This invention relates to fluid ejection devices. In some fluid ejection devices, fluid droplets are ejected from one or more nozzles onto a medium. The nozzles are fluidically connected to a fluid path that includes a fluid pumping chamber. The fluid pumping chamber can be actuated by an actuator, which causes ejection of a fluid droplet. The medium can be moved relative to the fluid ejection device. The ejection of a fluid droplet from a particular nozzle is timed with the movement of the medium to place a fluid droplet at a desired location on the medium. In these fluid ejection devices, it is usually desirable to eject fluid droplets of uniform size and speed and in the same direction in order to provide uniform deposition of fluid droplets on the medium.
In one aspect, a method of determining whether a flow path is ready for ejection including supplying liquid to the flow path, which includes a pumping chamber and a nozzle, after supplying fluid to the flow path, applying energy to an actuator adjacent to the pumping chamber, measuring an electrical characteristic of the actuator to obtain a measured value, and comparing the measured value to a threshold value to determine if the flow path is ready for ejection.
This and other implementations can optionally include one or more of the following features. The measured value includes an equivalent series resistance, Rs, of the actuator. The flow path is in a print head, and the method includes signaling the print head that the flow path is ready for ejection if the equivalent series resistance is greater than the threshold value. The threshold value is an equivalent series resistance of the actuator for a flow path that is ready for ejection. The equivalent series resistance is measured at a frequency of 100 kHz or greater. The method includes purging fluid from the flow path if the equivalent series resistance is less than the given value. The method also include remeasuring the equivalent series resistance of the actuator after purging, and comparing the remeasured resistance to the given value to determine if the flow path is ready for ejection. The actuator includes piezoelectric material. The measured value includes an equivalent parallel resistance of the actuator, (1/Rp). The flow path is in a print head, and the method includes signaling the print head that the flow path is ready for ejection if the equivalent parallel resistance (1/Rp) is less than the threshold value. The method includes purging fluid from the flow path if the equivalent parallel resistance (1/Rp) is more than the threshold value. The measured value includes a power loss of the actuator. The power loss is measured by determining a current through the actuator and multiplying the current by an applied voltage and calculating a time average of the current multiplied by the applied voltage using an equation, Ploss=1/T∫0T(t)V(t)dt, where Ploss is the power loss, I(t) is the current as a function of time, and V(t) is the voltage as a function of time. The flow path is in a print head, and the print head includes a plurality of flow paths, a plurality of actuators, and a current sensing circuit to detect the current through a plurality of actuators. The print head includes a plurality of flow paths, a plurality of actuators, and a plurality of current sensing circuits, wherein each current sensing resistor is coupled to an associated actuator to detect the current through that associated actuator. The measured value includes a dissipation of the actuator. Applying energy to the actuator includes applying a drive pulse to the actuator. The drive pulse is at a lower amplitude than a drive amplitude such that a fluid drop is not ejected through the nozzle. Applying energy to the actuator can include applying a waveform selected from the group consisting of sinusoidal waves, square waves, and trapezoidal waves. The method includes printing on a substrate while measuring the electrical characteristic of the actuator. The method can also include moving the print head to a maintenance station to measure the electrical characteristic of the actuator.
In another aspect, a print system includes a print head having a flow path including a pumping chamber and a nozzle, an actuator adjacent to the pumping chamber, a circuit configured to measure an electrical characteristic of the actuator to obtain a measured value, and a controller configured to compare the measured value to a threshold value to determine if the flow path is ready for ejection.
This and other implementations can optionally include one or more of the following features. A controller is configured to send a signal to the print head to purge fluid from the flow path if the measured value is below the given value. The controller is configured to send a signal to the print head to begin printing if the measured value is greater than the given value. The circuit includes a member selected from the group consisting of a capacitance meter, a multimeter, and an impedance meter. The print system includes a plurality of flow paths and a plurality of actuators, wherein the circuit includes a current sensing circuit for each actuator, a switch for each actuator, and a low pass filter. The print system includes a plurality of flow paths and a plurality of actuators, wherein the circuit includes a current sensing circuit for the plurality of actuators, a switch for each actuator, and a low pass filter. The circuit is positioned on the print head drive circuit board. The print system includes a maintenance station and the circuit is positioned at the maintenance station.
