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We have come
a long way from the stone plate. As you can well imagine,
it would be very difficult to mount a piece of stone on
modern high-speed presses. Senefelder's first press was
flat, so the use of stone was easy. Today's presses use
curved cylinders to hold the offset plates. The basis
of modern lithography is a combination of photography
and Senefelder's original observation that "oil and water
do not mix". All offset plates made today employ this
offset principle, they use as an image carrier such as
thin paper, plastic, or a metal sheet which once exposed
and processed can be wrapped around a cylinder of a press
for printing. This modern offset plate contains two areas;
image areas, which repel water (remain dry and accept
ink) and non-image areas, which accept water. This is
the basic requirement of all modern lithography - the
ability to produce a plate which will have image areas
that are "hydrophobic" (meaning water hating) and non-image
areas that are "hydrophilic" (meaning water loving). While
the basic principle is common, there are many differences
between offset plates and the method they use to separate
the image from the non-image areas.
Today, the
majority of lithographic plates are made of aluminum sheets
of varying thickness (usually between .008" and .0015")
with a surface grain or granular finish. This grain serves
to give water-carrying properties to the plate and to
give anchorage to the image forming material. Practically
all plates are presensitized, that is they are supplied
ready coated with a light sensitive diazo compound or
photopolymer resin material ready for light exposure.
This photopolymer
coating, as the term implies, is a chemical resin or polymer
that will react with ultraviolet light - much like photographic
film. When UV light strikes the photopolymer on the plate,
it is "hardened". Photopolymer that is not exposed to
the light is not "hardened" and can be easily removed.
This is the principle of the modern offset plate.
The light is
reflected away from the dark portions of the negative
and will not cause a cross linking or hardening of the
polymer. Light, however, will pass through the clear areas
of the negative and cause a cross linking (hardening)
of the polymer resulting in the image areas of the plate
after processing.
Exposing an
Offset plate to produce a usable plate for the offset
press
There are seven
major types of lithographic plates used in the printing
industry today:
- Diazo
- Photopolymer
- Silver Halide
- Electrophotographic
- Bimetal
- Waterless
- Spark Discharge
(digital waterless)
- Laser (digital
waterless)
- Computer-to-plate
- Various types of Plate Material
Film positives
and negatives along with digital information (computer)
are used for making or exposing most types of offset plates
today. While there are several types of offset plates,
they are all generally classified as either positive or
negative working plates.
Negative-working
plates are comparatively inexpensive and commonly used
in the United States. As the name implies, film negatives
are used to image the negative working plate. These plates
are generally coated with a photopolymer and are known
as negative working presensitised plates. Exposure and
processing of this type of plate is usually within ten
minutes. To expose the plate, a film negative is placed
over the light sensitive coating and exposed to UV light.
Light that passes through the clear areas of the negative
causes a reaction with the "monomers" of the photopolymer
which chemically cross-link with each other to form polymers.
These polymers can be thought of as complex chains of
monomers, which are linked so strongly, that they behave
as a single, hard, wear-resistant molecule. The actinic
light cannot pass through the black areas of the negative
so no reaction takes place with the polymer under the
non-clear areas of the negative. Processing removes unexposed
non-hardened polymer. An application of a gum solution
to the non-image areas of the plate to make it water-attracting/ink
rejecting. The processing does not wash off the hardened
polymer image areas of the plate.
Positive
working plates are more expensive than their negative-working
counterparts. These types of plates are used more by European
printers. As the name implies, film positives are used
to image this type of plate. The photopolymer used to
produce a positive working plate is different from the
polymer used in the negative working plate as it is hardened
before exposure. The photopolymer used here becomes unstable
when exposed to ultraviolet light and remains hard where
no light strikes the polymer. Plate processing is similar
to the negative plate except that the processor removes
the exposed photopolymer from the plate and applies a
thin layer of gum to protect the non-image areas from
ink.
Plates are
generally made from aluminum. Other base materials can
be used such as paper, polyester and multi-metal. Multi-metal
plates are used for long extensive press runs due to their
durability. Paper type plates are used in small offset
presses known as duplicators for very short runs (1,000
- 10,000 impressions). Polyester plates may be used in
small press or in larger sheetfed presses. Like paper
plates, these are intended for short runs. In general,
the polyester and paper plates are much less expensive
than the aluminum or multi-metal plates. Cost, run length,
type of press and the type of job dictate the type of
plate used by a printer.
Offset Plate
Technology
The aluminum-based
plate contains the light-sensitive coating applied or
coated over the aluminum. Paper and polyester plates are
treated very similarly. The multi-metal plate, however,
is similar but the structure of the base plate is slightly
different from that of the aluminum, paper, etc. Multi-Metal
Plates were developed to extend press run life. In general,
multi-metal plates are presensitized polymer plates consisting
of a metal base with one or more metals plated to it.
