EP0058855A2 - Electrolytic printing method and apparatus - Google Patents
Electrolytic printing method and apparatus Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- EP0058855A2 EP0058855A2 EP82100837A EP82100837A EP0058855A2 EP 0058855 A2 EP0058855 A2 EP 0058855A2 EP 82100837 A EP82100837 A EP 82100837A EP 82100837 A EP82100837 A EP 82100837A EP 0058855 A2 EP0058855 A2 EP 0058855A2
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- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- surface layer
- write
- electrode
- recording medium
- layer
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
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Classifications
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B41—PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
- B41M—PRINTING, DUPLICATING, MARKING, OR COPYING PROCESSES; COLOUR PRINTING
- B41M5/00—Duplicating or marking methods; Sheet materials for use therein
- B41M5/20—Duplicating or marking methods; Sheet materials for use therein using electric current
Definitions
- This invention is directed to apparatus for low voltage electrolytic printing on a recording medium as well as to a method. It is particularly concerned with the provision of a recording medium that includes a surface layer containing an electrochemically sensitive compound, which medium is particularly suitable for employment in low voltage electrolytic printing apparatus -.that has been adapted to take advantage of the properties of said recording medium.
- United States Patent No. 2 358 839 to Wagner teaches a "wet" electrolytic printing arrangement wherein the recording paper is impregnated with 100 cm 3 of water prior to recording.
- the current in a recording stylus is modulated in accordance with the instantaneous density of the subject to be reproduced and forms an image thereof in the recording paper.
- the resultant image is of improved sharpness due, in part, to the limited amount of moisture which remains after printing.
- the present invention intends to provide a remedy.by providing a recording medium which is particularly suitable for use by low voltage printing apparatus adapted to efficiently utilize said medium.
- the present invention also intends to provide a recording medium which is constructed to exhibit, in conjunction with the geometry of the printing apparatus electrodes and their spacing, a predetermined vertical resistance component through the surface layer thereof.
- Such recording medium may also require only low levels of energy input compatible with those needed by high density integrated circuit chips yet permits high resolution printing.
- the present invention intends to enable low level energy printing on a responsive recording medium that facilitates the use of a low cost, integrated print head that will exhibit significantly improved operating life over that of the prior art.
- a layered recording medium having a topmost surface layer, an insulating support layer and a conductive layer sandwiched therebetween, all of appropriate thickness and low voltage printing apparatus adapted to employ said recording medium.
- the surface layer includes a binder, a leuco dye which is responsive to low levels of electrical energy and electrochemically converted thereby to a visible dye, a dye stabilizer, pigment and an electrolyte.
- the surface layer is constructed to insure, in conjunction with the area and spacing of the apparatus' electrodes, that sufficient current to effect full dye visibility passes vertically therethrough into the conductive layer.
- the thickness of the surface layer is also a factor in building the recording medium to function correctly when subjected to the relatively low voltage and energy levels that are associated with large scale and very large scale integrated circuit chips. It is constructed with the purpose of providing an effective print medium that affords a low resistance path for a high percentage of current flow vertically through the surface layer directly under the print electrode and then into the conductive layer from where it returns to its source, given the spacing and geometry of the electrodes involved. The result is intended to pass at least 75% of the supplied current through the surface layer directly beneath the print electrode into the conductive layer.
- the phrases “low voltage” or “low electrical energy” or their equivalent means that a voltage pulse of no more than 25 V amplitude is applied for an appropriate time to the print electrode.
- the "write” pulse should not be greater than 15 V.
- the phrases “high voltage” or “high electrical energy” or their equivalent, as previously noted, means that a voltage pulse of between 150 and 250 V is to be applied to the print electrode.
- FIG. 1 depicts a paper system that has been fabricated in accordance with the present invention.
- This paper system or recording medium 10 includes a surface layer or coating 12, a conductive layer 14 and a base or support layer 16. These layers are joined together by known techniques which form no part of the present invention. As fabricated however, the paper system 10 described herein can be utilized in the form of rolled, cut sheet or fan-folded medium.
