Alignment system and method of compensating for skewed printing in an ink jet printer

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6281908
  • Patent Number
    6,281,908
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, April 15, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 28, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
A method of printing with an ink jet printer compensates for skewed printing on a print medium An image area is defined on the print medium that has a plurality of rows of pixel locations and a plurality of columns of pixel locations. A printhead includes a plurality of vertically adjacent ink emitting orifices arranged in an array having a height. The printhead is scanned during first and second scans across the print medium in a direction transverse to the advance direction. The ink is jetted onto the print medium from the ink emitting orifices during the first and second scans at selected ink dot placement locations generally corresponding to one of the columns of pixel locations An offset is determined in a transverse direction between a bottom ink dot placement location associated with the first scan and a top ink dot placement location associated with the second scan. The ink dot placement locations associated with each swath is shifted by a predetermined amount to properly align the top dots of that swath with the bottom dots of the previously printed swath.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates to a method of printing using an ink jet printer, and more particularly, to a method of compensating for skewed printing using an inkjet printer.




2. Description of the Prior Art




Ink jet printers typically include a printhead which is carried by a carriage assembly which is moved in transverse directions across the print medium, relative to the advance direction of the print medium within the printer. For a mono-color printhead used to jet a single color ink onto the print medium, the printhead is scanned across the print medium in one transverse direction, advanced a distance corresponding to the height of the printhead, and scanned in a return direction back across the print medium in an opposite direction. Ink is jetted from the ink emitting orifices in the printhead as the printhead scans in the transverse directions across the print medium. An image area is defined via software which overlies the print medium. The image area includes a plurality of rows of pixel locations and a plurality of columns of pixel locations. As each ink emitting orifice is scanned across an associated pixel location on the image area, a determination is made as to whether ink is to be jetted from the associated ink emitting orifice onto the print medium at the selected pixel location. By sequentially scanning the printhead across the print medium and advancing the print medium during scans a distance corresponding to the height of the printhead, ink may be selectively jetted onto the print medium at any pixel location within the image area.




One known type of error associated with ink jet printing is referred to as a “rotational error” caused by a skewed positioning of the ink emitting orifices relative to the advance direction of the print medium. Such a rotational error may result from rotational inaccuracies of the ink emitting orifices within the nozzle plate on the printhead, rotational errors of the nozzle plate relative to the remainder of the printhead, rotational errors of the printhead relative to the carriage assembly, and rotational errors of the carriage relative to the scanning axis.




A noticeable defect associated with rotational errors is an offset in the transverse direction between vertically adjacent scans of the printhead across the print medium. For example, to print a vertical line, the printhead is scanned in a first transverse direction and the ink jetting heaters are fired at selected points in time corresponding to a column of pixel locations on the image area. The paper is then advanced a distance corresponding to the height of the printhead and the printhead is scanned in an opposite direction and the ink jetting heaters are fired at selected points in time corresponding to the same column of pixel locations on the image area. Since each column of ink dot placement locations on the print medium is in fact rotationally skewed relative to the advance direction, an offset or error in the transverse direction occurs between the bottom-most ink dot placement location of the first scan and the top-most ink dot placement location of the second scan. This offset or error in the transverse direction may be objectionably perceptible to the user, depending upon the severity.




One known method of compensating for rotational errors is to advance or delay the firing times of the ink jetting heaters associated with each ink emitting orifice such that the rotationally skewed column of ink dot placement locations is rotated back to a substantially vertical orientation relative to the advance direction. However, advancing or delaying the firing time associated with each ink emitting orifice such that the entire rotationally skewed array of ink dot placement locations is rotated in one direction or the other requires a substantial amount of computational processing. Such a method therefore requires additional computing time and also may increase the cost of the machine because of the associated electrical processing hardware.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention provides a method of compensating for skewed printing with an ink jet printer by shifting the position of each swath by a predetermined amount to align the top dots of that swath with the bottom dots of the previously printed swath.




The invention comprises, in one form thereof, a method of compensating for skewed printing on a print medium with an ink jet printer. An image area is defined on the print medium which has a plurality of rows of pixel locations and a plurality of columns of pixel locations. A printhead includes a plurality of vertically adjacent ink emitting orifices arranged in an array having a height. The printhead is scanned during first and second scans across the print medium in directions transverse to the advance direction. The ink is jetted onto the print medium from the ink emitting orifices during the first and second scans at selected ink dot placement locations generally corresponding to one of the columns of pixel locations. An offset is determined in a transverse direction between a bottom ink dot placement location associated with the first scan and a top ink dot placement location associated with the second scan. The position of each swath is shifted by the offset amount to align the top dots of that swath with the bottom dots of the previously printed swath. Note that the offset is a fixed value computed and loaded into memory once and used throughout.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a schematic view of an exemplary printhead which may be used with the method of the present invention, shown in relationship to a portion of an image area on a print medium.





