Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1893740> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 43 of
43
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1893740 subject Q9656521.
- Q1893740 abstract "Thermal paper is a special fine paper that is coated with a chemical that changes color when exposed to heat. It is used in thermal printers and particularly in inexpensive or lightweight devices such as adding machines, cash registers, and credit card terminals.The surface of the paper is coated with a solid-state mixture of a dye and a suitable matrix; a combination of a fluoran leuco dye as an example. When the matrix is heated above its melting point, the dye reacts with the acid, shifts to its colored form, and the changed form is then conserved in a metastable state when the matrix solidifies back quickly enough. The reactant acid in thermal paper is often BPA.Usually, the coating will turn black when heated, but coatings that turn blue or red are sometimes used. While an open heat source, such as a flame, can discolor the paper, a fingernail swiped quickly across the paper will also generate enough heat from friction to produce a mark.Multicolor thermal paper first became available in the early 1990s with the introduction of the Fuji Thermo-Autochrome (TA) system. This was followed in the early 2000s by the development of the Polaroid "zero-ink" (ZINK) system. Both of these methods rely on multi-layer coatings with three separate colorizing layers, but different methods are used for independent activation of each layer.".
- Q1893740 thumbnail Thermal_paper.jpg?width=300.
- Q1893740 wikiPageExternalLink bpa-till-roll-ban-enforced-in-suffolk-county.
- Q1893740 wikiPageExternalLink TI.Silent700.1976.102646198.pdf.
- Q1893740 wikiPageExternalLink IMG_3127.jpg.
- Q1893740 wikiPageExternalLink lowbandwidthtimelinecsis.shtml.
- Q1893740 wikiPageExternalLink two-sided-thermal-printing.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q108766.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q1138899.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q1493050.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q159433.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q164740.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q1753339.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q178778.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q193412.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q1945572.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q199769.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q2166429.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q221681.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q2272055.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q235041.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q271980.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q3483826.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q3547325.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q418379.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q42332.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q494389.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q524989.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q54065.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q5462802.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q605108.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q6966903.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q7574817.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q7783075.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q790650.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q8093.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q80978.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q899581.
- Q1893740 wikiPageWikiLink Q9656521.
- Q1893740 comment "Thermal paper is a special fine paper that is coated with a chemical that changes color when exposed to heat. It is used in thermal printers and particularly in inexpensive or lightweight devices such as adding machines, cash registers, and credit card terminals.The surface of the paper is coated with a solid-state mixture of a dye and a suitable matrix; a combination of a fluoran leuco dye as an example.".
- Q1893740 label "Thermal paper".
- Q1893740 depiction Thermal_paper.jpg.