1 UV Curable Inks
1 UV Curable Inks
1 UV Curable Inks
by Raji Koshy
UV Curable screen printing ink is a 100% solid system: that is, it essentially does
not contain solvent that must evaporate during the curing phase. The cure takes
place through the interaction of the ink ingredients and a strong UV (ultra violet)
light source in a dryer, or more accurately, a reactor. Since UV contains little or
no solvent, there is a lot of interest in using it because of the lack of VOCs
(volatile organic compounds). Either reducing VOCs or eliminating theneed to
report them both have appeal. The reduction in VOCs also has an appealing
environmental effect.
Why then, doesn’t everyone just switch to UV curable ink? It is not that easy. As
with any product, there are advantages and disadvantages. Solvent inks have
wonderful coverage, they are relatively inexpensive, and they have good
durability. But, they have a strong odor, the vapors can create health concerns,
and they produce a large volume of VOCs.
Advantages of UV Ink
UV cure reactors can be run at very high production rates. The actual cross-
linking of the UV ink takes place in one to three seconds, depending upon the
color of the ink and the intensity of the UV light source. High cure rates translate
into very high operating speeds. UV inks can be run on high-speed production
equipment without having to allow for excessively large dryers, as would be
necessary for high-speed solvent systems.
The rapid cure also allows UV inks to be used on a new generation of graphic
presses that can do multiple colors in succession without having to move the
substrate. Historically, graphic screen printing has been done on presses that did
one color at a time. The substrate was printed, put through the dryer (or racked
for air-drying), and then returned to the press for the next color.
The new generation of graphic screen presses takes advantage of the UV cure
rate and prints colors in succession with cure reactors between each print head.
The production rates of these machines are very good.
UV inks range in opacity from very transparent to translucent. There are no real
opaque UV inks. The high level of transparency produces a very clean color
gamut.
This quality makes UV ink an exceptionally good choice for four-color process
graphic printing. This clarity of color, combined with the very fine pigment grind
and the fact that the ink does not dry in the screen allows UV ink to be printed
through extremely high mesh counts. It is not unusual to see UV printed through
mesh counts as high as 165 threads/cm (420 threads/inch) although 154
threads/cm (390 threads/inch) is much more common..
6. UV inks are more sensitive than other inks to proper cure procedures
A printer can not just slap on UV ink, run it through the reactor and be confident
that it will be cured. There are issues with UV ink that must be addressed. These
include inter-coat adhesion and proper cure level for each color. When UV inks
are cured, if too much radiation is applied, the next color may not adhere
properly. In addition, the effects of the UV radiation are cumulative and if an ink
film is over-cured, it can become brittle and flake off.
Summary
Do not be swayed by the fact that there are six disadvantages listed to only three
advantages. The overwhelming majority of graphic screen printing applications
can benefit from UV curable ink systems. Many products are printed almost
exclusively with UV ink. The best known of these are CD-ROMs, which are
printed on very high speed production equipment.