Compound, tautomer of compound or salt of compound or tautomer, method for producing same, coloring composition, dyeing method, and dyed article
US-12240842-B2 · Mar 4, 2025 · US
US9605378B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9605378-B2 |
| Application number | US-201414556693-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 1, 2014 |
| Priority date | Dec 3, 2013 |
| Publication date | Mar 28, 2017 |
| Grant date | Mar 28, 2017 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A textile printing method that includes printing to a textile with a material including a dye expressed by the following general formula 1. In general formula 1, R 1 to R 16 is H, CH 3 , OH, NHC 2 H 5 , COOH, SO 3 H, SO 3 Na, NO 2 , or NH 2 .
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A textile printing method, comprising: printing to a textile with a material including a dye expressed by the following general formula (1): wherein: R 1 to R 15 are each independently H, OH, NHC 2 H 5 , COOH, SO 3 H, SO 3 Na, NO 2 , or NH 2 ; and R 16 is OH, NHC 2 H 5 , COOH, SO 3 H, SO 3 Na, or NH 2 . 2. The textile printing method of claim 1 , wherein the textile is formed of natural fibers with a principal component of cotton or silk. 3. The textile printing method of claim 1 , wherein the dye liquefies by heating. 4. The textile printing method of claim 1 , wherein the material is an inkjet ink for use in digital textile printing. 5. The textile printing method of claim 1 , wherein the material is an electrophotographic toner for use in digital textile printing. 6. The textile printing method of claim 1 , further comprising: forming an image with the material on a flexible supporting medium or an intermediate transfer body and heat transferring the image on the flexible supporting medium or the intermediate transfer body to the textile. 7. The textile printing method of claim 1 , further comprising: directly forming an image with the material on the textile. 8. An inkjet ink, comprising: a dye liquefying by heat expressed by formula (1): wherein: R 1 to R 15 are each independently H, OH, NHC 2 H 5 , COOH, NO 2 , or NH 2 , and R 16 is OH, NHC 2 H 5 , COOH, NO, or NH 2 , and wherein the dye, when liquefying by heat, is configured for sublimation textile printing on polyester fibers or natural fibers with a principal component of cotton or silk. 9. An electrophotographic toner, comprising: a dye liquefying by heat expressed by formula (1): wherein: R 1 , R 14 , and R 16 are each independently H, CH 3 , OH, NHC 2 H 5 , COOH, SO 3 H, SO 3 Na, NO 2 , or NH 2 ; and R 2 to R 13 and R 15 are each independently CH 3 , OH, NHC 2 H 5 , COOH, SO 3 H, SO 3 Na, NO 2 , or NH 2 .
Azo dyes · CPC title
using specified dyes · CPC title
not containing metal · CPC title
Ink jet printing · CPC title
Image-receiving members, based on materials other than paper or plastic sheets, e.g. textiles, metals · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.