Micro Gravure
™
THE YASUI
SEIKI "Micro
Gravure™" COATING METHOD

Micro Gravure ™
Applications
(examples of MG coated products)
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Key Performance
-
Wet Coat Weight: <1μ
to 80μ
-
Coating Speed:
1 ft/min to 300+ ft/min
-
Adjustable
coat weight with a single gravure roll (2:1 range) <Table1>
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|
http://www.yasui.com/
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Benefits
*Small Diameter (20 - 50mm) Gravure Roll
- Uniform Coating Thickness
- Smooth Surface Morphology
- Quick Change Over
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Also,
pdf. file (277K)
is available.
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* Kiss (Web Tension) Coating
- Wide Selection of Web Material - Plastic films, metal foils, paper, etc.
- Flexibility for Web and Coated Width
- Low Drag and Good for Light Webs
- No Backing Roll to Change for Web Width Change
- No Dangerous Nip Roll
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INTRODUCTION
Many different types of coating systems are available,
and in use today. Direct or reverse gravure, reverse roll, die coaters, wire bar,
knife or blade coaters and many more are known and are widely used. All these techniques
and more, are offered by many machine manufacturers including
Yasui Seiki
Company.
However, many converters have reported disappointing results with techniques
such as the wire bar and reverse roll. Many streaks with a wire bar and ‘orange
peel’ with reverse roll, or creases caused by the backing roll of a gravure coater,
troublesome changes of gravure roll and backing roll, and many other quality problems
or difficulties are often reported.
The
Micro Gravure™
coating method was developed in response to
the need for a smooth and uniform thin layer coating technique offering simplicity,
reliability and reproducibility of coating.
The
Micro Gravure™
method uses a gravure roll. The
Micro Gravure™
roll surface is engraved with a pattern or
cells which provide a specific coating volume, just as in standard gravure. The
Micro Gravure™
roll is mounted in bearings and rotates partially
submerged in a coating pan. Rotation of the roll picks up the coating, which is
doctored (pre-metered) by a flexible steel blade as the roll rotates toward the
contact point with the web.
(Fig.1)
WHAT IS THE
"Micro
Gravure™"
METHOD?
Generically described, this
Micro Gravure™
is a
reverse,
kiss
gravure coating method.
Standard gravure can be segregated into several types; direct and reverse are the
two of greatest interest to this discussion.
(Fig. 2)
Typically, both of these types use a backing roll, usually rubber covered, and about
the same diameter as the engraved roll. The web is trapped, or nipped, between the
engraved roll and the backing roll. In addition to the obvious and frequently encountered
problems of web creases or breaks, a nip point introduces a number of mechanical,
hydraulic and other stresses which impact coating quality.
Micro Gravure™
is a kiss coating method. “Kiss” implies the absence of a backing roll,
which would trap the web against the engraved roll.
Since
Micro Gravure™
is a kiss method, and does not use a nip, a number of these potentially
deleterious stresses (and safety issues) are eliminated.
Micro Gravure™
is a reverse process. That is to say that the rotational direction
of the engraved cylinder is opposite to the travel direction of the web. The coating
is thus applied to the web in a shearing manner, or the liquid coating is experiencing
shear. If the web direction and the cylinder rotation are the same, the coating
would be split apart; some would tend to go to the web, some would tend to stay
on the cylinder. This condition is often described as “film splitting”. Depending
on the strength of the internal forces in the coating itself, film splitting can
be very disruptive. On the other hand,
“shear” application is generally acknowledged to produce somewhat smoother coatings
than “film splitting”.
The Surface of the roll used in
Micro Gravure™
coating has a number of regularly spaced "cells" which determine a finite volume
of internal capacity. The geometry, number and spacing, depth or other features
of the cell can be varied to produce a range of total volume to accomplish coating
weight (thickness) control. This logic is, of course, the same as in standard gravure.
So,
Micro Gravure™
is a kind of gravure coating method.
"Micro
Gravure™"
vs. OTHER METHODS
Therefore, what is the difference between this
Micro Gravure™
system and conventional ordinary direct or reverse gravure systems?
There is, of course, a great difference between them.
The "
Micro " reference is in regard to the
small physical diameter of the engraved
roll. In the case of conventional gravure coating methods, standard gravure roll
diameters are typically in the range of 125 to 250mm. On the other hand,
Micro Gravure™
diameters are from 20mm to 50mm, determined by the coated width required.
