The invention relates to inkjet printing, and more particularly to an inkjet printer apparatus and method particularly suited for suppressed bi-directional banding or hue shift effects.
Color inkjet printers commonly employ a plurality of printheads, mounted in the print carriage to produce different colors. Each printhead contains ink of a different color, with the commonly used colors being cyan, magenta, yellow and black. The various colors are produced by depositing droplets of the required colors onto dot locations. Secondary or shaded colors are formed by depositing drops of primary different colors on adjacent or overlapping dot locations with the human eye interpreting the color mixing as the secondary or shaded colors.
Print quality is one of the most important considerations of competition in the color inkjet printer field. As the image output of a color ink-jet printer is formed of millions of individual ink droplets, the quality of the image is ultimately dependent upon the quality of each ink droplet and the arrangements of the ink droplets on the print medium.
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In order to overcome this problem, a fully staggered printhead layout may be employed wherein each of the printheads are staggered in the direction of the print medium advancement so that no two printheads are in the same row when moved in the direction of the print swath axis. An example of the fully staggered printhead arrangement 7 is shown in FIG. 2. In this arrangement, printheads 7Y, 7M, 7C and 7K are positioned so that they are spaced in the media advance direction, arrow C, and when operated for printing, no two printheads print dots on top of each other when moved together in one of the carriage advancements in the direction of the print swath axis, arrows A-B, within a swath. The resulting color sequence of printing one color upon another is independent of carriage movement direction. Therefore, there is no bi-directional hue shift banding. However, the fully staggered layout causes the length of the print zone to be significantly increased. For example, in
In accordance with the invention there is provided a method and apparatus for bi-directional color inkjet printing comprising providing a printer carriage for bi-directional movement along a print swath axis and providing a plurality of color inkjet printheads of different colors, each printhead having a nozzle array for emitting droplets of ink. The printer carriage supports all of the plurality of color inkjet printheads so as to form only two rows of printheads. Two or more respective printheads are supported for printing a first primary color and there is additionally supported a respective printhead for printing black. These printheads are positioned in a row directed along the print swath axis and form one row of printheads. Two or more printheads are supported for printing a second primary color and there is additionally supported a respective printhead for printing yellow and these printheads are positioned in a row directed along the print swath axis and form a second row of printheads. Nozzle arrays associated with the printheads for printing the first primary color and a nozzle array of the printhead for printing black do not overlap in the direction of the swath axis direction with nozzle arrays associated with the printheads for printing the second primary color and a nozzle array of the printhead for printing yellow. The printer carriage is moved in a first direction along the swath axis from one side of a print area to a second opposite side of the print area while driving one or more of the printheads to emit droplets onto a print medium. Relative motion is also provided between the print medium and the carriage in a direction transverse to the swath axis. The printer carriage is moved in a second direction along the swath axis from the second side of the print area to the first side, while driving one or more of the printheads to emit droplets onto the print medium to establish bi-directional printing. When the printer carriage moves in each of the first and the second directions along the swath axis, droplets of ink of the first primary color and of the second primary color are deposited at least partially overlapping on the medium to form dots of a color different than the first and second primary colors, and further, the first primary color and the second primary color are different primary colors and different in color from yellow and black.
The printheads for printing the first primary color preferably include different inks for respectively printing a relatively lighter and relatively darker version of the first primary color and the printheads for printing the second primary color include different inks for respectively printing a relatively lighter and relatively darker version of the second primary color.
The advantages and features of the disclosed invention will readily be appreciated to a person skilled in the art from the following detailed description when read in conjunction with the drawings wherein:
The present description will be directed to the elements forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, apparatus and methods in accordance with the present invention. It is to be understood that elements not specifically shown or described may take various forms well known to those skilled in the art.
Referring to
The right side housing 13 shown in
As shown in
Typically in printers of this type, the number of nozzles provided is insufficient to print the entire image during a print pass and thus plural print passes are required to print an image with the receiver media being indexed in the direction of the arrow C after each pass. Thus, it may be said that the images are printed a swath at a time. However, a modification to this last statement exists for the situation wherein a printing technique known as “print masking” is used which will be explained below. Where print masking is used, typically no fraction of the printhead height indexing of the receiver media is done and the image is printed through multiple passes of the printhead. In the following description it will be understood that a print pass may be accomplished also during a return movement of the nozzles to their starting positions so that bi-directional print passing may be said to occur.
The carriage assembly 17 engages the shaft 19 through the sliding bushings 25, which are rigidly mounted on the printer structure, to ensure that the carriage assembly movement is linear and smooth. In operation, each ink-jet printhead 27 faces the receiver media and is mounted on the print cartridge, which in turn is mounted on the carriage assembly 17. The carriage assembly 17 is coupled through a timing belt (not shown) with a driver motor (not shown), and is reproducibly movable along the width of the receiver media (in the directions of the arrows A-B, i.e. the print swath or print scan axis). Each inkjet printhead 27 receives ink from the respective print cartridge. A transport roller (not shown), when driven by drive motor (not shown), transports the receiver media in the receiver media advance direction (arrow C) perpendicular to the moving direction of the carriage 17. Roll media (not shown) can be mounted on the media roll holder 30 for a continuous supply of receiver media, or discrete sheets of receiver media (not shown) can be fed in printer 10.
