Source: https://patents.google.com/patent/DE60110287T2/en
Timestamp: 2020-01-25 11:51:07
Document Index: 542258172

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 40', 'art 96', 'art 145', 'arts 2', 'arts 2', 'arts 2', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'arts 2', 'art 1', 'arts 2', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'arts 2', 'arts 2', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1']

DE60110287T2 - Liquid composition, Ink jet recording ink set, Ink jet recording method, Recording unit and Recording apparatus - Google Patents
Liquid composition, Ink jet recording ink set, Ink jet recording method, Recording unit and Recording apparatus
DE60110287T2
DE60110287T2 DE2001610287 DE60110287T DE60110287T2 DE 60110287 T2 DE60110287 T2 DE 60110287T2 DE 2001610287 DE2001610287 DE 2001610287 DE 60110287 T DE60110287 T DE 60110287T DE 60110287 T2 DE60110287 T2 DE 60110287T2
DE2001610287
DE60110287D1 (en
Ryuji Ohta-ku Katsuragi
Makoto Ohta-ku Shioya
2000-02-17 Priority to JP2000045073 priority Critical
2000-02-17 Priority to JP2000045074 priority
2000-02-17 Priority to JP2000045073 priority
2001-02-16 Application filed by Canon Inc filed Critical Canon Inc
2005-06-02 Publication of DE60110287D1 publication Critical patent/DE60110287D1/en
2006-02-16 Publication of DE60110287T2 publication Critical patent/DE60110287T2/en
The The present invention relates to a liquid composition, a Ink jet for ink jet recording, an ink jet recording process, on a recording unit and on an inkjet recording Device, and more particularly to a liquid composition and an ink set for ink jet recording, which generate images can with reduced bleeding and excellent water resistance, and to an ink jet recording method, a recording Unit and to an ink jet recording apparatus which use this composition and the ink set.
One Ink jet recording method is a recording method which is quiet and stop-free, in which for recording an image a Ink is ejected directly onto a recording medium. In this process, it is easy to lower the running costs, to downsize the device and create color images because no complicated device is required for its exercise. Therefore found previously recording devices such as printers, copiers, fax machines and word processors practical application in which the ink jet recording method is applied. A color ink jet recording apparatus finds also practical use for generating multi-color images with a black ink and color inks (for example, at least a colored ink chosen by yellow, cyan, magenta, red, green and blue ink) uses such an ink jet recording technique.
on the other hand involves image formation by the ink jet recording method a problem that this is a phenomenon (Bleeding) occurs when two inks of different kinds in be applied adjacently to a recording medium, the inks mix with each other at boundaries between them, so that the quality of a generated color image deteriorates. In particular, that has Color mixing at interfaces between a black ink and a colored ink a big impact on the deterioration of image quality, so that developed numerous solutions were.
A representative Solving method is an ink set and a recording method with a mechanism when two inks adjoin a recording medium in an adjacent manner be applied, viscosity increase of at least one ink or aggregation or precipitation of causing at least one ink to prevent bleeding.
For example, as disclosed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 5-202328 (EP-A-0534634), US Patent No. 5,198,023 and Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 6-106841 (EP-A-0586079), techniques are disclosed for controlling the Bleeding paint by using a first liquid containing a precipitating agent and a second liquid containing a coloring material capable of producing a precipitate in combination with the precipitating agent. Polyvalent metal salts are disclosed as the precipitating agent, and dyes having at least one carboxyl group, and the like are disclosed as the coloring materials capable of precipitating by the polyvalent metal salts. The first liquid may contain a coloring material. In this case, the first liquid may also be used as an ink. However, all of these polyvalent metal salts using a Cl -, NO 3 -, I -, Br -, ClO 3 -, or CH 3 COO - ion as an anion in the polyvalent metal salts. Further, Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2000-136337 discloses as precipitating agents metal-coordinated compounds in which a polyvalent metal ion is coordinated to a compound having a ligand, such as lactic acid, in addition to the polyvalent metal salts described above.
The present inventors have made an extensive investigation regarding the improvement of bleeding. As a result, it has been found that when a first liquid containing a polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid and a second liquid containing a coloring material capable of reacting with the polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid are used in combination, and these liquids are applied to a recording medium to provide a touch The coloring material reacts with the polyvalent metal ion to reduce the occurrence of bleeding. The term "reaction" used in the present invention means generation of aggregation, precipitation or viscosity increase of the second liquid, and also includes a reaction after these liquids have penetrated into the recording medium. It has also been found that polyvalent metal salts Aldonic acid is excellent in solubility in an ink, can be used effectively as a component of the ink, and is harmless to the human body, and it has also been confirmed that improvement in water resistance is observed when the first liquid and the second liquid are so applied be that they overlap each other.
It It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a liquid composition which can reduce the occurrence of bleeding, when combined in an ink jet recording process is used with a color ink, and high quality images with improved Can produce water resistance.
A Another object of the present invention is to provide an ink set which allows the generation of high quality images with reduced occurrence of bleeding and with excellent water resistance.
A Another object of the present invention is an ink jet recording method to provide images with good water resistance can generate.
A Another object of the present invention is an ink jet recording method which can produce color images in which bleeding reduced to boundaries between adjacent inks of different colors is.
A Another object of the present invention is to provide an ink jet recording To provide device which uses appropriately can be in the formation of color images with reduced incidence bleeding and pictures with good water resistance.
Yet Another object of the present invention is to provide a recording To provide unit suitably used in the inkjet recording Device can be used.
The above tasks can be solved by the present invention described below.
According to one embodiment The present invention thus provides a liquid composition for inkjet recording, which together with a colored Ink is used and which reacts with the colored ink, when in contact with the colored ink, which is a polyvalent one Metal salt of aldonic acid and a liquid one Medium includes.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, there is also provided an ink jet recording method comprising the steps of:
(i) applying energy to the liquid composition described above to eject it to a recording medium;
(ii) applying energy to a colored ink to impinge on a recording medium; and
(iii) forming a contact state of the liquid composition with the colored ink on the recording medium.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, there is further provided an ink set for ink-jet recording
(2) a colored ink comprising a coloring material and a liquid medium, and which reacts with the liquid composition by contact with the liquid composition.
According to one embodiment The present invention further provides a recording Unit with a container part a liquid A composition containing the above-described liquid composition contains an ink container part, which contains a color ink, and an ink jet recording head for ejecting the liquid Composition and colored ink by applying energy at the liquid Composition and colored ink.
According to one embodiment The present invention further provides an ink jet recording Device with a container part a liquid Composition which is a liquid composition contains an ink container part, that contains a colored ink, and an ink jet recording head for ejecting the liquid Composition and colored ink by applying energy at the liquid Composition and the colored ink, wherein the liquid composition the liquid described above Composition is.
According to one another embodiment The present invention further provides an ink jet recording Device with the recording unit described above.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, there is further provided an ink set for ink-jet recording
(1) a colored ink having a coloring material, a liquid medium and a polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid, and
(2) a black ink comprising a coloring material and a liquid medium and which reacts with the colored ink by contact with the colored ink.
According to another embodiment of the present invention there is further provided an ink jet recording method comprising the steps of:
(i) applying energy to the black ink contained in the ink set described above to eject it to a recording medium;
(ii) applying energy to the colored ink contained in the ink set described above to eject it to a recording medium; and
(iii) generating a contact state of the black ink with the colored ink on the recording medium.
According to one another embodiment The present invention further provides a recording Unit with an ink tank part, containing the ink set described above, and one inkjet recording head for ejecting the inks which are supplied from the ink container part by applying energy to the inks.
According to one another embodiment The present invention further provides an ink jet recording Device with an ink tank part, which contains an ink set with at least one black ink and a colored ink, and an ink-jet recording head for ejecting the ink supplied from the ink container part by applying energy to the ink, the ink set of the is the ink set described above.
1 Fig. 10 is a longitudinal sectional view illustrating an exemplary head of an ink jet recording apparatus.
2 Figure 11 is a transverse sectional view illustrating the exemplary head of the ink jet recording apparatus.
3 FIG. 15 is a perspective view illustrating the appearance of a multi-head which is an array of heads, as in FIG 1 shown.
4 FIG. 12 is a schematic perspective view illustrating an exemplary ink jet recording apparatus. FIG.
5 Fig. 10 is a longitudinal sectional view illustrating an exemplary ink cartridge.
6 FIG. 12 is a perspective view illustrating an exemplary recording unit. FIG.
7 Fig. 10 is a schematic sectional view illustrating an exemplary construction of an ink-jet recording head which uses the energy of a piezoelectric element.
8th Fig. 15 is a perspective view illustrating a recording part in which a plurality of recording heads are arranged.
9 Fig. 15 is a perspective view of another recording head used in the present invention.
10 illustrates a first exemplary construction of a recording head.
11 illustrates a second exemplary construction of a recording head.
12 illustrates a third exemplary construction of a recording head.
13 Fig. 15 is a perspective view illustrating a recording part in which a plurality of recording heads are arranged.
14 Fig. 15 is a perspective view of another recording head used in the present invention.
15 illustrates a fourth exemplary construction of a recording head.
16 illustrates a fifth exemplary construction of a recording head.
17 schematically illustrates an ink jet recording method according to an embodiment of the present invention.
The present invention will be described in detail with reference to the preferred embodiments. First embodiment:
First, a specific embodiment of the present invention in which a liquid composition comprising a polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid and a colored ink having a coloring material in combination will be described. In this embodiment, the liquid composition containing the polyvalent metal salt, which causes a reaction caused by contact with the coloring material in the colored ink to cause aggregation, precipitation or viscosity increase of the colored ink, and the colored ink are applied to a recording medium. to bring them into contact with each other to thereby perform recording. The liquid composition preferably does not affect the hue of the colored ink in a recorded image.
below gets detailed in the liquid Composition contained aldonic acid according to this embodiment described.