FIG. 2

is a schematic view of another exemplary printhead which may be used with the method of the present invention.





FIG. 3

illustrates an offset error between skewed columns of ink dot placement locations during first an second scans of the printhead; and





FIG. 4

illustrates one embodiment of the method of the present invention for compensating for the skewed columns of ink dot placement locations shown in FIG.


3


.





FIG. 5

illustrates one method to determine the amount of correction.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION





FIG. 1

shows a schematic view of an exemplary printhead


10


of an inkjet printer which may be used with the present invention, shown in relationship to a portion of an image area


12


on a print medium


14


. Print medium


14


which may be a piece of paper, is movable in an advance direction within the inkjet printer, indicated by arrow


16


.




Printhead


10


includes a plurality of ink emitting orifices


18


that are arranged in a vertical array. For manufacturing purposes, the vertically adjacent ink emitting orifices


18


are disposed in a staggered relationship relative to each other.




That is, the bottom ink-emitting orifice


18


shown in the right hand column is disposed vertically adjacent to the bottom ink-emitting orifice shown in the left-hand column. In the embodiment shown, printhead


10


includes eight ink-emitting orifices which are arranged in a staggered and vertically adjacent relationship relative to each other. The array of eight ink emitting orifices


18


has a height H extending from the top-most ink emitting orifice


18


to the bottom-most ink emitting orifice


18


.




Printhead


10


is carried in known manner by a carriage assembly which is movable in directions transverse to advance direction


16


, as indicated by double-headed arrow


24


. The carriage assembly and printhead


10


may be configured for single directional printing or bi-directional printing, in known manner.




Image area


12


overlying at least a portion of paper


14


is defined in part by the vertical spacing between adjacent ink emitting orifices


18


. Image area


12


includes a plurality of rows of pixel locations


20


and a plurality of columns of pixel locations


22


. Each pixel location within each row


20


of pixel locations has a height that corresponds to a height of an associated ink-emitting orifice


18


on printhead


10


. Moreover, in the embodiment shown, each pixel location within each column


22


of pixel locations has a width that corresponds to the height dimension of each row


20


. That is, each pixel location is substantially square. However, it is also to be understood that each pixel location may have a width which differs from the height, dependent upon the addressable resolution of the stepper motor which drives the carriage assembly carrying printhead


10


.




Printhead


10


includes a plurality of ink jetting heaters, one of which is shown and referenced as


26


in

FIG. 1

, which are respectively associated with the plurality of ink emitting orifices


18


. Each ink-jetting heater is actuatable at selected points in time during a scan of printhead


10


across paper


14


to jet the ink from an associated ink-emitting orifice


18


. Actuation of an ink jetting heater


26


at a selected point in time causes the rapid formation of a bubble at the base of an associated ink emitting orifice


18


, thereby jetting the ink onto paper


14


in known manner.





FIG. 2

is a schematic illustration of another exemplary printhead


30


that may be used with the method of the present invention. In contrast with printhead


10


shown in

FIG. 1

, printhead


30


shown in

FIG. 2

includes three separate arrays


32


,


34


and


36


of ink emitting orifices


18


. Each array


32


,


34


and


36


includes four ink-emitting orifices


18


which are disposed in a staggered and vertically adjacent relationship relative to each other. That is, the bottom-most ink emitting orifice


18


in the right hand column of array


32


is disposed staggered and vertically adjacent relative to the bottom-most ink emitting orifice in the left hand column of array


32


. Each array


32


,


34


and


36


of ink emitting orifices


18


has a common height H extending from an associate top-most ink emitting orifice


18


to a bottom-most ink emitting orifice


18


. Array


32


is used to jet cyan ink onto paper


14


; array


34


is used to jet yellow ink onto paper


14


; and array


36


is used to jet magenta ink onto paper


14


. Thus printhead


30


corresponds to a tri-color printhead used for carrying out multi-color printing. It will be appreciated that the number of ink emitting orifices


18


within each array


32


,


34


and


36


may vary from that shown, and the physical position of the cyan, yellow and magenta arrays relative to each other may vary.





