HK1082151B - Apparatus and method for controlling registration of print steps in a continuous process for the manufacture of electrochemical sensors - Google Patents
Apparatus and method for controlling registration of print steps in a continuous process for the manufacture of electrochemical sensors Download PDFInfo
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Description
The present invention relates, in general, to a process for manufacturing electrochemical sensors in a continuous web and, more particularly, to a web manufacturing process wherein electrochemical sensor strips are printed on a continuous web and wherein a unique two layer registration mark is used to control the registration of print steps in the manufacture of the electrochemical sensor strips.
Electrochemical sensors are used in a variety of diagnostic procedures, including the measurement of glucose in human blood. The manufacture of such electrochemical sensors involves the manufacture of millions of small strips which each include electrodes arranged in a sample receiving cell which is adapted to receive blood or other bodily fluids. The bodily fluids the form complete circuit between the electrodes in the cell. The electrodes are generally coated with at least one reagent that reacts with the analyte (e.g. glucose) in the blood to form an intermediate analyte that may be measured by a meter adapted to measure current or charge at the electrodes. Manufacture of such electrochemical sensors requires the deposition of several layers of electrode material, insulation material and reagent in a very small space and the accuracy and arrangements of such layers is critical to the ultimate function of the device. Further, in order to hold down costs and meet demand, it is imperative that the electrochemical sensors be manufactured at very high speeds and with absolute accuracy of alignment between the layers.
Electrochemical sensors can be used for many applications. In one application, electrochemical sensor strip are inserted into specially adapted meters for self-monitoring of glucose or other analytes (such as fructosamine, haematocrit etc) in, for example, blood or interstitial fluid. Many analytes can be tested using such electrochemical sensors, depending upon the design of the electrochemical sensor, the arrangement of the electrodes, the reagent used and other factors. Many of these applications, and in particular strips for testing glucose, require sensor layouts of a particular size and construction, where the manufacture is done within particular tolerances to render the electrochemical sensors having characteristics which are as predictable and repeatable as possible.
The manufacturing process is further complicated by the need to manufacture sensors many sensors very quickly where the sensors have very small cell sizes and, therefore, very small electrodes within very tight tolerances. When testing blood or interstitial fluid glucose, one of the main factors discouraging regular testing is the pain involved in extracting the required amount of blood or interstitial fluid. A larger volume typically requires a greater amount of pain than a smaller volume. Thus, it is advantageous to produce sensors that require a smaller amount of blood or interstitial fluid and therefore are less painful to use, encouraging more regular discrete or continuous testing. One way of requiring less analyte is to produce electrochemical sensor strips having a very small structural features such as, very small sample receiving cells and very small electrodes within those sample receiving cells, however, such small features more difficult to manufacture, particularly in an accurate and reproducible manner in order to produce accurate and reproducible analyte measurements.
Many methods may be used to manufacture electrochemical sensors, including such processes as rotogravure and cylinder screen printing. In rotogravure printing a cylinder is coated with a covering defining the shape of the feature (e.g. electrodes) to be printed. Further cylinders may be used to print further films or layers (e.g. enzymes or insulation layers).
Where an electrochemical sensor is fabricated by rotogravure printing of electrically conductive ink to form one or more electrodes on a flexible web, which may be polymeric. High quality print definition is possible using very thin inks. For the thicker inks and greater print thicknesses required when printing electrochemical sensors fixed flat screens have generally been used in single feed flat bed printing of electrochemical sensors. Other methods, including methods of manufacturing electrochemical sensors using rotating printing structures have also been described.
In a web manufacturing process for electrochemical sensors, a web of substrate material is passed through a series of print stations. At each print station, a new layer of material such as, for example, electrode material, is deposited on the substrate or on a previously deposited layer using, for example, a screen printing process. In the screen printing process, the web is positioned under a screen and an ink, for example, a conductive ink used to make electrodes is pushed through selected portions of the screen to print a layer having a predetermined layout on the portion of the web positioned below the screen. Thus, it is possible build the electrochemical sensor on the substrate by moving the substrate from one print station to the next, printing each layer consecutively and cutting the individual sensor's from the finished web.
In one manufacturing method an electrode layer and at least a first reagent layer are manufactured by transporting a continuous web of the substrate past at least two print stations. The print stations may be cylindrical rotogravure print stations or cylinder screen print stations. However rotogravure (rotating an engraved cylinder) and cylinder screen printing (rotating a cylindrical screen/stencil) methods of printing suffer drawbacks when printing electrochemical sensors on a web. Rotogravure printing typically gives very thin print heights. The thick electrically conductive inks needed to produce the required electrode thickness for electrochemical sensors (especially those for blood glucose detection) are particularly likely to suffer from incomplete, inconsistent printing with the resultant reduction in electrochemical sensor quality, consistency and reliability. Rotogravure printing with carbon inks (which typically have a high solid content and can be quite viscous) for producing carbon electrodes is especially difficult as the solid/liquid phases in the ink can separate resulting in incomplete or uneven filling or emptying of the engraving from print to print. This can result in uneven print thicknesses and degradation of carbon electrode quality and consistency. Cylinder screen printing is well suited to single feed arrangements (as opposed to continuous web arrangements). Furthermore, the ability to manipulate the way the screen interacts with the printing medium, and hence exert influence on the print quality by doing this) is limited because of the cylindrical nature of the screen. Also, the variety of stencils available to achieve the correct ink thickness for each type of ink (Carbon, silver/silver chloride, insulation, enzyme or other reagent layer) is not readily commercially available.
Electrochemical sensors for testing blood or interstitial glucose may also be produced in a multi step printing process using flat bed printers (such as Thieme or Svecia available from Kippax UK, Huddersfield, UK and Registerprint, London, UK) and metering an ink through screen stencils available from DEK Machinery, Weymouth, UK and BTP Craftscreen, Coventry, UK) arranged parallel to the flat substrate cards to be printed upon. This process has the advantage that the sensors can be produced in an accurate repeatable manner so that a user can compare results from time to time. Sheets of substrate for printing rows of strips thereon are passed through several flat bed printing stages with the rows perpendicular to the direction of travel. In this manufacturing process thin layers of ink are sequentially screen printed on to a polymeric substrate to form a large group of sensor strips. Firstly carbon ink may be laid down to form an electrode layer. Next an insulation ink layer may be laid down. Next a reagent layer, typically enzyme ink, may be laid down. Next a second enzyme layer may be laid down. Next an adhesive layer may be laid down. Finally, a hydrophilic layer may be laid down. A protective film may be placed on top of the sensor sheet before prior to cutting the sheet into rows and the rows into individual strips. A single sheet manufactured in this way of substrate may produce 500 or more sensor strips. These sensor strips are arranged in rows 0 to 9 perpendicular to the direction of travel of the substrate sheet through the flat bed printer (the direction of printing) with 50 sensor strips per row. Strips 1 to 50 in each row are each parallel to the direction of printing. Each sheet may be manipulated by hand between each stage. In particular following the four print steps (for printing carbon ink, insulation ink and two layers of enzyme ink) each sheet may be manipulated by hand into a cutting machine so that the cutting may be done along the rows separating one row of sensor strips from another. Next each row may be manipulated so as to be cut into 50 separate strips. These manipulation steps are time consuming and inefficient.
