Patent Publication Number: US-2019193368-A1

Title: Device and method for processing a material web

Description:
TECHNICAL FIELD 
     The invention relates to a device for processing a material web according to the preamble of claim  1 . The invention also relates to a method for processing a material web according to the preamble of claim  24 . The invention also relates to a material web according to the preamble of claim  22  and cardboard packaging produced by means of a material web according to the invention. 
     BACKGROUND 
     WO 2017/051146 A1 describes a corrugated cardboard machine in which a printed roll or material web is applied to corrugated cardboard as a surface, wherein the corrugated cardboard is then cut. In addition to the actual printed images, for visual configuration of the cuts, the material web also contains markings with digitally encoded items of information, wherein the items of information can be read during processing and used to control the processing. The markings are configured as two-dimensional fields, in particular like a QR code. Irrespective of these markings, a continuous control line is provided on the material web, the position of this line being defined relative to the printed images and the line serving as a positional aid in the processing of the material web. 
     The problem underlying the invention is to specify a device for processing a material web in which flexible control and little material waste are made possible. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     This problem is solved in respect of a device referred to in the introduction according to the invention by the characterizing features of claim  1 . 
     Introducing the digital code structure into the control line itself means that local or temporally resolved items of information on the material web are provided without additional surface area of the material web being taken up for it. At the same time, the control line can retain its function of lateral alignment or lateral position control during processing of the material web. 
     A control line within the meaning of the invention is any linear structure which functionally serves to ensure guidance and/or lateral positional control during processing or manipulation of the material web. The control line is preferably printed continuously and only interrupted by gaps in the region of the code structure. To save printing ink, however, the control line does not have to be printed continuously. For example, the control line can be printed with regular interruptions or can be missing entirely over a relatively long section. In a possible exemplary embodiment, the control line can, for this purpose, also consist merely of sections with a digital code structure. Such a control line can also serve to ensure lateral positional control or alignment. 
     A printed image is preferred or, in the narrower sense, a structure or defined surface area consisting of one or more printing-inks serving to provide the design or the visual surface configuration. However, within the meaning of the invention, the printed image also comprises, depending on the circumstances, control marks or other structures such as edges etc. of printing ink which do not or do not merely serve to provide the design. 
     Within the meaning of the invention, a material web is understood to be a thin web made of paper, plastic film, metal foil, fibrous tissue, multilayered composite material or some other material. The material web is typically, but not necessarily, several meters wide. The material web is usually, but not necessarily, less than 1 mm thick. The length of an uninterrupted material web usually exceeds 100 m and includes typical lengths of several kilometers. 
     In particular, the invention relates to printed material webs which, in a processing operation, are connected two-dimensionally to cardboard packaging, preferably corrugated cardboard. After the cardboard packaging which has been coated with the material web in this way has been cut, an individually printed package is obtained. Accordingly, the printed images provided on the material web are preferably repeating. The repetition length of such a printed image on the material web is referred to as the repeat length. 
     According to the invention, the digital code structure is preferably contained in the control line in one-dimensional form so that there is a structural change in the control line only in the longitudinal direction. However, in possible refinements of the invention, the control line may also be structured transversally too. For example, the control line may comprise several parallel, adjacent lines which each have a code structure. 
     Within the meaning of the invention, a digital code structure may preferably be a two-value or binary item of information. This can be represented, for example, by the statuses “control line present” and “control line not present/interrupted”. However, it may also consist of two different print brightnesses or printing inks of the control line to generate a code structure. Alternatively, it is also conceivable for a polyvalent (more than binary) digital item of information to be encoded in the control line using more than two brightness values and/or inks. 
     In particular, a digital code structure within the meaning of the invention may also comprise a plurality of discrete characters. In a generally advantageous manner, this may be a human-readable item of information in plain text. For example, the plain text or human-readable item of information may comprise the letters of an alphabet, preferably of the Latin alphabet, and/or the Arabic numbers 0-9. 