Today, there are two basic types of "bi" or multi-metal
plates:
- Copper plated
onto stainless steel or aluminum
- Chromium
plated on copper
They are the
most durable and the most expensive. These plates can
be coated with either diazo or photopolymer and can be
either negative or positive working.
They are designed
with a purpose in mind. In most cases, a major determining
factor is press run length. A long run length, for example,
on a small offset duplicator might be 10,000 impressions
(copies) with a short run length being in the neighborhood
of 2,000 impressions. When you talk about larger commercial
4 to 6 color sheetfed presses, short run lengths would
be around 20,000 with long run lenghts being up to 100,000.
High speed webs differ even more. Long run lengths generally
will be in the 1,000,000 impression range. So it is difficult
to give a generalization of run length for a particular
plate.
Diazo
- is a compound used to coat the offset plate. Diazo coatings
are organic compounds that are used to make presensitized
plates with a shelf life of about a year and for wipe-on
type plates that can be in-plant coated with a shelf-life
about one to two weeks. These plates can be both negative
or positive working. Once exposed, they are treated with
an emulsion developer which consists of a lacquer and
gum in an acid solution. As the unexposed diazo is dissolved
by the solution, the gum deposits on the non-printing
areas ensuring water receptivity. The lacquer deposits
on the exposed areas making them ink receptive. Once developed,
the plate is rinsed with water and coated with a protective
gum arabic solution. Run lengths are short with these
type of plates. Run lengths of 100,000 to 250,000 impressions
with web and sheetfed presses can be achieved.
Photopolymer
- coatings used to make photopolymer plates are organic
compounds which are very inert and abrasion resistant,
allowing longer press runs than diazo coatings (up to
1,000,000 sheetfed or web impressions). This type of coating
is the most widely used material in platemaking. Plates
made with photopolymer can be both negative or positive-working.
The photopolymer coating is different from other sensitizers
as they change in molecular weight during exposure. This
accounts for many of their unusual properties such as
long runs, resistance to abrasive wear and increase in
wear resistance after baking (processing technique to
extend run length). Today, new high-speed photopolymer
plates have been developed with a dye sensitized photopolymer
that can be exposed by laser and used in digital imaging
systems (computer based desktop systems). The photopolymer
plates are by far the most widely used plates in the printing
industry today.
Silver Halide
- are high speed plates that use a photosensitive coating
similar to photographic film except that the silver halide
emulsions are slower. The emulsions are color-blind and
very light sensitive in the blue region of the visible
spectrum so they have to be handled in yellow filtered
light. This type of coating can be exposed optically using
negatives or by lasers from digital data. The processing
solutions contain heavy metal (silver) by-products which
must be either carried away to special treating plants
or treated in-plant with silver recovery chemicals before
being allowed to drain into municipal sewers. Film-based
plates are used to print single color business forms,
reports, etc. from digital information. These plates may
also be exposed like photographic film in a large camera
then following exposure, developed and placed on the press
for printing. Silver-halide plates are used for spot and
process color reproduction using digital data. These types
of plates are popular with short run, quick turnaround
printers.
Electrophotographic
- plates are based on the principles of the electrostatic
copier. There are two types of plates:
- Inorganic
photoconductor on a drum
- Organic
photoconductor on a substrate
The photoconductor
is sensitized to light by charging with a corona discharge.
The charge is dissipated in the areas exposed to light.
The charge remaining on the unexposed areas attracts a
dry or liquid toner with an opposite charge. The base
photoconductor material used is normally selenium or cadium
sulfide coated onto paper, plastic, etc.
Plates for
laser imaging are coated on electrograined anodized aluminum.
During processing, the coating must be removed in the
non-printing areas, and the plates are treated with etch
and gum to make them water receptive. In the chemical
removal process the image elements (dots) become slightly
ragged which can affect their use for fine screen, high
quality process color printing. Another type of electrophotographic
plate is the Zinc Oxide paper plate used by quick printers.
These plates are very similar except the Zinc Oxide is
the photoconductor. These types of plates are normally
used for short run duplicators by quick printers.
Waterless
plates - are similar to the conventional offset plate
except that a layer of silicone is applied on the surface
of the light sensitive photopolymer. The thin layer of
silicone is bonded to the photopolymer. Exposure is similar
to that of the conventional offset plate. Exposure light
passes through the clear areas of the film negative and
silicone layer striking the photopolymer material beneath.
The light activates the photopolymer, causing a break
in the bond between the photopolymer and the silicone
layers. Areas where light does not pass through negative,
no break in the silicone bond occurs. Processing removes
the un-bonded silicone leaving only the photopolymer which
is ink receptive. Silicone rubber has a very low surface
energy and is not wet by the ink.