Therefore there exists the need for an improved process for the manufacture of electrochemical sensors, and in particular, for the manufacture of electrochemical sensors for measurement of markers in the body such as in blood or interstitial fluid (glucose, fructosamine, haematocrit and so on). There further exists a need for a high speed, predictable, reproducible way to manufacture sensor strips at a reasonable cost. Further, there exists a need for a high speed, predictable, reproducible way to manufacture sensor strips having very small features where each finished strip may be used to reliably, predictably and accurately measure analytes in bodily fluids in a reproducible manner.
In a continuous web manufacturing process for manufacturing electrochemical sensor strips, a substrate is passed through a number of print stations for the purpose of printing a number of features such as, for, example, electrodes and reagent layers. In order to ensure that the layers are properly aligned, it is important to maintain registration between the layers. Thus, registration marks may be used to align subsequent print steps prior to depositing the material for the next layer. Unfortunately, in a high speed process where the ink is dried at the end of each print station, the substrate may stretch as it passes through each the drying step, which may be, for example 140 degrees centigrade. As a result the screen size for the next print step has been increased slightly in size. Thus, particularly where multiple print stations and multiple drying steps are involved, making accurate registration of subsequent layers, for example, the enzyme ink on the carbon electrodes, difficult. In the past, a single registration mark printed with each layer (e.g. the carbon layer) has been used to register each of the subsequent print steps (e.g. printing an insulation, and two enzyme layers). Because of the increase in screen size for the subsequent print steps, the use of single registration marks at each layer may result in the image being printed slightly too late.
It would, therefore, be advantageous to develop a registration method that is adaptable to use in a high speed continuous web process. It would further be advantageous to develop a registration method and apparatus that provides superior registration in a high speed continuous web process where one or more of the print stations includes a dryer which heats and stretches the substrate, making registration difficult.
In the continuous web manufacturing process for manufacturing electrochemical sensors, the web can wander from side to side as it passes through the machine. This can cause problems with registration of one printing step to the next with a resultant decrease in yield. There is also a need to provide a visual quality control QC check in the continuous web process, this is difficult as the substrate travels at 10m/min. Furthermore there is a need for QC checks of individual rows. Registration control of one print step to the next can and is carried out automatically using registration marks on the cards printed on the substrate. In flat bed processing each card can be viewed individually by an operator as a QC check before the next stage. Thus, if the previous step has gone awry, any necessary adjustments can be made quickly.
A process for the manufacture of electrochemical sensors is described in WO 01/73109 . Accordingly, successive functional layers may be printed on a moving web substrate, wherein a drying step may be provided after each respective printing operation.
The use of registration marks on a substrate for printed electrical circuits to assist in aligning printing masks for successive print layers is described in US 4376584 . Misalignment between a later and an earlier mark may indicate a misalignment of the mask.
In a method according to the present invention, the use of a second registration mark over printed onto the first during printing of the insulation layer. This second mark is slightly larger than the first. Hence the second mark obliterates the first and causes registration of the subsequent enzyme layers to be triggered slightly earlier. In a method according to the present invention, a two layered mark is used, the second layer being larger than the first so as to "move" the mark to take account of the variation in screen size for the second (e.g. insulation) and subsequent (e.g. enzyme) layers.
The method according to the invention is defined in appended claim 1. Further preferred features are defined in subclaims 2-8.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a first registration mark is printed at the first print station during the carbon print. The substrate then moves to the second print station and the insulation layer is printed at the appropriate location on top of the carbon layer using the first registration mark to align the insulation print screen. The insulation print screen has been increased in size slightly relative to the print screen used to deposit the carbon layer, to take into account the stretching of the substrate prior to the insulation print. In one
embodiment of the present invention, a second registration mark is printed as part of the insulation print, and because the second registration mark is larger than the first registration mark, the second registration mark covers the first registration mark and the enzyme layers is now relative to the insulation registration mark as opposed to the original carbon registration mark.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a special mark is printed on the substrate in a first print step and a second mark printed on the substrate adjacent the first mark in a second print step. A camera views the two marks as they pass beneath the camera lens on the substrate. An operator views the relative position and orientation of the two marks on the camera. The operator can see the marks and make adjustments to the registration of the two print steps. Typically marks are printed at four location, one at each corner of the card. In a further embodiment of the present invention, two special marks are printed adjacent each row (0 to 9 along the substrate) one from each of two adjacent print steps (eg carbon to insulation, insulation to enzyme). This gives an indication for the row of the match from print to print. Thus, a particular row, rather than a card can be rejected if necessary.
The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description that sets forth illustrative embodiments, in which the principles of the invention are utilized, and the accompanying drawings of which:
- Figure 1 is a schematic diagram depicting 8 sections of the web printing process.
- Figure 2A is a schematic diagram depicting a first and second sections of the web printing process.
- Figure 2B is a schematic diagram depicting a third, fourth, and fifth sections of the web printing process.
- Figure 2C is a schematic diagram depicting a sixth and seventh sections of the web printing process.
- Figure 3 is a schematic diagram depicting a humid environment around a fifth and sixth sections of the web printing.
- Figure 4 is a bottom view depicting a humid environment around a fifth and sixth sections of the web printing.
- Figure 5 is a perspective view of a pipe with perforations.
- Figure 6 is a schematic diagram depicting a flood cycle
- Figure 7 is a schematic diagram depicting a print cycle
- Figure 8 is a schematic diagram depicting 2 different squeegee angles.
- Figure 9 is a schematic diagram depicting 2 different squeegee positions.
- Figure 10 is a schematic diagram depicting a screen snap distance.
- Figure 11 is an exploded view of a preconditioning zone (211).
- Figure 12 is an exploded view of the first drying zone (217).
- Figure 13 is an exploded view of a second drying zone (224).
- Figure 14 is an exploded view of a third drying zone (230).
- Figure 15 is an exploded view of a fourth drying zone (236).
- Figure 16 is an exploded view of a first cleaning unit (204).
- Figures 17A-17D are views of an insulation layer to carbon layer with proper registration.
- Figures 18A-18D are views of an insulation layer to carbon layer with improper registration when the artwork resulting from the screen 301 is stretched.
- Figures 19A-19D are views of an insulation layer to carbon layer with improper registration when the art work from screen 301 has not stretched.
- Figures 20A-20D are schematic diagrams depicting the print results for operator registration of the web using a first view guide for visual inspection during an initial registration process.
- Figure 21A is an example of a sensor sheet with a first and second web view guides; first, second, third and fourth Y registration marks; and X registration marks.
- Figure 21B is an exploded view of one row within a sensor sheet with a carbon X registration mark.
- Figure 21C is an exploded view of one row within a sensor sheet with an insulation X registration mark over coating a carbon X registration mark.
- Figure 22 is a schematic diagram of parameters X, Y, and θ used to register the web printing process.
Section 1 may be implemented using a substrate material unwind unit 101 such as, for example, a Martin Unwinder/Automatic Splice which is available from Martin Automatic Inc. in Rockford, IL. In this embodiment of the invention, Sections 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6, may be implemented using a modified Kammann Printer, which is available from Werner Kammann Maschinefabrik Gmbh, model number 4.61.35, in Bünde, Germany.
Section 2 may be pre-conditioning unit 102. Pre-conditioning unit 102 may be used to precondition substrate 242 prior to printing and sections 3, 4, 5 and 6 may be used to screen print carbon, insulation, first enzyme and second enzyme inks onto a substrate 242. Section 7 may include rewinder unit 107 such as, for example, a Martin Rewinder, which is available from Martin Automatic Inc. in Rockford, IL. Section 8 may include a punch 108 such as, for example, a Preco punch which is available from Preco Press, in Lenexa, Kansas as model number 2024-P-40T XYT CCD CE. While specific models of apparatus are mentioned, these pieces of apparatus may be varied and/or replaced and/or omitted altogether as will be understood by those skilled in the art.
