Thermal printing (or direct thermal printing) is a digital printing process which produces a printed image by selectively heating coated ther mochromic paper, or thermal paper as it is commonly known, when the paper passes over the thermal print head. The coating turns black in the areas where it is heated, producing an image. Two-colour direct thermal printers can print both black and an additional color (often red) by applying heat at two different temperatures
Design
A thermal printer
comprises these key components:
·
Thermal head: generates heat; prints
on paper
·
Platen: a rubber roller that feeds
paper
·
Spring: applies pressure to the
thermal head, causing it to contact the thermosensitive paper
·
Controller boards: for controlling
the mechanism
In order to
print, thermo-sensitive paper is inserted between the thermal head and the
platen. The printer sends an electrical current to the heating elements of the thermal head, which generate heat
The heat
activates the thermo-sensitive coloring layer of the thermosensitive paper,
which changes color where heated. Such a printing mechanism is known as a thermal system or direct system. The heating elements are usually arranged as a matrix of small closely spaced
dots—thermal printers are actually dot-matrix printers, though they are not so called.
The paper is
impregnated with a solid-state mixture of a dye and a suitable matrix; a
combination of a fluoral leuco
dye and an octadecylphosphonic acid is an example. When the matrix is heated above its melting
point, the dye reacts with the acid, shifts to its colored form, and the
changed form is then conserved in metastable state when the matrix solidifies
back quickly enough (a process known as the rmochromism).
Controller
boards are embedded with firmware to manage the thermal printer mechanisms. The firmware can
manage multiple bar code types, graphics and logos. They enable the user to
choose between different resident fonts (also including Asian fonts) and
character sizes. Controller boards can drive various sensors such as paper low,
paper out, door open and so on, and they are available with a variety of
interfaces, such as RS-232, parallel, USB and wireless. For point
of saleapplication some boards can also
control the cash
drawer.
Applications
Thermal
printers print more quietly and usually faster than impact dot matrix printers. They are also smaller, lighter and consume less power,
making them ideal for portable and retail applications. Its efficiency can be
utilized in retail sectors. Roll-based printers can be rapidly refilled.
Commercial applications of thermal printers include filling station pumps, information kiosks, point of sale systems, voucher printers in slot machines, print on demand labels for shipping and products, and for recording live
rhythm strips on hospital cardiac monitors.
Many popular
microcomputer systems from the late 1970s and early 1980s had first-party and
aftermarket thermal printers available for them - such as the Atari 822 printer
for the Atari
8-bit systems, the Apple Silentype for the Apple
II and the Alphacom 32 for the Sinclair ZX Spectrum and ZX81. They often used unusually-sized supplies (10CM wide rolls
for the Alphacom 32 for instance) and were often used for making permanent
records of information in the computer (graphics, program listings etc.),
rather than for correspondence.
Through the
1990s many fax
machines used thermal printing technology.
Toward the beginning of the 21st century, however, thermal wax transfer, laser, and inkjet printing technology largely supplanted thermal printing
technology in fax machines, allowing printing on plain paper. Thermal Receipt
Printer are very efficient and quick. Its efficiency can be utilized in retail
sectors.
Thermal
printers are still commonly used in seafloor exploration and engineering geology due to their portability, speed, and ability to create
continuous reels or sheets. Typically, thermal printers found in offshore
applications are used to print realtime records of side scan sonar and sub-seafloor
seismic imagery. In data processing, thermal
printers are sometimes used to quickly create hard copies of continuous seismic
or hydrographic records stored in digital SEG Y or XTF form.
The Game Boy Printer, released in 1998, was a small thermal printer used to
print out certain elements from some Game Boy games.
Early
formulations of the thermo-sensitive coating used in thermal paper were
sensitive to incidental heat, abrasion, friction (which can cause heat, thus darkening the paper), light
(which can fade printed images), and water. Later thermal
coating formulations are far more stable; in practice, thermally printed text
should remain legible at least 50 days.
In many
hospitals in the United
Kingdom, many common ultrasound sonogram devices output the results of the scan onto thermal paper.
This can cause problems if the parents wish to preserve the image by laminating
it, as the heat of most laminators will darken the entire page—this can be tested for
beforehand on an unimportant thermal print. An option is to make and laminate a
permanent ink duplicate of the image.
Health
concerns
Reports began
surfacing of studies in the 2000s finding the oestrogen-related chemical bisphenol
A ("BPA") mixed in with
thermal (and some other) papers. While the health concerns are very uncertain,
various health and science oriented political pressure organizations such as
the Environmental
Working Group have
pressed for these versions to be pulled from market, but BPA-free and totally
phenol-free thermal paper is available

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