Aldonic acid is a polyhydroxycarboxylic acid corresponding to a compound obtained by oxidizing an aldehyde group of an aldose to a carboxyl group, and is represented by the general formula
where n is an integer 0 or greater, and * C denotes an asymmetric carbon atom.
Because aldonic has an asymmetric carbon atom as described above, There are several optical isomers. It is generally said that an aldonic acid having at least 5 carbon atoms (n at least 3 in the general Formula) hardly in an aqueous one solution is present, and part of the aldonic acid forms a lactone with a Hydroxy group, located in a γ position or a δ position, each to a γ-aldonolactone or a δ-aldolactone to become, and thus is aldonic acid present in the form of an equilibrium mixture of aldonic acid, γ-aldolactone and δ-aldolactone.
Aldonic acid is divided by the number of carbon atoms, and those with 4 Carbon atoms (n is 2 in the general formula) generally become named as tetronic acid; that with 5 carbon atoms (n is 3 in the general formula) as pentonic acid; and those with 6 carbon atoms (n is 4 in the general formula) as hexonic acid. Specific examples of aldonic acid include glycolic acid (further name: hydroxyacetic acid) with 2 carbon atoms (n is 0 in the general formula); Glyceric acid with 3 carbon atoms (n is 1 in the general formula); Erythronic acid and threonic with 4 carbon atoms (n is 2 in the general formula); Ribonic acid, arabic acid, xylonic acid and lyxonic with 5 carbon atoms (n is 3 in the general formula); Gluconic acid, allonic acid, altronic acid, mannonic acid, gulonic acid, idonic acid, galactonic acid and Talon acid with 6 carbon atoms (n is 4 in the general formula); and glucoheptonic with 7 carbon atoms (n is 5 in the general formula). In These compounds can in some cases D-forms, L-forms and DL-form may be present.
Gluconic acid (n is 4 in the general formula), which is preferably used in this embodiment, and more preferably among the aldonic acids will be described below. Gluconic acid will is widely used as a food additive and is opposite to that human body harmless. It is generally said that gluconic acid is rare as such in an aqueous solution is present, and part of the aldonic acid forms a lactone with a Hydroxy group, located in the γ position or δ position, each to a γ-gluconolactone or δ-gluconolactone to become, and thus is gluconic acid present in the form of a balance mixture of gluconic acid, γ-gluconolactone and δ-gluconolactone. For gluconic acid are a D-shape, L-shape and DL-form, any of which can be used. However, that is D-gluconic the D-form generally readily available. As optical isomers Gluconic acid are allonic acid, altronic, Manno acid, gulonic, idonic, galactonic and talc available. These connections can can also be used because they have a nature similar to gluconic acid.
For the present Invention is preferably a polyvalent metal salt of gluconic acid used. Particularly preferred examples include magnesium gluconate, Calcium gluconate, barium gluconate, ferrous gluconate, copper (II) gluconate and zinc gluconate. These include magnesium gluconate and calcium gluconate particularly preferably used. These compounds can be found in any combination, not to mention individual ones Use.
Of the total share of at least one compound chosen by the above mentioned polyvalent metal salts of aldonic acid, is preferably 0.005 to 20% by weight, more preferably 0.05 to 12% by weight based on the total amount of liquid composition in the Intention of reaching a higher one Effects to reduce bleeding and good ejection stability.
below is described a colored ink, which together with the liquid composition according to this embodiment is used. The colored ink comprises a coloring material and a liquid medium. The ink is such that it reacts with the polyvalent metal salt the aldonic acid On contact with the liquid Composition containing the polyvalent metal salt to aggregation or precipitation of the coloring To cause material in the color ink or viscosity increase of the colored ink. Examples of coloring Materials include dyes and pigments.
When Pigments can almost all pigments such as inorganic pigments and organic pigments used become.
CI Pigment Yellow 1, 2, 3, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 73, 74, 75, 83, 93, 95, 97, 98, 114, 128, 129, 151, 154 and 195;
CI Pigment Red 5, 7, 12, 48 (Ca), 48 (Mn), 57 (Ca), 57: 1, 57 (Sr), 112, 122, 123, 168, 184 and 202;
CI Pigment Blue 1, 2, 3, 15: 3, 15:34, 16, 22 and 60; and
CI Vat Blue 4 and 6.
If such a pigment as described above is used as a coloring Material for the ink will preferably be a dispersant in combination thus used with the intention of stably dispersing the pigment in the ink. The dispersant used is a polymeric Dispersant or a dispersant of a surface-active Art.
Specific examples of the polymeric dispersant include polyacrylates, salts of styrene-acrylic acid copolymers, salts of styrene-acrylic acid-acrylate terpolymers, salts of styrene-maleic acid copolymers, salts of acrylate-maleic acid copolymers, salts of styrene-methacrylic acid copolymers, Salts of vinylnaphthalene-maleic acid copolymers, salts of β-naphthalene-sulfonic acid-formalin polycondensates, polyvinylpyrrolidone, polyethylene glycol and polyvinyl alcohol. Among them, those having a weight-average molecular weight of 1,000 to 30,000 and an acid value of 100 to 430 are preferable.
Examples for the Dispersant from the surface-active Type include laurylbenzenesulfonates, laurylsulfonates, laurylbenzenecarboxylates, Laurylnaphthalensulfonate, aliphatic amine salts and polyethylene oxide condensates. Each of these surface active Substances can be used. These dispersants may preferably used in an amount of 10: 5 to 10: 0.5 with respect to one ratio the mass of the pigment to the mass of the dispersant used.
In this embodiment can as the coloring Material also used such a carbon black pigment, the is capable to disperse itself by introducing a water-soluble Group on the surface of the carbon black, as described, for example, in the laid open patent Japanese Patent Application Nos. 5-186704 and 8-3498. If such a Self-dispersing carbon black used must have a dispersant as described above are not necessarily used. Therefore At least the amount of the dispersant used can be considerable be reduced.
If such a pigment ink comes into contact as described above with the liquid composition, becomes the dispersion stability pigment in the pigment ink by the salting effect and the like of the polyvalent metal ion in the liquid composition interrupted, and the dispersed state of the pigment is destabilized. As a result, the pigment in the pigment ink aggregates promptly and was cancelled, to fixing the coloring Accelerate material in the pigment ink on a recording medium. It is therefore considered that if at least two inks of different color be applied in an adjacent manner to a recording medium, Bleeding is difficult to occur. In this embodiment, destabilization becomes the dispersed state of the pigment based on such Effect as described above, considered as a "reaction" between the colored ink and the liquid Composition.
When a dye is used as the coloring material for the color ink according to this embodiment, a water-soluble dye is preferably used. As the water-soluble dye, any dyes such as direct dyes, acid dyes, basic dyes and disperse dyes can be used. As the colored ink containing a dye as the coloring material, it is preferable to use an ink in which the fixing of the dye in the colored ink on a recording medium is promptly accelerated by precipitating the dye due to the salting out effect, forming a slightly water-soluble or water-insoluble salt or compound by a reaction of a divalent metal ion with the dye, or the combination of these effects by contacting the ink with the liquid composition according to this embodiment. As the dye usable in such a colored ink, a dye having at least one carboxyl group is preferred because it readily reacts with the polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid upon contact with the liquid composition according to this embodiment containing the polyvalent metal salt to form an insoluble salt or compound to build. In particular, dyes having such a structure as mentioned below as exemplified compounds 1 to 30 are preferably used. Exemplary compound 1:
Exemplary compound 2:
Exemplary compound 3:
Exemplary compound 4:
Exemplary compound 5:
Exemplary compound 6:
Exemplary compound 7:
Exemplary compound 8:
Exemplary compound 9:
Exemplary compound 10:
Exemplary compound 11:
Exemplary compound 12:
Exemplary compound 13:
Exemplary compound 14:
Exemplary compound 15:
Exemplary compound 16:
Exemplary compound 17:
Exemplary compound 18:
Exemplary compound 19:
Exemplary compound 20:
Exemplary compound 21:
Exemplary compound 22:
Exemplary compound 23:
Exemplary compound 24:
Exemplary compound 25:
Exemplary compound 26:
Exemplary compound 27:
Exemplary compound 28:
Exemplary compound 29:
Exemplary compound 30:
When the coloring Material used in the colored ink according to this embodiment is included the above-described dyes and pigments either individually or used in combination. The concentration of this Dyes and pigments are preferably within a range of 0.1 to 20% by weight based on the total amount of the ink.
The in the liquid Composition used liquid Media according to this embodiment and the colored ink together with the liquid composition described below. As the liquid medium is preferably uses a mixed solvent Water and a water-soluble organic solvents.
In relating to this in this embodiment used water it is desirable use deionized water instead of tap water, which contains numerous ions. The water content is preferably within a range of 35 to 96 percent by weight based on the total amount of the ink. The water-soluble organic solvents, used in combination with water, may be suitably selected from the ones mentioned below water-soluble organic solvents, dependent on from the intended end use. Because the water-soluble organic solvent the viscosity the ink up to one for the use may preferably regulate suitable viscosity, it is used in the intention of slowing the drying speed of the Ink and raising the solubility of the coloring Material to the clogging of the nozzles in a recording Prevent head.