In Figure 2A , unwinder unit 101 consists of, for example, a Martin Unwinder/Automatic Splice which is used to facilitate the continuous movement of substrate 242 into pre-conditioning station 102 under a tension of approximately 80N. Unwinder unit 101 may include a first unwind arbor 200 and a second unwind arbor 201. Note that an arbor can also be referred to as a mandrel. First unwind arbor 200 holds a roll of substrate material 242 and continuously feeds substrate 242 into pre-conditioning station 102 of section 2. Second unwind arbor 201 holds a standby roll of substrate 242, which is automatically spliced to the end of the roll of substrate 242 from first unwind arbor 200 ensuring a semi-continuous supply of substrate 242. This continuous process repeats from first unwind arbor 200 to second unwind arbor 201. A substrate material accumulator 203 stores a predetermined length of substrate 242 and dispenses the stored substrate 242 into pre-conditioning station 102 of section 2 while the splicing operation takes place in first splice unit 202 (during which time both the first unwind arbor 200 and second unwind arbor 201 are stationary). The splice created is a butt splice with a length of splice tape on either side of the material at the joint. In order to ensure quality, approximately 10m of printed substrate may be discarded either side of the splice. First unwind arbor 200 and second unwind arbor 201 includes web edge guides (not shown) which guide substrate 242 into first splice unit 202. The web edge guides are adapted to prevent substrate 242 from wandering as it is being fed into first splice unit 202.
Typically the machine of the invention is set up to produce between 2 and 10 and more usually 6 rolls of substrate at any one time. For those print stations connected to a continuous supply of ink, the number of rolls to be used is not usually a problem. However, for the two enzyme print stations, to which a limited amount of ink is supplied, the number of rolls to be used is an important input parameter. Indeed the number of rolls to be used determines the amount of ink placed on the screen prior to start of the printing process. For example for a 6 roll run, 6 (or rather just more than 6) rolls worth of enzyme ink are placed on the screen prior to the start of printing in each of sections 5 and 6. Thus, the enzyme ink needs to be kept in readiness for printing throughout the print run to ensure consistent printing of enzyme over the whole life of the print run. A wall has been placed about the screen in the enzyme print stations to ensure that a sufficient amount of enzyme ink can be added to the screen without requiring the screen to be topped up during a run and also reducing the risk of the enzyme ink overflowing the screen and onto the web substrate running below it.)
Substrate 242 may be held under a tension of approximately 165N throughout the process in order to maintain registration of the four layers to be printed (typically the print registration tolerance is 300µm). The substrate 242 is also subjected to various temperatures of 140°C or less in order to dry the printed inks during each printing step. Due to this tension and temperature, there may be a tendency for substrate 242 to stretch or expand during the process and consequently fall outside the registration tolerance. Indeed the image size variation from print stage to print stage and print run to print run as well as within the print run itself was unpredictable and higher than could be tolerated.
In Figure 2A , section 2 is a preconditioning station 102. Pre-conditioning occurs before any image is printed onto the substrate. Substrate 242 is pre-conditioned to reduce the amount of expansion and stretch within subsequent sections of the web process and also to aid the registration of substrate 242 through sections 3-6. Preconditioning station can heat substrate 242 to a temperature, which is not exceeded in the subsequent print steps. Typically this takes place under tension of between 150 and 180N more typically around 165N. However, in another embodiment pre-conditioning station 102 can heat substrate 242 to a temperature sufficient to remove the irreversible stretch from substrate 242, again optionally while under tension as described above.
The substrate may be heated to approximately 160°C in the preconditioning zone 211, which is illustrated in more detail in Figure 11 . As explained above, the temperature to which substrate 242 is heated in pro-conditioning station 102 is not met or exceeded during subsequent processing of substrate 242, including subsequent drying steps. Subsequent print processes may compensate for the slightly larger image due to stretching caused by the process of pre-conditioning station 102 by the provision of a slightly larger stencil screen size (typically 750µm in the direction of travel of the web). The provision of new screens can be problematical. Other parameters can therefore be varied at each print station to accommodate a variation in image size without replacing the screen, such as the relative speed of the screen and the web. Nevertheless, there is a limit to the amount of image size variation that can be accommodated. It is therefore preferable to precondition the substrate as described herein reducing the overall image size increase and reducing the variation in said image size increase.
Pre-conditioning station 102 also includes additional elements, which perform functions, which facilitate proper operation of a web manufacturing process according to the present invention. In pre-conditioning unit 102, there are two web cleaning units, a first cleaning unit 204 and a second cleaning unit 207 which clean the top and underside of substrate 242. First cleaning unit 204 and second cleaning unit 207 use tacky adhesive coated rollers to remove particulates from substrate 242 prior to any printing step. First cleaning unit 204 may be, for example, a cleaner commercially available from KSM Web Cleaners, model number WASP400, in Glasgow, United Kingdom. Second cleaning unit 207, for example, a cleaner commercially available from Teknek. Pre-conditioning station 102 further includes inbound nip roller 206 and a load cell 208. Inbound nip roller 206 is used to control the tension of substrate 242 (specifically the tension between inbound nip roller 206 and outbound nip roller 238). Inbound nip roller 206 is linked via a control system (not shown) to load cell 208. Substrate 242 is removed from second enzyme print station 106 in section 6 at a constant rate by outbound nip roller 238. Load cell 208 in Section 2 measures the tension of substrate 242 when it is moving through the web process according to the present invention. Inbound nip roller 206 adjusts its speed in order to control the tension at a predetermined set point. A typical substrate tension in a web manufacturing process according to the present invention would be approximately 150N to 180N and more specifically 160N to 170N. Here, the tension is approximately165N.
Section 3 of the web manufacturing process is where carbon printing takes place. Of course, as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the number and type of printing processes can be varied. For example, two carbon prints may be provided or one or more prints with carbon with metallic particles, silver/silver chloride ink or gold or palladium based inks may be used to provide an electrode layer in the electrochemical sensors. The insulation and reagent layers may be varied in their composition, order of deposition, thickness of deposition and layout as well as in other parameters apparent to those skilled in the art from the embodiments described herein. In section 3, the carbon artwork for the electrochemical sensors manufactured in accordance with the present invention may be printed utilizing screen-printing. The basic components of the carbon print station 103 are illustrated in Figures 6 and 7 . In particular, a suitable print station according to the present invention includes a screen 301, lower print roller 303, print roller 600, a flood blade 603, a squeegee holder 605 and a squeegee 606. In carbon print station 103, print roller 600 is second print roller 214. Screen 301 is of generally flat construction and typically comprises a mesh arranged to provide a negative of the artwork desired. Carbon ink is applied to the mesh and pushed through it during printing. At this stage the flat screen may be deformed slightly out of a flat shape by the weight of the ink (this is especially true for the enzyme print steps in which all of the ink to be used during the entire print run is usually deposited on the screen at the start of the print run) and the pressure from the squeegee pushing the ink through the mesh stencil.
In a flood cycle process, screen 301 is charged with ink 604 by moving squeegee 606, flood blade 603, print roller 600, and lower print roller 303, in first direction 608 which corresponds to the web movement of substrate 242. Screen 301 is moved in second direction 607 opposite to first direction 608 of substrate 242 for the flood cycle where ink 604 is charged onto screen 301.