- the surface layer 12 is typically about 5 to 50 pm thick. It includes five main components, one of which is a pigment of appropriate color, generally a clay. The clay component is selected, as needed, to enhance or reduce the brightness, whiteness and/or absorbtion of the surface layer 12 as would be appropriate to the. end use.
- the surface layer 12 also includes as components thereof, a leuco dye, a dye stabilizer, a binder, and an electrolyte. It is applied by coating the surface of the conductive layer 14 with a predetermined proportion of its components.
- a leuco or 1-dye is one whose chromophore is not visible under ordinary room conditions. It can, however, be permanently shifted into the visible spectrum if a pulse of sufficient energy is applied thereto for an appropriate period.
- the nature and use of such dyes for printing at low energy levels is described in United States Patent Application Serial No. which was filed in the name of W. E. Bernier.
- the leuco dye selected for use in and by the present invention is to be compatible with and responsive to the voltage and concomitant energy levels associated with large and very large scale integrated circuits.
- LSI and VLSI chips will typically require bus and driver voltages on the order of no more than 25 V (preferably 15 V) and power drain of about 2.0 W, an energy level which was intolerable in prior art printing systems and for prior art recording mediums.
- bus and driver voltages on the order of no more than 25 V (preferably 15 V) and power drain of about 2.0 W, an energy level which was intolerable in prior art printing systems and for prior art recording mediums.
- the definition of printing apparatus and of a recording medium that is particularly suitable to be printed on at this rather low energy level permits the use of an integrated print head and very significantly lowers, if not eliminates with the use of appropriate print electrodes, the consumption of the print electrodes.
- the conductive layer 14 is generally formed from a thin metal foil, such as aluminum, about 1000 R (0.1 ⁇ m) thick or from a coating of electrolyte such as NaCl or other suitable salt. As will be hereinafter discussed, the thickness of the conductive layer 14 is not critical to the printing mechanism. However, it should be kept to a minimum to avoid giving the recording medium too thick a feel or appearance as well as to hold down cost.
- the support layer 16 serves merely, as its name states, to support the surface layer 12 and conductive layer 14. It will typically be about 15 to 50 ⁇ m thick and be fabricated from commonly available paper. As an insulator, the support layer 16 will not play an active role in the printing process except to prevent current from leaking off the conductive layer 14.
- a printing arrangement which would utilize a recording medium fashioned in accordance with the present invention is schematically illustrated in Figure 2.
- the recording medium 10 is brought beneath a print stylus or electrode (anode) 18 by any suitable conventional transport mechanism, which is not shown.
- the print stylus 18 may be formed of tungsten, which shows some degree of consumability in use, or of a ruthenium oxide coated member, which compound is very stable and exhibits little or no tendency to chemically enter into the printing process.
- the ground electrode (cathode) 20 would be fabricated from a similar, if not identical, material and is separated from the write electrode 18 by a distance L. Both the write electrode 18 and the ground electrode 20 are assumed to have the same diameter D, since both will likely be fashioned of the same stock material and thereafter coated if appropriate.
- the 15 V limit is highly desirable since it is compatible with and would therefore permit the use of LSI or VLSI integrated circuit chips right in the print head itself.
- a simplified equivalent electrical circuit of the paper system 10 is shown in Figure 2.
- a control circuit 22 is coupled between the voltage source V+ and the write electrode 18.
- This control circuit can be of conventional design and serves to form and then selectively forward voltage pulses of appropriate amplitude and width or duration to the write electrode 18.
- the control circuit 22 would, of course, be forming pulses pursuant to printing desired text and/or graphics as directed by a source therefor to which it is coupled by an input line or bus 24.
- R l the horizontal resistive component through the surface layer 12 between the electrodes 18 and 20
- R 2' the vertical resistive component through the surface layer 12 between the electrodes 18 and 20 respectively and the conductive layer 14
- R 3' the total resistance along or through the conductive layer 14 from the current entry to exit points therein.
