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There
are four key ingredients in an ink:
- Pigments
- Solvents
- Vehicles
- Additives
Pigments
- These are dry particles that give color
to ink. There are various types of pigments
such as organic and inorganic. Organic
pigments contain carbon and hydrogen and
most are made from petroleum. Coal, wood,
animal fats, and vegetable oils are also
used in organic pigment manufacture. Generally
there is a wider selection of colors in
relationship to inorganic pigments. Colors
tend to be richer, brighter, and more
transparent. Inorganic pigments are chemical
compounds, typically formed by precipitation.
Pigment color is determined by theproportions
of the chemicals used to produce a pigment.
Cadmium yellow, for example, may contain
the chemical cadmium sulfide in a compound
with zinc sulfide. Ink made with inorganic
pigments are less expensive to produce
than those made with organic pigments.
They give good opacity but lack some of
the qualities of organic pigments inks,
such as transparency.
Pigments
are classed as opaque and transparent
pigments. Opaque pigments are used when
transferring an image to cover a substrate
or when overprinting another color. Opaque
whites are also used for mixing with other
inks to lighten the color or hue. Many
times a printer will print opaque white
to help "hide" the infl uence of a dark
color paper on the overprinting ink. For
example, if the printer was printing a
job on a dark brown paper, he may first
print a mask of the images in opaque white
then over print his colors. If he did
not do this, the dark brown color of the
paper would infl uence the color of the
ink. Transparent pigments are used to
allow the background material or ink to
be seen. All process colors (black, cyan,
magenta and yellow) are transparent. Process
inks need to be transparent to allow the
proper tapping mechanism to occur. For
example, to create green we must print
cyan and yellow. By printing cyan and
then over printing yellow, the result
in green. If the inks were opaque, when
printing the yellow on top of the cyan,
the opaque yellow would hide the cyan
resulting in the final color being yellow!
Vehicles
- Vehicles are made with resins (to promote
pigments wetting, tack, gloss, etc.) and
solvents (press stability, resin solubility,
ink fl uidity, etc.). The vehicle portion
of an ink is the liquid portion that holds
and carries the pigment. It also provides
workability and drying properties and
binds the pigment to the substrate after
the ink has dried. Each vehicle used in
the manufacture of ink has a slightly
different composition. Non-drying vehicles
used in newspaper and comic book production
are made from penetrating oils such as
petroleum and rosin. Oils are classed
as to how fast they "dry". Linseed oil,
for example is a faster drying oil than
soy. Quicksetting inks used for sheetfed
offset consist of resin, oil and solvent.
During the drying process the solvent
is absorbed by the substrate, leaving
an ink film of resin and oil that dries
by oxidation. Heatset inks are made from
rosin ester varnishes or soaps and hydrocarbon
resins dissolved in petroleum solvents.
The solvents are driven off in the heatset
oven, and the resins "set" by the action
of the cold chill rollers.
Ink
Additives - Listed below are some
of the more common ink additives:
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Reducers:
Varnishes, solvents, oils, or waxy
or greasy compounds that reduce the
tack or stickiness of ink. They also
aid ink penetration and setting.
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Driers:
Metallic salts added to inks to speed
oxidation and drying of the oil vehicle.
As noted earlier, these include cobalt
and maganese driers.
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Binding
Varnish: A viscous varnish used
to toughen dried ink film. Can increase
image sharpness, resist emulsification,
eliminate chalking, and improve drying.
Remember, over emulsification occurs
in offset litho when excessive fountain
solution mixes with the ink. The result
of emulsification is an ink that actually
appears to break down and becomes
greasy looking.
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Waxes:
Usually cooked into the vehicle during
the manufacturing process or can be
added to the ink later. Paraffin wax,
beeswax, carnauba wax, microcrystalline,
ozokerite, and polyethylene are commonly
used. Wax helps prevent setoff and
sheet sticking. Wax also "shortens"
the ink or limits its ability to stretch
or web.
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Antiskinning
agents: Prevent ink on ink rollers
from skinning and drying. If these
agents are used excessively, the ink
will not dry on the paper. These are
also known as antioxidants. Printers
will use them on the inking system
if the press shut down for a period
of time. You will see the press use
a spray can on the ink system just
after shutdown.
