An inkjet printer typically contains an ink reservoir to supply ink to a printhead of the printer. The ink reservoir may be contained in a print cartridge, or for a bulk ink, inkjet printer, the ink reservoir may be separate from the ink reservoir. For such purposes as protecting the printhead and preventing the ink from running out while printing a document, and to notify the user, the printer may contain a mechanism to detect an out of ink state before the supply of ink to the printhead is entirely depleted.
An inkjet printer may contain a mechanism to detect an ink state, such as an out of ink (OOI) state, for an ink reservoir, or supply, of the printer. In this context, the “ink state” refers to a characterization of the ink level of the ink supply, and the “OOI state” refers to an ink state for which the ink supply is sufficiently depleted so that the ink supply may no longer be reliably used to supply ink to the printhead without refilling the ink supply with ink or replacing the ink supply. The inkjet printer may use a bulk ink supply in which ink is supplied to the printhead through an ink supply that is separate from the print cartridge containing the printhead. In this manner, the ink supply may include a pressure containing vessel (a rigid plastic container, for example) and an ink bag that is disposed inside the vessel. The vessel may be pressurized with air, which surrounds the ink bag, so that the air pressure exerts a force on the ink bag to force ink from the ink supply.
In accordance with example implementations that are described herein, an inkjet printer contains a primary ink supply and a backup, or auxiliary, ink supply. In accordance with example implementations, the existence of the auxiliary ink supply allows the primary ink supply to be fully depleted. In this manner, primary and auxiliary ink supplies may have associated ink outlets that are connected to a manifold that supplies ink to a printhead of the printer; and the primary and auxiliary ink supplies may be pressurized at different air pressures. More specifically, the primary ink supply may have a higher associated air pressure than the auxiliary ink supply so that the ink from the primary ink supply is depleted first before the auxiliary ink supply furnishes ink to the printhead.
In accordance with example implementations that are described herein, the air pressure difference between the primary and auxiliary ink supplies allows a sensed ink-to-air pressure of one of the ink supplies to be used for purposes of detecting an OOI differential state of the primary ink supply.
More specifically, in accordance with example implementations, the ink-to-air differential pressure of the primary ink supply may be monitored for purposes of detecting an OOI state for the primary ink supply. When the primary ink supply has a sufficient ink level (a full ink level, for example), the ink-to-air differential pressure of the primary ink supply is near or at a zero pressure level. However, as the ink level of the primary ink supply is depleted so that the primary ink supply approaches the OOI state, the ink-to-air differential pressure of the primary ink supply rapidly increases to approach the air pressure difference between the primary and auxiliary ink supplies. In accordance with example implementations, the OOI state may be detected by detecting a pressure rise in the primary supply's ink-to-air differential pressure, which is equal or near the air pressure difference between the two ink supplies. In accordance with further example implementations, the OOI state may be detected by detecting a relatively sharp, or abrupt, transition in a relationship, or curve, of the primary ink supply's ink-to-air differential pressure versus the volume of ink that is delivered to the printhead.
The ink-to-air differential pressure of the auxiliary ink supply may be monitored (in lieu of monitoring the ink-to-air differential pressure of the primary ink supply) for purposes of detecting an OOI state for the primary ink supply, in accordance with further example implementations. As described further herein, the ink-to-air differential pressure of the auxiliary ink supply exhibits a relatively small, if any, change as a function of the volume of ink that is provided to the printhead, as long as the ink level in the primary ink supply is not sufficiently depleted (i.e., as long as the primary ink supply has not reached the OOI state). However, as the ink level of the primary supply approaches a level associated with an OOI state, the ink-to-air differential pressure of the auxiliary ink supply rapidly increases. In accordance with example implementations, the OOI state may be detected by detecting a relatively sharp, or abrupt, transition in the relationship, or curve, of the ink-to-air differential pressure of the auxiliary ink supply versus the volume of ink that is delivered to the printhead.
In accordance with example implementations, the OOI state detection systems and techniques that are described herein may obviate sensor characterization and corresponding sensor calibration at the factory. Moreover, the OOI state detection systems and techniques that are described herein may produce less residual “stranded” ink in the primary ink supply, thereby reducing the environmental impact associated with an empty supply and improving the customer experience with the printer.
As a more specific example,
The primary ink supply 110 and the auxiliary ink supply 160 have different associated air pressures: the air pressure of the primary ink supply 110 is greater than the air pressure of the auxiliary ink supply 160 to cause ink from the primary ink supply 110 to be furnished to the printhead 197 (in lieu of ink from the auxiliary ink supply 160), as long as the primary ink supply 110 has not reached the OOI state. When the ink from the primary ink supply 110 is depleted (i.e., the primary ink supply 110 reaches the OOI state), the auxiliary ink supply 160 then supplies the ink to the printhead 197.