Specific Examples of the water-soluble organic solvent include alkyl alcohols of 1 to 5 carbon atoms, such as methyl alcohol, Ethyl alcohol, n-propyl alcohol, Isopropyl alcohol, n-butyl alcohol, sec-butyl alcohol, tert-butyl alcohol, isobutyl alcohol and n-pentanol; Amides such as dimethylformamide and dimethylacetamide; Ketones and ketone alcohols such as acetone and diacetone alcohol; Ethers such as tetrahydrofuran and dioxane; Oxyethylene or oxypropylene copolymers such as diethylene glycol, triethylene glycol, Tetraethylene glycol, dipropylene glycol, tripropylene glycol, polyethylene glycol and polypropylene glycol; Alkylene glycols in which the alkylene radical Has 2 to 6 carbon atoms, such as ethylene glycol, propylene glycol, Trimethylene glycol and triethylene glycol; 1,2,6-hexanetriol; glycerol; trimethylolethane, trimethylolpropane; lower alkyl ethers of polyhydric alcohols, such as ethylene glycol monomethyl (or Monoethyl) ether, diethylene glycol monomethyl (or Monoethyl) ether and triethylene glycol monomethyl (or monoethyl) ether; lower Dialkyl ethers of polyhydric alcohols such as triethylene glycol dimethyl (or Diethyl) ether and tetraethylene glycol dimethyl (or diethyl) ether; alkanolamines such as monoethanolamine, diethanolamine and triethanolamine; sulfolane; N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone; 2-pyrrolidone; and 1,3-dimethyl-2-imidazolidinone. The water-soluble organic solvents, those mentioned above are, can either used singly or in combination.
Around the pH of the colored ink according to this embodiment to make constant the solubility of the Dye or the dispersibility of the pigment in the colored To stabilize ink, a pH regulator can be added to the colored ink. Specific examples of the pH regulator include hydroxides such as lithium hydroxide, Sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide and ammonium hydroxide; Sulfates like Lithium sulfate, sodium sulfate, potassium sulfate and ammonium sulfate; Carbonate such as lithium carbonate, sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, potassium carbonate, Potassium hydrogencarbonate, ammonium carbonate and ammonium hydrogencarbonate; Phosphates such as lithium phosphate, monosodium phosphate, disodium phosphate, Trisodium phosphate, monopotassium phosphate, dipotassium phosphate, tripotassium phosphate, Monoammonium phosphate, diammonium phosphate and triammonium phosphate; and acetates such as lithium acetate, sodium acetate, potassium acetate and ammonium acetate.
These Salts can individually added to the colored ink. However will preferably to use two or more of these salts in combination. These salts are preferably added in a ratio of 0.1 to 10 weight percent, more preferably 1 to 8 weight percent in the intention of maintaining stable pH, increasing the Solution stability of the water-soluble Dye, contained in colored ink, and preventing problems such as nozzle clogging.
In the liquid Composition according to this embodiment and the colored ink used with the liquid composition should be able to various types of conventionally known general additives, for example, viscosity modifiers, Mold protectants, preservatives, antioxidants, defoamers, and Means for preventing drying out of nozzles, such as urea, on suitably used in combination, in addition to the components described above.
Regarding the preferred ranges of physical properties of the liquid composition according to this embodiment and with the liquid Composition to be used colored ink, at a temperature near 25 ° C especially suitable for ink-jet recording, the pH is preferably within a range of 3 to 12, more preferably 4 to 10, the surface tension is preferably within a range of 10 to 60 mN / m (dynes / cm), more preferably 15 to 50 mN / m (dynes / cm), and the viscosity is preferably within a range of 1 to 30 cP, more preferably 1 up to 10 cP.
The An ink-jet recording method according to this embodiment is an ink jet recording process in which the liquid composition and the colored ink having those respective compositions, as described above, can be used in combination, and be applied to a recording medium to each other in touch to bring to record in this way. Indeed The ink jet recording method according to this embodiment will be described particularly preferably used in the generation of images so-called plain paper such as paper for copying or binding paper, which has hitherto been used because of the effect of reducing The occurrence of bleeding is pronouncedly developed.
The Order of the liquid Composition and the ink applied to a recording medium at Generation of images can be applied, can be arbitrary. Namely, each one the liquid Composition and the colored ink can be applied first. The liquid Composition can be applied after the colored ink has been applied, and the colored ink can be further applied become.
Namely in this embodiment becomes the liquid Composition applied to the recording medium to them in touch to bring with the colored ink, being achieved a good Character quality, fixing ability and water resistance an image formed by the colored ink, and an improvement the bleeding preventing effect regardless of the order and the method of their application. It is considered that this is up the fact goes back that aggregation, precipitation or viscosity increase of colored ink on the recording medium occurs by, for example Mixing the polyvalent metal ion in the liquid composition with the pigment and / or the dye in the colored ink.
From the viewpoints of improving the optical density and the fixing ability, it is particularly preferable that the liquid composition is applied after the colored ink has been applied, and the colored ink is further applied in connection therewith. In the case where the application of the liquid composition is performed before the application of the colored ink, no particular limitation is imposed on the time from the time when the liquid composition is applied to the recording medium until the time when where the colored ink is applied is required. In order to perform the present invention more effectively, however, it is desirable to apply the colored ink within several seconds, more preferably within one second. The same applies to the case where the liquid composition and the colored ink are applied to the recording medium in the reverse order. As in 17 illustrates, the liquid composition ( 804 ) and the colored ink ( 805 ) from corresponding recording heads ( 801 . 802 ) of an ink jet recording apparatus, and are mixed together just after ejection ( 806 ) to transfer the mixture to the recording medium ( 803 ).
The quantitative ratio of the color ink to the liquid composition used in the area may be 1: 1, when used in an image-forming area. However, the ratio of the colored ink to the liquid composition may be within a range of 10: 1 to 10:10. The amounts of the colored ink and the liquid composition applied to the unit area of the recording medium in the image forming area can be specifically controlled according to, for example, a method in which the application of the liquid composition and the colored ink by an ink jet recording system is performed such that the number of pixels of the liquid composition applied to the recording medium is within a range of 10% to 100% of the pixel number of the colored ink applied to the recording medium, a method in which the application of the liquid composition and the colored ink by an ink jet recording system is conducted in such a manner that the amount of the liquid composition ejected is controlled in such a manner that it becomes smaller than the amount of the discharged colored ink for adjusting the ejection amount of the liquid composition applied to the recording medium to a range of from 10% to 100% of the ejection amount of the colored ink applied to the recording medium, or a combined method thereof.
When a method for applying the liquid composition according to the present invention Invention and the colored ink on a recording medium Preferably, an ink jet recording method such as described above. Numerous types of conventionally known ink jet recording systems can be used as the ink jet recording method be used. However, in the present invention Preferably, an ink jet recording method is used which uses makes of thermal energy, and an ink jet recording method, which of mechanical energy by deformation of a piezoelectric Elements makes use of.
First, will an ink jet recording apparatus which makes use of thermal energy, below with reference to the drawings described.
An exemplary structure of a head, which is a major component of the ink jet recording apparatus which makes use of thermal energy, is disclosed in US Pat 1 and 2 shown. 1 is a sectional view of a head 13 , taken along the flow path of the ink, and 2 is a sectional view taken along line 2-2 in FIG 1 , The head 13 is formed by bonding a glass, ceramic, silicone, polysulfone, or plastic plate with a flow path (nozzle) 14 through which an ink is passed, to a heating substrate 15 , The heating substrate 15 is composed of a protective layer 16-1 made of silicon oxide, silicon nitride or silicon carbide, an uppermost protective layer 16-2 , made of a metal such as platinum, or a metal oxide such as platinum oxide, preferably tantalum or tantalum oxide, electrodes 17-1 and 17-2 formed of aluminum, gold, or aluminum-copper alloy, a heating resistive layer 18 formed from a refractory material such as hafnium boride, tantalum nitride or aluminum tantalum, a heat-collecting layer 19 formed of silica or alumina, and a substrate 20 made of silicon, aluminum or aluminum nitride having a good heat radiating property.
Well, after applying pulsed electrical signals to the electrodes 17-1 and 17-2 Of the head 13 , generates the heating substrate (heater) 15 heat directly in the area shown by "n" to be in an ink 21 which is in contact with this area to form bubbles. A meniscus 23 The ink protrudes through the pressure thus produced, and the ink protrudes 21 gets out of an ejection opening 22 over the nozzle 14 Of the head 13 on a recording medium 25 ejected in the form of ink droplets 24 , 3 FIG. 12 illustrates a multi-head appearance composed of an array of a number of heads, as in FIG 1 shown. The multiple head is created by tight binding of a glass plate 27 with a number of furrows 26 to a warming head 28 , similar to the one in 1 . described
4 Fig. 12 illustrates an example of an ink jet recording apparatus in which such a head as described above has been introduced. In 4 denotes reference number 61 a blade serving as a wiping member, one end of which is a stationary end supported by a blade holding member to form a cantilever. The blade 61 is provided at a position adjacent to an area in which a recording head 65 is active, and is carried in this embodiment in such a way that it protrudes into the barrel, through which the recording head 65 is moved.
reference number 62 denotes a cap for the area of the ejection openings of the recording head 65 , which is provided in a rest position, the blade 61 adjoins, and is up so builds that it moves in a direction perpendicular to a direction in which the recording head 65 is moved, and comes into contact with the surface of the ejection openings to cover them. reference number 63 denotes an ink absorbing member provided adjacent to blade 61 , and becomes similar to the blade 61 carried in such a way that it protrudes into the barrel, through which the recording head 65 is moved. The blade described above 61 , Cap 62 and the ink-absorbing element 63 form an ejection recovery section 64 where the blade 61 and the ink-absorbing element 63 Remove water, dust and / or the like from the surface of the ink ejecting openings.
reference number 65 denotes the recording head with an ejection energy-generating means, and which serves to eject the ink onto a recording medium placed in an opposite relation to the ejection opening side provided with the ejection openings to perform recording. reference number 66 denotes a carriage on which the recording head 65 so appropriate that the recording head 65 can be moved. The car 66 is slidably toothed with a guide rod 67 , and is connected (not shown) to its part with a strap 69 powered by a motor 68 , This can the car 66 along the guide bar 67 be moved, and thus the recording head 65 be moved from a recording area to an adjacent area.
references 51 and 52 respectively denote a feeding part from which the recording medium is inserted, and guide rollers driven by a motor (not shown). With such a structure, the recording medium is supplied at the position opposite to the surface of the ejection opening of the recording head 65 is unloaded from a discharge section provided with discharge rollers 53 , in the course of recording. In the above construction, the cap becomes 62 in the ejection recovery section 64 from the path of movement of the recording head 65 withdrawn when the recording head 65 returns to its resting position upon completion of recording, and the blade 61 remains protruding into the path of movement. As a result, the area of the ejection opening of the recording head becomes 65 wiped.