Upon receiving the image data, the printer electronics translates the data into printer actions, including sending electrical impulse signals to the printheads on the print cartridges 22 to eject ink droplets on the receiver media to form images, moving the carriage 17 back-and-forth in the direction of the swath axis or scan axis to cover the receiver media width, and stepping advance of the receiver media in a direction C, orthogonal to the carriage scanning direction or swath or scan axis direction A-B.
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Before a print pass, the print medium is lined up with the nozzle array such that the nozzles will eject drops during a print pass by printing dots of ink in the form of a raster on the receiver media. It will be understood that, while only a few nozzles are illustrated in the accompanying figures, hundreds and even thousands of nozzles may be on a printhead with a certain nominal nozzle spacing between nozzle centers of, for example, {fraction (1/300)}th of an inch or {fraction (1/600)}th of an inch between nozzle centers.
A typical ink jet printer reproduces an image by ejecting small drops of ink from a printhead containing an array of spaced apart nozzles (28 in FIG. 5). The ink drops ejected from the printhead land on a receiver medium (typically paper) to form substantially round ink dots. In some printers, all drops are about the same size, and therefore, all dots are about the same size. Normally, these drops are deposited with their respective dot centers on a rectilinear grid or raster, with equal spacing in the horizontal and vertical directions.
Modern ink jet printers may also possess the ability to vary (over some range) the amount of ink that is deposited at a given location on the page. Inkjet printers with this capability are referred to as “multi-tone” or gray scale or “multidrop capable” inkjet printers because they can produce multiple density tones at each pixel location on the page. Some multi-tone inkjet printers achieve this by varying the volume of the ink drop produced by the nozzle by changing the electrical signals sent to the nozzle, or by adjusting the geometry of the drop ejection element including selecting a nozzle of different diameter. See for example U.S. Pat. No. 4,746,935. Other multi-tone inkjet printers produce a variable number of smaller, fixed size droplets that are ejected by the nozzle (or by plural nozzles during different passes of the nozzle array), all of which are intended to merge and land at the same pixel location on the page. See for example U.S. Pat. No. 5,416,612. These techniques allow the printhead to vary the size or optical density of a given ink dot, which produces a range of density levels at each dot location, thereby improving the image quality. Thus, printing methods that require multiple drop sizes usually depend upon the way the drops are generated by the printhead. As noted above, some printheads have multiple size nozzle diameters, others have circuitry in which the individual ink chambers accept changing electrical signals to instruct each chamber how much ink to eject. Still other printheads have nozzles that eject a variable number of small, fixed size droplets that are intended to merge then land in a given image pixel location. Printing methods that deposit more than one drop in the pixel location are typically carried out by multiple printing passes wherein the printhead prints a row of pixels multiple times, the image data to the printhead changing in accordance with each pass so that the correct number of total droplets deposited at any pixel location is commensurate with the density required by the processed image data.
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The ink jet printer configurations employed herein comprise a plurality of inkjet printheads each of which has an array of nozzles. Each nozzle can eject drops independently, and each nozzle can eject at least two different volumes of ink including a drop of zero volume where essentially background is printed. Where at least three different volumes of ink (including a drop of zero volume) are capable of selectively being emitted from each nozzle such printers may be referred to as multi-tone printers. The printheads may be a drop on demand or continuous ink jet printing device. An inkjet printhead drive mechanism moves the printheads in a direction generally perpendicular to the array of nozzles. This direction is referred to as the fast scan or pass or swath scan direction. Mechanisms for moving the printhead in this direction are well known and usually comprise providing the support of the printheads or carriage on rails, which may include a rail that has a screw thread and advancing the printhead along the rails, such as by rotating the rail with the screw thread or otherwise advancing the printhead along the rails such as by using a timing belt and carriage. Such mechanisms typically provide a back and forth movement to the printhead. Information to the printhead, including data and control signals, can be delivered through a flexible band of wires or electro-optical link. As the printheads are transported in the fast scan direction, the nozzles selectively eject drops at intervals in accordance with enabling signals from a controller that is responsive to image data input into the printer. The intervals in combination with the nozzle spacing represent an addressable rectilinear grid, a raster, on which drops are placed. In response to an image pixel value, the printer may deposit a drop on a receiver medium, the drop being deposited on a location associated with a raster. It will be understood that rasters are not printed on the receiver sheet but represent a grid pattern of potential pixel locations.
