PERPETUAL PRINTING
Printing has come a
long way since the computer landed on the desktop. First, there were
daisy-wheel printers, then dot-matrix printers, then inkjet and laser printers. The problem with all of these output devices,
of course, is that they require paper -- lots of it -- and expensive
consumables, like toner. Why can't someone invent an inkless, tonerless printer
that allows the operator to reuse paper?As it turns out, this isn't a new idea. Xerox
has been working with so-called electronic paper since the 1970s. Its most
promising solution is a type of paper called "Gyricon." A Gyricon
sheet is a thin layer of transparent plastic containing millions of small
oil-filled cavities. A two-colored bead is free to rotate inside each cavity.
When a printer applies a voltage to the surface of the sheet, the beads rotate
to present one colored side to the viewer, offering the ability to create text
or pictures. The images will remain on the paper until it's fed through the
printer once again.A Japanese company, Sanwa Newtec, is offering
its version of inkless, tonerless and rewritable printing technology. Its
product is called the PrePeat rewritable printer, which, like the
Xerox solution, requires plastic paper. But PrePeat uses a different technique
to produce an image. Each sheet of paper comes embedded with leuco dyes, which
change color with temperature -- colored when cool and clear when hot. The
PrePeat printer, then, heats and cools the paper to first erase an image and
then create a new image in its place. According to the company, a single sheet
of paper can be reused 1,000 times before it needs to be replaced.
BY:-Aakshi Sahoo
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