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Cornstarch:
Can be used to add body to a thin
ink. Also helps prevent set off.
Types
Of Lithographic Inks
As
you can imagine, there are many types
of ink formulations to serve the offset
or lithographic industry. The attached
table show the various ink formulations
for different presses and substrates.
A variety of vehicles are required because
of the differences between sheet and web
feeding and because of the many substrates
on which the printer must transfer images.
Some
of the key offset inks include:
Rubber-Base
Offset Ink - This ink is a heavy formulation
that gives quick setting and drying on
both coated and uncoated paper. It can
remain on the press for long periods without
skinning. Printers will leave these inks
on the press overnight without the fear
of skinning or drying. These inks are,
by far, more popular with quick printers
using small duplicators.
Nonporous
Ink - An ink formulated with a nonporous
vehicle. These inks are suited for plasticcoated
or metallic type of papers. They dry by
oxidation rather than by absorption. Ink
additives are not recommended with this
ink formulation. To prevent set-off, do
not allow a large pile to accumulate in
the stacker and use small amount of spray
powder.
Quick-setting
Inks - Quick-setting, low tack inks
are formulated with the color and process
printer in mind. Quick setting ink relys
on rapid separation of thin mineral oil
from the ink film followed by oxidation/polymerization
of the drying oil. The quickset vehicle
is composed of two phases which are of
limited compatibility. One phase is a
highly viscous solution of hard resin
in drying oil, and the other phase is
very low viscosity petroleum distillate.
The resin/drying oil and distillate must
be sufficiently compatible for the vehicle
to remain as a stable, homogeneous fluid
throughout ink distribution and transfer
to the substrate on the press. Once deposited
as a thin film on absorbent paper or board,
a capillary-draw mechanism pulls the highly
mobile distillate away from the rest of
the ink. If the two phases are too compatible,
the affinity of the resin/oil for the
distillate will inhibit this penetration
and slow drying occurs. If a limited compatibility
exists the distillate will be separated
from the ink and will be drawn into the
interstices of the substrate coating or
fiber network leaving the hard resin in
drying oil (or alkyd) phase binding the
pigment on the print surface. While not
fully dry, the ink film reaches such a
high viscosity that is loses mobility
and ceases to transfer readily. At the
stage the ink is said to be "set" and
will not mark the reverse of the subsequent
sheet in a stack. Setting may take from
2 mins to over 1/2 hour depending on the
ink formulation, the printed film weight,
the nature of the par or board substrate
and ambient conditions.
After
the ink is set, oxidation drying within
the drying oil or alkyd, and possibly
the resin, leads to polymerization and
the formation of a three dimensional cross-linked
network of chemical bonds. Depending upon
many conditions (temperature, humidity,
acidity, etc.) this chemical reaction
is usually well advanced in 9 - 15 hours,
although it may take a matter of day to
reach total completion!
Waterless
Sheetfed Inks - These inks are used
in the modified lithographic process where
no fountain solution is used. The key to
this process is a technique is a plate that
consists of two layers, a photopolymer layer
and a silicone layer. The ink chemical nature
of the silicone resists the ink and keeps
the nonimage areas of the plate clean. The
key to waterless printing is ensuring that
the ink film is more attracted to itself
than it is to the silicone of the nonimage
areas of the plate. To perform this task
the inks are formulated with special resins
and other additives to produce higher viscosities
than are found in conventional lithographic
inks. Because the ink's viscosity is affected
by temperature, waterless lithographic presses
must carefully regulate the temperature
of the ink and control the tendency of ink
to lose viscosity from friction-generated
heat in the ink train. Most waterless inks
have a temperature "window" where the ink
runs. Get outside that window and the ink
may start scumming, toning, piling, etc.
To regulate the ink's temperature, the ink
system for each unit is controlled by a
control system, which is usually sitting
along side the press. An infrared sensor
on each printing units ink system tracks
the inks temperature. If the ink roller
system, for example black, gets to hot cold
water is passed through the black ink vibrators;
get to cold and hot water is passed through
the rollers.
