| Printing Process
And Inks > Page 1 |
| Printing
Process And Inks |
| Because
printing ink must be formulated to carry out specific jobs, we must
pay some attention to the printing processes for which the ink is
designed. This overview shows how the printing process and its typical
products affect the ink requirements.
There are five major methods of printing: LETTERPRESS,
LITHOGRAPHY, GRAVURE, FLEXOGRAPHY and SCREEN PRINTING.
Although lithography is now the most important general commercial
process, letterpress is considered first because it is the oldest
method. The basic processes for printing are listed in the accompanying
table together with few examples of methods. There are many other
specialty processes that are used in some applications, to some
extent. |
| The Printing Processes |
| Process |
Method |
Examples |
| Relief |
Printing from raised surface |
Letterpress, Flexography |
| Planographic |
Printing from flat surface |
Lithography |
| Intaglio |
Printing from recessed surface |
Rotogravure |
| Stencil |
Ink forced though a stencil |
Screen printing |
|
| Letterpress |
Letterpress
is one of the oldest printing processes. Long before Gutenberg developed
a system of movable type, man was using woodcut print to produce
graphic designs. The letterepress printing from has raised characters
and other image areas that, on modern presses, are inked by the
from rollers of the press. The form is then pressed against a substrate
such as paper or paperboard, or occasionally it may be trasferred
to a blanket for printing of folding cartons. |
| Flexography |
Flexography "flexo"
uses flexible rubber or plastic plates. Only two or three rollers
besides the plate cylinder are used, a fountain roller that picks
up the ink, an engraved (anilix) roller that meters the ink (sometimes
it also picks the inkup form the fountain) before it contacts the
place cylinder, and a backup roller, or impression cylinder. Reverse
doctor blades are being used on some of the newer presses to improve
the metering of the ink. The used of so few roller permits use of
a highly colatile ink that will dry quicky at the low temperatures
required for drying plastic films. Flexography si widely used for
printing flexible packaging, corrugated boxes, folding cartons,
paper bags, and narrow web labels. |
| Lithography |
Lithography printing
was first done from blocks of imestone. Lithography now prints primarily
from plates commanly made of alumimium, although plates for offset
dupilcators are made of specially treated paper. Zinc, steel, and
brass have also been used for making these plate. The nonimage area
of the plate has an affinity for water (that is, it is hydrophilic)
and, when wet, will not accept ink. The image area, on the other
hand, dows not accept water (it is hydrophobic) but is wetted by
ink, whick sticks to it. The nonimage area is usually aluminium
or chromium, the image area can be diazo, copper, brass, or photopolymer.
Sheetfed offset lithography is used in general commercial printing,
short-run books and other publications, folding cartons, labels,
and metal decorating. Wed offset lithography is used for longer-run
books, magazines, and catalogs, newspaper, and business forms. |
| Gravure |
Bank-notes, treasury
bonds and some postage stamps are printed by copper plate or steel
engraving, but most important of the intaglio processes is rotogravure
(rotary-press gravure). Copper plates for intaglio may be hand-engraved,
but steel plates are engraved from a hardened die. The plate is
filled with ink, excess ink is cleaned from the surface, and the
plate is pressed onto the paper to be printed. The process is cvapable
of extremely high-quality line work. In gravure printing, the cylinder
has a copper surface that is etched chemically or engraved mechanically
to form the image. The size and depth of each halftone dot can be
modified to give gravure the widesttonal range of all printing processes.
The cylinder rotates in the fountain, the excess ink is wiped from
the surface with a doctor blade made of metal or plastic. The cylinder
is then pressed against the substrate, and the ink the cells transfers
directly to the material. Products commonly printed by gravure are
long-run magazines, catalogs, labels, flexible packaging and specialties
like wallpaper and decorative panels. |
| Screen Printing |
Once called "silk
screen" because the screen were originally made of silk, the
name screen printing is now prefered because the mesh is usually
made of metal or plastic fabric. The screen can be coated with a
phoyopolymer material that can be made insoluble by exposure to
light through an imaged photographic film. After development, the
nonimage areas are hardened and the image area whashed away. The
ink is forced through the voids of the screen onto the substrate
with a squeegee. Poster printing is a major use of screen process,
but there are many other applications, such as clothing and other
textiles, decalcomanias, ring binders, instrument panels and sials,
preformed metal and plastic containers, and printing resists on
circuit boards. Screen printing is ideal for printing irregulary
shape objects. |
|
There are variations
within these five major printing processes. Printing maybe done
either directly onto the paper (or other subtrare) or by offsetting
from an intermediate surface, called a blanket. One of the major
characteristics affecting the printing process and the ink formulations
for them is the characteristic ink film thickness applied. Think
ink films requeire a higher level of pigmentation ( higher colour
strength ) than thick films. Thick ink films may contain filler
such as clay. In fact, it is often necessary to incorporate a filler
into a screen ink and often necessary in a letterpress ink to achieve
proper flow. Although printed ink film thickness aplied by any process
can vary greatly, the following numbers can be considered typical. |
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