- the applied print voltage was significantly higher than is presently comtemplated and the R 1 resistance component of the utilized recording mediums was never a factor as sufficient excess current was available to flow into and through the conductive layer and then back through the surface layer to the cathode.
- the surface layer was saturated with water or similar fluid and thereby rendered sufficiently conductive for printing purposes. This meant that the surface layer resistance R l was lowered considerably and so excessive current and so excessive current also was made available to insure sufficient current flow into and through a conductive layer, if present, to insure that printing would take place.
- the resistance R 1 is equal to the resistivity R s of surface layer 12 times L divided by the product of D and T s , the thickness of layer 12.
- the resistance R 2 is equal to the resistivity R multiplied by the thickness T s and then divided by the area of the electrodes 18 and 20.
- Resistance R 3 is determined by summing L and D, which sum is then multiplied by the resistivity R c of the conductive layer and that total then divided by the product of D and T , the thickness of the conductive layer 14.
- the total or equivalent resistance R t of two resistors R a and R b in parallel is equal to their product divided by their sum, or
- a liquid applicator 26 may be provided.
- the applicator 26 is adapted to uniformly meter out very small quantities of liquid, preferably water, over the surface layer 12 of recording medium 10, just prior to its passing under the write electrode 18.
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- Electronic Switches (AREA)
- Printers Or Recording Devices Using Electromagnetic And Radiation Means (AREA)
Abstract
Description
- This invention is directed to apparatus for low voltage electrolytic printing on a recording medium as well as to a method. It is particularly concerned with the provision of a recording medium that includes a surface layer containing an electrochemically sensitive compound, which medium is particularly suitable for employment in low voltage electrolytic printing apparatus -.that has been adapted to take advantage of the properties of said recording medium.
- The concept of electrically generated printing has sparked interest since the 1840's. Most attempts at utilizing an electrically initiated reaction by which printing could be accomplished required relatively high voltages, in the order of 150 to 250 V as that term is used herein, saturated or completely wetted paper and/ or consumable electrodes. It was, therefore, necessary to employ various recording medium configurations which would be satisfactory for use in and which would meet the requirements of these prior art printing systems. As a result, all of these known recording mediums were intended to be employed in either a dry, relatively high voltage printing_system or in a wet printing system wherein the recording medium was thoroughly saturated. There were also some attempts at hybrid printing systems and recording mediums therefor which attempted to reconcile and/or compensate for the disadvantages of both the dry and saturated printing approaches. However, like all compromise situations, these efforts were either too expensive to employ or unsatisfactory in performance.
- United States Patent No. 2 358 839 to Wagner teaches a "wet" electrolytic printing arrangement wherein the recording paper is impregnated with 100 cm3 of water prior to recording. The current in a recording stylus is modulated in accordance with the instantaneous density of the subject to be reproduced and forms an image thereof in the recording paper. The resultant image is of improved sharpness due, in part, to the limited amount of moisture which remains after printing.
- Another example of prior art electrically-based printing is found in United States Patent No. 2 833 677 to Baumlein which also describes one type of paper system or recording medium that was usable in a dry, high voltage class of printer. In that arrangement, an insulating paper layer is sandwiched between an upper metalized layer and a conductive backing. Sparks are created and traverse an air gap between the write electrode and the upper conductive layer to impinge thereon causing vaporization of the metalized layer lying in the spark path. This exposed the contrasting insulating layer beneath the vaporized metalized layer to thereby form a visible or printed track.
- Also of interest is United States Patent No. 3 974 041 to Haruta et al which discloses an image recording medium having a recording layer which contains an image forming component and at least one reducing agent in an electrically conductive matrix composed of at least one zeolitic water containing compound. The zeolitic compound is one which contains water in cavities formed within its structure, yet still seemingly appears to be in a dry state. Recording takes place using a tungsten stylus and the zeolitic compound containing recording medium across which a voltage of 150 V is impressed. The foregoing and other similar prior art examples of electrically induced or stimulated printing worked satisfactorily. However, their underlying operative processes still required significant wetting of the recording medium, the use of a relatively high voltage to achieve printing and/or the frequent replacement of the print electrodes due to their consumption in the printing process itself. Such requirements were obviously major impediments to a commercially successful printer which utilized electrically initiated printing, particularly those printing arrangements which could take advantage of and fully utilize the capabilities.of integrated circuit chips.