If the cap 62 comes into contact with the surface of the ejection opening of the recording head 65 to cover it, the cap becomes 62 so moved to the path of movement of the recording head 65 protrude. When the recording head 65 from its rest position to the position at which recording is started are the cap 62 and the blade 61 at the same positions as the positions for the above-described wiping. As a result, the area of the ejection opening of the recording head becomes 65 also wiped at the time of this movement. The above movement of the recording head 65 to its rest position is not only performed when recording is stopped or the recording head 65 is recovered to expel, but also when the recording head 65 between recording areas in the intention of recording, during which it is moved to the rest position adjoining each recording area at given intervals where the area of the ejection opening is wiped according to this movement.
5 illustrates an exemplary ink cartridge 45 in which an ink to be supplied to a recording head via an ink-supplying member such as a tube is contained. Hereby reference number 40 an ink tank portion containing the ink to be supplied, as exemplified by a pocket for the ink. One end of it is provided with a plug 42 , made of rubber. A needle (not shown) can be inserted into this stopper 42 so that the ink is in your pocket 40 for the ink can be fed to the head. reference number 44 denotes an absorbent element for receiving a waste ink. It is preferable that the ink container part 40 is formed on its surface, with which the ink comes into contact, from a polyolefin, in particular polyethylene.
The ink-jet recording apparatus according to this embodiment is not limited to the above-described apparatus in which the head and the cartridge are separately provided. Therefore, it is also preferable to use a device in which these elements are integrated as shown in FIG 6 shown are formed. In 6 denotes reference number 70 a recording unit, inside which is contained an ink tank portion containing an ink, for example, an ink absorbing member. The recording unit 70 is constructed such that the ink in such an ink-absorbing member is ejected in the form of ink droplets via a head 71 with a plurality of nozzles. Polyurethane is preferably used as the material for the ink-absorbing member. The ink container portion can be constructed without using the ink absorbing member through a pocket for the ink, inside which a source is provided. reference number 72 denotes an airway for communicating the interior of the recording unit 70 with the atmosphere. This recording unit 70 is used in place of the recording head 65 who in 4 is shown, and is detachably installed on the carriage 66 ,
As an ink jet recording apparatus of a system other than the above, there may be mentioned an on-demand type ink jet recording apparatus comprising a nozzle-forming substrate having a plurality of nozzles, pressure generating devices composed of a piezoelectric material and an electrically conductive material provided in an opposite one Relationship with the nozzles, and an ink filled around the pressure-generating devices, wherein the displacement of the pressure-generating devices is generated by applied voltage to eject ink droplets from the nozzles. An example of the structure of a recording head, which is a main component of such a recording apparatus, is shown in FIG 7 illustrated.
The head is composed of an ink flow path 80 communicating with an ink chamber (not illustrated) of a nozzle plate 81 through which ink droplets of desired volume are ejected, a vibrating plate 82 for directly applying a pressure to the ink, a piezoelectric element 83 , bound to the vibration plate 82 , which undergoes a shift in accordance with an electrical signal, and a substrate 84 that is adapted to the nozzle plate 81 , the vibration plate 82 and the like to support and fix.
In 7 is the ink flow path 80 formed of a photosensitive resin or the like. The nozzle plate 81 is made of a metal such as stainless steel or nickel, and an ejection opening 85 from this is formed by electroforming or punching by pressing. The vibration plate 82 is formed of a film of a metal such as stainless steel, nickel or titanium and a high-modulus resin film. The piezoelectric element 83 is made of a dielectric material such as barium titanate or PZT.
The recording head having the above construction operates in such a manner that pulsed voltage is applied to the piezoelectric element 83 is applied to generate a voltage so that the to the piezoelectric element 83 bound vibrating plate 82 is deformed by the energy of the voltage, and the ink in the ink flow path 80 thus pressurized vertically to ink droplets (not shown) from the ejection opening 85 the nozzle plate 81 to perform recording in this way. Such a recording head is used by incorporation into an ink jet recording apparatus similar to that shown in FIG 4 shown. The operation of the details of the ink jet recording apparatus can be performed in the same manner as described above.
When a color image is formed according to the ink jet recording method according to this embodiment, for example, a recording apparatus is used in which 5 recording heads, each of them in 3 pictured on a cart 96 are arranged. An embodiment thereof is shown in FIG 8th , references 91 . 92 . 93 and 94 Indicate recording heads for ejecting yellow, magenta, cyan and black inks. reference number 95 denotes a recording head for ejecting the liquid composition. The recording heads are arranged in the above-described recording apparatus and eject the respective color inks according to recording signals. The liquid composition is applied to at least image-forming areas of a recording medium where the colored inks are applied, for example, by moving the carriage in an X-direction. 8th shows the case where 5 recording heads are used. For example, an embodiment is also included in which colored inks are yellow 101 , Magenta 102 , Cyan 103 and black 104 , and a liquid composition 105 are ejected from a recording head in which ink flow paths are formed separately as in 9 shown. It will be understood that a recording head may be constructed so that the color inks and the liquid composition are ejected in reverse order to the above-described order. Specific structural examples of the arrangement of ink-jet recording heads suitably used in this embodiment include such 3 cases as shown in FIG 10 to 12 , In 10 to 12 designate reference numbers 111 to 114 . 121 to 124 , and 131 to 134 respectively recording heads for ejecting colored inks yellow (Y), magenta (M), cyan (C) and black (Bk). references 115 . 125 and 135 refer to recording heads for ejecting a liquid composition (S). The respective recording heads are arranged on a carriage as illustrated in FIG 8th (varies according to the construction example). The recording heads are arranged in the above-described recording apparatus, and eject the corresponding color inks according to recording signals. The liquid composition is applied to at least image-forming parts of a recording Medium, where the colored inks are applied, before or after the application of the colored inks. The recording heads are moved by the carriage in the direction of the arrows (1), and the recording medium is moved by guide rollers in a direction of the arrow (2).
In the first constructional example, shown in 10 , are the recording heads S ( 115 ), Bk ( 114 ), Y ( 113 ), M ( 112 ) and C ( 111 ) are arranged in a parallel manner on the carriage. The second structural example, shown in 11 , comprising the recording heads for the liquid composition ( 125 ) and the black ink ( 124 ), arranged in parallel, and the recording heads for Y ( 123 ), M ( 122 ) and C ( 121 ) arranged parallel to these recording heads, and in series from one to the other. The ejection volumes per dot of the respective recording heads are not always the same, and the ejection volume (Vd) per dot of each recording head can be set to suitably optimize the recording. It is preferable that Vd of S, Y, M and C is set similarly, and Vd is doubled by Bk. In the third structural example, shown in 12 , are the recording heads for Bk ( 134 ), S ( 135 ), Bk ( 134 ), Y ( 133 ), M ( 132 ) and C ( 131 ) in which the ejection volumes are equal, are arranged in parallel on the carriage, and thus the amount of ejected black ink can be made twice as much as each ejection quantity of the other liquid composition and the color inks.
When next becomes a special second embodiment of the present invention, in which an ink set for inkjet recording, which comprises at least one colored one Ink with a polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid and a coloring Material, and a black ink with a coloring material that is capable of to react with the polyvalent metal salt is used. In this embodiment Both the colored ink and the black ink are placed on a recording medium applied to a touch condition to make recordings.
in the Ink set according to this embodiment is intended to bleed between the black ink and the to prevent colored ink, and is no special measure to prevent bleeding between the colored inks. But if the colored inks are designed to be promote penetrability in smooth, sized paper, for example by adding a surface active Substance to the colored inks, such colored inks are effective in preventing bleeding between the color inks.
The the ink set according to this embodiment Forming colored inks are described first. The in this embodiment Color inks used include a coloring material, a liquid medium and a polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid. The polyvalent metal salt the aldonic acid is as detailed as possible in the first embodiment described.
The coloring material contained in each of the colored inks constituting the ink set according to this embodiment will now be described. Examples of the coloring material include direct dyes, acid dyes, basic dyes, disperse dyes and pigments. The coloring material is preferably such that it does not cause a reaction with the polyvalent metal salt of the aldonic acid, even when mixed with such a salt, and thus its solubility is maintained. Specific examples of such a coloring material include:
CI Acid Yellow 23;
CI Acid Red 52 and 289;
CI Acid Blue 9;
CI Reactive Red 180;
CI Direct Blue 189 and 199;
CI Basic Yellow 1, 2, 11, 13, 14, 19, 21, 25, 32, 33, 36 and 51;
CI Basic Orange 2, 15, 21 and 22;
CI Basic Red 1, 2, 9, 12, 13, 37, 38, 39 and 92;
CI Basic Violet 1, 3, 7, 10 and 14;
CI Basic Blue 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 19, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 45, 54 and 65;
CI Basic Green 1 and 4;
CI Basic Brown 1 and 12; and
CI Basic Black 2 and 8.
However, the coloring materials are not limited thereto. These water-soluble dyes can be used either singly or in combination. The concentration of these water-soluble dyes is preferably within a range of 0.1 to 20% by weight based on the total amount of the ink.
In addition to The above-described components may preferably be at least a surface active Fabric contained in each of the colored inks containing the ink set according to this Embodiment form. The desired Penetrability and viscosity can be incorporated into the colored inks by containing the surfactants Stoffes, giving them the required performance of the inks Inkjet recording suffice. In particular, as described above, such colored Ink high penetrability in smooth paper by adding the surfactants Substance to the colored ink, and is effective in preventing bleeding between colored inks.