Micro Gravure™
rolls are 20mm diameter for 300mm width and increase to 50mm diameter
for coating widths of 1600mm. The small diameter produces a much smaller line of
contact on the web at the point the web touches
Micro Gravure™
roll. This is easily visualized by two concentric circles with a pair of rays drawn
from the center of each
(Fig. 3).
The arc on the circumference of the larger circle is obviously much greater than
on the small circle. The total contact area of web and wet gravure roll has a certain
criticality.
In general, a larger contact area may exhibit coating
problems to a much greater degree than a smaller contact area. The total area is
a product of dimension in the transport direction and in the cross web direction.
It is really the transport direction (the length of the contact) that is the critical
factor. For a given set of conditions, a larger diameter roll will produce a longer
line of contact than a smaller diameter. When a backing roll is introduced, this
region of contact is increased even more.
In the case of standard gravure, operating in the direct mode, the amount of the
coating in the cells is divided. Some is transferred to the web and some part remains
in the cell after the contact point has passed. Typically, there is established
a reservoir of coating at both the entry point and the departure point of the nip.
Within these two beads of coating, a pattern of turbulent re-circulation will occur.
The large diameter rolls used in standard gravure can produce very large turbulent
beads, which in turn create aberrations in the coating.
(Fig. 4)
When nip roll pressure, skewness of rolls, or other mechanical factors are present,
the situation is even more critical.
In standard reverse gravure, particularly with a backing roll, much of the
above holds true. In some cases a very large reservoir of coating at the web exit
point can be generated. This is seriously influenced by abnormal or faulty condition
of the backing roll. The absence
of a backing roll with
Micro Gravure™
reduces or eliminates many of the nip induced coating defects associated with other
methods. The turbulent bead problem is also minimized because of the small diameter
rolls used. The volume of the bead present on the entry and exit point is very small
and stable.
Like any “gravure” or “engraved roll” system the
Micro Gravure™
system also requires two basic processes; introduction of coating to the roll surface,
and a means of evenly and accurately metering the coating on the roll surface. A
common method of coating application to the roll is a “pan” in which the roll rotates
partially submerged. Since the amount of coating on the roll surface is largely
dependent on viscosity, some metering means must be used. A blade, or knife is used
to remove excess coating solution. Without this, the cell volume could not be the
major factor in determining thickness or weight of the wet coating on the substrate.
However, the blade used in
Micro Gravure™
is quite different from blades used in most gravure processes. The major
departure relates to stiffness and the angle of attack of the blade to the roll
surface.
Micro Gravure™
blades are quite thin and flexible in comparison to those typically used in gravure
processes. The pressure of the blade against the roll is rather light. The angle
of attack of a standard gravure blade is steep. The line of the blade extension
typically passes close to the roll center. The thin, flexible
Micro Gravure™
blade lays on the roll, nearly tangent to the surface. The comparison here is a
scraping action versus smoothing or metering. Standard Doctor metering can cause
considerable wearing of blade and roll surface because of this scraping action.
The life of both blade and roll is extended because of the more gentle contact inherent
in the
Micro Gravure™
process.
OPERATION of
"Micro
Gravure™"
As already mentioned, the
Micro Gravure™
roll is made with surface cells designed to produce a specific coating volume, just
as in a standard gravure system. A wide range of patterns and cell volumes is available.
The roll is mounted in bearings and is rotated by a small motor through a coupling.
Direction of rotation is opposing that of web travel. As the roll rotates, it picks
up coating in the ink pan. Continuing rotation takes the coating to the blade where
a small excess amount is removed prior to the contact point with the web. The distance
from coating impingement on the roll surface to web transfer point is less than
a 90degree arc. The circumferential distance is about 30mm or less even for a 40mm
diameter roll.
(Fig.1)
The ratio of the web speed to circumferential speed of the engraved roll is critical
in establishing coating thickness.
(Fig. 5)
At a given web speed with the cylinder stationary, no coating is transferred
to the web. As rotational speed is increased, coating will start. Additional rotational
speed increases the coating weight until flooding, or instability, and a decrease
in coating weight occurs. Coating weight plotted against speed ratio will generally
show a “hump back” or bell-shaped curve. The behavior of a “typical” coating will
follow the pattern: 60% - coating starts, 100 to 130% - a smooth and uniform coating,
130 to 200% - weight increase, 200% or more – weight decrease and instability. If
the web speed is 30m per minute and the cylinder’s surface speed is also 30m per
minute, it is 100% or 1 to 1, and if the roll speed is 60m per minute for 30m per
minute web speed, then it is 200% or 2 to 1 ratio.
