The Basics of Ink Drying in Inkjet Coding: Methods and Best Practices!

 

The Basics of Ink Drying in Inkjet Coding: Methods and Best Practices

Ink drying is a critical factor in achieving sharp, smudge-free, and durable prints in industrial inkjet applications. Whether you’re printing on cardboard, plastic film, glass, or aluminum, understanding how ink dries—and how to control the process—can significantly improve your production efficiency and print quality. This article explores how various ink types dry and offers best practices for managing drying across different printing conditions.

How Inkjet Inks Dry

1. Evaporation (Solvent & Water-Based Inks)

  • Solvent or water evaporates from the ink, leaving pigment or dye behind
  • Fast on porous materials (paper), slower on films or coated surfaces
  • Affected by airflow, temperature, and humidity

2. Polymerization (UV-Curable Inks)

  • UV light initiates a chemical reaction that hardens the ink instantly
  • No evaporation involved—cures on non-absorbent surfaces like PET, glass
  • Requires a UV lamp installed near the printhead

3. Absorption (Mainly Water-Based Inks)

  • Ink seeps into porous substrates (paperboard, wood, untreated fiber)
  • Faster if surface is uncoated and ambient humidity is low

Drying Time Comparison by Ink Type

Ink Type Drying Time Drying Method
Solvent-Based (CIJ) 1–5 seconds Evaporation + optional air assist
Water-Based (TIJ) 3–10 seconds Evaporation + absorption
UV-Curable (UV Inkjet) 0.1–0.5 seconds UV lamp curing
TTO Ribbon Instant Transferred solid wax/resin—no drying

Factors That Affect Drying

  • Substrate type: Non-porous surfaces like PE/PET dry slower
  • Ambient temperature: Higher temps speed up drying
  • Airflow: Fans or air knives help solvent evaporation
  • Ink drop volume: Large characters = more ink = longer drying
  • Humidity: High humidity slows evaporation; low humidity speeds it up

Best Practices to Optimize Drying

  • Use pre-treated or coated substrates if possible to speed adhesion
  • Install forced air or IR drying modules for high-speed lines
  • Minimize handling of printed surface for 2–3 seconds after print
  • Use UV lamps with adjustable intensity for UV systems
  • Select fast-dry ink formulations for flexible film or oily surfaces

FAQs

  • How do I know if drying is insufficient? Look for smudging, blurred barcodes, or fingerprint transfer after packaging
  • Is UV ink always the fastest? Yes—but it requires a UV curing unit and is usually more expensive

Conclusion

Ink drying is more than just waiting—it’s an engineered process that ensures the ink adheres correctly, resists abrasion, and doesn’t smudge during handling. By choosing the right ink, adjusting line conditions, and using proper drying aids, you can significantly improve printing consistency. For tailored drying solutions and ink recommendations, contact Cheef Inkjet at sales@cheef.cn.

 

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