None special restriction will be added to the amount of surfactants Stoffes imposed. To the desired Permeability, and the resulting ink a suitable viscosity however, it is preferably within a range from 0.01 to 10% by weight, more preferably from 0.1 to 5 Weight percent based on the total amount of ink.
The black ink containing the ink set according to this embodiment is described below. The in this embodiment used black ink comprises a coloring material that is capable is, with the polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid and a liquid medium to react. As the coloring Material of black ink can the colorants are used Materials of black that are in the colored inks according to the first embodiment is usable. This coloring Material can be used either alone or in combination. The amount of this added coloring Material is preferably within a range of 0.1 to 20% by weight based on the total amount of ink.
It is further preferred, a nonionic surface-active Add fabric to the black ink. Adding the nonionic surfactant Stoffes further prevents bleeding between the black inks and the colored ink and leads about that in addition to an effect of preventing the lowering of the density the black ink at interfaces between the black ink and the colored inks, i. the occurrence from so-called "whitish Turbidity ".
As As described above, the surfactant is preferably contained in the colored inks contained in the ink set according to this embodiment be used. Therefore, such an ink often has a high penetrability in recording media such as smooth paper and low surface tension. When such a colored ink having a low surface tension comes into contact with the black ink with a high surface tension, enters an area on, the less coloring Contains material at the interface between the black ink and the colored ink, and such Phenomenon, which is called "whitish turbidity" occurs in some cases on. When the nonionic surfactant is black Added ink is going to increase their surface tension can minimize the phenomenon the "whitish Turbidity "effectively prevented become.
In this embodiment is the proportion of nonionic surfactant in the black Ink no special restriction imposed. To prevent bleeding between the black To facilitate ink and the colored ink, and to make the appearance from whitish cloudiness effectively prevent and good ejection stability of the ink and picture quality however, this is preferably within one Range of 0.1 to 0.5 weight percent, more preferably from 0.2 to 0.4 weight percent based on the total amount of Ink.
Examples in black ink according to this embodiment contained nonionic surfactant contained Ethylene oxide adducts of higher Alcohols, ethylene oxide adducts of alkylphenols, ethylene oxide adducts of fatty acids, Ethylene oxide adducts of polyhydric alcohol fatty acid esters, ethylene oxide adducts of aliphatic amides, ethylene oxide adducts of higher alkylamines, ethylene oxide adducts of polypropylene glycol, fatty acid ester of polyhydric alcohols and alkanolamine fatty acid amides. All these nonionic surfactants Substances are preferably used. However, further preferred uses nonionic surfactants Substances such as ethylene oxide adducts of higher Alcohols, ethylene oxide adducts of alkylphenols, ethylene oxide-propylene oxide copolymers, ethylene oxide adducts of acetylene glycol more preferably used. It is further preferred that the number of moles of added Ethylene oxide in the ethylene oxide adducts described above within a range of 4 to 20.
Regarding the liquid Media used in black ink and colored inks which the ink set according to this embodiment can form the water-soluble ones are used organic solvents, the detailed as liquid Media are described which are used in the liquid composition according to the first embodiment, and the colored inks, which together with the liquid composition used, the additives used therein, their added amounts and their physical property values and the like.
The An ink-jet recording method according to this embodiment and the recording apparatus according to this embodiment, by which the recording method can be realized described.
The An ink-jet recording method according to this embodiment is an ink jet recording method in which the inks Energy is used to eject these inks, thereby forming a color image on a recording medium, the ink set for ink jet recording according to this embodiment as described above is used as ink. No special restriction is imposed on the recording medium used here. Indeed The ink jet recording method according to this embodiment will be described particularly preferably used in the generation of images so-called plain paper such as paper for copying or glued paper which Previously used because of the effect of reducing bleeding noticeably developed between the black ink and the colored inks is. It goes without saying That is, the ink-jet recording method according to this embodiment can be suitably applied, for example, in coated Paper specially made for inkjet recording, and transparent films for Overhead projectors. This procedure may also be appropriate be applied to ordinary woodfree paper and glossy paper.
When a method of applying the black ink and the colored ones Ink on a recording medium in the ink jet recording method according to this embodiment can be mentioned be a method in which the black ink and the colored Ink can be applied to interface with each other in touch get.
As a further mode, there may be mentioned a first method in which the black ink and the colored ink are applied to a recording medium so as to overlap each other on the recording medium, and the application of the colored ink is performed before the black ink is applied. When such a first method is performed, the prevention of the bleeding between the black ink and the colored inks is facilitated, and moreover, the reduction of "whitish haze" described above and the improvement of the water resistance are also achieved In the first method, no particular limitation is imposed on the time required from the time when the colored ink is applied to the recording medium until the time when the black ink is applied, however, to carry out the present invention more effectively It is preferable to apply the black ink within several seconds, more preferably within one second, There may be mentioned a second method in which the colored inks are applied after the black ink is applied, and a mode in which the colored ink and the black ink Ink exactly after her Au to be mixed with each other, as in 17 illustrated.
In the first method, the quantitative ratio of the black ink to the colored ink applied to the area unit of a recording medium in an image-forming area may be 1: 1. However, the ratio of the black ink to the colored ink can be controlled within a range of 10: 1 to 10:10, thereby reducing the whitening haze of the resulting image, and also achieving stable printing. For example, the control of the amounts of the black ink and the colored ink applied to the unit area of the recording medium in the image-forming area can be achieved in detail by the following methods. The methods include a method in which the number of pixels of the colored ink applied to the recording medium is controlled within a range of 10% to 100% of the number of pixels of the black ink applied to the recording medium; a method in which the application of the black ink and the colored ink is performed by an ink jet recording system, wherein the amount of the discharged colored ink is controlled so as to become smaller than the amount of the black ink that is ejected; and a combined method thereof in which the number of pixels of the colored ink applied to the recording medium is controlled within a range of 10% to 100% of the number of pixels of the black ink applied to the recording is applied to the medium, and the application of the black ink and the colored ink is performed by an ink jet recording system, wherein the amount of ejected colored ink is controlled so that it is less than the amount of ejected black ink.
When a method of applying the black ink and the colored ones Inks on a recording medium in this embodiment For example, an ink jet recording method is used. Several types of Conventionally known ink jet recording systems may be referred to as the ink jet recording method can be used. Indeed For example, in the present invention, an ink-jet recording method is particularly preferable. which makes use of thermal energy, and an ink jet recording method, which makes use of mechanical energy through deformation a piezoelectric element. The ink jet recording method, What use of thermal energy is one how detailed in the first embodiment described.
When a color image is formed according to the ink jet recording method according to this embodiment, for example, a recording apparatus is used in which four recording heads, each of them in 3 was illustrated on a cart 145 is arranged. An embodiment thereof is illustrated in FIG 13 , references 141 . 142 . 143 and 144 respectively denote recording heads for ejecting a black ink (Bk), a yellow ink (Y), a magenta ink (M) and a cyan ink (C). The recording heads are arranged in the above-described recording apparatus, and eject the respective color inks according to recording signals, for example, during the movement of the carriage in an X direction.
13 shows the case where the four recording heads are used. However, the present invention is not limited thereto. For example, an embodiment is also included in the inks of black 154 , Yellow 151 , Magenta 152 and cyan 153 are ejected from a recording head in which ink flow paths are formed separately, as shown in FIG 14 ,
Specific structural examples of the structure of ink-jet recording heads which are suitably used in this embodiment include the two cases as shown in FIG 15 and 16 illustrated. In 15 and 16 designate reference numbers 161 to 164 and 171 to 174 each recording heads to eject yellow, magenta, cyan and black inks. The respective recording heads are arranged on a carriage as illustrated in FIG 13 (varies according to the construction example). The recording heads are arranged in the above-described inkjet recording apparatus and eject the respective inks according to recording signals. The recording heads are moved by the carriage in the direction of the arrow (1), and the recording medium is moved by guide rollers in a direction of an arrow (2).
In the first structural example, the in 15 shown are the recording heads for Bk ( 164 ), Y ( 163 ), M ( 162 ) and C ( 161 ) arranged in parallel on the carriage. The second structural example, shown in 16 , comprising the recording head for black ink ( 174 ), and recording heads for Y ( 173 ), M ( 172 ) and C ( 171 ) arranged parallel to this recording head and in series with each other. In 15 For example, this structure can be applied to the so-called line printer in which a carriage is fixed, and a recording medium is moved by guide rollers in a direction of the arrow (2).
The The present invention will be described in detail below with reference to the following Examples and comparative examples are explained. All designations "part" or "parts" and "%", which in the following Examples used are parts by weight or parts by weight and percent by weight, unless otherwise specified.
EXAMPLES 1 to 33:
These Examples are examples related to the first embodiment belong.
The following respective ingredients were used to prepare the respective liquid compositions and colored inks. The preparation of the liquid compositions and the colored inks using a dye as a coloring material was carried out in the following manner. The following respective ingredients were dissolved, and the resulting solutions were then separately filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.) having a pore size of 0.2 μm, to thereby prepare respective liquid compositions and colored inks , In the case of color inks using a pigment as a coloring material, a Pigment dispersion prepared according to a respective preparation method described below, the resulting dispersion was thereafter mixed with a liquid medium, and the resulting mixture was filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.) having a pore size of 3 μm, thus to produce a pigmented ink.
The following respective components were dissolved, and the resulting solutions were then separately filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.) having a pore size of 0.2 μm, to thereby prepare liquid compositions 1 to 4. <Preparation of Liquid Composition 1> diethylene glycol 20 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 2 parts calcium gluconate 2 parts water 76 parts.
