ROCHESTER, N.Y., Jan. 17, 2008 -- Xerox Corporation today offered a look inside
"non-contact flash fusing" -- a major technology breakthrough in high-speed
color printing. The innovation enables color xerographic continuous feed printers
to achieve speeds of nearly 500 color pages per minute.
By flashing a high-intensity Xenon light more than 2,000 times per second,
Xerox printers fuse the color toner to a wide variety of paper and substrates
without any components ever touching the paper. As a result, the new fusing
technology enables color continuous feed printing at speeds that rival black-and-white
continuous feed printing while creating high quality images.
Conventional toner-based printers heat the entire paper and pressure-roll the
toner in order to fix the image onto the paper. This has limited print speeds
to only 110 pages per minute and restricted printing on surfaces that have adhesives.
Xerox's new flash fusing method depends on newly developed color toners, which
melt and fuse the image entirely through the energy from the Xenon lamps, producing
up to 650 images per minute in monochrome and 493 images per minute in full
color. In addition, plastic identification cards and peel-off labels on statements,
price tags and stickers as well as RFID transponder inlays can now be printed
at extremely high speeds.
"This fusing technology is a great example of how Xerox innovation drives
the development of color products with functionality never before seen in the
marketplace," said Daniel McCue, vice president and chief technology officer,
Xerox Production Systems Group. "As we expand our portfolio of continuous
feed systems, we're giving print providers more options on how to print faster,
in full color, on different materials and papers. This innovation brings another
Xerox technology breakthrough to market, providing high reliability xerographic
printing at extraordinary speed and print quality."
How it works
Flash fusing uses Xenon lamps similar to those used in super bright headlights
on luxury cars. There are eight flash lamps placed in a unique design inside
the continuous feed printer.
"Think of the instant pulse of heat you would feel if you were to hold
your hand in front of a flash camera," said Peter Crean, a research fellow
at the Xerox Research Center Webster. "Now imagine thousands of those firing
at high speed. In fact, the lamps that line up along the paper path inside the
machine pulse light sequentially 120,000 times per minute, exposing and fusing
the toner to the paper as it passes by at 226 feet per minute."
In order for flash fusing to work, Xerox scientists had to change how cyan,
yellow and magenta toners absorb energy from light. To solve this problem, Xerox
created color toners that contain special infrared energy-absorbing material.
This allows the individual color toners to absorb enough energy so that each
fuses as fast as the black toner, which absorbs all light. As a result, the
toners are laid down in the order of their absorption rate - with the black
at the bottom. As each toner is overlaid on the preceding toners, the energy
builds with each flash providing just the right amount of light to fuse each
color perfectly.
The new flash-fusing approach also provides dramatic improvements in reliability
and quality. Because only the toner -- not the entire paper -- is heated, moisture
is maintained in the paper, minimizing stock shrinkage, paper curl and static
electricity. This also improves front-to-back registration -- a challenge when
printing on both sides of the paper at high speeds -- and results in higher
productivity and reliability because the paper feeds dependably during the printing
and finishing processes.
Flash fusing is the technological cornerstone of the Xerox 490/980 Color Continuous
Feed Printing System, the fastest, full-color toner-based continuous feed device
of its kind as well as the newly announced 650/1300 Monochrome Continuous Feed
printer and the 495 Monochrome Duplex Continuous Feed printer.
About Xerox Xerox Corporation is the world's leading document management, technology
and services enterprise, providing the industry's broadest portfolio of color
and black-and-white document processing systems and related supplies, as well
as document management consulting and outsourcing services. For more information,
visit www.xerox.com/innovation.
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