imaging element of claim 1 comprising repetitive sense marks on at least one side of said substrate.

[Claim 25] 25. The imaging element of claim 24 comprising repetitive sense marks both sides of said substrate.

[Claim 26] 26. The imaging element of claim 24 in which said sense marks have different repeat lengths on opposite sides of said substrate.

[Claim 27] 27. The imaging element of claim 1 including a topcoat overlying the thermally sensitive coating on one side of said substrate.

[Claim 28] 28. The imaging element of claim 25 including a topcoat overlying the thermally sensitive coating on both sides of said substrate.

[Claim 29] 29. The imaging element of claim 25 in which said topcoat comprises a spot, strip or pattern coating.

[Claim 30] 30. The imaging element of claim 1 comprising repetitive sense marks on at least one side of said substrate to register locations of said topcoat.

[Claim 31 ] 31. The imaging element of claim 1 comprising repeating lines of perforation.

[Claim 32] 32. The imaging element of claim 1 having one or more areas pre-printed by ink or other non-thermal printing on at least one side of said substrate.

[Claim 33] 33. The imaging element of claim 30 having a pre-printed area to which said thermally sensitive coating is applied, affecting the heat-change color of said coating.

[Claim 34] 34. The imaging element of claim 1 in which said substrate comprises a two ply substrate which is separable into two separate portions.

[Claim 35] 35. The imaging element of claim 1 having a thickness in the range of 1.8 to 70 mils, a weight in the range of 1 1 to 1 15 lbs/1300SFR and an opacity in excess of 80%. [Claim 36] 36. The imaging element of claim 1 having a thermally sensitive coating enabling a single color of printing on each side of said imaging element.

[Claim 37] 37. The imaging element of claim 36 having a thermally sensitive coating enabling a single color of printing on each side of said imaging element, where the enabled print colors are the same on each side of the imaging element.

[Claim 38] 38. The imaging element of claim 36 having a thermally sensitive coating enabling a single color of printing on each side of said imaging element, where the enabled print colors are different on each side of the imaging element.

[Claim 39] 39. The imaging element of 1 having multiple thermally sensitive dyes on at least one side of said imaging element enabling multiple colors of printing on said at least one side.

[Claim 40] 40. The imaging element of 39 having multiple thermally sensitive dyes on both sides of said imaging element enabling multiple colors of printing on each side.

[Claim 41 ] 41. The imaging element of claim 39 in which the multiple thermally sensitive dyes on at least one side of said substrate comprise a spot, strip or pattern coating.

[Claim 42] 42. The imaging element of claim 39 in which the multiple thermally sensitive dyes are within multiple layers on said at least one side of said substrate.

[Claim 43] 43. The imaging element of claim 39 in which the multiple thermally sensitive dyes are within a single coating layer on said at least one side of said substrate.

Description:
Two-Sided Thermal Paper DESCRIPTION

BACKGROUND

[Para 1] Duplex or dual-sided direct thermal printing of transaction documents or receipts

Is described in U.S. Patent Nos. 6,784,906 and 6,759,366. The printers are configured to allow printing on both sides of sheet media moving along a feed path through the printer.

In such printers a direct thermal print head is disposed on each side of the media feed path.

A thermal print head faces an opposing platen across the feed path from the print head.

[Para 2] . In direct thermal printing, a print head selectively applies heat to paper or other sheet media comprising a substrate with a thermally sensitive coating. The coating changes color when heat is transferred, by which "printing" is provided on the coated substrate. For dual-sided direct thermal printing, the sheet media substrate may be coated on both sides. [Para 3] Duplex or dual-sided direct thermal printing has been described for providing variable information on both sides of a paper receipt, to save materials and to provide flexibility in providing information to customers. The printing could be driven electronically or by computer using a computer application program which directs dual-sided printing. [Para 4] Given the general desirability of two-sided direct thermal printing for a variety of applications, qualified two-sided direct thermal imaging media or paper is needed.

SUMMARY

[Para 5] Imaging elements for dual-sided direct thermal printing are described, generally comprising a substrate and a thermally sensitive coating on each side. Calendering is provided to produce a smoothness of 75 Bekk or greater on each side of the media product. A subcoat or base coat, e.g., comprising calcium carbonate or clay, may be provided on paper substrates to enhance smoothness of finish and the quality of printing. [Para 6] Alternative features, advantages and variations of the invention will be illustrated by example by the description to follow and the appended drawings and claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[Para 7] Figure 1 shows a schematic of a dual-sided imaging direct thermal printer useable for dual-sided, single pass printing of media such as transaction receipts or tickets. [Para 8] Figure 2A shows a receipt with transaction detail printed on the front side. [Para 9] Figure 2B shows a receipt with supplemental information printed on the reverse side, such as variable stored information determined at the time of the transaction.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

[Para 10] By way of example, various embodiments of the invention are described in the material to follow with reference to the included drawings. Variations may be adopted. [Para 1 1] Background material applicable to direct thermal printing and related media production and common features generally is described in U.S. Patent No. 6,803,344, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.