<Preparation of Liquid Composition 2> Triethyleneglycol monobutylether 10 parts glycerin 20 parts Magensiumgluconat 4 parts water 66 parts.
<Preparation of Liquid Composition 3> diethylene glycol 20 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 2 parts Calcium DL-glycerate 1.5 parts water 76.5 parts
<Preparation of Liquid Composition 4> diethylene glycol 20 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 2 parts water 78 parts
(Preparation of the pigment dispersion 1)
After this 300 g of commercially-available acidic carbon black "MA-77" (trade name; pH: 3.0; Product of Mitsubishi Kagaku Co., Ltd.) with 1000 ml of water, 450 g of sodium hypochlorite were dropwise added to the mixture (available Chlorine concentration: 12%), followed by stirring for 10 Hours at 100 to 105 ° C. The resulting slurry was over Toyo filter paper # 2 (Product of Advantes Co.) to the resulting pigment particles thoroughly wash with water. The wet cake of this pigment became dispersed again in 3000 ml of water, and the dispersion became Desalted by means of a reverse osmosis membrane to a conductivity of 0.2 .mu.s. The pigment dispersion (pH: 8 to 10) was reduced to a pigment concentration concentrated by 10%. The process described above became to obtain pigment dispersion 1 in which self-dispersing Carbon black, on the surface a -COONa group was bound, was dispersed.
(Preparation of the ink)
The following ingredients containing the above-obtained Pigment Dispersion 1 were mixed and filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.) having a pore size of 3.0 μm, to thereby prepare Black Ink 1. Pigment dispersion 1 40 parts glycerin 8 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts isopropyl alcohol 4 parts water 43 parts.
<Preparation of Black Ink 2> (Preparation of Pigment Dispersion 2) Styrene-acrylic acid-butyl acrylate terpolymer (acid value: 116; average molecular weight: 3700) 5 parts triethanolamine 0.5 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts water 89.5 parts.
The above ingredients were mixed and heated in a water bath at 70 ° C, thereby completely dissolving the resin component. To this solution was added 15 parts of carbon black "MA-100" (trade name, pH: 3.5, product of Mitsubishi Kagaku Co., Ltd.) and 5 parts of 2-propanol to mix the components for 30 minutes resulting premix of a dispersing treatment under the following conditions:
Dispersing Machine: Sand Mill (manufactured by Igarashi Kikai KK)
Milling medium: Zirconium beads (diameter: 1 mm)
Packing proportion of the grinding medium: 50% (by volume)
Meal duration: 3 hours.
The thus obtained dispersion was subjected to a centrifuging treatment (12000 rpm, 20 minutes) to remove coarse particles, to thereby prepare pigment dispersion 2 of carbon black.
The following ingredients containing the above-obtained Pigment Dispersion 2 were mixed and filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.) having a pore size of 3.0 μm, to thereby prepare Black Ink 2. Pigment dispersion 2 20 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts diethylene glycol 10 parts 2-pyrrolidone 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 0.2 parts water 59.8 parts
The following ingredients were dissolved, and the resulting mixture was then filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.) having a pore size of 0.2 μm, to thereby prepare Black Ink 3. Exemplary Compound No. 1 (M: NH 4 + ) 2 parts diethylene glycol 10 parts 2-pyrrolidone 5 parts 2-propanol 5 parts Sodiumhydroxid 0.1 parts water 77.9 parts
<Preparation of Yellow Ink 1> (Preparation of Pigment Dispersion 3) Styrene-acrylic acid copolymer (acid value: 200, average molecular weight: 7000) 5.5 parts Monoethanolamine 1.0 parts Deionized water 67.5 parts diethylene glycol 5.0 parts.
The above ingredients were mixed and heated to 70 ° C in a water bath to completely dissolve the resin component. To this solution were added 20 parts of CI Pigment Yellow 93 and 1.0 part of isopropyl alcohol to mix the ingredients for 30 minutes. Thereafter, the resulting premix was subjected to a dispersing treatment under the following conditions: dispersing: sand mill Grinding Medium: Glass beads (diameter: 1 mm) Pack dose of the milling medium: 50% (by volume) Meal-time: 3 hours.
The thus obtained dispersion was subjected to a centrifuging treatment (12000 rpm, 20 minutes) to remove coarse particles, thus to prepare Pigment Dispersion 3.
The following ingredients containing the above-obtained Pigment Dispersion 3 were mixed and filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.) having a pore size of 3.0 μm to thereby obtain Yellow Ink 1. Pigment dispersion 3 20 parts glycerin 15 parts diethylene glycol 10 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken, Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 0.3 parts water 54.7 parts.
The following components were dissolved and the resulting solution was then filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.) having a pore size of 0.2 μm, to thereby prepare yellow ink 2. Exemplary Compound No. 2 (M: NH 4 + ) 3 parts glycerin 7 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts urea 5 parts ethanol 2 parts water 78 parts.
<Preparation of Magenta Ink 1> (Preparation of Pigment Dispersion 4) Styrene-acrylic acid copolymer (acid value: 200, average molecular weight: 7000) 5.5 parts Monoethanolamine 1.0 parts Deionized water 67.5 parts diethylene glycol 5.0 parts.
The above ingredients were mixed and heated to 70 ° C in a water bath to give the Completely dissolve the resin component. To this solution was added 20 parts of CI Pigment Red 122 and 1.0 part of isopropyl alcohol to mix the ingredients for 30 minutes. Thereafter, the resulting premix was subjected to a dispersing treatment under the following conditions: dispersing: sand mill Grinding Medium: Glass beads (diameter: 1 mm) Pack dose of the milling medium: 50% (by volume) Meal-time: 3 hours.
The thus obtained dispersion was subjected to a centrifuging treatment (12000 rpm, 20 minutes) to remove coarse particles, thus to prepare Pigment Dispersion 4.
The following ingredients containing the above-obtained Pigment Dispersion 4 were mixed and filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.) having a pore size of 3.0 μm, to thereby produce Magenta Ink 1. Pigment dispersion 4 20 parts glycerin 15 parts diethylene glycol 10 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 0.3 parts water 54.7 parts.
The following components were dissolved and the resulting solution was then filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.) having a pore size of 0.2 μm, to thereby produce magenta ink 2. Exemplary Compound No. 3 (M: NH 4 + ) 3 parts glycerin 7 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts urea 5 parts ethanol 2 parts water 78 parts.
<Preparation of Cyan Ink 1> (Preparation of Pigment Dispersion 5) Styrene-acrylic acid copolymer (acid value: 200, average molecular weight: 7000) 5.5 parts Monoethanolamine 1.0 parts Deionized water 67.5 parts diethylene glycol 5.0 parts.
The above ingredients were mixed and heated in a water bath to 70 ° C, thereby completely dissolving the resin component. To this solution were added 20 parts of CI Pigment Blue 15: 3 and 1.0 part of isopropyl alcohol to mix the ingredients for 30 minutes. Thereafter, the resulting premix was subjected to a dispersing treatment under the following conditions: dispersing: sand mill Grinding Medium: Glass beads (diameter: 1 mm) Pack dose of the milling medium: 50% (by volume) Meal-time: 3 hours.
The thus obtained dispersion was subjected to a centrifuging treatment (12000 rpm, 20 minutes) to remove coarse particles, to prepare pigment dispersion 5.
The following ingredients containing the above-obtained Pigment Dispersion 5 were mixed and filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.) having a pore size of 3.0 μm, to thereby prepare Cyan Ink 1. Pigment dispersion 5 20 parts glycerin 15 parts diethylene glycol 10 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 0.3 parts water 54.7 parts.
The following components were dissolved, and the resulting solution was then filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.) having a pore size of 0.2 μm, thus cyan ink 2 manufacture. Exemplary Compound No. 4 (M: NH 4 + ) 3 parts glycerin 7 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts urea 5 parts ethanol 2 parts water 78 parts.
The colored inks and the liquid compositions prepared above were used in the combinations shown in Tables 1 and 2 to perform recording on recording paper. The recording was carried out by means of an ink jet recording apparatus having the same construction as that in FIG 4 and images were generated using two recording heads among the five recording heads which are shown in FIG 8th are shown. At this time, the liquid composition in each ink set was first ejected to be applied in advance to the recording paper, and then the respective color inks were applied. The positions of the recording paper to which the liquid composition was applied were controlled so as to exactly superimpose the positions of the recording paper to which the color ink was applied. Each of the recording heads used here had a recording density of 360 dpi, and was operated under the conditions of a driving frequency of 5 kHz. The ejection volume per dot of the recording heads used was 80 pl / dot for the colored ink and 40 pl / dot for the liquid composition. As the recording paper, PB paper (trade name, product of Canon, Inc, used for both copying machines and ink jet printers) and XEROX 4024 paper (trade name, product of Xerox Co., Ltd.) was used.
Prints were made with the respective color inks and liquid compositions, and the resulting print samples were allowed to stand for 1 hour. Thereafter, the optical density of each print sample was measured by means of a Macbeth RD-915 (trade name, manufactured by Macbeth Co.). The print sample was then immersed in tap water for 3 minutes, allowed to stand and dried again to measure its optical density, and the percentage retention of optical density was found according to the following equation to use the value as a measure of water resistance. The percentage retention of optical density was preferably at least 95% from the viewpoint of practical use. The evaluation results are shown in Table 1. Percentage retention of optical density (%) = [(optical density after immersion in water) / (optical density before immersion in water)] × 100
Percentage retention of optical density was not less than 95%;
Percentage retention of optical density was not less than 85% but less than 95%;
Percentage retention of optical density was less than 85%.
2nd picture quality:
Similarly, English characters and numbers (12 dots) were printed and the resulting print sample was allowed to stand for 1 hour. Thereafter, the sample was visually evaluated to evaluate the sharpness of the characters and the degree to which feathering occurred on the characters. The results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
Sharp characters, free from leakage;
Poor sharpness of the characters and easy leakage;
Poor sharpness of the characters and considerable leakage.