FIG. 3

illustrates an offset error E between skewed columns of ink dot placement locations which are printed during adjacent scans of printhead


10


. The skewed column of ink dot placement locations


38


correspond to ink dot placement locations which are generally associated with one of the columns


22


of pixel locations in image area


12


during a first scan of printhead


10


across paper


14


. Printhead


10


may be moved in a direction from left to right as indicated by arrow


42


, relative to advance direction


16


. A second skewed column of ink dot placement locations


40


correspond to ink dot placement locations which are generally associated with the same column


22


of pixel locations in image area


12


during a second scan of printhead


10


across paper


14


. Printhead


10


may be moved in a direction from right to left during the second scan as indicated by arrow


44


, relative to advance direction


16


.




The skewed angular relationship of each column of ink dot placement locations


38


and


40


may result from alignment inaccuracies of ink emitting orifices


18


in the nozzle plate forming a part of printhead


10


; rotational errors between the nozzle plate and printhead


10


; rotational errors between printhead


10


and the carriage assembly; and rotational errors of the carriage relative to the scanning axis. Such rotational errors cause the entire column of ink dot placement locations


38


and


40


to be rotated relative to advance direction


16


. This in turn causes the bottom-most ink dot placement location in skewed column


38


to be offset in the transverse direction relative to the top ink dot placement location in skewed column


40


. If this offset or error E in the transverse direction exceeds a certain threshold value, the offset will be perceptible to a user. For example, in the embodiment shown, each ink dot placement location within skewed columns


38


and


40


has a corresponding pixel size associated with image area 12 of 600 dots per inch (DPI). It has been found desirable to not exceed an error E in the transverse direction of greater than one-half to one-fourth a pixel or PEL (approximately 0.000835-0.0004175 inch) so that the rotational error associated with the skewed columns


38


and


40


is not readily perceptible to a user. The maximum acceptable error may thus be expressed as a percentage of the pixel size associated with each ink dot placement location in columns


38


and


40


. Although a pixel size of 600 DPI is shown in

FIG. 3

, it will also be appreciated that other pixel sizes may be used with the method of the present invention (e.g., 300 DPI at 0.00333 inch). Moreover, the acceptable percentage of offset or error E may vary dependent upon the particular application.




Referring now to

FIG. 4

, there is shown an illustration of one embodiment of method of the present invention for compensating for the skewed columns of ink dot placement locations shown in FIG.


3


. The left row of pixels shown in

FIG. 4A

is an illustration like in

FIG. 3

of skewed columns of ink dot placement. The true vertical positioning is shown by line


41


. The right row of pixels shown in

FIG. 4B

illustrates one embodiment of method of the present invention. The position of each swath is shifted by a predetermined amount to properly align the top dots of that swath with the bottom dots of the previously printed swath. Referring to

FIG. 4B

, at swath boundary


47


, ink dot placement location in column


40


is placed directly below the ink dot placement location in column


38


. The shifting of swath position is accomplished by advancing or delaying the starting point of each swath, based on the PEL and delay counters of the printer. The delay counters have very fine resolution allowing for fractional dot shifting of the swath.




The amount of position shift adjustment would be cumulative from one swath to the next, causing the entire print to appear defect free. As shown in

FIG. 4B

, at swath boundary


49


, pixel location


42


is shifted twice the amount that pixel location


40


was shifted. This causes pixel location


39


to be aligned with pixel location


42


. This invention hence makes the misalignment less noticeable to where it may not be perceived by the human eye.




Because of the present manufacturing tolerances of alignment, the total amount of print misplacement generated down the page, due to the accumulated positional shifting, will be minor. For example, if a continuous six inch image were printed using a 0.5 inch print swath at a 0.001 inch rotational alignment error level, the total accumulated print position offset would be less than {fraction (1/80)}


th


of an inch.




The amount of correction can be determined either by manual or automatic means contained within the printer. One method of manual implementation is to present the user with an alignment pattern as shown in FIG.


5


. The alignment pattern associates various number selections and requiring the correct selection to be input as a value which will be stored within the driver and possibly the printer as well. This technique is similar to current bidirectional and color/monochrome alignment methods used today.




One example of the alignment pattern is shown in FIG.


