|
The goal of
any inking system is to place a uniform layer of ink across
every dimension of the printing plate. The Lithographic
process is unique in that it requires the ink form rollers
to pass in contact with the nonimage areas of the plate
without transferring ink to them.
All lithographic
inking systems are made up of three main sections:
- Ink Fountain
and ball roller
- Ink Distribution
rollers
- Ink Form
rollers
The ink fountain
stores a quantity of ink in a reservoir and feeds small
quantities of ink to the rest of the inking system from
the fountain roller. The ink distribution rollers receive
ink and work it into a semiliquid state that is uniformly
delivered to the ink form rollers. A thin layer of ink
is then transferred to the image portions of the lithographic
plate by the ink form rollers.
The ink fountain
holds a pool of ink and controls the amount of ink that
enters the inking system. The most common type of fountain
consists of a metal blade that is held in place near the
fountain roller. The gap between the blade and the fountain
roller can be controlled by adjusting screw keys to vary
the amount of ink on the fountain roller. The printer
adjusts the keys in or out as the fountain roller turns
to obtain the desired quantity of ink. In simple presses,
the printer must turn these screws by hand. The modern
state of the art press today, the adjusting screws are
moved by "servo" motors which are controlled by the printer
at a press console. Thus the printer can make ink adjustments
electronically. If the printer needs to increase or decrease
ink in an area of the plate (print), he need only adjust
the needed keys to allow more or less ink flow through
the blade.
The ink distribution
rollers spread the ink out to a uniform layer before it
is placed on the plate. There are generally two types
of distribution rollers:
- Rotating
distribution rollers
- Oscillating
rollers
The rotating
distribution rollers rotate in one direction. The oscillating
rollers rotate and move from side to side. Ink is transferred
to the ink distribution rollers by a ductor roller. The
ductor is a movable roller that moves back and forth between
the ink fountain roller and an ink distribution roller.
As the ductor contacts the fountain roller, both turn
and the ductor is inked. The ductor then swings forward
to contact a distribution roller and transfers ink to
it. The rate of rotation of the ink fountain roller and
the gap between the fountain blade and roller control
the amount of ink added to the distribution system. Any
roller on a press that contacts the plate is known as
a form roller. An ink roller that touches the plate is
an ink form, a water roller that touches the plate is
a water form.
A simple indication
of the quality of a printing press is the number of distribution
and form rollers. The greater the number of distribution
rollers, the more accurate the control of ink uniformity.
It is difficult to ink large solid areas on a plate with
only one form roller. With three (generally the maximum),
it is relatively easy to maintain consistent ink coverage
of almost any image area on the plate. Business forms
presses, which print very little coverage, usually only
have one or two ink form rollers. Because of this, they
cannot print large solid or screen images. Smaller less
sophisticated presses also have the same problem, however,
many of the newer presses today are being equipped with
larger better inking systems to meet the growing print
demands of the consumer.
A whole battery
of tests are run on every ink batch produced.
Fineness
Of Grind
This is checked
with an instrument called a grindmeter which is basically
a wedge ground out of a stainless steel block. This wedge
is 1 or 2 thousands of one inch deep at the deep end and
graduates up to 0. An ink sample is placed in the trough
and drawn down with a steel doctor blade. The presence
of large particles will show up as scratches or specks
in the trough after the doctor blade has been drawn down.
Fineness of grind is critical for several reasons. First
of all in order to gain the maximum efficiency from a
pigment, the most expensive ingredient, it is essential
that it be thoroughly dispersed. Secondly, a coarse grind
can lead to premature plate wear or piling on the plate,
thus causing printing problems.
Shade
There is more
to formulating an ink than just loading the maximum amount
of pigment in to it. The amount and type of pigment will
have a drastic effect on the body, viscosity, flow characteristics,
transfer characteristics, and water pick-up properties
of the ink, in addition to the print density and trapping
characteristics on the print. In process work shade is
very important. If the inks are not the proper shade,
the results from the press cannot be expected to match
the original artist copy or the proofers preliminary print.
Shade is checked by a draw down versus the standard.
Length
Length is a
properly associated with the ability of an ink to flow
and form filaments. Ink can be long or shore. Long ink
flow well and form long filaments. They are undesirable
especially on high speed presses because thy have a tendency
to fly or mist. Short inks have the consistency of butter
with poor flow properties. They have a tendency to pile
on the rollers, plate or blanket. Most satisfactory inks
are neither excessively long or short.
Tack
The tack of
an ink is the force required to split a thin film of ink
as it transfers down or up the ink train from roller to
roller; roller to the plate; plate to the blanket; and
blanket to the stock. The ink formulator will use an instrument
called an Inkometer to measure the tack and will use this
instrument to help him adjust the final formulation of
the ink. The measure ink tack and the stability of ink
tack an Inkometer is used.