     It must essentially be understood that such human-readable plain text can also be read mechanically with corresponding sensors and programs (OCR=Optical Character Recognition). It must also essentially be understood that people could in principle also read binary encoded items of information, but this is not usually practicable. “Human-readable plain text” is therefore to be understood in the present sense as any encoding which is optimized for rapid and effective absorption by a person, such as conventional human writing systems. 
     In general, a digital code structure within the meaning of the invention may include several types of digital encoding at the same time. In particular, these may be binary encoded items of information and items of information encoded in plain text. 
     The minimum information content of four bits, that is to say 16 statuses, is only sufficient for simple control tasks. At least one byte is preferably encoded in the data set, and at least two bytes, that is to say 65536 statuses, are even more preferable. At least four bytes are even more advantageously encoded in the data set, and at least 6 bytes(=48 bits) are particularly advantageous. 
     In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the control line is applied to the material web by applying ink by means of a printing mechanism. The application preferably takes place here in the same processing step as an application of the printed image. This allows simple provision of the control line overall. A fixed relative positioning of the control line with respect to the printed image consisting, in particular, of ink is preferably made possible here. 
     Depending on requirements, the control line may can be applied by means of the same printing mechanism as the printed image in order to reduce the number of components. As an alternative to this, the control line can also be applied by means of an individual or separate printing mechanism in order to preserve a printing mechanism applying the printed images. 
     In a generally advantageous manner, provision may be made for at least a second control line running in the longitudinal direction to be arranged in another region of the material web. In this way, any transverse shift of the material web during processing can be detected. In particular, the second control line can also have a digital code structure in the same way as the first control line. 
     In a preferable refinement, the two control lines are assigned to different print orders on the same material web here. For example, a plurality of different print orders may be provided for alongside one another on the same material web. The print orders may, in particular, have different printed images with different repeat lengths. Operation with a plurality of print orders alongside one another is also referred to as dual-lane or multi-lane operation. 
     In a particularly preferred refinement of the invention, the control line is arranged here in a first edge region of the material web, wherein the second control line is arranged in a transversally opposite second edge region of the material web. This enables the spacing of the control lines and therefore of the edges of the material web to be controlled by means of the corresponding use of sensors. This means, for example, that cutting blade positions or the like can also be optimally corrected in dual-lane or multi-lane operation. 
     In a generally advantageous manner, provision is made for the code structure to comprise gaps in the control line, wherein a length of each of the gaps does not exceed a maximum value. In order to ensure reliable functioning of the control line for the purposes of aligning the apparatus, the maximum size of a gap in relation to a resolution of the scanning by the sensor is prescribed. A typical maximum size of a gap may, for example, be 9 mm. A smallest unit of length which is reliably detected by the sense here may, for example, be 3 mm, this being defined as a block or the minimum length of a feature. The maximum length of a gap in a code structure according to the invention is therefore three blocks. 
     Code segments of the control line are preferably defined by the gaps, wherein at least two, in particular at least four different discrete lengths of the code segments are provided, these corresponding to a digital item of information of at least two, in particular at least four different values per code segment. In this way, a proportion of gaps or unprinted regions of the control line is kept particularly low so that the guiding function of the control line is assured irrespective of the data content of the code structure. For example, the code segments may be 2 blocks, 3 blocks, 4 blocks or 5 blocks in length which, for example, are assigned the decimal numbers 1 to 4 or the binary numbers 00, 01, 10 and 11. Depending on the resolution of the sensor, other systems for translating code segments of different lengths into digital values may also be defined. 
     Provision is particularly preferably made here for the data set to comprise a large number of gaps and code segments following one another, wherein, in particular, the data set is of a length in the longitudinal direction which depends on the encoded information, wherein the length does not exceed a defined maximum length. Therefore, for example, each printed image may be assigned its own data set which, in particular, is encoded in the same position relative to the printed image in the control line. In order to ensure such assignment, the theoretical maximum length of the data set merely has to be smaller than the repeat length of the printed image. 