In a subsequent print cycle process, as illustrated in Figure 7 , squeegee 606 transfers ink 604 through the screen 301 and onto substrate 242. During the print cycle, the squeegee 606, flood blade 603, print roller 600, and lower print roller 303 all move in second direction 607 which is opposite to the web movement of substrate 242. Screen 301 is moved in first direction 608 which corresponds to the web movement of substrate 242 for the print cycle where ink 604 is pushed through screen 301 and deposited on substrate 242. Thus during the print cycle the screen 301 moves in the same direction as the web substrate at the same or very nearly the same speed as the substrate. The screen 301 is substantially flat when at rest although in use it is pushed by the squeegee 606 towards the web becoming slightly distorted as this happens and substantially returning to it's original shape once the squeegee 606 is removed. The screen 301 then moves in the opposite direction to the substrate as it is reloaded with ink 604 ready for the next print cycle. When the ink is loaded onto the screen 301 the weight of the ink may ever so slightly bend the screen. The screen 301 is at an angle to the direction of travel 608 of the web as it leaves the print station. This arrangement (the angle being typically around 10 to 30 degrees and more specifically around 15 degrees) improves ink release from the screen onto the substrate improving print definition and reproducibility. The screen to substrate angle, squeegee angle, screen to squeegee distance, squeegee to print roller position, snap distance, relative speeds of substrate and screen and squeegee pressure can all be used to control and optimize the resultant print definition and consistency across a card (One embodiment of a screen printing mechanism is described in more detail in issued US patent 4,245,554 .)
In particular, in carbon print station 103, the ink in question is a carbon ink. An example of a suitable carbon ink is set forth herein below. Screen 301 is flooded with ink 604 prior to using squeegee 606 to transfer the ink 604 through the screen and onto substrate 242. The printed carbon artwork deposited on substrate 242 is then dried using, for example, hot air at 140°C directed onto the printed surface of the substrate using four separate drying banks within the first drier zone217, which is illustrated in more detail in Figure 12 .
Suitable ink for use in carbon print station include, but is not limited to, carbon with metallic particles, silver/silver chloride, gold based, palladium based conductive printable inks.
Prior to the carbon printing process and immediately after drying, substrate 242 may be passed over a first chilled roller 212 which is designed to rapidly cool substrate 242 to a predetermined temperature, typically room temperature (around 18-21 °C and typically 19.5 °C +/- 0.5.°C). The surface of first chilled roller 212 may be approximately 18°C. First chilled roller 212 may be cooled to an appropriate temperature using, for example, factory chilled water at around 7°C. The temperature of the roller can be controlled by controlling the flow rate and/or the temperature of the factory chilled water. After the printed carbon patterns are deposited in the printing process, substrate 242 is passed over second chilled roller 218. Reducing the temperature of substrate 242 and maintaining the temperature of substrate 242 is beneficial because cooler temperatures reduces the probability of ink drying on the screens during printing and creating blocks in the mesh. The use of chilled rollers in a web manufacturing process is also beneficial because it reduces the amount of stretch in substrate 242, reducing registration problems and the need to modify the process on the fly to compensate for such problems.
The temperature of the chilled rollers may be controlled dynamically by a feedback loop measuring the temperature of the chilled roller and controlling the water flow/temperature. Other methods of chilling the rollers can be envisaged by those skilled in the art from the embodiments described herein, for example, electrically powered refrigeration units.
Section 4 of the web manufacturing process is where insulation printing takes place. In section 4, the insulation artwork for the electrochemical sensors manufactured in accordance with the present invention is printed utilizing screen-printing utilizing a generally flat screen. The basic components of the insulation print station 104 are illustrated in Figures 6 and 7 . In particular, a suitable print station according to the present invention includes a screen 301, lower print roller 303, print roller 600, a flood blade 603, a squeegee holder 605 and a squeegee 606. In insulation print station 104, print roller 600 is third print roller 221.
Screen 301 is charged with ink 604 by moving squeegee 606, flood blade 603, print roller 600, and lower print roller 303, in first direction 608 which corresponds to the web movement of substrate 242. Screen 301 is moved in second direction 607 opposite to first direction 608 of substrate 242 for the flood cycle where ink 604 is charged onto screen 301.
In a subsequent print cycle process, as illustrated in Figure 7 , squeegee 606 transfers ink 604 through the screen 301 and onto substrate 242. During the print cycle, the squeegee 606, flood blade 603, print roller 600, and lower print roller 303 all move in second direction 607 which is opposite to the web movement of substrate 242. Screen 301 is moved in first direction 608 which corresponds to the web movement of substrate 242 for the print cycle where ink 604 is pushed through screen 301 and deposited on substrate 242. One embodiment of the screen printing mechanism is described in more detail in issued US patent 4,245,554 .
In movable flat screen printing, during printing a generally flat screen has a component of its motion which is in the same direction and at approximately the same speed as the substrate. Typically in each of the print stations, the substantially flat screen is at an acute angle (A in figure 6 ) to the substrate as the screen and substrate move away from a printing position (adjacent a print roller 200 in figure 6 ). Varying the relative speed of the substrate and the screen varies the size of the printed image in the direction of travel of the substrate, i.e. the X-direction.
The stencil screen used in each of the print stations typically consists of a resiliently deformable polyester or steel mesh stretched and attached to a rigid frame. One embodiment uses a polyester screen supplied by DEK Machinery, Weymouth, UK. The mesh is coated with a UV sensitive coating and in conjunction with a film positive the screen is exposed to a UV light source, developed and dried so that the coating dries on the screen to form a negative of the desired artwork image. With the aid of a squeegee, ink is passed through the open areas of the stencil and onto the substrate (giving a positive image formed by the ink on the substrate). The frame provides a means of mounting the mesh, and withstanding the forces imposed by the stretched mesh with minimum distortion and with standing the additional forces produced during printing.
In particular, in insulation print station 104, the ink in question is an insulation ink. An example of a suitable insulation ink is set forth herein below. In this embodiment of the current invention, screen 301 is flooded with ink 604 prior to using squeegee 606 to transfer ink 604 through the screen and onto substrate 242. The printed insulation artwork deposited on substrate 242 is then dried using, for example, hot air at 140°C directed onto the printed surface of the substrate using four separate drying banks within second drier zone 224, which is illustrated in more detail in Figure 13 . An example of a suitable ink for use in insulation print station in a web manufacturing process according to the present invention is Ercon E6110-116 Jet Black Insulayer Ink which may be purchased from Ercon, Inc. insulation artwork may be registered to the carbon artwork in the X direction (along the machine) and the Y direction (across the machine) utilizing the techniques described herein. Other types of insulation ink may be utilized as will be understood by those skilled in the art from the description herein. Furthermore different layers or different orders of layers can be used to provide a different order of layers and therefore different construction in the electrochemical sensors produced
Before the insulation printing process and immediately after drying, substrate 242, including printed carbon and insulation patterns, may be passed over third chilled roller 219 which is designed to rapidly cool substrate 242 to a predetermined temperature typically room temperature (around 17-21 °C and typically 19.5 °C +/- 0.5 °C). In one embodiment of the web manufacturing process according to the present invention, the surface temperature of the third chilled roller is approximately 18°C. Third chilled roller 219 may be cooled to an appropriate temperature using, for example, factory chilled water at around 7°C. Reducing the temperature of substrate 242 and maintaining the temperature of substrate 242 is beneficial because cooler temperatures reduces the probability of ink drying on the screens and creating blocks in the mesh. The use of chilled rollers in a web manufacturing process according to the present invention is also beneficial because it reduces the amount of stretch in substrate 242, reducing registration problems and the need to modify the process on the fly to compensate for such problems.