5


. The top row of slanted lines represents one transverse swath of the printhead. Each line is a full printhead height. The exaggerated slant represents the rotation error. Below the top row is a second similar traverse swath printed in the same direction as the first with varying degrees of offsets for each vertical line as described previously. The user is instructed to pick the number that yields the straightest composite line. This number is then stored in the printer driver and/or printer hardware for calculations needed to make the timing corrections as a function of paper advancement. Note, in

FIG. 5

, if no rotation error were present, the center selection, line number


4


, would be the correct choice. With the rotation error illustrated, the correct value shifts to line number


6


. The maximum amount of rotation error expected, offset timing resolution available and perceivable delectability of the rotation error dictates the actual number of choices available. Patterns like that shown in

FIG. 5

can be developed to help increase both human and automated sensitivity to slight rotational errors.




The conditions of a dual printhead (color and monochrome) are considered. For monochrome only printing, position shift on single pass printing. Even highly shingled patterns will benefit from compensation in the form of crisper lines. If a reduction in print position offset is desired, position shift when gaps of white (no print) occur between swaths.




For color only printing, compensation is not required since due to the swath size and shingling requirements, the error is only one sixth that of the full mono swath. Both color and monochrome printing must remain aligned so the ending shift position is maintained and no positional shifting is required unless a white space occurs between the swaths.




For color and monochrome printing, compensation is not required or desired. During this type of printing, both the mono and color heads are shingled, reducing the misalignment error. As for color only printing, the ending shift position should be maintained and position shift only if a white space occurs between swaths. Note that the amount of positional shifting should be the same for color and monochrome printing.




While the invention has been described in detail with specific reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it is understood that variations and modifications thereof may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.



Claims
  • 1. A system for compensating for skewed printing on a print medium with an ink jet printer, the print medium being movable in an advance direction in the ink jet printer, said system comprising:(A) a printhead including a plurality of ink emitting orifices, said plurality of ink emitting orifices being arranged in an array, said array of ink emitting orifices having a height; (B) means for jetting ink onto the print medium as the printhead is scanned across the print medium in a direction transverse to the advance direction, the ink being jetted from the ink emitting orifices at selected ink dot placement locations to form a swath of ink dots having a top ink dot and a bottom ink dot from each scan; (C) means for advancing the print medium in the advance direction a distance corresponding to the height of said array of ink emitting orifices; (D) means for determining an offset in the transverse direction between a bottom ink dot of a first scan and a top ink dot of a second scan, wherein the second scan immediately follows the first scan; and (E) means for aligning the top ink dot of the second scan with the bottom ink dot of the first scan by shifting the swath of the second scan in an amount depending upon the offset in the transverse direction away from a vertical direction wherein subsequent swaths to the second swath are shifted by applying the determined offset thereto in relation to an immediately proceeding swath.
  • 2. The system of claim 1, wherein the offset is cumulative from one scan to the next.
  • 3. The system of claim 1, wherein the means for jetting ink comprises one of a black ink, cyan ink, yellow ink and magenta ink.
  • 4. A method of compensating for skewed printing on a print medium with an ink jet printer, the print medium being movable in an advance direction in the ink jet printer, said method comprising the steps of:(A) providing a printhead including a plurality of ink emitting orifices, said plurality of ink emitting orifices being arranged in an array, said array of ink emitting orifices having a height; (B) scanning said printhead in a first scan across the print medium in a direction transverse to the advance direction; (C) jetting ink onto the print medium from said ink emitting orifices during said first scan at selected ink dot placement locations to form a swath of ink dots having a top ink dot and a bottom ink dot; (D) advancing the print medium in the advance direction a distance corresponding to the height of said array of ink emitting orifices; (E) scanning said printhead in a second scan across the print medium in a direction transverse to the advance direction; (F) jetting ink onto the print medium from said ink emitting orifices during said second scan at selected ink dot placement locations to form a swath of ink dots having a top ink dot and a bottom ink dot; (G) determining an offset in the transverse direction between a bottom ink dot of the first scan and a top ink dot of the second scan; (H) aligning the top ink dot of the second scan with the bottom ink dot of the first scan by shifting the swath of the second scan in an amount dependent upon the offset in the transverse direction away from a vertical direction to form a substantially continuous swath; and (I) printing on the print medium along the continuous swath wherein subsequent swaths to the second swath are shifted by applying the determined offset thereto in relation to an immediately proceeding swath.
  • 5. The method of printing of claim 4, wherein the ink comprises one of a black ink, cyan ink, yellow ink, and magenta ink.
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