The influence of storage conditions on the ink detachment efficiency of
water-based flexographic ink printed onto model cellulose surfaces and
handsheets was investigated. It was shown that UV light, elevated
temperatures, longer storage time, increasing surface roughness, and
increasing surface hydrophobicity all had a negative effect on ink
detachment. It was also shown that the ink's chemical and structural
characteristics changed when stored at elevated temperatures. No
chemical or structural changes could be observed for the ink when
stored under UV light.
The influence of storage conditions on the ink detachment efficiency of water-based flexographic ink printed onto model cellulose surfaces and hand sheets were investigated. It was shown that UV-light, elevated temperatures, longer storage time, increasing surface roughness and increasing surface hydrophobicity all had a negative effect on ink detachment. It was also shown that the ink's chemical and structural characteristics changed when stored at elevated temperatures. No chemical or structural changes could be observed for the ink when stored under UV-light.
Gas chromatography (GC) and mass spectrometry (MS) were used to determine the stereoisomeric compositions of 6,10,14-trimethylpentadecan-2-ol and 6,10,14-trimethylpentadecan-2-one in wing extracts from 17 Bicyclus butterfly species from different regions of Africa. All samples were purified using solid phase extraction (SPE). Since some species contained both alcohol and ketone, these were separated and the ketone was reduced to the alcohol before analysis as either (R)-trans-chrysanthemoyl or (S)-2-acetoxypropionyl esters. A novel asymmetric synthesis was developed for a reference mixture of (2R/S,6S,10R)-6,10,14-trimethylpentadecan-2-ol with known composition of the eight stereoisomers. The mixture then was used as the (R)-trans-chrysanthemoyl esters to correlate each of the eight gas chromatographic peaks to a specific stereoisomer of the extracted wing compounds. Seven butterfly species showed (2R,6R,10R)-configuration of the alcohol, four species contained minute amounts of alcohol too small to determine the stereochemistry, nine species showed (6R,10R)-configuration of the ketone, and one species contained minute amounts of ketone too small to determine the stereochemistry. No other stereoisomers of alcohol or ketone could be detected in the extracts, and the quantities of the compounds in the wing extracts varied from 5 to 900 ng per sample for each species.