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Rollerball Pen




Rollerball pens are pens which use ball point writing mechanisms with water-based liquid or gelled Ink , as opposed to the oil-based Viscous inks found in Ballpoint Pen . The characteristics of these less viscous inks, which tend to saturate more deeply and more widely into the Paper than other types of ink, give rollerball pens their distinctive writing qualities.

The rollerball pen was initially designed to combine the convenience of a Ballpoint Pen with the smooth "wet ink" effect of a Fountain Pen .


TYPES


There are two types of rollerball pens: those that use a liquid ink and those that use a Gel led ink.

Gel rollerball pens use a jelly-like ink: the ink thins as it moves past the ball and sets back up just after it is applied to the paper and is no longer being "rolled" around. Because the gel inks set so quickly, they are not absorbed into paper fibers as much as liquid ink. Using a gel ink pen, one may often write on both sides of the same piece of paper. With a pure liquid ink pen, the ink is often thin enough that it will soak through or "bleed" through enough of the entire paper to make the second side of the paper totally unreadable if written on.

Gels usually contain Pigment s, while liquid inks are limited to Dyestuff s, as pigments will sink down in liquid ink ( Sedimentation ). It is the thickness and suspending power of gels that allows the use of pigments in gelled ink. Using pigments (the same pigments that are used in paint) yields a greater variety of brighter colors than is possible in liquid ink, so gel-based pens are available in a brighter and wider range of colors than liquid ink pens. Also, some gel ink pens can use the heavier pigments with metallic or glitter effects, or opaque pastel pigments that be seen on dark surfaces, because their gel ink suspends pigments so well. Writing by liquid ink pens cannot be seen on dark surfaces because inks containing dyes need a light colored, reflective background, due to the fact that dyes do not reflect light by themselves, in the way that pigment particles do. Dye molecules absorb all but a particular wavelength of light, so light must pass through the ink and bounce off a reflective background in order for our eyes to see the color of the ink.


ADVANTAGES OVER BALLPOINT

A rollerball has two advantages over a ballpoint: first, less pressure needs to be applied to the pen to have it write cleanly. This permits holding the pen with less stress on the hand. Second, the inks are usually more brightly and variously colored, due to the wider choice of suitable water-soluble dyes, or to the use of pigments.


DISADVANTAGES


  • There are a number of disadvantages inherent to rollerball pens: first, the ink is more liable to smudge than a ball-point pen's ink because water-based ink dries more slowly. Second, the ink may seep through the paper. Thicker paper must be used with a rollerball pen than with a ballpoint, because the oil-based ink of a ballpoint pen does not penetrate deeply into paper fibers.


  • Gel inks do not flow as readily as a liquid ink; this increases the likelihood of intermittent inking of the ball, producing "skipping" where the flow of ink will randomly cease.


  • Rollerball pens generally won't write as long as a ballpoint pen because both gel and liquid water-based inks are dispensed more quickly than oil-based ink.


  • Oil-based (ballpoint) pens are also far less likely to "leak" ink into a shirt pocket without putting the "cap" back on.



STANDARDS


The International Organization for Standardization has published standards for ball point and roller ball pens:

  • ISO 12756:1998 Drawing and writing instruments -- Ball point pens and roller ball pens -- Vocabulary {Link without Title}

  • ISO 14145-1:1998 Roller ball pens and refills -- Part 1: General use {Link without Title}

  • ISO 14145-2:1998 Roller ball pens and refills -- Part 2: Documentary use (DOC) {Link without Title}



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