Luminescent inks for mail coding and sorting
Submitting Institution
Lancaster UniversityUnit of Assessment
ChemistrySummary Impact Type
EconomicResearch Subject Area(s)
Chemical Sciences: Inorganic Chemistry, Macromolecular and Materials Chemistry, Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural)
Summary of the impact
Fundamental research in collaboration with Royal
Mail into luminescence molecules constrained
within a water-soluble acrylic polymer matrix has
led to the development of novel, water-soluble, ink-jet
printable, luminescent inks. These inks are
employed by Royal Mail for printing coding patterns
on envelopes that can be read by automatic letter-sorting
machines. The inks offer excellent
performance in humid environments, on coloured
paper, and on paper containing optical brighteners,
and are safer. Royal Mail delivers, on average, 58 million letters each
day, representing annual
revenue of £5.2 billion. The research at Lancaster enabling the innovation
has a direct impact on
the commercial performance of Royal Mail, the safety of its employees and
the public, and
everyone (commercially and/or privately) using Royal Mail services to send
and receive mail
correctly, quickly, and at a low cost.
Underpinning research
In 1987, Dr A. R. "Tim" Lane, a Senior Scientist at the Royal Mail
Research Laboratories,
approached Dr John Ebdon, Senior Lecturer, Chemistry Department, Lancaster
University, for help
in improving the physical and chemical properties of ink-jet printable
inks used for printing
machine-readable patterns of dots (representing postal codes) on
envelopes, enabling the
envelopes to be automatically sorted. At the time, the inks already in use
for this purpose were
based on suspensions of relatively simple phosphors in aqueous solutions
of amino resins. These
inks were believed first to dry and then to cure (crosslink) when applied
to paper, providing a solid
hydrophobic medium in which phosphorescence could develop and be "read"
when the envelope
was passed under a UV lamp. There were three problems with the inks: (1)
the inks contained
small amounts of free formaldehyde (a suspected carcinogen); (2) they were
slow to dry/cure,
leading to an unacceptable delay before the coding pattern could be read,
and (3) they performed
poorly in humid environments.
The academic outcomes of the project are described in five papers
published jointly by Royal Mail
and Lancaster University over the period 1995-1999 [1-5]. These
demonstrate: (1) that water-soluble
acrylic polymer solutions, e.g. aqueous solutions of polyacrylic and
polymethacrylic acids,
during the process of drying undergo a "coil-collapse" process whereby the
interiors of the polymer
coils become sufficiently hydrophobic to act as hosts for hydrophobic,
luminescent materials
(guests); (2) that in these collapsed coils, luminescence of the guest can
occur without significant
quenching, even before the solution has fully dried; (3) that the onset of
coil-collapse is influenced
by temperature and pH; and (4) that the hydrophobicity of the collapsed
coil can be increased by
the incorporation of small amounts of a hydrophobic monomer, such as
styrene or methyl
methacrylate. A further outcome, not published at the time owing to
commercial sensitivity, was the
demonstration that a bi-component luminescent system in a polymer matrix,
in which energy
transfer to a fluorescent compound occurs, could be used to give long-lived
red luminescence.
The fundamental research on the behaviours of water-based polymer systems
carried out at
Lancaster, and the more applied aspects researched jointly by Lancaster
and Royal Mail, led to the
patenting of polyacrylic acid binders together with various combinations
of luminescent compounds
for use in mail coding inks, by Royal Mail in 1998 [6]. These patents
refer to the environmental
hazards posed by the earlier amino resin binders and for the desirability
that the ink should contain
a long-lived red emitter so as to allow signals to be read (a)
irrespective of the substrate colour, (b)
in the presence of a fluorescence background from any optical brighteners
in the envelope paper,
and (c) throughout the period during which the coding ink is drying. The
use of energy transfer to
achieve long-lived (>500 ms) luminescence is also disclosed.
References to the research
[1]. Ebdon J. R., Lane A. R., Lucas D. M., Soutar, I. and Swanson L.