The primary ink supply 110 may include a pressure containing vessel 111, such as a rigid plastic container, and an ink bag 112 that may be disposed inside the vessel 111. The ink bag 112 is connected to supply ink to the outlet of the vessel 111, which forms the outlet 113 of the primary ink supply 110. The vessel 111 also contains an inlet 115 that is in fluid communication with an air pump 122 of the printer 100 and in fluid communication with an air containing region 114 inside the vessel 111. A controller 190 of the ink delivery system 101 controls the on/off operation of the air pump 122 and venting by an air release valve 120 based on a signal that is provided by a primary air supply pressure sensor 118 to regulate an air pressure (4 pounds per square inch (psi), for example) in the region 114 of the vessel 111, and this air pressure, in turn, applies a force on the ink that is supplied by the primary ink supply 110.
In a similar manner, the auxiliary ink supply 160 may include a pressure containing vessel 161, such as a rigid plastic container, and an ink bag 164 that may be disposed inside the vessel 161. The ink bag 164 is connected to supply ink to an outlet of the vessel 161, which forms the ink outlet 163 of the auxiliary ink supply 160. The vessel 161 also contains an inlet 165 that is in fluid communication with an air pump 166 of the ink delivery system 101 and is in fluid communication with an air containing region of the vessel 161. In this manner, the controller 190 may control the on/off operation of the air pump 166 and venting via an air valve 167 based on a pressure signal provided by an air pressure sensor 162 to regulate an air pressure (2 pounds per square inch (psi), for example) inside the vessel 161, and this air pressure, in turn, applies a force on the ink that is supplied by the auxiliary ink supply 160.
Due to the air pressure difference (2 psi, for example) between the primary ink supply 110 and the auxiliary ink supply 160, the primary ink supply 110 is biased to furnish ink to the printhead 197 until the supply 110 reaches the OOI state, and when this occurs, the auxiliary ink supply 160 furnishes the ink to the printhead 197.
More specifically, in accordance with some implementations, in response to detecting an OOI state for the primary ink supply 110, the controller 190 alerts a user of the printer 100 (by displaying a message, turning on a visual and/or aural indicator, and so forth); isolates the primary ink supply 110 (by closing a valve 124 between the outlet 113 of the primary ink supply 110 and the ink supply line 196 of the printhead 197); and depressurizes the primary ink supply 110 (by opening the air valve 122). The primary ink supply 110 may then be replaced, and in the interim, the auxiliary supply 160 may supply ink to the printhead 197. When the primary ink supply 110 is replaced, the controller 190 may then re-pressurize the primary ink supply 110 (pressurize the air inside the vessel 111 to 4 psi, for example) and open the valve 124 to reestablish ink communication between the primary ink supply 110 and the ink communication manifold. Due to the air pressure difference between the primary ink supply 110 and the auxiliary ink supply 160, at this point, the auxiliary supply 160 ceases providing ink to the printhead 197, and the primary ink supply 110 provides the ink to the printhead 197. Moreover, in accordance with example implementations, due to the air pressure difference between the ink supplies 110 and 160, ink from the primary ink supply 110 may recharge the ink supply of the auxiliary ink supply 160 to a full ink level.
In accordance with example implementations, the printer 100 includes one or multiple ink-to-air differential pressure sensors. For the specific example of
In performing its various functions, such as controlling the air pressures of the ink supplies 110 and 160 and detecting the OOI state of the primary ink supply 110, the controller 190 may receive one or multiple inputs 182 (signals representing sensed air pressures of the primary ink supply and the auxiliary ink supply; a signal representing a sensed ink-to-air differential pressure of the primary ink supply or auxiliary ink supply; and so forth) and provide one or multiple outputs 180 (valve control signals, air pump control signals, a signal representing a detected OOI state for the primary ink supply 110, and so forth).
In accordance with some implementations, the controller 190 may include one or multiple hardware processors 191, such as, for example, one or multiple central processing units (CPUs), one or multiple CPU cores, one or multiple microcontrollers, and so forth. In accordance with example implementations, the processor(s) 191 may execute machine executable instructions 193 (or “software”), for purposes of performing one or more of the functions described herein, such as detection of the ink state or OOI state for the primary ink supply 110. The instructions 193 may be stored in a non-transitory memory 192, such as a memory that is formed from semiconductor storage devices, memristor-based memory devices, phase change memory devices, volatile memory devices, non-volatile memory devices, a combination of one or more of the foregoing memory technologies, other memory technologies, and so forth.
In accordance with further example implementations, the controller 190 may be formed in whole or in part from a circuit that does not execute machine executable instructions, such as, for example, a field programmable gate array (FPGA), an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), and so forth.
In accordance with example implementations, the controller 190 may monitor the ink-to-air differential pressure of the auxiliary pressure supply 160 for purposes of detecting the OOI state of the primary ink supply 110. In other words, in accordance with example implementations, the controller 190 may monitor the differential pressure represented by the output of the differential ink-to-air sensor 170 for purposes of detecting the OOI state of the primary ink supply 110.