- The present invention intends to provide a remedy.by providing a recording medium which is particularly suitable for use by low voltage printing apparatus adapted to efficiently utilize said medium.
- The present invention also intends to provide a recording medium which is constructed to exhibit, in conjunction with the geometry of the printing apparatus electrodes and their spacing, a predetermined vertical resistance component through the surface layer thereof. Such recording medium may also require only low levels of energy input compatible with those needed by high density integrated circuit chips yet permits high resolution printing.
- In addition, the present invention intends to enable low level energy printing on a responsive recording medium that facilitates the use of a low cost, integrated print head that will exhibit significantly improved operating life over that of the prior art. These and other objects of the present invention are achieved by providing a layered recording medium having a topmost surface layer, an insulating support layer and a conductive layer sandwiched therebetween, all of appropriate thickness and low voltage printing apparatus adapted to employ said recording medium. The surface layer includes a binder, a leuco dye which is responsive to low levels of electrical energy and electrochemically converted thereby to a visible dye, a dye stabilizer, pigment and an electrolyte. The surface layer is constructed to insure, in conjunction with the area and spacing of the apparatus' electrodes, that sufficient current to effect full dye visibility passes vertically therethrough into the conductive layer.
- The thickness of the surface layer is also a factor in building the recording medium to function correctly when subjected to the relatively low voltage and energy levels that are associated with large scale and very large scale integrated circuit chips. It is constructed with the purpose of providing an effective print medium that affords a low resistance path for a high percentage of current flow vertically through the surface layer directly under the print electrode and then into the conductive layer from where it returns to its source, given the spacing and geometry of the electrodes involved. The result is intended to pass at least 75% of the supplied current through the surface layer directly beneath the print electrode into the conductive layer.
- Embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the attached drawing in which
- Figure 1 schematically illustrates a cross-sectional view of a recording medium fabricated in accordance with the present invention; and
- Figure 2 shows a schematic representation of the recording medium's electrical characteristics as affected by those of a low voltage printing apparatus which has been adapted to utilize said medium therein.
- As used herein, the phrases "low voltage" or "low electrical energy" or their equivalent means that a voltage pulse of no more than 25 V amplitude is applied for an appropriate time to the print electrode. Preferably, for reasons to be explained hereinafter, the "write" pulse should not be greater than 15 V. The phrases "high voltage" or "high electrical energy" or their equivalent, as previously noted, means that a voltage pulse of between 150 and 250 V is to be applied to the print electrode.
- Figure 1 depicts a paper system that has been fabricated in accordance with the present invention. This paper system or
recording medium 10 includes a surface layer or coating 12, aconductive layer 14 and a base orsupport layer 16. These layers are joined together by known techniques which form no part of the present invention. As fabricated however, thepaper system 10 described herein can be utilized in the form of rolled, cut sheet or fan-folded medium. - The
surface layer 12 is typically about 5 to 50 pm thick. It includes five main components, one of which is a pigment of appropriate color, generally a clay. The clay component is selected, as needed, to enhance or reduce the brightness, whiteness and/or absorbtion of thesurface layer 12 as would be appropriate to the. end use. Thesurface layer 12 also includes as components thereof, a leuco dye, a dye stabilizer, a binder, and an electrolyte. It is applied by coating the surface of theconductive layer 14 with a predetermined proportion of its components. - A leuco or 1-dye is one whose chromophore is not visible under ordinary room conditions. It can, however, be permanently shifted into the visible spectrum if a pulse of sufficient energy is applied thereto for an appropriate period. The nature and use of such dyes for printing at low energy levels is described in United States Patent Application Serial No. which was filed in the name of W. E. Bernier. The leuco dye selected for use in and by the present invention is to be compatible with and responsive to the voltage and concomitant energy levels associated with large and very large scale integrated circuits. These LSI and VLSI chips will typically require bus and driver voltages on the order of no more than 25 V (preferably 15 V) and power drain of about 2.0 W, an energy level which was intolerable in prior art printing systems and for prior art recording mediums. The definition of printing apparatus and of a recording medium that is particularly suitable to be printed on at this rather low energy level permits the use of an integrated print head and very significantly lowers, if not eliminates with the use of appropriate print electrodes, the consumption of the print electrodes.
