Xerox melts ink to stay greenPALO ALTO, Calif.--It looks and feels like a square, yellow crayon.
![]() Solid ink before it is melted and jetted onto paper in a printer. The image is then transferred with heat and pressure to paper. It takes about 10 revolutions of the drum to transfer the image, which is then hardened and ejected from the printer. So how is it greener? Liquid ink requires a lot more packaging--the cartridge and the box it comes in. Xerox says solid ink outputs 90 percent less waste than liquid ink, and saves up to 260 pounds of discarded cartridges and their packaging over the life of a single desktop printer. It also doesn't require any water or solvent to dry the ink. It does, however, require more energy to heat thick ink to melt it. (The melting point is between 70 degrees and 100 degrees Celsius.) Xerox says it continues to tinker with insulation and the ink's melting point to squeeze more energy efficiency out of every solid ink printer. Another way researchers are looking to improve the tech's green cred is through the printheads themselves. ![]() Smaller, modular printheads distribute melted solid ink. Xerox says this will be available in consumer desktop printers within a year. (Photo credit: Erica Ogg/CNET News.com) Via Crave CNET
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this raises the question of going 'green' or just for convenience sake, since it would take more energy to melt & print it over versus current tech sans the cartridge. it would take time for public acceptance to gauge the practicality of this product in the long term.
Apr 29, 2008 20:05