(1995) Luminescence studies
of polymer matrices. 1. Phosphorescence of benzophenone dispersed in
poly(methyl
methacrylate), Polymer, 36, 1577-1584. DOI:
10.1016/0032-3861(95)99002-C
[2]. Ebdon J. R., Hunt B. J., Lucas D. M., Soutar I., Swanson L. and Lane
A. L. (1995)
Luminescence studies of hydrophobically modified, water-soluble
polymers. 1. Fluorescence
anisotropy and spectroscopic investigations of the conformational
behaviour of copolymers of
acrylic acid and styrene and methyl methacrylate, Canadian Journal
of Chemistry, 73, 1982-1994.
DOI: 10.1139/v95-245
[3]. Ebdon J. R., Soutar I., Brown P., McCabe A. J., Lane A. R. and
Swanson L. (1999)
Luminescence studies of polymer matrices: 2. On the phosphorescence
characteristics of 2-benzoyl
naphthalene dispersed in various acrylic polymers, High Perf.
Polym., 11, 49-62. DOI:
10.1088/0954-0083/11/1/005
[4]. Ebdon J. R., Soutar I., Brown P., McCabe A. J., Lane A. R. and
Swanson L. (1999)
Luminescence studies of polymer matrices: III. Characterization and
evaluation of acrylic acid
based polymers as hosts for a phosphorescent coding system, J.
Polym. Sci. B. Polym. Phys. Ed.,
37, 2127-2136. DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(19990815)37:16
[5]. Ebdon J. R., Lane A. R., Lucas D. M., Soutar I. and Swanson L.
(1999) Luminescence studies
of polymer matrices. 4. Phosphorescence of benzophenone dispersed in
acrylic acid based
polymer films, High Perf. Polym., 11, 331-341. DOI:
10.1088/0954-0083/11/3/308
[6]. Brown P. R., Hewison S., Kondratowicz A., Metson C. A. L., Rock J.
and Scott R. (1998)
Patents WO19980003596 and EP 0914392B, assigned to the Post Office.
Details of the impact
The new ink formulations were introduced in the Royal Mail processes in
2006-7, defining the date
of onset of impact.
Embedding of Technology: Key to the realisation of the impact of
this research programme was
the embedding of the technology developed at Lancaster University into
Royal Mail Research
Laboratories. Linda Swanson [1-5] was a PhD student on the programme, who
was subsequently
employed by Royal Mail for three years. Paul Brown and Alistair McCabe,
employed at Royal Mail
Research Laboratories, were members of the research team [1-5]. The
research initiated through
the partnership with Lancaster University was subsequently refined at
Royal Mail Research
Laboratories, which led to a further patent [7] where practical ink
formulations are described which
include the addition of an opacifying agent (to enhance the fluorescence
signal on highly coloured
envelopes and wrappings, and therefore enhancing the reliability of the
automated barcode
reading equipment). A further development was to incorporate dyes that
could be monitored at two
distinct excitation wavelengths (e.g. 365 nm and 420 nm) which can be
`read' using a combination
of UV and visible illumination. Such formulation is typical of what is
used by Royal Mail to print
digital postmarks (DPMs) as barcodes on letters and parcels.
The IMPACT is evident under THREE distinct headings:
SAFETY — The earlier formulations, based on formaldehyde (a
suspected carcinogen), have been
replaced by safer polyacrylic and later styrene-acrylic resins [7]. The
principal impact is on the
safety of Royal Mail workers who operate the barcoding printers where the
risk of exposure to the
wet inks is greatest. Other postal workers, such as postmen and women who
are exposed to the
cured inks throughout their daily employment, will not be subjected to
persistent formaldehyde
outgassing. Neither will the general public be exposed to formaldehyde.
Safety, of paramount
importance, is a significant impact that is directly related to the inks
developed through the
Lancaster University/Royal Mail partnership.
EFFICIENCY — Royal Mail is characterised by its massive
daily throughput of letters and parcels
(typically 58 million items per day [8]). The logistics can only be
realised in a sensible and cost-effective
way through the extensive application of intelligent automation.