-
- The
conductive layer 14 is generally formed from a thin metal foil, such as aluminum, about 1000 R (0.1 µm) thick or from a coating of electrolyte such as NaCl or other suitable salt. As will be hereinafter discussed, the thickness of theconductive layer 14 is not critical to the printing mechanism. However, it should be kept to a minimum to avoid giving the recording medium too thick a feel or appearance as well as to hold down cost. - The
support layer 16 serves merely, as its name states, to support thesurface layer 12 andconductive layer 14. It will typically be about 15 to 50 µm thick and be fabricated from commonly available paper. As an insulator, thesupport layer 16 will not play an active role in the printing process except to prevent current from leaking off theconductive layer 14. - A printing arrangement which would utilize a recording medium fashioned in accordance with the present invention is schematically illustrated in Figure 2. As shown therein, the
recording medium 10 is brought beneath a print stylus or electrode (anode) 18 by any suitable conventional transport mechanism, which is not shown. Theprint stylus 18 may be formed of tungsten, which shows some degree of consumability in use, or of a ruthenium oxide coated member, which compound is very stable and exhibits little or no tendency to chemically enter into the printing process. The ground electrode (cathode) 20 would be fabricated from a similar, if not identical, material and is separated from thewrite electrode 18 by a distance L. Both thewrite electrode 18 and theground electrode 20 are assumed to have the same diameter D, since both will likely be fashioned of the same stock material and thereafter coated if appropriate. - As opposed to the dry, high voltage prior art printing process mentioned above, an electrode voltage V+ of not more than 25 V, and preferably of not more than 15 V, is applied thereto. The 15 V limit is highly desirable since it is compatible with and would therefore permit the use of LSI or VLSI integrated circuit chips right in the print head itself. A simplified equivalent electrical circuit of the
paper system 10 is shown in Figure 2. - A
control circuit 22 is coupled between the voltage source V+ and thewrite electrode 18. This control circuit can be of conventional design and serves to form and then selectively forward voltage pulses of appropriate amplitude and width or duration to thewrite electrode 18. Thecontrol circuit 22 would, of course, be forming pulses pursuant to printing desired text and/or graphics as directed by a source therefor to which it is coupled by an input line orbus 24. - There are three main resistances that can possibly affect or enter into the printing process: Rl, the horizontal resistive component through the
surface layer 12 between theelectrodes surface layer 12 between theelectrodes conductive layer 14; and R3' the total resistance along or through theconductive layer 14 from the current entry to exit points therein. In the dry, high voltage prior art printing processes, the applied print voltage was significantly higher than is presently comtemplated and the R1 resistance component of the utilized recording mediums was never a factor as sufficient excess current was available to flow into and through the conductive layer and then back through the surface layer to the cathode. In the wet processes of the prior art, the surface layer was saturated with water or similar fluid and thereby rendered sufficiently conductive for printing purposes. This meant that the surface layer resistance Rl was lowered considerably and so excessive current and so excessive current also was made available to insure sufficient current flow into and through a conductive layer, if present, to insure that printing would take place. - The resistance R1 is equal to the resistivity Rs of
surface layer 12 times L divided by the product of D and Ts, the thickness oflayer 12. The resistance R2 is equal to the resistivity R multiplied by the thickness Ts and then divided by the area of theelectrodes conductive layer 14. These resistive relationships would be expressed as: - The resistivity of the