A pass of the printheads during which drops are ejected is known as a print pass. The drops ejected during a print pass land on an inkjet recording medium. After one or more print passes, a print media drive moves the ink-jet recording medium or media; i.e. a receiver sheet such as paper, coated paper or plastic or a plate from which prints can be made, past the printheads in a slow scan direction orthogonal or transverse to the fast scan direction. After the recording medium or receiver member has been advanced, the printheads execute another set of one or more print passes. Printing during a next pass may be while the printheads are moving in the reverse direction to that moved during the prior pass. The receiver member may bea discrete sheet driven by a roller or other known driving device or the receiver sheet may be a continuous sheet driven, typically intermittently, by a drive to a take-up roller or to a feed roller drive.
Printheads are also known wherein each printhead includes two parallel columns of nozzles that are not staggered thus allowing printing of at least certain pixels using drops output by two nozzles in succession. In the field of inkjet printing it is also well known that if ink drops placed at neighboring locations on the page are printed at the same time, then ink drops tend to flow together on the surface of the page before they soak into the page. This can give the reproduced image an undesirable grainy or noisy appearance often referred to as “coalescence”. It is known that the amount of coalescence present in the printed image is related to the amount of time that elapses between printing adjacent dots. As the time delay between printing adjacent dots increases, the amount of coalescence decreases, thereby improving the image quality. There are many techniques present in the prior art that describe methods of increasing the time delay between printing adjacent dots using methods referred to as “interlacing”, “print masking”, or “multi-pass printing”. There are also techniques present in the prior art for reducing one-dimensional periodic artifacts or “bands”. This is achieved by advancing the paper by an increment less than the printhead height so that successive passes or swaths of the printhead overlap. The technique of print masking and swath overlapping are typically combined. See, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,967,203 and 5,992,962. The term “print masking” generally means printing subsets of the image pixels per pass and printing the entire image pixels in multiple passes of the printhead relative to a recording medium.
The nozzle pitch dimension described may be, but need not be, the same as that of the raster grid pitch dimension; i.e. spacing between centers of adjacent pixels on the raster. The nominal nozzle pitch spacing could be greater than the spacing between the raster grid lines and accommodation made in the printing mode through control of signals to the printhead in the fast scan direction with printing at appropriate predetermined intervals to provide a desired pitch spacing for the grid in the fast scan direction and with control of movement of the media in the slow scan direction to provide the desired pitch spacing of the grid in the slow scan direction. It will also be understood that the raster grid need not have the pitch spacing in the fast scan direction that is the same as that in the slow scan direction.
In operation of the method and apparatus of the invention, bi-directional color inkjet printing is provided by employing a printer carriage that is operated with bi-directional movement along a print swath axis. A plurality of color inkjet printheads having inks of different colors are supported on the carriage for bi-directional movement therewith. Each printhead has a nozzle array for emitting droplets of ink. The color inkjet printheads are supported on the printer carriage so as to form only two rows of printheads. The printheads are arranged such that two or more respective printheads for printing a first primary color and a respective printhead for printing black are positioned in a row directed along the print swath axis and form one row of printheads and two or more printheads for printing a second primary color and a respective printhead for printing yellow are positioned in a row directed along the print swath axis and form a second row of printheads. Nozzle arrays associated with the printheads for printing the first primary color and a nozzle array of the printhead for printing black do not overlap in the direction of the swath axis direction with nozzle arrays associated with the printheads for printing the second primary color and a nozzle array of the printhead for printing yellow. During printing the printer carriage is moved a first direction along the swath axis from one side of a print area to a second opposite side of the print area while driving two or more of the printheads to emit droplets onto a print medium for producing color that is different in color from that of the inks being used to record. Relative motion between the print medium and the carriage in a direction transverse to the swath axis is also provided for and typically when printing is not being done. After a pass in a first direction, the printer carriage is then returned by movement in a second direction along the swath axis from the second side of the print area to the first side while driving two or more of the printheads to emit droplets onto the print medium for producing color that is different in color from that of the inks being used to record. The printheads for printing the first primary color preferably include different inks for respectively printing a relatively lighter and relatively darker version of the first primary color and the printheads for printing the second primary color include different inks for respectively printing a relatively lighter and relatively darker version of the second primary color. During multi-pass printing, droplets of ink from the first primary color and from the second primary color are deposited at least partially overlapping on the medium to form dots of a color different than the first and second primary colors.
The invention is not limited to the particular details of the disclosed apparatus and methods and other modifications and applications are contemplated. Certain other changes may be made in the above-described apparatus and method without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention herein involved. It is intended, therefore, that the subject matter in the above depiction shall be interpreted as illustrative of certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is related to U.S. Application Ser. No. 60/534,879 entitled INK DELIVERY SYSTEM APPARATUS AND METHOD, filed on Jan. 8, 2004 in the names of David A. Neese, et al., the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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