3. Stability across from Bleed out:
Ink sets composed of the liquid composition and the color inks, as shown in Table 2, were separately used to print images on the above-described two plain paper sheets in the following manner. A hard-printed image was first printed with the black ink in each set of inks. Immediately after this printing, a solid image was printed with each of the yellow, magenta and cyan inks so as to be adjacent to each other. In a similar manner as above, a solid image was then printed with the yellow ink. Immediately after this printing, a solid image was printed with each of the black, magenta and cyan inks so as to be adjacent to each other. In a similar manner as above, a solid image was then printed with the magenta ink. Immediately after this printing, a solid image was printed with each of the black, yellow and cyan inks so as to be adjacent to each other. In a similar manner as above, a solid image was further printed with the cyan ink. Immediately after this printing, a solid image was printed with each of the black, magenta and yellow inks so that they adjoin one another. Adjacent portions of the solid printed specimens thus obtained were visually evaluated to evaluate the ink sets for the bleeding resistance between the respective color inks according to the following standard. The results of the evaluation are shown in Table 2.
No bleeding was noted at all interfaces;
Slight bleeding was observed, but not very noticeable;
Bleeding was observed to a large extent at almost all interfaces.
EXAMPLES 34 to 41:
These Examples are examples of which the second embodiment correspond.
A black ink and color inks of yellow, magenta and cyan were combined to prepare ink sets according to EXAMPLES 34 to 37 and COMPARATIVE EXAMPLES 12 to 15. The respective inks were prepared according to the following respective ingredients, according to the following respective procedures. With respect to the black ink constituting each ink set, Dispersion 1 or 2 of the carbon black as obtained above was used to mix with the corresponding Be shown below and the resulting mixture was filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.) having a pore size of 3 μm, to thereby prepare the black ink. With respect to the color inks constituting each ink set, the following respective ingredients were dissolved, and the resulting solutions were then separately filtered under pressure through a microfilter (product of Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd.) having a pore size of 0.2 μm, so as to produce the respective color inks. Main compositions of the ink sets according to EXAMPLES 34 to 37 and COMPARATIVE EXAMPLES 12 to 15 are shown in Table 3. <Ink Set of Example 34> Black Ink: Pigment dispersion 1 40 parts glycerin 8 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts isopropyl alcohol 4 parts water 43 parts.
Yellow ink: CI Acid Yellow 23 2.5 parts glycerin 5 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 Magensiumgluconat 2 parts water 84.5 parts.
Magenta ink: CI Acid Red 289 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 Magensiumgluconat 2 parts water 82 parts.
Cyan ink: CI Acid Blue 9 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 Magensiumgluconat Part 1 water 83 parts.
<Ink Set of Example 35> Black Ink: Pigment dispersion 1 40 parts glycerin 5 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts 2-pyrrolidone 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 0.3 parts water 44.7 parts.
Yellow ink: CI Acid Yellow 23 2.5 parts glycerin 5 parts triethylene 10 parts calcium gluconate 2 parts water 80.5 parts.
Magenta ink: CI Acid Red 289 2 parts glycerin 8 parts thiodiglycol 5 parts triethylene 10 parts calcium gluconate 1.5 parts water 73.5 parts.
Cyan ink: CI Acid Blue 9 2 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts triethylene 10 parts Calcium DL-glycerate Part 1 water 77 parts.
<Ink Set of Example 36> Black Ink: Pigment dispersion 2 20 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts diethylene glycol 10 parts 2-pyrrolidone 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 0.2 parts water 59.8 parts.
Yellow ink: CI Acid Yellow 23 2.5 parts glycerin 5 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 magnesium gluconate 2 parts water 79.5 parts.
Magenta ink: CI Acid Red 289 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts thiodiglycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 magnesium gluconate 1.5 parts water 77.5 parts.
Cyan ink: CI Acid Blue 9 2 parts ethylene glycol 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 magnesium gluconate Part 1 water 78 parts.
<Ink Set of Example 37> Black Ink: Exemplary Compound No. 5 (M: NH 4 + ) 2 parts glycerin 8 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts
isopropyl alcohol 4 parts sodium hydroxide 0.2 parts water 80.8 parts.
Yellow ink: CI Acid Yellow 23 2.5 parts glycerin 5 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 calcium gluconate 2 parts water 84.5 parts.
Magenta ink: CI Acid Red 289 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 Calcium Dl-gluconate Part 1 water 83 parts.
Cyan ink: CI Direct Blue 199 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 magnesium gluconate 2 parts water 82 parts.
<Ink Set of Comparative Example 12> Black Ink: Pigment dispersion 1 40 parts glycerin 8 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts isopropyl alcohol 4 parts water 43 parts.
Yellow ink: CI Acid Yellow 23 2.5 parts glycerin 5 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 water 86.5 parts.
Magenta ink: CI Acid Red 289 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 water 84 parts.
Cyan ink: CI Acid Blue 9 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 water 84 parts.
<Ink Set of Comparative Example 13> Black Ink: Pigment dispersion 1 40 parts glycerin 5 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts 2-pyrrolidone 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 0.3 parts water 44.7 parts.
Yellow ink: CI Acid Yellow 23 2.5 parts glycerin 5 parts triethylene 10 parts water 82.5 parts.
Magenta ink: CI Acid Red 289 2 parts glycerin 8 parts thiodiglycol 5 parts triethylene 10 parts water 75 parts.
Cyan ink: CI Acid Blue 9 2 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts triethylene 10 parts water 78 parts.
<Ink Set of Comparative Example 14> Black Ink: Pigment dispersion 2 20 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts diethylene glycol 10 parts 2-pyrrolidone 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) 0.2 parts water 59.8 parts.
Yellow ink: CI Acid Yellow 23 2.5 parts glycerin 5 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 water 81.5 parts.
Magenta ink: CI Acid Red 289 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts
thiodiglycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 water 79 parts.
Cyan ink: CI Acid Blue 9 2 parts ethylene glycol 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 water 79 parts.
<Ink Set of Comparative Example 15> Black Ink: Exemplary Compound No. 5 (M: NH 4 + ) 2 parts glycerin 8 parts trimethylolpropane 5 parts isopropyl alcohol 4 parts water 81 parts.
Magenta ink: CI Acid Red 289 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 water 1 parts.
Cyan ink: CI Direct Blue 199 2 parts glycerin 8 parts diethylene glycol 5 parts Acetylenol EH (trade name, product of Kawaken Fine Chemicals Co., Ltd.) Part 1 water 84 parts.
[Evaluation procedure and Rating Standard]
Everyone the ink sets, obtained in Examples 34 to 37 and Comparative Examples 12 to 15, was placed in a color inkjet printer (BJC-700J, trade name, manufactured by Canon Inc.) which is an ink jet recording type Device is equipped with a multi-recording head of the on-demand type, which ejects an ink Applying thermal energy to the ink in response to recording signals, in this way, each ink set with respect to the following entries (1) and (2) to evaluate. The paper used for evaluation was PB paper (Trade name, product of Canon Inc .; used for both copiers and inkjet printers) and XEROX 4024 paper (trade name, Product of Xerox Co., Ltd.). The results are shown in Table 4.
(1) bleeding between black ink and colored ink:
A hard-printed image was printed on the above-described two plain paper sheets with the black ink in each ink set. Immediately after this printing, an image was printed with each of the yellow, magenta and cyan inks so as to be adjacent to each other. Interfaces of the printed samples thus obtained were visually evaluated to evaluate the ink set for bleeding resistance between the black ink and the colored inks according to the following standard.
A: No bleeding was detected at all interfaces;
C: Bleeding was observed to a large extent at almost all interfaces.
(2) density of the part of the black ink in borderlands between black ink and colored Ink:
An image was printed with the black ink in each ink set on the above-described two plain paper sheets. Immediately after this printing, an image was printed with each of the yellow, magenta and cyan inks so as to be adjacent to each other to visually observe whether or not whitish turbidity occurred at the boundary areas between them, thereby to prepare the ink set according to the present invention to evaluate the following standard.
A: No density reduction was observed in areas of black ink in the border areas, and thus no whitish turbidity occurred;
B: Density of the part of the black ink in the border areas was reduced, and occurrence of whitish haze was observed, but no problem was caused from the viewpoint of practical use;
C: Density of parts of the black ink in the border areas was considerably lowered, and occurrence of whitish turbidity was noticeably observed.
EXAMPLES 38 to 41 and COMPARATIVE EXAMPLES 16 to 19:
Everyone that obtained in Examples 34 to 37 and Comparative Examples 12 to 15 ink sets was used to create an image by the first method in which a black ink and a colored ink on the same Position can be applied to a recording medium, and the Application of the colored ink is carried out before application the black ink. The ink jet recording method according to the first method, each using the ink sets of Examples 34-37 regarded as Examples 38 to 41, and the ink jet recording methods according to the first method, which in each case the ink sets according to Comparative Examples 12 to 15 were considered as Comparative Examples 16 to 19. The quantitative ratio of the black ink to the colored ink per unit area of the recording medium in Examples 38 to 41 and Comparative Examples 16 to 19 controlled to 10: 2.5. The results of the evaluation are in table 4.
As described above, according to the present invention, there can be provided liquid compositions, ink jet recording ink sets, ink jet recording methods, recording units, and ink jet recording apparatus for providing high quality images with reduced bleeding. It may also be provided liquid compositions, Tin ink jet recording sets, ink jet recording methods, recording units, and ink jet recording apparatus for providing images having excellent water resistance.
The Invention provides liquid Compositions, ink sets for inkjet recording, inkjet recording processes, recording units and an ink jet recording apparatus for Provide high quality images with reduced bleeding. The invention also provides liquid compositions, ink sets for Inkjet recording, inkjet recording, recording Units and an ink jet recording apparatus for providing of images with excellent water resistance.