Although the cell volume is the major control of coating weight, a “window”
will exist on the linear portion of the curve, usually between 100% and 130%, which
will allow coating weight or thickness control, while maintaining a uniform appearance.
In a very practical way, weight changes of perhaps +/-10% or more, can be made for
each cylinder pattern. This can result in economy through requiring a fewer number
of rolls to obtain particular weights. From the list of rolls shown in
Table 1, it can be seen that
it is possible to overlap adjacent rolls via the ratio change. In this way almost
continuous changes in weight can be made. For critical applications a curve should
be developed for each cell pattern and theological combination.
A 1 to 1 ratio is a good starting point for examination of a new coating. Some 100%
solids formulations have been seen to exhibit rather strange behavior relative to
the “typical coating” with a 1 to 1 ratio,
although it is really not surprising, to see a departure from a typical 30-40%
solids solution chemistry. The
Micro Gravure™
system can easily respond via manipulation of the ratio. On occasion, a ratio of
2 to 1 or 3 to 1 has produced good coatings with 100% solids UV or radiation curables.
ADVANTAGES
of
"Micro
Gravure™"
Micro Gravure™
can put down thinner coatings on thinner webs, than any other system.
This is accomplished primarily because of the very small “footprint” of the web
on the roll and because no backing roll is used. A nip point can cause breakage,
wrinkles or folds in the web. As
Table 1
shows, a 250 mesh (250 cells per linear inch) gravure roll can produce a 1 micron
thick wet coated layer. If the coating’s
solid content is 5%, then the applied film is 0.05 micron thick after drying.
Since there is no backing roll, coating can be applied close to the film edge without
concern for transfer to the backside of the film or to the backing roll. Film widths
can be changed without having to change the backing roll, as would be required in
standard gravure. A wide variety of thin films, papers, fabrics and foils can be
easily accommodated. But, this does
not mean that the
Micro Gravure™
system is only suitable for thin films, i.e. 2 micron PET. This system is also used
for coating on 8 mil (200 micron) thick steel foil.
Wear of the doctor blade and of the engraved cylinder is minimized because of the
light contact of blade and roll. The action is pre-metering rather than scraping.
The cost of the small diameter rolls is relatively low, so that many can be on hand
without economic penalty. Because of the small size, quick changes of rolls can
be made to change coating thickness. Speed ratio manipulation, as previously discussed,
makes thickness changes possible as well.
Reverse or shearing application normally produces smooth coatings without the need
for a post smoothing system. The small diameter also allows more volatile solvents
to be used without danger of cell plugging. There is considerable flexibility in
formulating for the system; experience indicates a viable range of viscosity from
1 cps to 1000 cps and in some cases even to 2000 cps.
SUMMARY
Very simply,
regardless of whether for production use or for laboratory use a coating
machine must satisfy such requirements as ‘Reliability’, ‘Reproducibility of coating’
and ‘Simplicity of operation’. The
physical comparisons of
Micro Gravure™
to other roll coating processes show simplicity versus complexity. Machine construction
is such that vibration, drive inconsistency, tension variation or similar problems
do not arise to adversely effect coating quality. Particular attention is given
to component selection such as: drive couplings, motors, tension controls and the
like. Structural members are selected with regard to influence on the most sensitive
coating methods. Sensible design and quality assembly of top grade components assures
reliability and reproducibility. Simplicity
of the
Micro Gravure™
system fosters simplicity of operation.
In the past 20 years, over 300 Yasui production coating lines, laboratory use coaters,
and over 100
Micro Gravure™
production coating stations have been
sold to companies all over the world, such as Eastman Kodak, DuPont, 3M, JVC, Hitachi,
Toshiba, Panasonic, Mitsubishi Chemical, Teijin, SKC, and many other leading companies
in various industrial fields. Virtually all of our customers who replaced or supplemented
their production system or laboratory use system with
Micro Gravure™
coaters produced better results than with their other production systems
or research coaters. Especially when a smooth, uniform and very thin layer such
as several or a few micron or even a few hundred angstrom is required, this
Micro Gravure™
system exhibits its capability.
Yasui Seiki
Company does not wish to give the impression that the
Micro Gravure™
system can do anything and everything. Our experience indicates that
in many cases improved coating quality can result from use of this technology for
solvent and emulsion coatings or UV curables. We also do not imply that all other
coating methods are categorically inferior to
Micro Gravure™.
We are certainly well aware that quality coatings are being made every day using
a wide range of coating techniques….