[Para 12] Figure 1 shows a schematic of a dual-sided imaging direct thermal printer 10 useable for dual-sided, single pass printing of transaction receipts or tickets at time of issue. The printer 10 operates on print media 20 which is double-sided thermal paper, e.g., comprising a cellulose-based or polymer substrate sheet coated on each side with heat sensitive dyes as described in U.S. Patent Numbers 6,784,906 and 6,759,366. Multi-color printing capability can be provided on both sides of the receipt by using two or more dyes with sensitivity to different temperatures on a side where multi-color printing is desired. Substrates and heat sensitive color changing coatings for direct thermal printing media are generally well known in the art. Dual-sided direct thermal printing can be facilitated by a media 20 which Includes dyes sensitive to different temperatures on opposite sides of the media 20, or by use of thermally resistant substrates to inhibit thermal printing on one side of the media 20 from affecting the coloration on the opposite side of the media 20. [Para 131 As shown in Figure 1 , the printer 10 has rotating platens 30 and 40 and opposing thermal print heads 50 and 60 on opposite sides of the receipt or ticket media 20. Dual- sided direct thermal printing of the media 20 occurs in a single pass at the time of the transaction or when a receipt or ticket is issued. The media 20 can be cut or severed to provide an individual receipt or ticket document, typically once printing is completed. [Para 14] Figure 2A shows transaction detail 70 such as issuer identification, time, date, line item entries and a transaction total printed on the front side of a receipt 80. Figure 2B shows custom information 90, e.g., based on recipient identity or transaction detail ascertained at transaction time, printed on the reverse side of the receipt 80. For example, custom information 90 could include further or duplicate transaction information, a coupon as shown, rebate or contest information, serialized cartoons, conditions of sale, document images, advertisements, security features, ticket information, or other information, e.g., custom information based on recipient identity or transaction data or detail. [Para 15] Exemplary media 20 comprises an opaque substrate and a thermally sensitive coating on each side for general two-sided direct thermal printing applications. The substrate or base sheet can comprise those materials used in conventional direct thermal printing applications, including materials derived from synthetic or natural fibers such as cellulose (natural) fibers, e.g., opaque paper, and polyester (synthetic) fibers. Substrates may also include plastics, e.g., extruded plastic films using materials such as Kapton, polyethylene or polyester polymers. Calendering is provided to produce a smoothness of 75 Bekk or greater on each side of the media 20 to improve the thermal imaging. A subcoat or base coat, e.g., predominantly of calcium carbonate or clay, and binder material, e.g. a latex-based binder, may be provided on paper substrates to enhance smoothness of finish and the quality of direct thermal printing. Without a subcoat, a typical smoothness achieved by calendaring of base paper before applying thermally sensitive coatings would be in the range of 75 - 150 Bekk. With a subcoat and calendaring a finished smoothness of 250 Bekk or greater is typical. To give higher quality thermal imaging characteristics, e.g., for bar code printing, a minimum finished smoothness of 300 Bekk should be used. Where used, a subcoat weight of about 1 -10 Ibs/33OOSFR (square foot ream) per side for one or both sides, preferably 2-5 lbs/3300SFR per side for one or both sides, is generally typical. [Para 16] Calendering to provide smoothness of the sides of the media 20 can comprise, e.g., on-line or off-line soft or soft nip calendaring or supercalendering in one or more pass operations. Supercalendering, typically performed off-line from a paper production line, may be performed using a stack of alternating chilled cast iron and fiber-covered rolls. The fiber-covered rolls may for example be covered with highly compressed paper for processing Ï…ncoated papers, or with highly compressed cotton for processing papers with .coatings. In a soft calendar, a composite-covered crown roll can run against a heated metal roll, e.g., in an in-line process, to produce a desired sheet surface finish and gloss. To calendar both sides of the media 20 in one pass, two or more roll stacks may be used. [Para 17] Calendering of both sides of the media 20 for two-sided direct thermal printing has the benefit of providing the desired degree of smoothness to achieve a print quality required for a given application. The smoother the media 20 the less the print head wear will be, and concomitant abrasion of the media 20. A calendered subcoated surface of the media 20 also minimizes substrate interaction with thermally sensitive coating components. [Para 18] The thermally sensitive coatings are preferably of the dye-developing type particularly when used with opaque paper substrates for the media 20, e.g., for two-sided direct thermal printing applications. Such coatings would typically comprise a developer, an optional sensitizer and color former or dye, e.g., leuco-dye, and undergo a color change upon transfer of heat. Different thermally sensitive coatings, e.g., of the dye-developing type or the dye-sublimation type, can be used with, e.g., plastic substrate materials. The dye-developing type thermally sensitive coating, e.g., overlying the subcoat where used, would generally have a weight of about 1 -8 Ibs/33OOSFR, or preferably about 1 -3 lbs/33O0SFR. Without a subcoat, the weight of a thermally sensitive layer will typically be greater.