Section 5 of the web manufacturing process is where the first enzyme printing takes place. In section 5, the enzyme ink artwork for the electrochemical sensors manufactured in accordance with the present invention is printed utilizing screen-printing and a movable generally flat screen as herein before described. The basic components of the first enzyme print station 105 are illustrated in Figures 6 and 7 . In particular, a suitable print station according to the present invention includes a screen 301, lower print roller 303, print roller 600, a flood blade 603, a squeegee holder 605 and a squeegee 606. In first enzyme print station 105, print roller 600 is fourth print roller 227.
In a flood cycle process, screen 301 is charged with ink 604 by moving squeegee 606, flood blade 603, print roller 600, and lower print roller 303, in first direction 608 which corresponds to the web movement of substrate 242. Screen 301 is moved in second direction 607 opposite to first direction 608 of substrate 242 for the flood cycle where ink 604 is charged onto screen 301.
In a subsequent print cycle process, as illustrated in Figure 7 , squeegee 606 transfers ink 604 through the screen 301 and onto substrate 242. During the print cycle, the squeegee 606, flood blade 603, print roller 600, and lower print roller 303 all move in second direction 607 which is opposite to the web movement of substrate 242. Screen 301 is moved in first direction 608 which corresponds to the web movement of substrate 242 for the print cycle where ink 604 is pushed through screen 301 and deposited on substrate 242. One embodiment of the screen printing mechanism is described in more detail in issued US patent 4,245,554 .
In particular, in first enzyme print station 105, the ink in question is an enzyme ink. An example of a suitable enzyme ink is set forth herein below. Screen 301 is flooded with ink 604 prior to using squeegee 606 to transfer the ink 604 through the screen and onto substrate 242. The printed enzyme artwork deposited on substrate 242 is then dried using, for example, hot air at 50°C directed onto the printed surface of the substrate using two separate drying banks within the third drier zone230, which is illustrated in more detail in Figure 14 . An example of a suitable ink for use in first enzyme print station 105 in a web manufacturing process according to the present invention as summarized in Table 2. Table 2.
| Component | Supplier |
| Glucose Oxidase | Biozyme Laboratories |
| Tri-sodium Citrate | Fisher Scientific |
| Citric Acid | Fisher Scientific |
| Poly Vinyl Alcohol | Sigma Aldrich |
| Hydroxyethylcellulose (Nat 250 G) | Honeywell and Stein |
| BDH/Merck LTD | |
| Sigma-Aldrich Chemical Co., UK | |
| Potassium hexacyanoferrate III | Norlab Instruments Ltd., UK |
| DC 1500 Antifoam | BDH/Merck Ltd |
| Cabosil | Ellis and Everard Ltd |
| PVPVA | ISP Company Ltd |
| Analar Water | BDH/Merck Ltd |
After the insulation printing process and immediately after drying, the substrate 242, including printed carbon and insulation patterns, may be passed over fourth chilled roller 225 which is designed to rapidly cool substrate 242 to a predetermined temperature typically room temperature (around 17-21 °C and typically 19.5 °C +/- 0.5 °C).. The surface of fourth chilled roller 225 may be approximately 18°C. Fourth chilled roller 225 may be cooled to an appropriate temperature using, for example, factory chilled water at around 7°C. Reducing the temperature of substrate 242 and maintaining the temperature of substrate 242 is beneficial because cooler temperatures reduces the probability of ink drying on the screens and creating blocks in the mesh. The use of chilled rollers in a web manufacturing process according to the present invention is also beneficial because it reduces the amount of stretch in substrate 242, reducing registration problems and the need to modify the process on the fly to compensate for such problems.
Additionally, due to the high water content of the enzyme ink and the airflow due to the movement of the screen, it is crucial to ensure that the enzyme ink does not dry into the screen. The relative flow of air encountered by the moving screen dries the ink on the screen in a manner not normally observed in flat bed screen printers (such as Theme flat bed printers) since the screen itself does not move within the machine, unlike the present invention. As well as the chilled roller alleviating this by ensuring the substrate is cooled to around 18°C before it encounters the enzyme screen-printing step, the screen loaded with enzyme ink is humidified during printing. In one embodiment, humidification is substantially continuous. There may be topside, underside and/or side screen humidification and indeed all three may be provided. An arrangement of pipes provides a substantially constant stream of humidified air above, below and sideways onto the screen respectively, ensuring the water content of the ink, is maintained at a constant level. A suitable arrangement for providing topside, underside and/or side screen humidification according to the present invention is illustrated in Figures 3 , 4 and 5 . The amount and arrangement of humidification means (typically pipes carrying humidified air) will depend, amongst other things, upon the amount of humidification required, the water content of the ink, the humidity and temperature of the surrounding air, the temperature of the substrate as it approaches the enzyme print station, the temperature of the print roller, the size of the screen and the exposure of the screen to the surrounding (unhumidified air). In one embodiment a pipe 304 comprising one or more rows of holes 400 delivers humidified air across the whole underside of the screen during one stroke of the screen back and forth. Pipes (not shown) above and to the operator side of the machine deliver humidified air flows 300 and 304 (see figure 4 ).
Typically all the enzyme ink required for that print run is placed on the screen at or prior to the start of the print run. Since the enzyme ink is composed of a large part of water (typically between 55 and 65% by weight, more typically around 60 % by weight, the ink is prone to drying out over the lifetime of the run. This risk can be alleviated by providing humidification around the screen loaded with enzyme ink. Alternatively or more typically in addition the substrate can be chilled prior to encountering the enzyme (or indeed any) print station by the use of chilled rollers as herein described. Typically the temperature of the substrate is controlled to be less than or equal to the temperature of the room. However, the temperature of the substrate is kept above the dew point for the atmosphere in the room. If the room is at 60% humidity then the dew point may be 15 °C. If the temperature of the substrate falls below this then, condensation can occur on the substrate potentially compromising any subsequent print run, especially any subsequent print run with water soluble ink such as enzyme ink. Control of the substrate temperature, for example between the limits of room temperature and dew point, may therefore be important for a successful print run. Control of temperature of and/or time passing over chilled rollers 212, 219, 225, and 231 is important in controlling substrate temperature. A feedback control loop can be used to measure the substrate temperature for example relative to the room temperature and/or dew point (given the room's humidity) to control the temperature of the chilled rollers and the temperature of the substrate as it leaves the roller and approaches the next print station.
Section 6 of the web manufacturing process is where the second enzyme printing takes place. In section 6, the enzyme ink artwork for the electrochemical sensors manufactured in accordance with the present invention is printed utilizing screen-printing. The purpose of applying 2 coatings of the enzyme ink is to ensure complete coverage of the carbon electrodes and so that the electrodes are substantially even and free of voids. The basic components of the second enzyme print station 106 are illustrated in Figures 6 and 7 . In particular, a suitable print station according to the present invention includes a screen 301, lower print roller 303, print roller 600, a flood blade 603, a squeegee holder 605 and a squeegee 606. In second enzyme print station 106, print roller 600 is fifth print roller 233.
In a flood cycle process, screen 301 is charged with ink 604 by moving squeegee 606, flood blade 603, print roller 600, and lower print roller 303, in first direction 608 which corresponds to the web movement of substrate 242. Screen 301 is moved in second direction 607 opposite to first direction 608 of substrate 242 for the flood cycle where ink 604 is charged onto screen 301.
