Reference is made to commonly-assigned, U.S. patent applications Ser. No. 12/420,842, entitled “DEVICE FOR CONTROLLING FLUID VELOCITY”, Ser. No. 12/420,837, entitled “DEVICE INCLUDING MOVEABLE PORTION FOR CONTROLLING FLUID”, Ser. No. 12/420,839, entitled “INTERACTION OF DEVICE AND FLUID USING FORCE ”, and Ser. No. 12/420,846 , entitled “DEVICE FOR MERGING FLUID DROPS OR JETS”, all filed concurrently herewith.
This invention relates generally to formation and control of fluid drops, and in particular to control devices that either actively or passively control fluid drops via interaction of a fluid jet and a control device surface at or near the region of fluid jet breakoff.
The ability to reliably and accurately position drops ejected from fluid ejectors, for example, inkjet printheads, at predetermined locations is a critical systems requirement for the printing of high-quality pictorial images and text. Accurate positioning of drops on the receiver is difficult because ejected drops suffer from both stochastic (random) placement inaccuracies and repeating (semi-permanent) placement inaccuracies. Examples of a stochastic (random) placement inaccuracy includes drop-to-drop variations in the contact point of the drop tail as is leaves the ejector surface and fluctuations in the airflow around the printhead. Examples of repeating (semi-permanent) placement inaccuracies include permanently malformed ejectors and particulate debris contacting the ejector nozzle plate.
In some situations, accurate positioning of drops may be achieved by locating the receiver in close proximity to the printhead, so that drops which are angularly misdirected do not have time to travel too far from their desired location on the receiver in the plane of the receiver. However, overly close spacing may cause mechanical contact between the printhead and the receiver possibly resulting in printhead damage.
Other strategies to control drop locations include the use of airflow or electric fields oriented in the direction of the drop trajectories to guide drops to desired locations as well as the application of electric fields perpendicular to the direction of the drop trajectories to guide drops to desired locations. However, these strategies need to use very large airflows or very high electric fields to influence drop trajectories which possibly resulting in image artifacts and reduced system reliability.
Accurate positioning of drops on the receiver is also limited by the formation of satellite drops during drop breakup or by drop recombination as drops travel along their trajectories. Drops of unusually small or large sizes are produced which reduce image quality or cause reliability problems due to fluid accumulation at unwanted regions. Although satellite formation can be controlled to some extent by ink formulation or printhead operation parameters, these solutions typically reduce image quality or printer performance, for example by requiring special ink formulations not optimized for image quality or by necessitation reduced printing speeds.
The inverse relationship between frequency of operation and drop control also contributes to accurately positioning drops. In general, it is desirable to operate inkjet printers at the highest possible frequencies for reasons of productivity. However, drop placement typically suffers at high frequency operation while the propensity of satellite formation or drop recombination typically increases.
According to one aspect of the present invention, the formation and control of a fluid drop(s) produced by fluid drop ejectors, for example, drop ejectors of the drop-on-demand type or continuous type, are managed either passively or actively.
The control device of the present invention can be positioned remotely from the surface of the drop ejectors. For example, when the drop ejector is a continuous type ejector, the control device can be positioned at or near the location of drop break-off from the jetting fluid column so that the fluid leaving the control surface of the control device after interacting with the control surface of the control device can be in the form of a fluid jet or a fluid drop(s). Additionally, an array of control devices can be remotely positioned from the surface of a corresponding array of drop ejectors.
The control device of the present invention either passively or actively modifies drop velocity, trajectory, or combinations thereof through interaction of a surface of a control device and the fluid jet or the fluid drop(s). For example, the control devices of the present invention can modify drop trajectories through contact of the surface of a control device and the drop(s) as the drop(s) travels across the surface of the control device or exits the surface of the control device. This can occur on a drop by drop basis. Additionally, when incoming fluid jets suffering from variations in directionality interact with the control surface of the control device of the present invention, the trajectory of the corresponding exiting drops can be at least partially corrected.