Systems have
been developed for waterless printing using special ink
temperature control systems on press to assist in stabilizing
the ink and its viscosity. Waterless plates can be either
negative or positive-working. This type of printing has
advantages as it eliminates the gum-water based fountain
solution. Fountain solution, as it emulsifies with the
ink, can dull printed colors, increase dot gain and make
controlling the press more diffi cult. Printing with the
waterless process allows the printer to print with finer
line screens (300 lines per inch and higher) due to the
absence of the fountain solution resulting in higher resolution
pictures. The plates, due to the silicone, have shorter
run lengths (under 100,000) and scratch easily requiring
press shutdown for plate repair. This type of system is
also more expensive than the conventional offset plate.
Heidelberg
GTO-DI (Direct Imaging) - plates are used on the Heidelberg
GTO-DI press system. These plates are very similar to
the above waterless plates except they are imaged on press
by computer. In a way, the press is the printer for the
computer much like a dot matrix printer is. The plates
are imaged in this case, however, by lasers. The plates
are made in a three layer composition. The base material
is either polyester or aluminum. The middle layer is an
infrared-absorbent material. This layer matches the laser's
output wavelength and its role is simply to vaporize when
struck by the laser light. Over this layer is a thin layer
of silicone. As the laser strikes the plate, the infrared
vaporizes and loosens the silicone layer which is wiped
away following imaging. The wiped area is now the image
area as no silicone remains. The non-image area is the
area containing silicone which was not removed during
the imaging process.
The same plate
and technology is used in the Heidleberg Quickmaster DI-46-4
press with the exception that instead of a single plate
a plate roll is used. See the first section under Printing
Processes for a more detailed description. These plates
are very short run plates (under 25,000 impressions).
Once the plate has been imaged, the waterless process
is near similar to the above waterless plate. These plates
are near similar to the Toray Waterless plates mentioned
in the Waterless Section in the previous page.
Heidelberg
Quickmaster D146-4 (Direct Imaging) - Like it's predecessor
the GTO-DI, the Quickmaster uses a waterless plate. Unlike
the earlier versions of the OTO-DI (which used the "spark"
imaging system) the Quickmaster waterless plate is imaged
via an laser array. Data (Postscript level 2) is converted
in the RIP (Raster Image Processor) into screen data,
which is in turn converted into control signals for 64
infrared laser diodes (16 diodes per printing unit) in
the printing press. An Ethernet interface is sufficient
to transmit digital documents from the prepress directly
without film exposure, plate exposure and stripping tot
he Quickmaster DI. The laser beams created by the laser
diodes are led to optics via fiber-optic cables, and are
bundled into a precise ray of light. On a special, multi-layer
plate very small sharp-edged depressions are created through
high levels of energy. Analogous to other dry offset processes
these depressions accept ink, which is repelled by a silicon
layer on all other places on the plate. The system can
image up to 1,270 dpi or 2,540 dpi. This is sufficient
for printing a 150 Ipi screen in very good offset quality.
Imaging time ranges from 6 minutes (1,270 dpi) to 12 minutes
(2,640 dpi). Since all four printing units are imaged
at the same time, all are in registration. The plate itself
is very similar to the waterless plate used in the GTO-DI
with the exception the plate comes in roll form (see Printing
Methods, Section 2). Like with the OTO-DI Waterless plate,
the Quickmaster plate is on a mylar or polyester base
and is flexible.
MAN Dicoweb
or the CTPress (Direct Imaging) - Meaning "Digital
Change Over Web" is the latest digital technology to hit
the printing scene, however, it is not yet commercially
available. The Dicoweb works by printing digitally to
a "plate" cylinder, printing the job and then cleaning
the "plate" cylinder for re-imaging. The process works
by using a laser head to directly image the printing cylinder
via a thermal ribbon. The thermal material transferred
from the ribbon to the plate cylinder (which is actually
a sleeve). The thermal image laser deposited is ink receptive.
The areas of the cylinder that received no thermal material
are the non-image areas which accept no ink but fountain
solution instead. After the completion of a print run,
the cylinder surface is automatically cleaned by a device
similar to a blanket washer. Once washed, the cylinder
is reading for more imaging. See the Printing Methods
Section for more details.
Continued on the
Next Page Offset Plate Technology
Computer
to Plate (CTP) - Computer to plate systems today can
use a variety of plate material - depending upon the manufacturer,
system design, etc. CTP systems can use several systems
which include:
- Silver Halide
- Thermal
- Direct
Thermal - Requires the use of a special substrate
that changes color when exposed to heat.
- Thermal
Transfer - This approach uses a thermal array to
transfer colorant from a ribbon to a substrate.
- Photopolymer
- Ink Jet
- Hybrid
No matter how
what technique is used, the end result is the same; an
offset lithographic plate with the image areas that will
accept ink and a non-image area which will accept no ink.
Computer to Plate is a technology whose time has come.
It was only a few short years ago when only 2 or 3 major
vedors were available, now today there are over 46!
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