Potential advantages may include may include none, one or more of the following. An electrical characterization of an actuator can be used to determine whether a flow path is ready to eject a drop without having to print a test sample. An electrical characterization can also prevent wasting jetting fluid by purging only when necessary rather than at predetermined intervals. A purging procedure can be performed only when it is actually needed and/or only on the flow paths that need to be serviced. Otherwise, printing can continue uninterrupted if all of the flow paths are ready for ejection. The electrical characterization can also provide feedback about whether the purging procedure was successful. In addition, the measurements of the electrical characteristic of the actuator can be performed using either a circuit positioned on the maintenance station or on the print head drive circuit board. The actuators can be tested either while the print head is printing or idle.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Before performing a printing operation, a fluid ejector needs to be “primed”, i.e., filled with the fluid to be ejected. Conventionally, to determine whether the priming procedure was successful, a test sample is printed and examined. However, printing and analyzing test samples can be time consuming and wastes jetting fluid. If the fluid being jetted is expensive, test samples can also be costly. A possible technique to avoid this problem is to characterize the electrical properties of an actuator and use the characteristics to determine whether a flow path is primed. Similarly, the electrical characteristics of the actuator can be used to detect other failures that make the flow path fully or partially inoperable, such as a clogged nozzle or an electrical problem with the actuator. For example, the electrical characteristics could be used to detect any loss of ejection capability, even though the flow path was still able to eject some fluid.
Fluid droplet ejection can be implemented with a substrate, for example a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) fabricated on the substrate. The substrate can include a fluid flow path body, a membrane, and a nozzle layer. The flow path body has a fluid flow path formed therein, which can include some or all of the following features: a fluid fill passage, a fluid pumping chamber, a descender, and a nozzle having an outlet. An actuator can be located on a surface of the membrane opposite the flow path body and proximate to the fluid pumping chamber. When the actuator is actuated, the actuator imparts a pressure pulse to the fluid pumping chamber to cause ejection of a droplet of fluid through the outlet. The flow path body can include multiple fluid flow paths and nozzles, and each fluid flow path can have an associated actuator, so that the substrate includes a plurality of independently actuatable fluid ejectors.
A fluid droplet ejection system can include the substrate with one or more independently actuatable fluid ejectors, a source of fluid for the substrate, and a controller to apply electrical signals to actuate the actuators. The fluid source can be a fluid reservoir fluidically connected to the substrate, e.g., by passages in tubing, chambers in housings, or the like, for supplying fluid for ejection. The fluid is a liquid, and can be, for example, a chemical compound, a biological substance, or ink.
To prepare for printing, fluid is supplied to the print head module, for example, from a fluid reservoir (not shown) through a fluid inlet 112 in the filter assembly 108. The fluid can travel through the filter assembly 108 and the housing 106 to the print head body 102. The fluid enters a flow path 200 as shown in
Filling the flow path with fluid can also be referred to as “priming” the flow path. Fluid is purged through the flow path displacing the air in the flow path, such that the flow path is completely filled with fluid without any air bubbles. A print head can be primed when a print head is first installed in a printer, before the start of a print job, or at periodic intervals during a printing operation. Conventionally, to determine whether the priming procedure was successful, a test sample is printed and examined for unprinted areas corresponding to unprimed flow paths. Printing and analyzing test samples can be time consuming and wastes jetting fluid. If the fluid being jetted is expensive, test samples can also be costly.
During printing, a flow path can become unprimed, blocked, or experience another type of failure that causes the flow path to become fully or partially inoperable. A flow path can become unprimed, for example, if an air bubble is ingested through the nozzle, if an air bubble grows in the flow path due to rectified diffusion, if the ink becomes saturated with air and air bubbles nucleate together and block the flow path (e.g., when heating a water-based ink), or if an air bubble enters the flow path from the fluid reservoir. A flow path can become blocked, for example, if fluid dries in the nozzle, a particle enters the flow path from a fluid supply or from outside the nozzle. However, without printing a test sample, it is not possible to know whether any of the flow paths need to be serviced. Therefore, a purging procedure is usually executed at predetermined intervals to re-prime any flow paths that may have become unprimed or blocked. However, this purging procedure may be executed long before or after purging is actually needed. Even after the purging procedure, there is no way of knowing whether the purging procedure was successful, unless a test sample is printed.
Rather than printing test samples or purging at predetermined intervals, an electrical characteristic of an actuator can be measured, and the measured value of the characteristic can be used to determine whether a flow path is ready for ejection. In that case, a purging procedure is performed only when it is actually needed and only on the flow paths that need to be purged. Further, the measurement of the electrical characteristic can provide feedback about whether the priming procedure was successful without having to print a test sample. If the electrical characteristic shows that all the flow paths are ready for ejection, printing can continue uninterrupted.