A pressure sensor, in general, provides a signal that represents (in millivolts, for example) a pressure that is sensed by the sensor. The pressure sensor, however, may introduce an error (an offset error, a linearity error, another type of error, a combination of errors, and so forth), and accordingly, the pressure sensor may be calibrated before the sensor may be used to provide an accurate absolute pressure measurement. However, in accordance with example implementations, the controller 190 may monitor the signal from the ink-to-air differential pressure sensor 170 and process this signal to detect a sharp, or abrupt, pressure transition that represents the OOI state for the primary ink supply 110, without relying on the sensor 170 being calibrated.
More specifically, in accordance with example implementations, the controller 190 uses a combination of the ink-to-air differential pressure (as represented by the signal from the sensor 170) and an estimation of the volume of ink delivered to the printhead 197 to construct a curve, or representation, of the ink-to-air differential pressure versus the delivered ink volume. It is noted that the controller 190 has an estimate of the delivered ink volume due to the knowledge of the number of ink drops provided at the printhead 197. Although the delivered ink volume (as determined from the number of ink drops) may provide a coarse estimate of the ink level of the primary ink supply 110 (an estimate that has an accuracy of ±20%, for example), the controller 190 uses the delivered ink volume in combination with the signal from the pressure sensor 170 to provide a relatively finer (i.e., more accurate) estimate of the ink level, and in particular, a relatively accurate detection of the OOI state. In this manner, in accordance with example implementations, the controller 190 uses the delivered ink volume and the signal from the sensor 170 to detect a relatively abrupt transition in the ink-to-air pressure of the auxiliary ink supply 160, which coincides with the primary ink supply 110 reaching an OOI state.
As a more specific example,
In accordance with some implementations, the controller 190 may detect the transition 204 as follows. First, it is noted that the controller 190 may generally be aware of the current position on the curve 200 due to the knowledge of the current delivered ink volume (the controller 190 may assume that the curve 200 is in the first flat region 202, for example, due to knowledge that less than one half of the initial volume of ink in the primary ink supply 110 has been delivered to the printhead 197, for example). The controller 190 may condition the signal that is provided by the pressure sensor 170. For example, in accordance with some implementations, the controller 190 may apply a low pass filter to the signal provided by the sensor 170 and “ratchet” the filtered signal to hold the maximum value of the filtered signal. Next, the controller 190 may determine the first order differential of the resulting conditioned pressure signal, i.e., derive a signal representing the rate of change of the conditioned pressure signal with respect to the delivered ink volume.
The controller 190 may then sample the rate of change signal to monitor the rate of change signal for two conditions representing the transition 204: a first condition representing the beginning of the transition 204; and a second condition representing the end of the transition 204. More specifically, in accordance with some implementations, the controller 190 may sample the rate of change signal to detect a consecutive sequence of a predetermined number of samples in which each sampled value exceeds a predetermined threshold value. For example, the controller 190 may detect the first condition by monitoring for a certain number consecutive samples of the rate of change signal meeting or exceeding a threshold value of 0.10 to 0.25 psi (or a corresponding millivolt range) per cubic centimeter of delivered ink. When this consecutive sequence is detected, the first condition has been satisfied, and the controller 190 may next monitor for the second condition, i.e., the controller 190 may monitor the rate of change of signal to detect the end of the transition 204 and the beginning of the second flat region 206. In accordance with example implementations, the controller 190 may detect the second condition by monitoring for a certain number of consecutive samples of the rate of change signal, which are below a predetermined threshold value. For example, for purposes of detecting the second condition, the controller 190 may monitor the rate of change signal to detect ten consecutive sampled values that are less than 0.01 psi (or a corresponding millivolt value) per cubic centimeter of delivered ink.
In accordance with further example implementations, the controller 190 may monitor the differential ink-to-air differential pressure of the primary ink supply 110 (via the differential sensor 119) for purposes of detecting the OOI state for the primary ink supply 110. Referring to
In accordance with example implementations, the controller 190 may detect the transition 305 by first calibrating the differential pressure sensor 119 such that the sensor 119 provides a signal representing a zero or near zero pressure level for the initial flat region 304; and subsequently, the controller 190 may monitor the curve 300 to detect a pressure increase that is equal to or nearly equal to the air pressure difference between the primary ink supply 110 and the auxiliary ink supply 160.
In accordance with further example implementations, the controller 190 may coarsely calibrate the sensor 119 or not calibrate the sensor 119. Moreover, in accordance with further example implementations, the controller 190 may use the above-described technique discussed above in connection with
Thus, referring to
Referring to
In accordance with further example implementations, an apparatus 600 that is depicted in
While the present disclosure has been described with respect to a limited number of implementations, those skilled in the art, having the benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and variations.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2017/053180 | 9/25/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2019/059940 | 3/28/2019 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20210197576 A1 | Jul 2021 | US |