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Sheetfed Presses
Substrates - Paper, Foil, Film, Thin
Metal
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Web Presses
Substrates - Mostly Paper
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| Ink Vehicle Class Oxidative - Neutral
or synthetic drying oils. |
Ink Vehicle Class Oxidative - Drying
oil varnish |
| Penetrating - Soluble resins, hydrocarbon
oils & solvents, drying and semidrying
oils and varnishes. |
Penetrating - Hydrocarbons, oils
& solvents, soluble resins, drying
oil varnishes, and plasticizers. |
| Quickset - Hard soluble resin, hydrocarbon
oils and solvents, minimal drying
oils and plasticizers. |
UV Curing - Highly reactive, cross-linking
proprietary systems that dry by UV
radiation. |
| UV Curing - Highly reactive, cross-linking
proprietary systems that dry by UV
(ultra violet) radiation. |
Thermal Curing - Dry by application
of heat and use of special cross linking
catalysts. |
| Gloss - Drying oils, very hard resins,
minimal hydrocarbon solvents. |
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Heatset
Inks - These inks are used in heatset
web offset presses and require the use
of an oven and a chill roll section. The
"oven" drives off the fresh ink liquid
solvents and the "chill roll section"
(series of cold rolls), solidifies the
remaining pigment-in-resin component.
The typical heatset ink is usually made
up of hydrocarbon solvents, hard soluble
resins, drying oil varnishes and plasticizers
along with pigments. As the inks require
heat to drive off the solvents, no driers
are added like in sheetfed inks thus they
can be left in the ink sump for extended
periods of time if needed.
Metallic
Inks - use metallic powders, such
as aluminum and copper alloys, mixed with
the proper varnish base to give a pleasing
metallic luster. This is because the powders
are actually fl akes which deposit in
refl ective layers. The bronze powder
and vehicle for preparing gold inks are
mixed just before using. The varnish dries
rapidly and has sufficient binding qualities
to hold the powder to the paper surface.
Coated papers give the best results. On
rough paper surfaces, a base ink is usually
printed first, allowed to dry and overprinted
with gold. Both aluminum and gold inks
can be printed by letterpress, offset
or gravure. When printed by offset, alkaline
or neutral fountain solutions should be
used to prevent tarnishing of the bronze
powder.
Magnetic
Inks - were developed to increase
the speed and efficiency of handling bank
checks. These ink are made with pigments
which can be magnetized after printing,
and the printed characters are later "recognized"
by electronic reading equipment.
Fluorescent
Inks - were formerly limited to screen
printing. New finer grind pigments and
greater pigments strength now permit colors
to be printed in one pass. The semi-transparency
of the inks permits overprinting to achieve
color mixture. Fluorescent ink must be
printed on a white surface and provide
maximum brilliance when contrasting with
dark surrounding hues. Fluorescent pink
is used as a fifth color in 4-color process
printing to enhance skin tones and extend
the range of magenta hues in the images.
Dye
Sublimation Inks - These inks are
used widely in textile printing. The "dye-sub"
process works like this: When the correct
heat and pressure is applied, the ink
passes (or sublimates) form a solid to
a gas, never passing through liquid form.
Once in gaseous form, it dyes or stains
whatever is next to it. On a molecular
level, it becomes part of the substrate
and will not peel away or fade faster
than the fabric itself. The ink doesn't
sit on top of the material so it doesn't
wear off and usually fades or breaks down
in the same rate as the fabric does. These
special inks are usually printed using
the lithographic process onto paper. The
printed paper is then pressed against
the fabric and heat applied. Today ink
jet printers can also do this. Home users
can, today, also do "fabric printing"
by using "Tee-Shirt Transfer" material,
such as Hammermill's "Invent itTM"
ink jet transfer product. Once ink-jet,
heat is applied and the dye transferred
on to the fabric. While good, the lithographic
dye-sub process is far superior.
There
is a drawback with dye sub in that the
substrates must contain a portion of synthetics,
like polyester and nylon. This is because
the textile dyes must sublimate at 410
degrees Fahrenheit to transfer the print
from the paper to the fabric.
Radiation
Curing Inks - have been developed
to eliminate spray powder in sheetfed
printing and air pollution from solvent
is conventional web heat-set inks. There
are two types of these inks: Ultraviolet
(UV) and electron beam (EB) curing.