[Para 19] A subcoat can be used on one side or both sides and the degree of calendering or finished smoothness can be the same or different on each side of the media 20, according to considerations of cost and the requirements of particular applications involved. For example, a higher quality of printing may be required for one side such as where printing of a bar code may be required. Such an application would normally require use of a subcoat and. calendaring to a finished smoothness 300 Bekk or greater on the bar code print side of the media 20. The same finish or a less expensive finish might be used for the other side of the media 20. Similarly the character, chemical composition, thermal sensitivity and cost of the thermally sensitive coating could be the same or different on each of the two sides, e.g., a sensitizer may be used on one or both sides of the media 20 depending upon application. Different chemistries on the two sides of the media 20 can be employed to provide different environmental compatibilities or properties or other desired product characteristics. [Para 20]The subcoat where used could be the same on each side or have a different composition or weight on each side of the media 20, again depending upon cost and application considerations. For example, if there is to be any ink jet printing as well as direct thermal printing on one side a calcium carbonate subcoat may be preferred. [Para 21]The thermally sensitive coatings on each side of the media 20 can provide single color printing on each side of the media 20, where the. print colors are the same or different on each side of the media 20. Alternatively, multiple color direct thermal printing may be implemented on one side or both sides, using multiple thermally. sensitive coatings or multiple thermally sensitive layers within a coating, e.g., as taught in U.S. Patent No. 6,906,735, or using multiple dyes within a coating layer, where the available print color choices are the same or different on each side of the media 20.

[Para 22] In some applications it may be desirable to provide the thermally sensitive coating on one or both sides of the media 20 in the form of a spot, strip or pattern coating or to provide for a spot, strip or pattern of special or higher cost finish on one or both sides. For example, to provide for printing of a bar code at a particular location on the media 20 the requisite smoothness of finish and thermally sensitive coating could be limited to that location. Repetitive sense marks could be applied to one or both sides of the media 20 to allow the bar code printing location to be identified during the bar code printing process. For some applications the sense marks could have different repeat lengths on opposite sides of the media 20, e.g., to allow for different intended print sizes. [Para 23] For image protection and environmental durability, a top coat can be applied over the thermally sensitive coating on one or both sides of the media 20. Where used, the topcoat could comprise a spot, strip or pattern coating, e.g., for the added protection of a bar code. Repetitive sense marks could be applied to the media 20 to help identify the particular topcoat spot, strip or pattern locations.

[Para 24] To assist web severance or folding generally or in forms applications, repeating lines of perforation may be added to the media 20 In areas where separation or folding will be desired, e.g., to provide fan-folded multi-page documents printed on both sides. [Para 25] The media 20 may be provided with one or more areas pre-printed by ink, thermal printing or other non-thermal printing on at least one side of the media 20, e.g., for security features, pre-printing of standard terms or advertising, depending on application requirements. The pre-printing could also provide a colored background area affecting the color of a final image. For example, yellow ink over a red image thermal paper could be used to provide an orange final image color. [Para 26] For some applications the media 20 may be in the form of a two-ply web or comprise a two-ply substrate, e.g., for simultaneous printing of customer and merchant receipts and separable into the two separate receipt portions at a point of sale.

[Para 27] Generally the media 20 can preferably be expected to have a thickness in the range of 1.8 to 70 mils, a weight in the range of 1 1 to 1 15 lbs/1300SFR and an opacity in excess of 80%, depending upon the application or end-use requirements.

[Para 28] The foregoing description above presents a number of specific embodiments or examples of a broader invention. The invention is also carried out in a wide variety of other alternative ways which have not been described here. Many other embodiments or variations of the invention may also be carried out within the scope of the following claims.




 
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