Offset Printing
Nanotechnology in the printing industry
Thursday 09. April 2009 - The Nanocure Project
The selective transfer of knowledge within the print value-adding chain increases the attractiveness of the printing industry and its products. This is why manroland AG is active in a variety of ways in research projects and teams concerning nanotechnology. One of the highlights here is the Nanocure Project (BMBF Fkz: 13 N 9115) where manroland together with partner companies is expediting nanotechnological applications in the field of printing.
In the printing industry and also in the fields of surface coating of metals for example, radiation-hardening polymerization methods have developed very rapidly. The Nanocure Project focuses on nanotechnological applications for radiation curing. The advantages of these novel research approaches will make UV printing even more attractive.
Research in UV printing
In the last years the average growth rate in the consumption of UV printing inks lay around five until eight percent. The reason for this is the higher productivity that comes from instantaneous hardening which permits print products to move from the press to the finishing operations without delay. Other advantages of UV technologies stem from the fact that they are solvent-free. Even non-absorbent materials that are hard to print by conventional methods such as foils can be printed with UV inks in outstanding quality. However, these advantages are opposed by certain challenges like high energy costs for drying and the possible migration of organic photoinitiators to packaged products.
Therefore the partners in the Nanocure Project are conducting research to find a new class of modified photoinitiators and UV-curable printing inks, coatings and adhesives based on this. The project aims at achieving greatly improved efficiency in the conversion of radiant energy, a higher level of environment compatibility, no health hazards, and cost-efficient systems.
Jointly researching the processing chain
The project partners cover the entire processing chain of the planned new inks and coatings:
Sustech GmbH & Co KG, Darmstadt, and the INM-Leibniz Institut for Neue Materialien GmbH, Saarbrücken, are examining selective modification of the source materials.
Zeller + Gmelin GmbH & Co KG is responsible for further processing of the modified photoinitiators into application-compliant UV-curable printing inks and coatings.
Eltosch Torsten Schmidt GmbH is researching suitable UV-curing systems and is optimizing these regarding their energy consumption.
manroland AG is examining the use of the new inks and coatings in printing presses.
The Universität des Saarlandes, Physikalische Chemie, is carrying out important accompanying research, for instance in analyzing coatings.