The control device of the present invention also has the ability to selectively suppress satellite drops and to reduce inadvertent drop merger. For example, the control surface of the control device can be designed to passively or actively control (modulate) the trajectory and velocity of the exiting drops relative to the that of the incoming drops on a drop by drop basis so as to cause satellite drops to merge with other drops or prevent drops from inadvertently merging with each other.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a method of controlling fluid flow includes providing a moving fluid including a fluid flow characteristic; providing a fluid control device including a fluid control surface, the fluid control surface including a pattern that guides the fluid; causing the fluid to contact the fluid control surface of the fluid control device; and causing the fluid to interact with the fluid control surface of the fluid control device by guiding the fluid using the pattern of the fluid control surface while the fluid is in contact with the pattern of the fluid control device such that the fluid flow characteristic of the fluid after interacting with the fluid control surface of the fluid control device is different from the fluid flow characteristic of the fluid before interaction with the fluid control surface of the fluid control device.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a microfluidic device includes a fluid source and a fluid control device. The fluid source provides a moving fluid with the moving fluid including a fluid flow characteristic. The fluid control device includes a fluid control surface. The fluid control surface includes a pattern that guides the moving fluid while the fluid is in contact with the pattern such that the fluid flow characteristic of the moving fluid after interaction with the fluid control surface of the fluid control device is different from the fluid flow characteristic of the moving fluid before interaction with the fluid control surface of the fluid control device.
In the detailed description of the example embodiments of the invention presented below, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The present description will be directed in particular to elements forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, apparatus 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. In the following description and drawings, identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical elements.
The example embodiments of the present invention are illustrated schematically and not to scale for the sake of clarity. One of the ordinary skills in the art will be able to readily determine the specific size and interconnections of the elements of the example embodiments of the present invention.
As described herein, the example embodiments of the present invention provide a printhead or printhead components typically used in inkjet printing systems. However, many other applications are emerging which use inkjet printheads to emit liquids (other than inks) that need to be finely metered and deposited with high spatial precision. As such, as described herein, the terms “liquid” and “ink” refer to any material that can be ejected by the printhead or printhead components described below.
Generally described, the present invention describes a microfluidic device that manages the formation and control of a fluid drop(s) produced by fluid drop ejectors through interaction of a surface of a control device and a fluid jet that breaks up into the drop(s) or through interaction of a surface of a control device and the drop(s) themselves. For example, fluid drops or fluid jets can impact on at least one control device surface and subsequently exit the surface. While in contact with the surface, the surface acts on the drops or jets to provide alteration, correction, or modulation of the trajectories or other properties of the drops or jets after the drops or jets subsequently exit the surface. As used herein, a fluid jet includes a fluid column with sufficient momentum to self-eject from an aperture, for example, a nozzle of a continuous inkjet printhead.
Advantageously, the present invention provides a way to deliberately control the trajectories of drop(s) moving through the air. For example, slight and precise corrections to drop trajectories can be made to drop(s) exiting the device of the present invention. Additionally, the present invention is applicable to either drops or jets entering the device and includes, for example, drops or jets obliquely impacting a surface of the device with drops exiting the surface of the device.
The surface of the control device can include patterned features, either passive, active, or combinations thereof, for passively or actively controlling the exiting trajectories and other properties of the exiting drops or jets. Typically, the control surface acts on the impacting droplets to improve or even correct the properties of the impacting drops before the drops exit the control surface. This results in improved printing performance attributes such as reliability or image quality. For example, impacting jets that suffer from directional errors or exhibit a propensity to form satellite drops exit the control surface with at least partially corrected trajectories or with fewer satellite drops formed when compared to jets that do not impact the control surface of the control device.