In a subsequent print cycle process, as illustrated in Figure 7 , squeegee 606 transfers ink 604 through the screen 301 and onto substrate 242. During the print cycle, the squeegee 606, flood blade 603, print roller 600, and lower print roller 303 all move in second direction 607 which is opposite to the web movement of substrate 242. Screen 301 is moved in first direction 608 which corresponds to the web movement of substrate 242 for the print cycle where ink 604 is pushed through screen 301 and deposited on substrate 242. One embodiment of the screen printing mechanism is described in more detail in issued US patent 4,245,554 which is incorporated by reference herein.
In particular, in second enzyme print station 106, the ink in question is an enzyme ink. Screen 301 is flooded with ink 604 prior to using squeegee 606 to transfer the ink 604 through the screen and onto substrate 242. The printed enzyme artwork deposited on substrate 242 is then dried using, for example, hot air at 50°C directed onto the printed surface of the substrate using two separate drying banks within a fourth drier zone 23 6, which is illustrated in more detail in Figure 15 . An example of a suitable ink for use in second enzyme print station 106 is the same as the enzyme ink used in first enzyme print station which is described in aforementioned Table 2.
After the second enzyme printing process and immediately after drying, the substrate 242, including printed carbon, insulation, and enzyme ink patterns, may be passed over fifth chilled roller 231 which is designed to rapidly cool substrate 242 to a predetermined temperature. The surface of the fifth chilled roller 231 is approximately 18°C. Fifth chilled roller 231 may be cooled to an appropriate temperature using, for example, factory chilled water at around 7°C. Reducing the temperature of substrate 242 and maintaining the temperature of substrate 242 is beneficial because cooler temperatures reduces the probability of ink drying on the screens and creating blocks in the mesh. The use of chilled rollers in a web manufacturing process according to the present invention can also be beneficial because it reduces the amount of stretch in substrate 242, reducing registration problems and the need to modify the process on the fly to compensate for such problems.
Additionally, due to the high water content of the enzyme ink and the airflow due to the movement of the screen, it is crucial to ensure that the enzyme ink does not dry into the screen. As well as the chilled roller alleviating this by ensuring the substrate is cooled to 18°C before it encounters the enzyme screen-printing step, there is also topside and/or underside and/or side screen humidification, which can provide a stream of humidified air above and below the screen, ensuring the water content of the ink is maintained at a constant level. Typically the humidified air flows constantly over the screen. A suitable arrangement for providing topside and underside screen humidification according to the present invention is illustrated in Figure 3 .
Second enzyme print station 106 may include outbound nip roller 238, inspection system 237 for inspecting registration, third Y registration system at 237C (not shown) and barcode station (not shown). Outbound nip roller 238 helps control the tension of substrate 342 (specifically the tension between inbound nip roller 206 and outbound nip roller 238). Substrate 242 is removed from second enzyme print station 106 at a constant rate by outbound nip roller 238.. The Y registration system (not shown) at positons 237A, 237 B and 237C controls the Y registration (i.e. across the web) of each print cycle during printing by utilizing the first Y registration marks 2101, second Y registration marks 2102, third Y registration marks 2103, fourth Y registration marks 2104 which are illustrated in Fig 21A . In one embodiment of the invention, first Y registration marks 2101, second Y registration marks 2102, third Y registration marks 2103, and fourth Y registration marks 2104 may correspond, respectively, to the Y registration of carbon print station 103, insulation print station 104, first enzyme print station 105, and second enzyme print station 106. Each Y registration marks comprises 2 triangles that are juxtaposed in an orientation that approximates a rectangle. The Y registration system located at positions 237A, 237B and 237C can be implemented by an Eltromat DGC650 from Eltromat Gmbh in Leopoldshöhe, Germany.
The present invention, the inspection system 237, may be implemented using the Eltromat Inspection System, model number PC3100 HD, which is commercially available from Eltromat Gmbh in Leopoldshöhe, Germany. The inspection system237 has a vision component that inspects the registration marks illustrated in Figures 17A to 19D and/or figure 20D and can be used as a tool in assessing whether a sensor sheet 2106 should be rejected (for example by recording inspection results against a barcode in a database).
Registration issues in the Y dimension (which can be altered during printing by the registration system (not shown) which is located at 237A, 237B and 237C and/or inspected by inspection system 237 after all print stages are complete) may be ascribed to variations in web tension or non-uniform distortions to the substrate 242. The barcode station may comprise the following commercially available components barcode printer (model number A400 from Domino UK Ltd. In Cambridge, United Kingdom), barcode traverse system (Scottish Robotic Systems in Perthshire, Scotland), and barcode reader (RVSI Acuity CiMatrix in Canton, MA). The barcode station (no shown) labels each row of the sensor sheet 2106 with a 2 dimensional bar code. This provides each row of sensors a unique identifier code, batch/Lot number identification, the sensor sheet number, and row number. The barcode station also reads barcode immediately after printing to verify that the barcode has printed properly and provides a visual indicator to the machine operators. The barcode and process information from sections 2 to 6 are stored in a database and used later to identify and subsequently reject/accept cards for future process.
Rewinder unit 107 consists of, for example, a Martin Automatic Rewind System. This is the last section of the machine and allows the continuous rewind of substrate 242. Rewinder unit 107 consists of a first rewind arbor 240 and second rewind arbor 241. First rewind arbor 240 holds a roll of substrate material 242 and continuously pulls material from second enzyme print station 106. Second rewind arbor 241 holds a standby roll of material, which automatically splices a first roll of substrate 242 into a second roll on the completion of the roll of substrate 242 from first rewind arbor 240. This continuous process repeats from first rewind arbor 240 to second rewind arbor 241. A flying splice, which occurs while the substrate 242 is still moving, is used to enable the continuous rewind of substrate 242. The splice is placed directly onto a fresh roll of substrate material 242 which is primed with double sided pressure sensitive adhesive.
An exploded view of one corner of the print guides is shown in Figure 20A-D , in the sequence in which they are printed. At section 3 of carbon print station 103, a solid carbon rectangle 1700 is printed along with a rectangular carbon line 1703, which surrounds the solid carbon rectangle 1700. At section 4 of insulation print station 104, a rectangular insulation line 1701 is printed between the solid carbon rectangle 1700 and the rectangular carbon line 1703. When insulation to carbon registration is correct at all four corners typically there will be no uncoated substrate 242 showing between solid carbon rectangle 1700 and rectangular insulating line 1701. Additionally, at section 4 of insulation print station 104, there are two more rectangular insulation lines 1701 printed directly above the solid carbon rectangle 1700. These two additional insulation lines are used to visually assess the registration of first enzyme layer 2000 to the insulation layer and second enzyme layer 2001 to the insulation layer, this is done so by printing a solid rectangle of enzyme ink within the rectangular insulation line as illustrated in Figure 20C and 20D . Thus the third and fourth printed layers can be registered to the second and not to the first printed layers. This has the advantage that a change in artwork size between the first and second layers (which may be required should the substrate stretch after the first print station for example due to the heat and tension encountered in the first drying zone 217) can be accommodated without adverse effect on print registration (a tolerance of 300µm is typical in the X direction).