For example, the electrical characteristic of the actuator could be the impedance of the actuator. The impedance can be measured across terminals connected to the electrodes of the actuator. To a first approximation, for a piezo-electric actuator the impedance is capacitive in the frequency range used to eject fluid from the flow paths, such as between 0 and 250 kHz. Taking dielectric losses of the material (e.g. piezoelectric) and complex elasticities into account, the impedance of the actuator will consist of a real part that correlates to the losses and an imaginary part that correlates to the elastic and dielectric properties. Adding fluid to a flow path in electromechanical contact with the actuator will add additional viscous losses that will increase the real part of the impedance because of the work done on the fluid by the actuator.
The measured value (Rs, Rp, D) can be sent to the controller 512 and compared to a threshold value to determine whether the flow path is ready for ejection. If the measured value does not meet the threshold value, the flow path is determined not to be ready for ejection. At the maintenance station, fluid can be purged out of the nozzle in attempt to revive the failed flow path. After purging, the electrical characteristic can be remeasured. The remeasured value is compared to the threshold value. The steps can be repeated until the measured value meets the threshold value. For example, where the measured characteristic is the series resistance or dissipation, the measured characteristic meets the threshold value if it is equal to or greater than the threshold value.
In some implementations, one flow path is tested at a time and once all of the flow paths are determined to be ready for ejection, the controller 512 sends a signal to the print head 502 that the print head is ready for printing.
In other implementations, the flow paths can be divided into groups and a group of flow paths can be tested together, especially if the print head includes a large number of flow paths (e.g. 300 or more, 600 or more, 1000 or more). In this case, the group of flow paths is measured together and an average value of the electrical characteristic is calculated. Likewise, the threshold value is an average value for the given number of flow paths, and this average threshold value is compared to the average measured value to determine if the group of flow paths is ready for ejection. If the average measured value is does not meet the average threshold value, then the group of flow paths can be purged together and retested together. After the group is determined to be ready, the next group is tested, and once all of the groups are determined to be ready, printing can resume.
To determine a threshold value for a particular print head, the print head could be tested with and without fluid at various frequencies to find a correlation between the electrical characteristic of flow paths ready for printing and flow paths not ready for printing. For example, the flow paths with fluid represent primed flow paths while the paths without fluid represent unprimed flow paths. The graph in
Rather than using a maintenance station to determine whether the flow paths are ready for printing, the flow paths can be tested in-situ. For example, the electrical characteristic of the actuators can be measured using a circuit positioned on the print head drive circuit board instead of on an external maintenance station. The print head drive circuit board can include application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) switches that can be used to measure the electrical characteristics of the actuators. In some implementations, the electrical characteristic can be measured while the print head is printing on a substrate. If the flow paths in the print head are determined to be ready for ejection, printing can continue without interruption. If a flow path is determined not to be fully or partially inoperable, the print head can move to a maintenance station to purge fluid until the flow path is ready for printing. In addition, unlike an impedance meter that is generally limited to a sinusoidal wave, a circuit can be built that can measure the electrical characteristic using any waveform shape including sinusoidal wave, square wave, trapezoidal wave, or the drive waveform. For example, the electrical characteristic can be the power loss in the actuator. The loss can be determined using the following equation:
where Ploss is the power loss in the actuator, T is the total time that measurements are taken, I(t) is the current as a function of time, and V(t) is voltage as a function of time. The circuit can be built to sense the current I(t) through an actuator, to multiply the sensed current by an applied voltage V(t), and to take a time average using, for example, a low pass filter. The output can be monitored by a controller. If the loss falls below a threshold value, a signal can be sent to the print head that a flow path is not ready for ejection and the print head can move to the maintenance station to purge the flow path.
For example, the switch S1 is closed and a waveform having a voltage V(t) is applied to C1 and the current sensing resistor R senses a current I(t), which is sent to the controller. The controller multiplies the current I(t) by the applied voltage V(t) and takes a time average to calculate the power loss Ploss. The controller can compare the value of Ploss with a threshold value. For example, if the value of Ploss is below the threshold value, then the flow path is determined not to be ready for printing and the flow path is purged until the value of Ploss is equal to or greater than the threshold value.
Rather than stopping the print head to test each flow path one at a time, each actuator C1, C2, C3, . . . Cn can have a corresponding current sensing circuit with a current sensing resistor R1, R2, R3, . . . Rn, as shown in the circuit 900 of
Referring to
The use of terminology such as “top” and “bottom” throughout specification and claims is for illustrative purposes only and does not imply a particular orientation of the assembly.
A number of embodiments of the invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
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