A first liquid, which contains a polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid, and a second liquid, the one coloring Contains material, that capable is to react with the polyvalent metal salt are combined used and so applied to a recording medium that they come into contact with each other to record in this way.
liquid Composition for inkjet recording, which together with a color ink is used and reacts with the color ink when she is in contact with the color ink comes with a polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid and a liquid Medium.
liquid The composition of claim 1, wherein the polyvalent metal salt the aldonic acid at least one, chosen from the group consisting of magnesium gluconate, calcium gluconate, Barium gluconate, ferrous gluconate, copper (II) gluconate and zinc gluconate is.
liquid A composition according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the total amount of polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid 0.005 to 20 mass percent based on the total amount of the liquid composition.
Ink jet recording method comprising the steps of: (I) Applying energy to the liquid A composition according to any one of claims 1 to 3, to which a Ejecting the recording medium; (ii) Applying Energy on a color ink to counter this a recording medium expel; (iii) generating a contact state of the liquid composition with the color ink on the recording medium.
An ink jet recording method according to claim 4, wherein a coloring Material of color ink is a pigment.
An ink jet recording method according to claim 4, wherein a coloring Material of the color ink is a dye having at least one carboxy group is.
An ink jet recording method according to any one of claims 4 to 6, wherein the energy is thermal energy.
An ink jet recording method according to any one of claims 4 to 6, the energy being mechanical energy through deformation a piezoelectric element.
An ink jet recording method according to any one of claims 4 to 8, wherein step (i) is performed before step (ii).
An ink jet recording method according to any one of claims 4 to 8, wherein step (i) is performed after step (ii).
An ink jet recording method according to any one of claims 4 to 8, wherein step (ii) is performed twice, and step (i) between the step (ii) performed becomes.
An ink jet recording method according to any one of claims 4 to 8, wherein step (i) is performed twice, and step (ii) between step (i) is performed.
An ink jet recording method according to any one of claims 4 to 8, wherein the liquid Composition and the color ink just after their ejection an ink jet recording apparatus on the recording medium be mixed together.
Ink set for inkjet recording with (1) the liquid A composition according to any one of claims 1 to 3, and (2) one Color ink, which includes a coloring Material and a liquid Medium, and reacts with the liquid Composition by touch with the liquid Composition.
Ink jet recording unit with a container part the liquid Composition which the liquid A composition according to any one of claims 1 to 3, comprising Ink container portion, which contains a color ink, and an ink jet recording head for ejecting the liquid Composition and color ink by applying energy the liquid Composition and color ink.
An ink jet recording unit according to claim 15, where the energy is thermal energy.
An ink jet recording unit according to claim 15, where the energy mechanical energy by deformation of a is piezoelectric element.
Inkjet recording device with a container part the liquid Composition which is a liquid Contains composition an ink container part, which contains a color ink, and an ink jet recording head for ejecting the liquid composition and the color ink by applying energy to the liquid composition and the color ink, wherein the liquid Composition the liquid A composition according to any one of claims 1 to 3.
Inkjet recording device with a recording unit according to claim 15.
Ink set for inkjet recording with (1) a color ink with a coloring Material, a liquid Medium and a polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid, and (2) a black ink comprising a coloring material and a liquid medium, and reacts with the color ink by touching the color ink.
An ink-jet recording ink set according to claim 20, wherein the polyvalent metal salt of aldonic acid at least one selected from the group consisting of magnesium gluconate, calcium gluconate, barium gluconate, Iron (II) gluconate, copper (II) gluconate and zinc gluconate.
An ink-jet recording ink set according to claim 20 or 21, wherein the total amount of the polyvalent metal salt the aldonic acid 0.005 to 20 mass percent based on the total amount of the ink is.
Ink set for inkjet recording after one the claims 20 to 22, wherein a coloring Black ink material is a pigment.
Ink set for inkjet recording after one the claims 20 to 22, wherein a coloring Material of black ink is a dye with at least one Carboxy group is.
Ink set for inkjet recording after one the claims 20 to 24, wherein proportions of water in the black ink and the Color ink each 35 to 96 mass% based on the total weight each ink are.
Ink set for inkjet recording after one the claims 20 to 25, wherein the color ink is at least one ink selected from the group consisting of a yellow ink, a magenta ink and a cyan ink.
An ink jet recording method comprising the steps of: (i) applying energy to the black ink contained in the ink set according to any one of claims 20 to 26 to eject it onto a recording medium; (ii) applying energy to the color ink contained in the ink set according to any one of claims 20 to 26 for ejecting it onto a recording medium; (iii) generating a contact state of the black ink with the color ink on the recording medium.
An ink jet recording method according to claim 27, wherein the black ink and the color ink are applied to the recording medium be applied so that they overlap each other on the recording medium, and step (ii) is performed before step (i).
An ink jet recording method according to claim 27 or 28, wherein the energy is thermal energy.
An ink jet recording method according to claim 27 or 28, where the energy is mechanical energy through deformation a piezoelectric element.
Ink jet recording unit having an ink tank portion, which contains the ink set according to any one of claims 20 to 26, and an ink jet recording head for ejecting the inks, which consists of Ink container portion by applying energy to the inks.
An ink jet recording unit according to claim 31, wherein the energy is thermal energy.
An ink jet recording unit according to claim 31, where the energy mechanical energy by deformation of a is piezoelectric element.
Inkjet recording device with a Ink container portion, which is an ink set with a black ink and a color ink contains and an ink jet recording head for ejecting the ink, which from the ink container part by applying energy to the ink, the ink set The ink set according to any one of claims 20 to 26.
Inkjet recording device with a A recording unit according to any one of claims 31 to 33.
DE2001610287 2000-02-17 2001-02-16 Liquid composition, Ink jet recording ink set, Ink jet recording method, Recording unit and Recording apparatus Active DE60110287T2 (en)
JP2000045073 2000-02-17
JP2000045074 2000-02-17
DE60110287D1 DE60110287D1 (en) 2005-06-02
DE60110287T2 true DE60110287T2 (en) 2006-02-16
ID=26585868
DE2001610287 Active DE60110287T2 (en) 2000-02-17 2001-02-16 Liquid composition, Ink jet recording ink set, Ink jet recording method, Recording unit and Recording apparatus
US (1) US6550903B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1125994B1 (en)
DE (1) DE60110287T2 (en)
US6582070B2 (en) * 2000-09-04 2003-06-24 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Recording unit and image recording apparatus
US6749290B2 (en) 2001-09-04 2004-06-15 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Recording unit, image recording apparatus and image recording method
JP4452429B2 (en) 2002-04-03 2010-04-21 富士フイルム株式会社 Ink set for ink jet recording and ink jet recording method
CN100448671C (en) 2002-06-24 2009-01-07 株式会社理光 Inkjet recording apparatus and inkjet recording method
US20040035325A1 (en) * 2002-08-22 2004-02-26 Scitex Digital Printing, Inc. Treating material for substrate property enhancement and print quality improvement
EP1874879B1 (en) * 2005-03-31 2013-05-15 FUJIFILM Corporation Ink jet recording ink set and ink jet image recording method
JP4621193B2 (en) * 2006-11-24 2011-01-26 キヤノン株式会社 Liquid composition, ink jet recording method, and ink set for ink jet recording
AU2008288785B2 (en) 2007-08-23 2014-08-21 Sensient Colors Inc. Self-dispersed pigments and methods for making and using the same
US7932306B2 (en) 2007-12-12 2011-04-26 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Amphoteric dispersants and their use in inkjet inks
US8092874B2 (en) * 2009-02-27 2012-01-10 Eastman Kodak Company Inkjet media system with improved image quality
KR20110135989A (en) 2009-04-07 2011-12-20 센션트 컬러스 엘엘씨 Self-dispersing particles and methods for making and using the same
JP5018908B2 (en) * 2010-01-29 2012-09-05 ブラザー工業株式会社 Aqueous image quality improving liquid
JP3550637B2 (en) * 1996-09-27 2004-08-04 セイコーエプソン株式会社 Inkjet recording method
JPH11136337A (en) 1997-10-27 1999-05-21 Kyocera Corp Portable telephone
EP1153093A1 (en) 1998-12-21 2001-11-14 Avecia Limited Chemical composition for ink
2001-02-16 DE DE2001610287 patent/DE60110287T2/en active Active
2001-02-16 EP EP20010103924 patent/EP1125994B1/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
2001-02-16 US US09/784,056 patent/US6550903B2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
US6550903B2 (en) 2003-04-22
EP1125994A1 (en) 2001-08-22
DE60110287D1 (en) 2005-06-02
EP1125994B1 (en) 2005-04-27
US20010030678A1 (en) 2001-10-18
DE60303072T2 (en) 2006-08-24 Reaction solution for ink jet recording, apparatus and ink jet recording method using this solution
JP4683585B2 (en) 2011-05-18 Ink set
ES2217080T3 (en) 2004-11-01 Registration liquid, registration procedure by ink jet and registration equipment using them.
DE60116820T2 (en) 2006-08-31 Ink set, method for reducing color mixing, and method for improving the fixation of black images
KR100221509B1 (en) 1999-09-15 Ink jet recording process using liquid formulation and ink in combination
EP0952196B1 (en) 2003-06-25 Ink-jet printing system for improved print quality
US7699924B2 (en) 2010-04-20 Aqueous ink, ink jet recording method, ink cartridge, recording unit and ink jet recording apparatus
DE602004005001T2 (en) 2007-11-15 Ink jet print ink combination and its use
JP2005297548A (en) 2005-10-27 Coating liquid for printing medium, ink for inkjet, imaging method, set of coating liquid for printing medium and ink for inkjet and inkjet recording device