conductive layer 14, assuming it was formed of aluminum, would be 2.8 x 10-6 ohm-cm. This number is very, very small when contrasted with a typical surface layer resistivity of 10 ohm-cm and would be if compared to most other, if not all, conductive materials that are usable to form theconductive layer 14. Thus, the effects of R3 will be negligible and can be ignored for purposes of analyzing the electrical resistive characteristics of the recording medium as influenced by the printing apparatus in which it is employed. - The current through each branch of the schematic circuit shown in Figure 2 is given in
-
-
-
-
-
- It can be seen from equation (15) that about 75% of the total current available will flow vertically through resistance R2 from the
print electrode 18 through theconductive layer 14 given the particular geometry and spacing of the electrodes. More importantly, the presence of aconductive layer 14 insures that a greater magnitude current will flow through thesurface layer 12 than if there were no conductive layer provided at all. This conclusion is verified by the followingconductive layer 14 draws almost four times the total current through thesurface layer 12. - It is therefore important when building a recording medium that is to be used in a low energy electrochemical printing system in accordance with the present invention to insure that current flow from the print electrode to a conductive layer under the surface layer of the recording medium, the vertical current component through the surface layer, is maintained about equal to or greater than 75% of the total current flow from the print electrode. As explained above, this is accomplished by selecting a recording medium and a surface layer therefor which, in conjunction with an appropriate printing apparatus electrode arrangement, are compatible with and conducive to low energy printing. Thus, the inclusion of a conductive layer in the recording medium, the proper selection of surface layer thickness and components thereof and the choice of appropriate electrode surface area and spacing insures that satisfactory low level energy printing will, in fact, take place. Further, such printing takes place with minimal halo or fringing beneath the
write electrode 18 due to the large vertical current component. - In order to facilitate and expedite printing, a
liquid applicator 26 may be provided. Theapplicator 26 is adapted to uniformly meter out very small quantities of liquid, preferably water, over thesurface layer 12 ofrecording medium 10, just prior to its passing under thewrite electrode 18.
Claims (9)
characterized by providing low voltage pulses having amplitudes that are compatible with those required by integrated circuit chips and of durations no greater than 0.5 milliseconds,
and selecting the thickness of the surface layer (12), the area of and the distance between the write and the ground electrodes (18, 20) such that a sufficient percentage of the current delivered to the write electrode (12) flows through the surface layer into and through the conductive layer (14) and back through the surface layer to the ground electrode (20) to form a visible mark in the surface layer (12) beneath the write electrode (18).
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US23756081A | 1981-02-24 | 1981-02-24 | |
US237560 | 1981-02-24 |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
EP0058855A2 true EP0058855A2 (en) | 1982-09-01 |
EP0058855A3 EP0058855A3 (en) | 1983-03-30 |
Family
ID=22894253
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
EP82100837A Withdrawn EP0058855A3 (en) | 1981-02-24 | 1982-02-05 | Electrolytic printing method and apparatus |
Country Status (2)
Country | Link |
---|---|
EP (1) | EP0058855A3 (en) |
JP (1) | JPS57140175A (en) |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP0097220A2 (en) * | 1982-06-18 | 1984-01-04 | International Business Machines Corporation | The stabilization of leucomethylene blue dyes on a printing substrate |
EP0114303A2 (en) * | 1982-12-29 | 1984-08-01 | International Business Machines Corporation | Device for dampening the surface of an object |
Families Citing this family (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE3686826T2 (en) * | 1985-03-15 | 1993-04-22 | Hitachi Ltd | TAPE CASSETTE FOR PRINTER. |
