National Repository of Grey Literature 4 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Ink formulation for chemical labels printing
Martiniaková, Ivana ; Krystyník,, Pavel (referee) ; Veselý, Michal (advisor)
This diploma theses is about the study of the effect of individual components of printing compositions intended for material printing of identificaton codes, read by X-ray fluorescence. Two printing technologies were used – screen printing and pad printing. The composition of the print compositions has been optimized in term of visual recognition, print repeatability, a dry matter content providing an X-ray fluorescence signal, as well as optimization of the material print process leading to the creation of invisible identification tags for archive documents.
Optimization of chemical code printing with XRF identification
Uher, Tadeáš ; Ďurovič, Michal (referee) ; Veselý, Michal (advisor)
The Master’s thesis deals with study printing and optimization of a chemical labels with a code readable by XRF technique. The study is focusing on the identifiability of components in chemical code through data analysis in the Origin program environment and reproducibility of the analysis. The responses of the XRF signal on real samples of historical documents were studied and possible interfering elements were identified. Based on these analyses, a recommendation was formulated for the method of evaluating the obtained data, code analysis and also for the composition of the printing formulation.
Optimization of chemical code printing with XRF identification
Uher, Tadeáš ; Ďurovič, Michal (referee) ; Veselý, Michal (advisor)
The Master’s thesis deals with study printing and optimization of a chemical labels with a code readable by XRF technique. The study is focusing on the identifiability of components in chemical code through data analysis in the Origin program environment and reproducibility of the analysis. The responses of the XRF signal on real samples of historical documents were studied and possible interfering elements were identified. Based on these analyses, a recommendation was formulated for the method of evaluating the obtained data, code analysis and also for the composition of the printing formulation.
Ink formulation for chemical labels printing
Martiniaková, Ivana ; Krystyník,, Pavel (referee) ; Veselý, Michal (advisor)
This diploma theses is about the study of the effect of individual components of printing compositions intended for material printing of identificaton codes, read by X-ray fluorescence. Two printing technologies were used – screen printing and pad printing. The composition of the print compositions has been optimized in term of visual recognition, print repeatability, a dry matter content providing an X-ray fluorescence signal, as well as optimization of the material print process leading to the creation of invisible identification tags for archive documents.

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