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1) High-speed ink-jet printing to weigh down conventional plate-making industry
2) Transformation of printers from the second stage to the third
3) Number of matters to be considered before high-speed printing
4) Quality to be diversified in future ink-jet printing
5) Pre-processing is of importance in ink-jet printing with dye-based inks
6) Dye and pigment-based inks for ink-jets introduced at 7th OTEMAS
7) Hashimoto Senko's introduction of natural fiber transfer printing
8) Restriction of nonylphenol use in developed countries to cast positive effects on inkjet printing
9) Peer to peer (P2P) for better match between life colors and those on computer screen
10) Power map of machine manufacturers may alter with problems different from those of paper inkjets
11) TTC (Kyoto) widens research into conversion between light-source color and object color for fabrics linked with CCM calculations
12) Inkjet printing for textiles in the 2nd phase of development with higher speeds
13) European conference on ink jet printing for textiles
14) Toshin Kogyo to exhibit high-performance inkjet at ITMA in association with DuPont
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Special feature: Inkjet Printing
 
8) Restriction of nonylphenol use in developed countries to cast positive effects on inkjet printing
Kazuhiko Sasaki, president of Senshoku Keizai Shimbun
In August 2001, the Japanese Ministry of the Environment announced that nonylphenol derivatives were suspected to be among endocrine disrupters. The switch-over from scouring agents made from nonylphenol derivatives, which have been used in enormous amounts, to ones composed of other chemicals has been carried forward in textile dyeing and printing factories.

Endocrine disrupters have been found not only in scouring agents but used in various other areas. The process agents made from nonylphenol derivatives, including detergents, oil varnish, rubber auxiliaries, rubber accelerators, anti-oxidizing agents and corrosion inhibitors for oil-based products, and oil-based agents to prevent oil sludge formation, come to quite a number.

Nonylphenol settles down in sludge after working on the effluent. Assuming that, in the near future, the Japanese Ministry of the Environment includes sludge treatment in its subjects to control and a consequent rise in the total costs of factory effluent treatment, Japanese surfactant manufacturers, in search of countermeasures, have developed new scouring agents made from other than nonylphenol derivatives, which are more expensive than those made with them but will lower the total effluent treatment costs.

Scouring in the pre-processing stage is the same in inkjet and other printing methods, however, there is a distinctive difference in post-processing. Inkjet printing has a great advantage in that post-processing (soaping and rinsing) is easier than conventional methods. With use of reactive-dye-based inks, post-processing becomes easier, and it is much simplified with disperse-dye-based ones. The process of soaping and rinsing can be omitted if pigment-based inks are used.


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