     In a particularly advantageous embodiment of the invention, the device comprises a corrugated cardboard machine, wherein control information for the corrugated cardboard machine is preferably contained in the data sets of the material web. Possible information in the data sets is, for example, the material web&#39;s roll ID, the order number of the print order, consecutive numbering of the printed images, a meter counter for the length of the material web, the order quantity, the repeat length or the like. Since the control line is preferably applied at the same time or immediately after the printed images, real-time data on defects and rejects can, in particular, also be encoded. For example, such items of information are helpful if problems with the order for the printed images have arisen in individual sections of the material web. 
     Through the control line according to the invention, defects in the material web can be sorted out in a corrugated cardboard machine just like when using a digital roll protocol. If required, a digital roll protocol can be used in addition to a code structure of the control line according to the invention. 
     In a generally advantageous manner, the material web may be configured as a digitally preprinted roll of a digital printing machine. Modern digital printing machines, for example Hewlett Packard&#39;s HP T1100S model, can apply particularly flexible print orders to a material web. Such machines generate, in particular, digital roll protocols on the material web generated. There may be a number of different print orders both in the transverse direction and in the longitudinal direction. Provision is particularly preferably made here for the material web to have at least two different printed images arranged alongside one another and repeated in the longitudinal direction, wherein, in particular, the printed images have repeat lengths which differ in the longitudinal direction. 
     In principle, the high level of flexibility even allows printed images which are not repeated but are completely different and have different repeat lengths to be applied in the longitudinal direction. Encoding by means of the control line according to the invention enables each of the printed images to be assigned to a respective data set. 
     In a generally advantageous manner, the combination of the material web with the data sets in the control line according to the invention enables at least essential data which are contained, for example, in a roll protocol of a digital printing machine to be printed on the material web. The invention also enables existing corrugated cardboard machines to be upgraded easily. For example, the preprints or material webs can be produced externally here. The processing into pieces of corrugated cardboard or packaging then takes place with the aid of the control line data which has been read. To achieve this, the sensor(s) of an existing apparatus merely have to be correspondingly adapted and coupled to a process control system. 
     In an advantageous embodiment of the invention, a breadth of the control line is less than 4 mm, wherein a clearance with a breadth of less than 4 mm to each side of the control line is provided. The breadth of the control line is particularly preferably about 3 mm with lateral clearances of 3 mm in each case too. Such dimensioning saves offcuts overall and optimizes the useful surface of the material web. In order to produce such narrow control lines, an optimal resolution of the sensors is expediently no more than 0.25 mm, in particular both in the longitudinal direction and in the transverse direction. 
     In a further advantageous manner, cut marks are printed laterally alongside the control line, wherein the cut marks can be read as a control signal for a cutting mechanism. This is an analog signal with a position which is correlated as accurately as possible to the printed image. Cut marks protruding laterally alongside the control line increase process reliability and cutting accuracy. As an alternative to the above, the code structure of the control line could also serve as a cut mark itself. The cut marks are advantageously read with the same sensor as the code structure of the control line. 
     The data set preferably contains one or more items of information selected from the group consisting of consecutive numbering of the printed image, identification of a print order, information on an order change or information on defects. 
     In a generally preferred embodiment of the invention, the sensor records a two-dimensional digital image of the control line, wherein the image is electronically evaluated. This may, for example, be carried out by means of a conventional CCD camera which takes a quasi-infinite 2D image at least of the relevant region of the material web passing through as a line scan camera. These digital images can then be evaluated both in terms of the position or control/monitoring function of the control line and in respect of the digital information of the code structure. 
     In a generally advantageous manner, the code structure is configured to be bidirectionally readable. This allows it to be read, in particular, even if the material web is unrolled in one or other direction in any intermediate steps. Such bidirectional readability can ideally be combined with the recording of a two-dimensional image of the control line. 
     In a further preferable embodiment of the invention, in addition to the digital code structure, a human-readable item of information in plain text is applied to the material web. The human-readable item of information is preferably, but not necessarily, correlated with the information content of the code structure. For example, at least part of the information of a binary digital code structure may be repeatedly applied in plain text. Even in highly automated production processes, it may, in certain situations, be necessary to intervene or monitor manually. It is advantageous for the intervening party if an integrated item of information can be ascertained simply by reading it. 