Citations (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2879127A (en) * | 1956-08-29 | 1959-03-24 | Carlson Harold | Apparatus for electrical recording in telephoto systems |
FR1499526A (en) * | 1965-10-20 | 1967-10-27 | Allied Chem | A method of electrographically producing images by passing an electric current through a sensitive composition and electrographic sheets for use in the method |
DE2140048A1 (en) * | 1970-08-17 | 1972-02-24 | Olivetti & Co Spa | Thermographic printing process |
US4042936A (en) * | 1975-07-29 | 1977-08-16 | Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. | Electrosensitive recording method |
FR2422507A1 (en) * | 1978-04-12 | 1979-11-09 | Electricite De France | Forming coloured inscription on paper - using a flat electrode carrying a moist sheet of paper contg. a pH sensitive developer, and a pointed inscription electrode |
EP0020974A1 (en) * | 1979-05-24 | 1981-01-07 | International Business Machines Corporation | Electrochromic printing ink dissolved in water and method for printing with this printing ink |
EP0047367A2 (en) * | 1980-09-10 | 1982-03-17 | International Business Machines Corporation | Electrochromic recording paper |
EP0058338A2 (en) * | 1981-02-05 | 1982-08-25 | International Business Machines Corporation | Electrochromic printing media |
Family Cites Families (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPS5216233A (en) * | 1975-07-28 | 1977-02-07 | Canon Inc | Record medium |
JPS5256545A (en) * | 1975-11-04 | 1977-05-10 | Fujitsu Ltd | Electrolytic recording material |
JPS5269637A (en) * | 1975-12-08 | 1977-06-09 | Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd | Electroconductive recording paper |
JPS5273741A (en) * | 1975-12-17 | 1977-06-21 | Ricoh Co Ltd | Multi-color electric sensitive recording medium |
-
1982
- 1982-01-08 JP JP106882A patent/JPS57140175A/en active Pending
- 1982-02-05 EP EP82100837A patent/EP0058855A3/en not_active Withdrawn
Patent Citations (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2879127A (en) * | 1956-08-29 | 1959-03-24 | Carlson Harold | Apparatus for electrical recording in telephoto systems |
FR1499526A (en) * | 1965-10-20 | 1967-10-27 | Allied Chem | A method of electrographically producing images by passing an electric current through a sensitive composition and electrographic sheets for use in the method |
DE2140048A1 (en) * | 1970-08-17 | 1972-02-24 | Olivetti & Co Spa | Thermographic printing process |
US4042936A (en) * | 1975-07-29 | 1977-08-16 | Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. | Electrosensitive recording method |
FR2422507A1 (en) * | 1978-04-12 | 1979-11-09 | Electricite De France | Forming coloured inscription on paper - using a flat electrode carrying a moist sheet of paper contg. a pH sensitive developer, and a pointed inscription electrode |
EP0020974A1 (en) * | 1979-05-24 | 1981-01-07 | International Business Machines Corporation | Electrochromic printing ink dissolved in water and method for printing with this printing ink |
EP0047367A2 (en) * | 1980-09-10 | 1982-03-17 | International Business Machines Corporation | Electrochromic recording paper |
EP0058338A2 (en) * | 1981-02-05 | 1982-08-25 | International Business Machines Corporation | Electrochromic printing media |
Non-Patent Citations (2)
Title |
---|
FUJITSU SCIENT. & TECHN. JOURNAL, vol. 12, no. 3, September 1976, pages 131-146, Kawasaki (JP); * |
IBM TECHNICAL DISCLOSURE BULLETIN, vol. 22, no. 8A, January 1980, pages 3439-3440, New York (USA); * |
Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP0097220A2 (en) * | 1982-06-18 | 1984-01-04 | International Business Machines Corporation | The stabilization of leucomethylene blue dyes on a printing substrate |
EP0097220B1 (en) * | 1982-06-18 | 1988-06-08 | International Business Machines Corporation | The stabilization of leucomethylene blue dyes on a printing substrate |
EP0114303A2 (en) * | 1982-12-29 | 1984-08-01 | International Business Machines Corporation | Device for dampening the surface of an object |
EP0114303A3 (en) * | 1982-12-29 | 1985-01-09 | International Business Machines Corporation | Device for dampening the surface of an object |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP0058855A3 (en) | 1983-03-30 |
JPS57140175A (en) | 1982-08-30 |
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