As illustrated in Figures 1 and 2 , at the end of the process, substrate 242, including the sensors printed thereon is rewound by rewinder unit 107 and is then fed into punch 108, which may be, for example, a Preco punch which is located within a low humidity environment. The Preco Punch is a CCD X, Y, Theta, Floating Bolster Punch. The Preco Punch registration system uses a CCD vision system to look at "Preco Dots" which are printed on the Carbon print station, these allow the punch to adjust to the carbon print and enable the punch to "punch" the cards out square. The output of Punch 108 is a set of punched cards such as those illustrated in Figure 21A . Punched cards are ejected from punch 108 onto a conveyer belt, this conveyer belt transports the cards under a barcode reader which reads two of the barcodes on each card to identify whether the card is accept or reject in relation to the Web Database. Automatic or manual extraction of rejected cards can carried out. The cards are then stacked on top of one another in preparation for the next manufacturing step.
At carbon print station 103, insulation print station 104, first enzyme print station 105, and second enzyme print station 106 all have a means for visually inspecting the registration immediately after the printing process step using first vision sensor 215, second vision sensor 222, third vision sensor 228, fourth vision sensor 234, respectively. For each section in the web printing manufacturing process - Section 3, 4, 5 and 6 - there are Web Viewer camera systems located immediately after the printing process step. See Figure's 2A-2C for web viewer locations. There are two cameras at Section 3 and four cameras each at Section 4, 5 and 6. The web viewer cameras are part of a manual set-up process used by the Web machine operators during the start of the print run. The cameras are used to view printed marks, which aid the initial set-up of carbon alignment to substrate 242 and registration between insulation layer to carbon layer, first enzyme layer to insulation layer, and second enzyme layer to insulation layer. The printing guides are illustrated indicated on Figure 21A . For carbon print alignment, second view guide 2100 is used to indicate the carbon print position in relation to the edge of substrate 242 as it runs through carbon print station 103. There is a leading line and a trailing line as illustrated in Figure 21A . The carbon print is adjusted until the lines indicate that the print is square to the substrate edge. Registration of the individually printed layers is required in the X direction (along the length of the machine) and the Y direction (across the width of the machine) See Figure 21A . X direction registration is controlled by the internal registration system of the machine. This utilizes the printed areas indicated on Figure 21A , B and C. On the Carbon print cycle a carbon X registration mark 2107 is printed in this area. The Insulation printing cycle is registered to the Carbon print using sensors which use carbon X registration mark 2107 to allow the insulation screen to adjust in order to print the insulation ink in the correct position. The carbon X registration mark 2107 used for this purpose is then over printed with insulation X registration mark 2108 and is utilized in the same manner to correctly register first enzyme layer 2000 and second enzyme layer 2001 with the insulation print. Y direction registration is controlled by Y registration system (not shown) located at positons 237A, 237B and 237C which in one embodiment of the invention may be an Eltromat registration system, model number DGC650 from Leopoldshöhe, Germany. This utilizes the printed areas 2101 to 2104 indicated in Figure 21A . On each print cycle - Carbon, Insulation, Enzyme1 and Enzyme2 - these marks are printed in order that the subsequent print is registered, via sensors, in the Y direction. The Web Database records process information during printing. Information recorded in the database can be traced back to each individual card via a barcode, in one embodiment a 2D barcode is used. Typical information gathered in the Web database is outlined in Table 3. The Web Database has the ability to assess whether a process parameter is Acceptable or Unacceptable and can be used to reject cards on this basis - whether the parameters were running within there tolerance limit. Unacceptable cards may be removed at future processes either manually or automatically. Table 3.
Table 3.
| Section 2 Pre Condition | Section 3 Carbon | Section 4 Insulation | Section 5 Enzyme 1 | Section 6 Enzyme 2 |
| Hot Plate 1 of 1 | Drier Bank 1 of 2 | Drier Bank 1 of 3 | Drier Bank 1 of 4 | Drier Bank 1 of 4 |
| Dier Bank 2 of 1 | Drier Bank 2 of 2 | Drier Bank 2 of 3 | Drier Bank 2 of 4 | Drier Bank 2 of 4 |
| Drier Bank 3 of 1 | Drier Bank 3 of 2 | Drier Bank 3 of 3 | Squeegee Pressure | Squeegee Pressure |
| Drier Bank 4 of 1 | Drier Bank 4 of 2 | Drier Bank 4 of 3 | Inside Hood %RH | Inside Hood %RH |
| Squeegee Pressure | Squeegee Pressure | Inside Hood Temp | Inside Hood Temp | |
| Outside Hood %RH | Outside Hood %RH | |||
| Outside Hood Temp | Outside Hood Temp |
| others | ||||
| Web Tension | ||||
| Web Speed | ||||
The output of the web manufacturing process may be cards printed with artwork comprising Carbon, Insulation and two identical Enzyme layers printed in register with one another to form strips each containing an electrochemical sensor and associated contact electrodes for detecting Glucose in a blood sample. The strips are used for self-monitoring of blood glucose in conjunction with a meter. Productions of several designs of strips are envisaged. At present the web is designed to produce "One Touch Ultra" strips for use in the One Touch Ultra meter which is available from LifeScan, Inc.
A schematic diagram sample of the artwork produced is in Figure 21A . This illustrates one complete printed card, which contains 10 "Rows" of 50 "Strips". There are a total of 500 "Strips" per card. Print orientations are also indicated. By printing rows 0 to 9 (each of 50 strips) parallel to the direction of print, the process can be easily extended to inclusion of a cutting step separating one row from another. Furthermore this means that any defective rows resulting from cross web variation in print quality (perpendicular to the direction ofprint)can be identified easily. Each row is allocated a number (identified by a barcode) and therefore specific rows from specific sheets on the web can later be identified with reference to the database and eliminated without the need to reject the whole sheet This increases the yield of usable product from the process and renders the whole process more efficient
The movable substantially flat screen copes well with the types of ink (solid/liquid combinations) used in the printing of electrochemical sensors. The use of a movable flat screen can enable better control of print definition and the deposition of the thicker layers of ink needed in electrochemical sensors than may be allowed by rotogravure or cylinder screen printing. A variety of types of screen (with different mesh, diameter of thread in the mesh, thread separation, thickness, mesh count) are readily commercially available to cope with the different requirements of different types of ink in the continuous web printing process (carbon, insulation, enzyme).
Because of the arrangement of the flat screen, print roller, substrate and a squeegee urging the screen towards the substrate, a variety of parameters are available to be manipulated (screen to substrate angle, squeegee angle, screen to squeegee position, squeegee to print roller position, snap distance, relative speeds of substrate and screen and squeegee etc) to optimize the print process for electrochemical sensors.
To summarize briefly in a web manufacturing process for manufacturing electrochemical sensors, the web expands or stretches as it is heated up and placed under tension during the process. The printing stations (for example carbon, insulation, two enzyme) typically each are followed by a drying station. In order to dry the inks efficiently the drier stations operate at quite high temperatures (50-140 degrees centigrade). Furthermore to aid registration of the web through each printing station, the web is placed under tension.
The substrate has to be kept under tension to control registration within the process, as a result, whenever the substrate is heated for example to dry the inks after printing, the substrate will stretch unpredictably causing image size variation in subsequent prints.
The size of the image printed at each print station is determined by several factors (stencil size, ink viscosity, relative web and stencil/screen speed and substrate stretch at that point (both reversible and irreversible stretch) etc.
The image size variation (between different printing steps) when looked at the end of the process was found to vary. It was unpredictable and higher than expected significantly reducing yields. If the mismatch between image sizes between layers is greater than 300microns along the web (x-direction), the product will not work. The excessive image size variation was thought to be due to excessive and unpredictable stretching (due to heating and tension) and shrinking of the web substrate.