     In a generally preferable manner, the human-readable item of information is applied in plain text in the same operation as the rest of the control line. In particular, the plain text can be applied to the material web by applying ink by means of a printing mechanism. 
     In a particularly preferable detail, the plain text is positioned congruent with the control line here. For example, a continuous part of the control line or a part without binary or other encoding may be used to provide the plain text in a space-saving manner. Particularly in the case of control lines with large breadths of several millimeters, for example 5 mm, particularly good readability by a person is provided at the same time. Breadths of the control line in combination with human-readable plain text which are preferred according to the invention range from 3 mm to 8 mm, particularly preferably 4 mm to 6 mm. 
     In an alternative to the above or in a supplementary embodiment, the plain text may be positioned outside the control line. This may preferably also be inside the printed image. 
     In an alternative embodiment of the invention, the digital code structure comprises a human-readable item of information in plain text, wherein the digital item of information preferably consists exclusively of the plain text, Such a code structure allows a space-saving arrangement along with human readability. Machine readability can also be provided for through suitable sensors and programs (OCR systems). 
     In a generally advantageous manner, the plain text comprises alphanumeric characters, preferably Latin letters and/or Arabic numbers. If the plain text, for example, consists of alphanumeric Latin letters and Arabic numbers, there are at least 36 different characters. A single character therefore already encodes an information content of more than five bits. With four of these characters (36*36*36*36=1679616 combinations), an information content of more than two bytes can be encoded. 
     The problem underlying the invention is also solved by a material web, preferably for processing with a device according to the invention, wherein both an applied, in particular repeated printed image and a control line extending in the longitudinal direction are configured on the material web, and wherein the control line has a defined position transverse to the material web, and wherein the control line has a digital code structure in its longitudinal direction, wherein the code structure encodes a data set of at least four bits, in particular at least two bytes, of information content. 
     A material web according to the invention advantageously serves, in particular, as a printed surface for the production of cardboard packaging or corrugated cardboard. 
     The problem underlying the invention is also solved by cardboard packaging, preferably corrugated cardboard, produced by applying a material web according to the invention to a support and cutting the support in conjunction with detecting the control line. 
     The problem underlying the invention is also solved in respect of a method for processing a material web with the characterizing features of claim  19  mentioned in the introduction. 
     The method according to the invention is preferably carried out by means of a device according to one of claims  1  to  16 . 
     Further advantages and features of the invention can be seen from the exemplary embodiments described below and from the dependent claims. 
     Four preferable exemplary embodiments of the invention are described below and explained in more detail by reference to the enclosed drawings. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES 
         FIG. 1  shows a schematic view of a device according to the invention from the side. 
         FIG. 2  shows a schematic three-dimensional view of a material web according to the invention with sensors arranged thereabove. 
         FIG. 3  shows a plan view of an enlarged detail of the material web from  FIG. 2 . 
         FIG. 4  shows a representation of a section of a control line of a material web according to the invention with a code structure. 
         FIG. 5  shows a second exemplary embodiment of the invention in which a control line contains additional information in human-readable plain text. 
         FIG. 6  shows a third exemplary embodiment of the invention in which additional information in human-readable plain text is provided outside a control line. 
         FIG. 7  shows a fourth exemplary embodiment of the invention in which a control line exclusively contains information in human-readable plain text. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     The device shown in  FIG. 1  is a corrugated cardboard machine (CCM)  1  which has a plurality of stations  2  for feeding, conveying and processing material. An upper printed material web  3  is applied two-dimensionally onto other webs  4  as a support here and are thereby joined together to form a printed corrugated cardboard  5 . 
     After being joined together, the web consisting of printed corrugated cardboard  5  is cut into individual cardboard packaging or pieces of corrugated cardboard or packaging in a cutting station  6 , the latter being stacked in a deposit station  7 . 
     In a procedure which is preferred here, the printed material web  3  is produced on an external printing machine (not shown). Already preprinted rolls are therefore supplied to the CCM and fixed. 
     Alternatively, the printing of the material web  3  can also be carried out directly during the production of the corrugated cardboard by means, in particular, of a digital printing machine  8 . No such integrated printing machine is shown in detail, but one would be arranged in the region of reference numeral  8  in an apparatus according to  FIG. 1 . 