Inkometer
Stability
The ink formula
must be balanced to obtain the best combination of fast,
low temperature dry and good ink train stability. To check
the inks tack and tack stability, ink measured on a inkometer
is measured at 90?F at 1200 RPM. Some ink companies will
measure ink at 90?F 900 RPM. Thus a ink measured at 1200
RPM with an ink tack of 16 will have an ink tack of 13
when measured at 900 RPM.
Viscosity
Viscosity is
a measurement of the flow characteristics of a given ink
and it determines the force required to move an ink down
the ink train or to pump it through pipe lines. The instrument
that we commonly use is the Laray or "falling rod" viscometer.This
instrument can be used to measure the viscosity and the
shortness ratio of an ink. The shortness ratio enables
the formulator to measure the gel structure of an ink
and to predict the performance of the ink in the fountain
and on the ink train. It also is a valuable tool to monitor
an ink from batch-to-batch to assure consistent quality.
Water Pick-up
Percentage
In offset printing,
the ability of the ink to interact with the fountain solution
is critical; however, excess water pick-up can lead to
emulsification which can show up on the print as loss
of strength, enlarged dot, dull finish or poor rub.
Evaluation
for Unground or Foreign Material
This test is
conducted by mixing a sample of ink in a solvent and then
filtering the residue on a fine mesh screen. The screen
is then rinsed with solvent and dried. An observation
is made of the foreign material. The operator must make
a determination whether to accept or reject the batch
based on the amount of this material.
Once the ink
formula has been prepared in the lab and tested for proper
physical properties, it can then be run through a battery
of tests to determine its printability and performance
after printing.
Ink Makeup
There are three
properties of ink that control the ease and quality of
image transfer:
- Viscosity
- Tack
- Drying quality
(Coldset only)
Viscosity
- is used to accurately describe the "body" of ink. Some
inks are heavy (offset and letterpress) and some are light
(flexographic and gravure inks). Viscosity, or resistance
to flow, can be measured and is a term universally accepted
in the printing industry.
Tack
- is actually the "stickiness". Tack must be controlled
during the printing process in order to transfer images
and deliver the sheet through the press. Tack can cause
paper (especially coated paper) to stick to the blanket
of an offset press. Ink that is excessively tacky may
also pick the surface of the paper and cause misfeeding.
Remember that to pick means to lift or tear small pieces
of the paper뭩 surface. Tack will increase as one
color is printed over another as it starts drying. When
printing multicolor and process color (black, cyan, magenta
and yellow) work, decrease the amount of tack on successive
runs. The first printing unit should have the highest
tack. Each successive printing unit should be printed
with ink of less tack. In this manner the ink is "trapped"
or transferred from the printing unit (image on the blanket)
to the paper or ink on the paper.
For example,
if we are printing black, cyan, magenta and yellow the
black ink will contain the highest tack and yellow the
lowest. As we first print black (highest tack) the ink
begins to dry as soon as the ink is transferred from the
blanket to substrate (paper). As the ink begins to dry,
the tack increases. At the second printing unit, the cyan
ink (which has a slightly lower tack) is transferred to
the substrate and possibility onto the just printed black
ink. Since the tack of the black ink is higher than the
tack of the cyan ink, the cyan is "pulled" or "trapped"
onto the higher tack black. As the cyan/black dries, it
increases in tack which traps the magenta and so forth.
This ability to "trap" is important. You will hear many
printers and paper people talk about "backtrap" mottle
or "backtrapping" problems. Some of this pheonomen is
caused by the interaction of paper and ink.
Drying Quality
- The final, and extremely important, property of ink
is its drying quality. With sheetfed inks, there are two
stages in the drying process.
Ink should
instantly set or stick to the paper. When ink on the press
sheet is set, it can be handled without smearing. If ink
does not set as it is stacked in the delivery side of
a press, the image will transfer to the bottom of the
next sheet. This transfer of wet ink from sheet o sheet
is called setoff.
Ink needs to
harden. When ink has hardened, the vehicle (solvent) has
completely solidified on the paper surface and will not
transfer. The time it takes for liquid ink to harden to
a solid state in called the drying time.
There are three
methods for coldset ink drying:
- Oxidation
- Penetration
- Evaporation
Most sheetfed
inks contain a drying oil (soy, linseed, cottonseed, etc.)
which is hardened by a chemical process called oxidation.
To oxidize is to combine oxygen with the drying oil which
changes the vehicle of the ink from a liquid to a solid.
When an ink
is printed on an absorbent substrate, drying results from
a physical process called penetration. When ink dries
by penetration, most of the vehicle is absorbed into the
substrate. The ink vehicle is not changed to a solid state
in this drying process. Inks that rely heavily on drying
by penetration are not popular because the ink never hardens.
Handling work printed with penetrating-drying ink usually
results in ink transfer to the hands. Business forms and
newsprint inks rely on this form of ink drying.
