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Xerox Scientists Discuss Groundbreaking Technologies Engineered to Make Great Color Prints.


SALT LAKE CITY -- Company Experts Present 15 Papers and Six Tutorials on Advanced Printing Materials and Methods at NIP20 Industry Conference

Producing great color prints is all about ultra fine precision, and Xerox Corporation (company) XEROX Corporation -

http://xerox.com/.

See also XEROX PARC, XEROX Network Services.
 (NYSE NYSE

See: New York Stock Exchange
:XRX XRX Xerox Corporation (stock symbol) ) scientists are applying their expertise in precision imaging across a range of products, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 presentations being made at NIP20: The International Conference on Digital Printing Technologies, taking place here Oct. 31 to Nov. 5.

In separate presentations, Rick Lux and Huoy-Jen Yuh from Xerox's Webster, N.Y., research and development complex, and James D. Padgett and Rodney Hill from Xerox's office products research and manufacturing facility in Wilsonville, Ore., are discussing engineering aimed at even higher image quality in the company's color digital presses and printers.

Their papers are two of the 15 technical papers Xerox is presenting at the conference. In addition, its researchers are sharing their knowledge in six tutorials, and the company is a corporate sponsor of the event. The annual NIP meeting, jointly sponsored by the Society for Imaging Science and Technology The Society for Imaging Science and Technology (IS&T) is a research and education organization in the field of imaging. Founded in 1947, as the Society of Photographic Science and Engineering (SPSE), it is headquartered in Washington DC.  and the Imaging Society of Japan, is the preeminent forum for discussions of advances and directions in non-impact and digital printing technologies. This is its 20th year.

Lux leads Xerox's Production Xerographic xe·rog·ra·phy  
n.
A dry photographic or photocopying process in which a negative image formed by a resinous powder on an electrically charged plate is electrically transferred to and thermally fixed as positive on a paper or other copying surface.
 Competency Center, of which Yuh is a member. Their paper reveals how the company overcame key technical challenges in the development of Xerox's patented Image-on-Image marking technology.

The company's first product employing IOI IOI - International Olympiad in Informatics  technology, the 100-page-per-minute Xerox iGen3(R) Digital Production Press, was so innovative that Xerox has received or applied for more than 425 patents associated with unique areas of the machine.

In their presentation, Lux and Yuh provide a behind-the-scenes look at Xerox's new high-speed marking technology, which was developed to deliver exceptional color images and high-precision registration at reduced costs and on a wide range of media. The centerpiece of this third-generation digital color printing “colour separation” redirects here. For other uses, see colour-separation overlay.
Color printing is the reproduction of an image or text in color (as opposed to simpler black and white or monochrome printing).
 system is the Recharge, Expose, and Develop (REaD) IOI process, the first that can build a four-color image on the photoreceptor photoreceptor /pho·to·re·cep·tor/ (-re-sep´ter) a nerve end-organ or receptor sensitive to light.

pho·to·re·cep·tor
n.
 in a single pass, then transfer the image to paper in a single step.

Single-step transfer eliminates opportunities for mis-registration, according to Lux and Yuh, and it results in image registration accuracy better than 40 microns, producing print quality close to - and in some cases better than - offset. (There are 25,400 microns in an inch, and the period at the end of this sentence is about 600 microns wide.) Single-step transfer also ensures consistent image quality job to job and machine to machine.

In Wilsonville, Xerox scientists are working to increase performance of office products by developing inkjet printheads with higher jetting frequencies, configurations to pack more jets into a given space, and ways to decrease drop mass.

One challenge: all colors are built up from just four colors of ink - yellow, cyan, magenta and black. To get green in a printed image, for example, a cyan drop must be deposited on top of a yellow drop. But as ink drops get smaller, they solidify faster, and the second drop tends to slide off to one side, increasing color-to-color dot position error. It's a problem called "dot position amplification."

Padgett and Hill have found that while it seems counterintuitive coun·ter·in·tu·i·tive  
adj.
Contrary to what intuition or common sense would indicate: "Scientists made clear what may at first seem counterintuitive, that the capacity to be pleasant toward a fellow creature is ...
, intentionally mis-registering the colors could solve the problem, according to a paper on the technique prepared for the NIP conference. Their technique has been used on the Phaser(R) 8400 Color Printer A printer that prints in color using three (CMY) or four (CMYK) colors of ink, toner or dye. Four color ribbons have been used in dot matrix printers, but these are rare today. See color laser printer and printer. , a 24-ppm solid ink printer A laser-class printer that uses solid wax inks that are melted into a liquid before being used. Instead of jetting the ink onto the paper directly as inkjet printers do, solid ink printers jet the ink onto a drum.  that's priced at less than $1,000. Introduced in early 2004, the printer has received accolades for its outstanding print quality.

Other Xerox papers at the conference cover topics ranging from GlossMark(TM) images, a technique for authenticating documents, to use of modern control theory to automate document production processes. Also included is research on characterization of surface properties of xerographic developers done in collaboration with the University of Montreal and research on half toning done with Purdue University.

Xerox Corporation is a $15.7 billion technology and services enterprise that operates research and technology centers in the United States, Canada and Europe that conduct work in color science, computing, digital imaging, work practices, electromechanical The use of electricity to run moving parts. Disk drives, printers and motors are examples. Electromechanical systems must be designed for the eventual deterioration of moving components that wear over time. The first TVs were electromechanical systems (see video/TV history).  systems, novel materials and other disciplines connected to Xerox's expertise in printing and document management. The company consistently builds its inventions into business by embedding them in superior Xerox products and solutions, using them as the foundation of new businesses, or licensing or selling them to other entities. For more information, visit www.xerox.com/innovation.

NOTE TO EDITORS: For more information on Xerox, visit www.xerox.com/news. XEROX(R) is a trademark of XEROX CORPORATION.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2004
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