     Irrespective of how the material web  3  is produced, printed images  9  are applied to the latter. The printed images  9  are repeated at a repeat length RL in a longitudinal direction L of the material web  3 . 
     A control line  10 ,  11  is configured on each side of the material web. The control lines  10 ,  11  are applied to the material web  3  by the printing machine  8  by means of printing ink. The control lines  10 ,  11  are each located in an edge region of the material web  3 , wherein the edge regions are transversely opposite. 
     Each of the control lines  10 ,  11  has a breadth B of 3 mm. A free unprinted region at least 3 mm in breadth is provided on at least one side of each of the control lines. Each of the control lines  10 ,  11  therefore requires a strip which is 6 mm in breadth at the edge of the material web  3 . 
     The control lines  10 ,  11  each have code structures  12  which are configured as a whole by gaps  13  or unprinted regions and code segments  14  extending between the gaps  13 . 
     The control lines  10 ,  11  are each visually perceived here by a separate sensor  15 ,  16 . For this purpose, alongside sensors  15 ,  16 , a defined light  17 ,  18  of the control lines  10 ,  11  is provided above the material web  3 . The sensors  15 ,  16  are connected to a control computer  19  which evaluates the signals from the sensors. The control computer  19 , for its part, is connected to a process control system  21  of the CCM via an interface  20 . 
     In the present case, the sensors  15 ,  16  are in each case configured as a CCD camera in the form of a line scan camera. The line scan camera, when triggered by a speed signal, scans line by line. This produces an “endless 2D image” of the control lines  10 ,  11 . The images are electronically evaluated by the control computer  19 . Algorithms extract the data contained therein in coherent code sequences and evaluate their contents. 
     The code structure is configured to be bidirectionally readable here so that the item of information is recognized irrespective of the direction in which the image is taken and/or in which the material web  3  is passing through. 
     The processing of the material web to produce fully cut cardboard packaging or pieces of corrugated cardboard can be controlled and monitored by following the control lines  10 ,  11  and reading the code structures  12 . 
     The sensors (scanners) used hitherto in the prior art are improved upon in the solution here by a factor of  4  and the scanning speed is also more than doubled. The demands on the printed control line therefore need to be reassessed. If the resolution of the line breadth by the sensor was approx. 1 mm in the prior art, resolution is 0.25 mm according to the invention. 
     Alongside the code structures  12 , the control lines  10 ,  11  consist of continuous or uniformly printed sections which are in principle of any desired or quasi-infinite length. These sections serve solely to ensure lateral positional control of the material web in the manner of an analog control signal. By arranging the two control lines on the opposite edges of the material web, in particular, a change in the breadth of the material web can be accurately controlled. Such changes in breadth through external influences constitute a possible source of errors in the production of corrugated cardboard. 
     The makeup of the code structures  12  is as follows here: 
     The gaps  13  in the control lines extend over the entire breadth of the control line  10 ,  11 . They are a minimum length of 3 mm in the longitudinal direction L. The minimum length of a feature, be it a gap or a printed section,is 3 mm here and is referred to as a block. Depending on the resolution of the sensors  15 ,  16 , a breadth of the control line or a length of a block may also assume other values. 
     The end of a quasi-infinite section of the control line  10 ,  11  is in each case introduced by a gap  13  which is three blocks in length. For redundancy reasons, there follows in each case a printed index mark  22  which is one block in length. The index mark  22  serves as a start code and also prescribes the reading direction. 
     The control computer  19  has been reliably informed hereby that there now follows a sequence which is provided with data content (see also the representation in  FIG. 4 ). 
     The sequence or the entire data set consists of a succession of code segments  14 . The number of code segments  14  per data set is stipulated here and is 24 pieces. Each of the code segments  14  is separated from the following code segment  14  by a gap  13  which is 3 mm in length or a block. 
     A code segment  14  is configured is a continuously printed section which is of one of four possible lengths: two blocks, three blocks, four blocks or five blocks. These different code segments  14  may, for example, be assigned to the binary numbers 00, 01, 10 and 11 so that a code segment  14  has an information content of 2 bits. Since a data set comprises  24  code segments  14  in this case, it contains an item of information of 48 bits or 6 bytes. 
     The end of the data set is in turn indicated by a gap  13  which is three blocks in length. In the present case, the term gap  13  is used both for the start and end signals of the code structures  12  which are three blocks long and for the spaces between the code segments  14  which are just 1 block long. In principle, however, these types of gaps are different types of segment of the code structure. The respective length of the region has a corresponding significance both in the printed and in the free regions of the code structure. 
     There are therefore a total of seven different types of segment in the code structure, these being summarized again in the table below: 
     