Some coldset
inks dry by evaporation. Resinous and other film-forming
solutions in the in vehicle pass off a vapor during the
drying process. Drying by evaporation is much like drying
by penetration. The volatile solutions disappear (by evaporating
instead of penetrating), leaving an ink film on the surface
of the substrate.
Most sheetfed
inks use a combination of oxidation and penetration to
accomplish drying. Heatset inks are far different from
sheetfed inks. They dry by evaporation of the main solvents
and setting the ink by the chill rollers. See the web
offset section for a description of ink drying.
To assist in
ink drying, additives can be added to the ink. These additives
are "catalysts" which accelerate the oxidation process.
The two main ink dryers used are:
Cobalt
- a very powerful surface dryer,. Violet in color until
oxidized where it will turn brown. This dryer tends to
discolor whites. It is readily soluble in organic acids,
so it may be affected by the fountain solution. Cobalt
acetate can be dissolved and introduced into the fountain
as a drying activator.
Manganese
- is a "through-put" dryer with less vigorous catalytic
action than cobalt. It is brown in color, has less effect
on whites than cobalt and is unlikely to leach out by
fountain solution.
There are ways
to calculate the amount of driers used in a ink. See Table
1 and 2 below for examples
Drier Calculations
Drier recommendations
are based on percent metal on vehicle solids
To calculate
the quantity of various driers required to be added to
an ink formulation it is necessary to know, a) vehicle
solids, b) percentage of metal available in the driers,
and, c) required percentage of metal on vehicle solids
The quantities
of driers is then calculated from the following formula:
Drier required (b) = Vehicle solids (lb) X % Metal required
/ % Metal in drier
Driers
| Driers |
Drier Based on vehicle solids |
| Colbalt |
0.01 to 0.1% Metal |
| Manganese |
0.02 to 0.0% Metal |
| Lead |
0.35 to 0.5% Metal |
| Calcium |
0.10 to 0.3% Metal |
| Zirconium |
0.10 to 0.3% Metal |
| Cerium |
0.10 to 0.3% Metal |
| Zinc |
0.10 to 0.15% Metal |
| XL-Dir* |
0.20 to 0.3% Metal |
| * Shepherd Brand Drier |
|
A blend of
the two drying additives, colbalt and mangenese for example,
is usuallydded to allow for rapid surface drying (colbalt,
to prevent set-off) and quickly harden the ink (mangenese,
throughput drying). The printer will use a blend of these
to accomplish this feat. The problem is, however, that
there is a "window of opportunity" for dryers. To much
will plastize the ink, and too little will slow drying.
Generally, less than 1% (by weight) is used. There are
today available other newer types of dryer additives that
will enhance the inks drying ability even more. While
most people think coated papers are more prone to drying
problems, uncoated papers many times experiences greater
drying problems. This is due to the fact that coatings
are made to absorb the oils in the ink. Uncoated papers
made with a very hard or tight surface will not absorb
the oils easily resulting in slow ink drying. Care must
be taken when printing these type of sheets. Drying can
be easily accomplished by taking the precautions ahead
of time. The printing, if printing on a tight uncoated
sheet, should contact his ink supplier for recommendations
on altering the ink. In most cases, a paper sample should
be supplied to the ink company for this purpose. Uncoated
papers vary greatly in their surface characteristics.
Proper care in ink selection should be done. Newsprint,
for example, is not Strathmore Elements. Ink will react
completely different with these two types of paper!
As mentioned
earlier, sheetfed or coldset inks dry mainly by oxidation
and absorption. Many business forms ink, however, dry
only by absorption. Oxidation is the process in which
oxygen crosslinks with the oils and varnishes in the ink
to form a solid. Absorption is the process of the solvent
penetrating into the paper allowing the oxygen to interact
with the oils and or varnishes.
Ink Setting
- is the removal of the solvent from the ink film by absorption
into the stock. This raises the viscosity of the ink and
starts the surface drying. Setting the surface allows
for backside printing, etc.
Ink Hardening
(drying) - or total ink drying is accomplished over
a longer period of time (up to 24 hours).
Solvents will
separate from the ink and bleed into the coating or paper
leaving the varnish on the surface to cross link with
oxygen and harded. At first the surface of the ink will
harden. This is known as setting.
As oxygen cross-links
with the help from driers, the ink over time will harden
all the way through. This is known as total ink drying
Solvents will separate from the ink and bleed into the
coating or paper leaving the varnish on the surface to
cross-link with oxygen and harden. At first the surface
of the ink will harden. This is known as setting
Two of the
main drying catalysts used to accelerate the ink drying
process contain Cobalt or Manganese.
- Cobalt helps
accelerate the surface drying process.
- Manganese
speeds the internal drying.
The best recommendation
one can give when printing a new type of paper is for
the printer to consult with their ink supplier as to the
proper amount as well as the maximum and minimum to use.
Ink suppliers will take a paper sample and adjust the
ink for drying properties or at least make recommendations
to the printer on how to handle the drying process.
|