UV
curing inks consist of liquid prepolymers
and initiators which on exposure to large
doses of UV radiation release free radicals
that polymerize the vehicle to a dry,
solid, tough thermosetting resin. These
inks are, however, more expensive than
standard inks and are used mainly for
luxury packaging, metal decorating, screen
printing, and coating.
Electron
beam (EB) - curing inks make a good
alternative to UV inks since no expensive
initiators are needed and some lower cost,
less reactive materials can be used. The
major disadvantage of EB is the high capital
cost of equipping a press to use it. EB
uses less energy than UV, which in turn
uses about half the energy of gas drying.
Varnish
and Lacquer - materials are used as
coatings over printing to protect the
printing and increase the gloss. Ink makers
should know when printing will be lacquered
so that ink can be formulated to be lacquers
resistant. Otherwise, the ink are apt
to bleed through the varnish or lacquers.
Inks to be varnished or lacquered would
not contain waxes which can prevent wetting,
or adhesion of the varnish or lacquer
to the ink. Also minimal spray powder
should be used on sheet to be varnished
or lacquered since the powder can affect
even transfer of the varnish or lacquer.
Lacquers
are applied off-line on special coating
machines. A variety of press applied varnishes
and devices for on-press application are
available. Most press varnishing is done
from a blank or imaged plate inline with
the printing on the press, and drying
is by oxidation without heat. Gloss and
their special characteristics are limited
as the varnishes must be compatible with
the wet inks.
Overcoatings
- are used to replace off-line varnishing
and eliminate the need for anti-set-off
starch sprays, which are yhe scourge in
the pressroom. Acrylic type emulsions
with water and alcohol and varying degrees
of gloss are coated over the wet inks
on the image inline with the printing.
The resin coats the ink, while the water
or alcohol disperse in the paper. The
coatings dry rapidly preventing the wet
inks from scuffing or marking while they
dry normally. UV curable clear coatings
are also used as overcoatings on the printing
inks. The ink may need reformulation to
be compatible with the UV overcoatings.
A
disadvantage of press overcoating has
been the need for an additional unit on
the press to apply the coating. The use
of overcoatings has become so popular,
however, that most new sheetfed presses
can be built with special coating units
or towers for controlled inline application
of the coatings.
Water-Washable
Inks - have been developed by Deluxe
Checks are are "water washable" so no
solvents are needed. The inks when used
on press are stable and not soluble with
the fountain solution. pH is the key for
making the inks water washable. The ink
is acidic and resists water. Once the
swing in pH is made, to alkaline, the
ink become soluble in water. The cleaning
material, mostly water, contains conversion
material to make the ink water washable.
Advantages of these inks include:
- No
solvent vapors
- No
fl ammability
- Potential
for increased EPA compliance
- Reduced
Hazardous waste
- Potential
to sewer wash ink/waste solution
- Improved
market position with environmental conscious
customers
As
of this writing, these inks are only suitable
for non-heatset web presses, however,
beta testing is being conducted on sheetfed
and heatset web.
The
following is are common additives used
in a sheetfed pressroom to alter sheetfed
offset ink:
- Smooth
Lith - A liquid that controls lay and
set-off.
- Reducing
Compounds - Cuts the tack of ink without
changing its body (viscosity).
- #00,
#0 Litho Varnish - A thin bodied compound
that rapidly reduces the ink's body.
- #1
Litho Varnish: reduces tack and body
- used as a lay compound and prevents
picking.
- #2,
#3, #4 and #5 Litho varnishes - Increase
the ink fl ow without changing the ink's
body.
- Overprint
varnish - A gloss, satin or dull finish
used to print over already printed ink.
- Dryers
- See above - To enhance the inks drying
ability.
- Luster
binding base - Builds up viscosity,
gives ink a luster finish and makes
ink more water repellent.
- Aqua
varnish - Builds up body and tack of
an ink.
- Body
gum - A heavy varnish that increases
the ink's body, tack, and water repellency.
- Gloss
varnish and wax compound - Increase
the ink's resistance to scratching and
scuffing. Gloss varnish gives ink a
bright finish and helps prevent chalking
on coated papers.
There
are other additives used by printers,
but the above are the normal additives
used.
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