       
         
           
               
               
               
               
               
               
             
               
                   
               
               
                   
                   
                   
                   
                 Length 
                   
               
               
                 Name 
                 Description 
                 Value 
                 Length 
                 [mm] 
                 Module 
               
               
                   
               
             
            
               
                   
               
            
           
           
               
               
               
               
               
               
            
               
                 Index 
                 Start signal, 
                   
                 1 block     
                 3 
                 
                   
                 
               
               
                   
                 printed 
               
               
                 Code seg. 0 
                 Data value 
                 00 
                 2 blocks 
                 6 
                 
                   
                 
               
               
                 Code seg. 1 
                 Data value 
                 01 
                 3 blocks 
                 9 
                 
                   
                 
               
               
                 Code seg. 2 
                 Data value 
                 10 
                 4 blocks 
                 12 
                 
                   
                 
               
               
                 Code seg. 3 
                 Data value 
                 11 
                 5 blocks 
                 15 
                 
                   
                 
               
               
                 Gap 
                 Unprinted length 
                   
                 1 block     
                 3 
                 
                   
                 
               
               
                   
                 between code 
               
               
                   
                 segments 
               
               
                 Start gap 
                 Unprinted gap to 
                   
                 3 blocks 
                 9 
                 
                   
                 
               
               
                   
                 beginning and end 
               
               
                   
                 of the data set 
               
               
                   
               
            
           
         
       
     