The problem of stretch and tension does not cause the same problems in flat bed printing. To solve the problem in the web process, pre-shrunk substrate was tried. The substrate was heated to around 185 degrees centigrade before being used in the web process. However, the variation in image size remained a problem, and caused reduced yields.
The current proposal for the web process is the use of high temperatures in a first drier or rather preconditioned at a sufficiently high temperature so that in one example, irreversible stretch is substantially removed from the substrate, prior to an image being printed on the substrate.
In a first processing station in the web machine, a drier bank heats the substrate up to 160 degrees centigrade. The temperatures encountered by the substrate later in the process, typically do not exceed 140 degrees.
In figure 2A the first heater bank that the unprinted substrate encounters is the hot plate. This is a Teflon coated plate, which lifts and contacts the substrate during motion of the web. The heat is introduced to the back face of the substrate. This is currently running at a set point of 160°C with a specification of +/- 4°C. The 160°C set point statistically provided the best dimensional control. The calculated mean is 160.9°C. In Bank 2 hot air is introduced to the front face of the substrate at a set point of 160°C with a specification of +/- 4°C. The calculated mean is 161.29°C. In Bank 3 hot air is introduced to the front face of the substrate at a set point of 160°C with a specification of+/- 4°C. The calculated mean is 161.18°C. In Bank 4 hot air is introduced to the front face of the substrate at a set point of 160°C with a specification of +/- 4°C. The calculated mean is 160.70°C.
As a result of the web tension and the heat introduced in the drier, the web substrate is stretched by approximately 0.7mm per artwork repeat. This was one of the primary reasons for utilizing Station 1 as a preconditioning unit to stabilize the substrate prior to subsequent printing stations. The use of Station 1 to precondition the substrate improves the stability of Carbon and Insulation Row Length since much of the material stretch has been removed from the substrate prior to printing.
The method includes the printing of the first registration mark at the first print station (e.g. the print station where the carbon electrodes are deposited), the printing of the second registration mark over the first registration mark during printing of the next (e.g. insulation) layer. The second registration mark, being slightly larger then the first registration mark, obliterates the first registration mark and causes registration of the subsequent layers (e.g. enzyme layers) to be triggered slightly earlier. A two layered mark may be used, the second layer being larger than the first so as to "move" mark to take account of the variation in screen size for the second (e.g. insulation) and subsequent (e.g. enzyme) layers.
The first registration mark may be printed at the first print station during the carbon print The substrate then moves to the second print station and the insulation layer is printed at the appropriate location on top of the carbon layer using the first registration mark to align the insulation print screen. The insulation print screen has been increased in size slightly relative to the print screen used to deposit the carbon layer, to take into account the stretching of the substrate prior to the insulation print. The second registration mark may be printed as part of the insulation print, and because the second registration mark is larger than the first registration mark, the second registration mark covers the first registration mark and the enzyme layers is now relative to the insulation registration mark as opposed to the original carbon registration mark.
A special mark may be printed on the substrate in a first print step and a second mark printed on the substrate adjacent the first mark in a second print step. A camera views the two marks as they pass beneath the camera lens on the substrate. An operator views the relative position and orientation of the two marks on the camera. The operator can see the marks and make adjustments to the registration of the two print steps. Typically marks are printed at four locations, one at each corner of the card. Two special marks may be printed adjacent each row (0 to 9 along the substrate) one from each of two adjacent print steps (eg carbon to insulation, insulation to enzyme). This gives an indication for the row of the match from print to print Thus, a particular row, rather than a card can be rejected if necessary.
Four print marks per card may be printed on the web substrate box formations are printed at the corner of each print and make up part of the Carbon and Insulation screen artwork. Carbon Ink is printed at station 2, insulation ink is then printed at station 3. The Insulation ink is printed around the solid Carbon rectangle and within the Carbon box in order to provide a guide/aid to the Web operator in obtaining the correct registration of the Carbon to Insulation prints. When the boxes indicate that the Insulation screen artwork is "stretched" on top of the carbon through the Web viewer system the Insulation screen art work may be reduced in size by the operator until it was perfectly aligned on top of the Carbon printed artwork
The boxes may indicate that the Insulation screen artwork is identical in size to the carbon printed art work but is off registration. Through the Web viewing system the insulation artwork/screen may be adjusted until it is perfectly aligned on top of the carbon printed artwork.
Four television cameras may view each card, one at each corner during each of the print stations. The images from one print step can be superimposed on another on a TV screen either singly or in twos (for example along the web, or across the web) or in fours (showing all four corners of the card at once). For each row, up to six mark locations can be used (two, one at each end of the row, for carbon to insulation and four, two at each end of the row, for insulation to enzyme 1 and insulation to enzyme 2).
The registration of the print steps is facilitated by the use of the special print marks in the print artwork and the use ofTV cameras viewing the marks during the web printing process. The row specific marks allow very good in built assessment QC of quality in individual rows during (if viewed by camera) and at the end of the process.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions will now occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention end that methods and structures within the scope of these claims be covered thereby.
Claims (8)
- A method of manufacturing an electrochemical sensor comprising transporting a web of a substrate (242) from a first roll of substrate material past one or more print stations (103-106) and printing multiple functional layers on the substrate at one or more print stations by screen printing, the method according to the present invention comprising:printing a first functional layer and a first registration mark (2107);heating the substrate to dry the first functional layer;aligning a print screen to the substrate using the first registration mark;printing a second functional layer and a second registration mark (2108) whereinsaid second registration mark is larger than the first registration mark and is printed over the first registration mark;heating the substrate to dry the second functional layer;aligning a second print screen to the substrate using the second registration mark;printing a third functional layer using the second print screen.
- A method according claim 1 in which the first functional layer is printed on the substrate (242) at a print station (103-106) by screen printing using flat screen printing.
- A method according claim 2 in which a first functional layer is an electrode layer.
- A method according claim 1 in which the second functional layer is printed on the substrate (242) at a print station (103-106) by screen printing an insulation ink using flat screen printing.
- A method according claim 4 in which the second functional layer is an insulation layer.
- A method according claim 1 in which the third functional layer is printed on the substrate (242) at a print station (103-106) by screen printing using flat screen printing.
- A method according claim 6 in which the third functional layer is a reagent layer.
- A method according to claim 2 in which one or more electrodes are printed on the substrate (242) at a first print station (103-106) by screen printing electrically conductive ink using flat screen printing; a first insulation layer is printed on the substrate at second print station by screen printing an insulation ink using flat screen printing; a first reagent layer is printed on the substrate at a third print station by screen printing a first reagent ink using flat screen printing; and the layers are printed in that order.
Applications Claiming Priority (9)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US42222602P | 2002-10-30 | 2002-10-30 | |
| US42223002P | 2002-10-30 | 2002-10-30 | |
| US422226P | 2002-10-30 | ||
| US422230P | 2002-10-30 | ||
| US43668302P | 2002-12-27 | 2002-12-27 | |
| US43668502P | 2002-12-27 | 2002-12-27 | |
| US436685P | 2002-12-27 | ||
| US436683P | 2002-12-27 | ||
| PCT/GB2003/004663 WO2004040948A1 (en) | 2002-10-30 | 2003-10-30 | Apparatus and method for controlling registration of print steps in a continuous process for the manufacture of electrochemical sensors |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| HK1082151A1 HK1082151A1 (en) | 2006-05-26 |
| HK1082151B true HK1082151B (en) | 2011-06-03 |
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