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Water-Based Gravure Ink: Plastic Film Printing Guide

Solvent-based gravure ink on plastic film burns through 30–50% of its own weight as organic solvent — most of it aromatic hydrocarbons — into the pressroom air, the printed package, and ultimately the consumer. A food bag tested in Gansu province measured benzene residue at 9.7 mg/m², well above safe limits. Water-based gravure ink eliminates this problem at the source, and the technology has matured to the point where it matches solvent ink on adhesion, speed, and color — at comparable cost.


Regulatory Pressure: The Standards Are Tightening

Standard Total Solvent Residue Benzene-Class Residue
GB/T 10004-2008 (solvent-based ink) ≤10.00 mg/m² ≤3.00 mg/m²
QB/T 2929-2008 (laminate film/pouch) ≤5.00 mg/m² Not detected (≤0.01 mg/m²)
EU / US / Southeast Asia ≤2.00 mg/m² ≤0.50 mg/m²

China’s Food Safety Law (effective June 2009) brought packaging materials under food safety regulation. The mandatory standard for additives in food containers and packaging materials no longer lists benzene-class solvents. And the 2007 environmental labeling standards for gravure and flexo inks set limits on heavy metals, VOCs, and benzene solvent residues. The direction is clear: water-based and alcohol-based inks are replacing solvent-based systems, and the regulations are making the transition mandatory, not optional.


Water-Based Gravure Ink: Performance Parameters

Water-based gravure ink uses high-acid-value rosin maleic resin or amine-neutralized acrylic resin as the binder, with water as the primary solvent and alcohol as a co-solvent where needed. Key specifications:

Parameter Value
Viscosity (as-supplied) 10–25 seconds (Zahn Cup #3, 25°C)
pH (as-supplied) 8–9 (typically no adjustment needed)
Recommended cylinder depth 15–25 μm (electro-mechanical or laser engraved)
Production speed range 30–120 m/min
Drying temperature 50–70°C (high airflow required)
Coating weight reduction vs. solvent ink 10–30% less (higher solids content)
Bond strength (with water-based laminating adhesive) 1.0 N/15mm (MD), 1.0 N/15mm (TD)
Substrate surface treatment ≥38 dyne/cm corona-treated BOPP, PE, PVC
Pressroom temperature 18–28°C
Pressroom humidity 55–75% RH

Three Production Case Studies

Parameter Case 1 Case 2 Case 3
Ink WE-0833 Sky Blue WE-0863 Green WE-0815 Magenta
Cylinder depth 45 μm 25 μm 30 μm
Speed 40 m/min 100–120 m/min 70–80 m/min
Drying temp 60–70°C 60–65°C 60–65°C
Substrate BOPP, corona treated BOPP, corona treated BOPP, corona treated
Post-process Water-based laminating adhesive

The critical lesson from Case 2: reducing cylinder depth from 45μm to 25μm — combined with dryer modifications for higher airflow — tripled the production speed from 40 to 120 m/min while maintaining full color density. Shallower engraving delivers less ink volume, but the higher solids content of water-based ink compensates. The dryer is the bottleneck, not the ink: water requires more evaporation energy than organic solvents, so airflow volume matters more than temperature.

All three cases produced prints with gloss, adhesion, and water resistance rated equal or superior to solvent-based ink on the same substrates.


Cost Comparison

At first glance, water-based ink looks more expensive: 30–45 RMB/kg vs. 20–30 RMB/kg for chlorinated polypropylene solvent ink (or 30 RMB/kg plus solvent for alcohol-ester systems). But the real cost is consumption per square meter. Water-based ink’s higher solids content and shallower cylinder engraving (15–25μm vs. 35–45μm for solvent) reduce ink consumption to roughly 75% of solvent ink by weight. The effective cost: 30–33.75 RMB/kg — on par with alcohol-ester systems and only marginally above solvent ink, while eliminating solvent purchase, solvent disposal, and VOC compliance costs entirely.


Press-Side Procedures

  1. Clean cylinders, doctor blades, and ink pans thoroughly with detergent water followed by clean water before first use. No solvent residue tolerated.
  2. Adjust viscosity with purified water only — 5–10% addition. Do not add water mid-run; adjust only when topping up with fresh ink to maintain color consistency.
  3. Run cylinders at idle for 5 minutes after filling the pan to wet and agitate the ink. If the press stops, keep the cylinder rotating — stagnant water-based ink dries in cells and blocks. Use dedicated wash-up solution for cleaning plugged cells.
  4. If pH drifts during the run, add pH adjuster — not water — to maintain the 8–9 range.
  5. Never mix water-based ink with solvent-based or alcohol-based ink. Incompatibility causes complete failure.

References

  • Wikipedia: Ink: Comprehensive overview of printing ink chemistry including water-based, solvent-based, and UV ink formulations and their environmental impact.
  • Wikipedia: Volatile Organic Compounds: Environmental and health effects of VOC emissions including benzene-class solvent toxicity and atmospheric chemistry relevant to printing operations.
  • Wikipedia: Rotogravure: Gravure printing technology including cylinder engraving, ink delivery, drying systems, and the transition from solvent to water-based ink in flexible packaging.
  • Wikipedia: Corona Treatment: Surface energy modification of polymer films including dyne level specifications for water-based ink wetting and adhesion on polyolefin substrates.
  • EPA: VOC Emissions Standards: U.S. regulatory framework for volatile organic compound emissions from industrial printing and coating operations.
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