Fundamental to the
automation of postal delivery is the ability to assign each postal item
uniquely, and with sufficient
data to ensure accurate delivery to the intended destination. The DPMs, as
barcodes, are readable
by intelligent letter sorting machines. Prior to 2006, most mail was still
hand sorted, which is a
"slow and cumbersome process" [8]. Royal Mail introduced a major
modernisation programme in
2006-07, coincident with the updated coding ink formulation [7], [8].
During this modernisation
programme, 64 intelligent letter sorting machines were installed, each
capable of processing up to
40,000 items of mail per hour [7]. This has also led to the adoption of
Compact Sequence Sorters
that are "walk-sequenced", so that letters are ordered to minimise the
travel distance by postmen
and women. This now accounts for about 75% of all deliveries. This has the
direct impact of
reducing the workload of the delivery personnel, and thereby increasing
efficiency of the delivery
process. In turn, this efficiency improvement leads to a reduction in
cost. During the year 2011-12,
a total of 235 new, refurbished or upgraded process sequencing machines
were installed across
the UK Royal Mail network. The coding inks are pivotal to the IMPACT
achieved in terms of postal
delivery efficiency.
FINANCIAL — Royal Mail has been hit by a general decline in
mail volumes within the last decade
due to electronic substitution of paper communication (for example, Royal
Mail observed a 3.1%
pa decline in letter volumes between 2005 and 2008). For Royal Mail to
remain competitive
alongside the trend towards electronic communication, it has been
essential to enhance their
efficiency, as described above. This will continue to be an acute risk for
Royal Mail, as they predict
letters will decline 5% pa during the period 2013-18; and 4% pa during
2018-23 [9]. The UK market
present and predicted volumes are: 2012 (Letters 13.8 billion; Parcels 1.7
billion); 2023 (Letters 8.3
billion; Parcels 2.3 billion) [9]. Recent (2011) revenue figures for Royal
Mail are £5.2 billion pa [8].
This is a significant business in its own right that is dependant for
efficiency upon the coded inks
developed from the expertise at the University of Lancaster. From a
societal standpoint, the
IMPACT is far greater, since the mail volume accounts for vital
communications within both the
domestic and business sectors, with a predicted volume in excess of 10
billion items pa up to
2023, even in the light of the trend towards electronic communication. The
recent flotation of Royal
Mail, the oversubscription of prospective shareholders, and the rapid
increase of share value by
48% [10] is clear evidence of a flourishing business with a strong future
prospect. The IMPACT of
the coding inks has played a significant part in the success of Royal Mail
through the facilitation of
considerable efficiency gains through intelligent automation. This is
IMPACT that is set to continue
to deliver for the foreseeable future [9].
With respect to corroboration, we quote below from a correspondence [11]
with Linda Swanson
who contributed to the fundamental research as a PhD student but then went
onto work for Royal
Mail and played a key role in embedding the printing inks science and
technology within Royal
Mail. She is therefore well placed to corroborate the implementation of
the technology within Royal
Mail.
`the most important and tangible output from this work is the red ink
which currently appears on letters
coded by Royal Mail — this was the ink that was designed and developed
at Lancaster during that
project.'
Sources to corroborate the impact
[7]. GB 2412659 B, 2005, assigned to the Royal Mail
[8]. Royal Mail Holdings plc, Annual Report and Financial Statements,
2011-2012.
[9]. PwC Strategy & Economics, "The outlook for UK mail volumes to
2023", PWC July 2013.
[10]. http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-2458523/Royal-Mail-shares-surge-stand-48-float-price.html
[accessed 5 Nov 2013]
[11] Correspondence with respect to the project from a former Royal Mail
employee associated with
embedding Lancaster's research within Royal Mail.
Contact 1: Royal Mail Group Dangerous Goods Advisor, Royal Mail
Engineering — can corroborate
implementation of printing inks technology within Royal Mail
Contact 2: Former Royal Mail employee (now at Sheffield
University) — can corroborate the
implementation of the technology