     The absolute length of a data set depends on the information content to be displayed (237 mm-453 mm). The makeup of the code enables bidirectional decoding (reading forward and backward). 
     A data set of the control line  10  is illustrated in abbreviated form by way of example in  FIG. 4 . From left to right in the drawing, there is first a gap  13  which is three blocks in breadth followed by the index mark  22  which is one block in breadth. Then come the first four code segments  14  of different length, that is to say the information bits  0  to  7 . 
     Because of the abbreviated illustration, the last four code segments, that is to say the information bits  40  to  47 , are shown again hereafter. There then follows the end gap  13  which is 9 mm or 3 blocks in length. After that comes another quasi-infinite section of the control line  10 . 
     To control a cross cutter or cutting mechanism of the CCM, special cut marks  23  are also already printed during the printing process. These cut marks  23  are read immediately before a knife shaft on the CCM with corresponding sensor technology. 
     The cut mark  23  may be integrated in the control line or printed on the inside of the control line  10 ,  11 , see  FIG. 3 . The control line  10 ,  11  with the code structure is removed when the edge is trimmed whilst the cut mark  23  remains and can control the cutting knife transversely to the web. 
     The individual data sets of the code structure and the cut marks  23  are usually always printed per repeat. Through integration into the control line  10 , the cut marks  23  can also be perceived by the same sensors (scanners)  15 ,  16  on the CCM. This results in redundant evaluation. 
     In the second exemplary embodiment of the invention shown in  FIG. 5 , in addition to the digital code structure  12 , a human-readable item of information in plain text  24  is applied to the material web  3 . The human-readable item of information  24  is correlated with the information content of the code structure. At least some of the information in the binary digital code structure  12  is repeatedly applied to the material web  3  in plain text  24 . 
     The plain text  24  comprises alphanumeric characters, in the present case Latin letters and Arabic numbers. 
     The second exemplary embodiment differs from the first exemplary embodiment only by the additional plain text  24  and a somewhat larger breadth of the control line, so reference is made to the first example with respect to the further characteristics, in particular the binary code structure  12 . 
     Even in highly automated production processes, it may, in certain situations, be necessary to intervene or control manually. It is advantageous for the intervening party if an integrated item of information can be ascertained simply by reading it. 
     In the exemplary embodiment according to  FIG. 5 , the plain text  24  is positioned here congruent with the control line  10 ,  11 . The quasi-infinite section of the control line  10 ,  11  described in the first exemplary embodiment is used here as a continuous part of the control line  10 ,  11  without binary or any other encoding in order to provide for the plain text  24  in a space-saving manner. The plain text  24  is configured in the present case as reverse print, that is to say as an omission inside the control line printed over the full surface. There therefore remain sufficient continuous edges of the control line in order to rule out any misinterpretation of the plain text  24  as a binary code structure  12 . 
     Particularly in the case of control lines  10 ,  11  with large breadths B of several millimeters, 5 mm in the present example, particularly good human readability is provided at the same time. Breadths of the control line  10 ,  11  in combination with human-readable plain text  24  which are preferred according to the invention range from 3 mm to 8 mm, particularly preferably 4 mm to 6 mm. 
     The human-readable information in plain text  24  is applied in the same operation as the rest of the control line  10 ,  11 . The plain text is also applied to the material web  3  by applying ink by means of a printing mechanism, in the present case by the printing machine  8 . 
     In a third exemplary embodiment of the invention according to  FIG. 6 , unlike in the second exemplary embodiment, the plain text  24  is positioned outside the control line  10 ,  11 . In the present case, the plain text is in each case in one of the printed images  9 . 
     In a fourth exemplary embodiment of the invention according to  FIG. 7 , the digital code structure within the meaning of the invention comprises a human-readable item of information in plain text  24 , wherein the digital item of information consists exclusively of the plain text  24 . Such a code structure  24  allows a space-saving arrangement along with the human readability. Machine readability can also be provided for through suitable sensors  15 ,  16  and programs (OCR systems). 
     The fourth exemplary embodiment according to  FIG. 7  corresponds, including with respect to the breadth of the control lines  10 ,  11 , to the second exemplary embodiment according to  FIG. 5 , but the binary code structure  12  is not present. The plain text  24  is positioned congruently on one of the control lines  10 ,  11  in each case. 
     In other words, the example according to  FIG. 7  relates to conventional continuous control lines  10 ,  11  on which a digital code structure in the form of the human-readable plain text  24  is stored. 
     Since the present case relates to alphanumeric Latin letters and Arabic numbers, there are at least 36 different characters. A single character therefore already encodes an information content of more than five bits. With four of these characters (36*36*36*36=1679616 combinations), an information content of more than two bytes can be encoded. 
     LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS 
       1  Corrugated cardboard machine (CCM) 
       2  Stations of the CCM 
       3  Material web 
       4  Further webs, support for the material web 
       5  Printed corrugated cardboard 
       6  Cutting station, CCM cutting mechanism 
       7  CCM deposit station 
       8  CCM printing machine 
       9  Printed images 
       10  First control line 
       11  Second control line 
       12  Code structure 
       13  Gap 
       14  Code segment 
       15  First sensor 
       16  Second sensor 
       17  First light 
       18  Second light 
       19  Control computer 
       20  Interface 
       21  Process master computer 
       22  Index mark 
       23  Cut mark 
       24  Human-readable plain text, alphanumeric characters 
     RL Repeat length 
     L Longitudinal direction of the material web 
     B Breadth of the control line