Example embodiments of the present invention are discussed below with reference to
The drop control device 20 includes a pattern on each drop control surface 21 which passively act to guide the direction of drops exiting the drop control surface 21 toward a preferred direction regardless of the direction of travel of the jet from the associated nozzle. The drop control surfaces 21 have geometry and properties such that the fluid drops or jets have high affinity to the drop control surfaces. The drop control surfaces 21 are separated by gap regions 22 having geometry and properties such that they have low affinity to the fluid drops or jets. As shown In
Alternatively in
Dielectrophoresis is the translational motion of neutral matter caused by polarization effects in a nonuniform electric field. The dielectrophoresis force can be seen only when drops or particles are in the non-uniform electric fields. Since the dielectrophoresis force does not depend on the polarity of the electric field, the phenomenon can be observed either with AC or DC excitation. Drops or particles are attracted to regions of stronger electric field when their permittivity exceeds that of the suspension medium. When permittivity of medium is greater than that of drops or particles, this results in motion of drops or particles to the lesser electric field. DEP is most readily observed for drops or particles with diameters ranging from approximately 1 to 1000 μm. Above 1000 μm gravity, and below 1 μm Brownian motion, overwhelm the DEP forces. The main advantages of the electrical systems include geometric simplicity, easy of fabrication, absence of moving parts and voltage-based control.
The basic geometry of the embodiment, shown in
In this embodiment, the force does not require drops 12 to be charged. All drops exhibit dielectrophoretic activity in the presence of electric fields. However, the strength of the force depends strongly on the medium and the electrical properties and size of the drops, as well as on the frequency of the electric field. Consequently, fields of a particular frequency can manipulate drops with great selectivity.
The deflection device 65 can be made of two metal sheets bonded together. The two metals have different coefficients of thermal expansion. When an electric current is applied to the metals, they will expand different in length. The deflection device 65 will bend toward to the metal with lower coefficient of thermal expansion. This type of device is often referred to as a thermal bi-morph or a bimetallic actuator although thermal tri-morphs (three metal layers) can also be used.
Another mean to deflect is to utilize piezo-electric material to make a cantilever. A piezoelectric actuator works on the principle of piezoelectricity. Piezoelectricity is the ability of crystals and certain ceramic materials to generate a voltage in response to applied mechanical stress. The piezoelectric effect is reversible in that piezoelectric crystals, when subjected to an externally applied voltage, can change shape by a small amount. (For instance, the deformation is about 0.1% of the original dimension in PZT.) The effect finds useful applications such as the production and detection of sound, generation of high voltages, electronic frequency generation, microbalance, and ultra fine focusing of optical assemblies. Barium titanate can be caused to have piezoelectric properties by exposing it to an electric field.
Piezoelectric materials are used to convert electrical energy to mechanical energy and vice-versa. The precise motion that results when an electric potential is applied to a piezoelectric material is of primordial importance for nanopositioning. Actuators using the piezo effect have been commercially available for 35 years and in that time have transformed the world of precision positioning and motion control. Piezo actuators can perform sub-nanometer moves at high frequencies because they derive their motion from solid-state crystalline effects. They have no rotating or sliding parts to cause friction. Piezo actuators can move high loads, up to several tons. Piezo actuators present capacitive loads and dissipate virtually no power in static operation. Piezo actuators require no maintenance and are not subject to wear because they have no moving parts in the classical sense of the term.
For deflection device 65 in the present invention using piezoelectric material, the poling axis of the material is directed from one electrode to the other. Such a configuration is a thickness mode actuator. When the voltage is applied between the electrodes, the thickness of the piezoelectric will change, resulting in a relative displacement of up to 0.2%. Displacement of the piezoelectric actuator is primarily a function of the applied electric field of strength and the length of the actuator, the forced applied to it and the property of the piezoelectric material used. With the reverse field, negative expansion (Contraction) occurs. If both the regular and reverse fields are used, a relative expansion (strain) up to 0.2% is achievable with piezo stack actuators. The piezo material 67 should be placed only on one side of the deflection device 65 (shown in
The drop control surface 110 is patterned with modified surface regions 130 that have properties different than those of the unmodified surface regions 140 of drop control surface 110. The modified surface regions 130 are substantially hydrophilic, while the unmodified surface regions 140 are substantially hydrophobic. It can be appreciated that the properties of the modified surface regions 130 can be different in many ways from those of the unmodified surface regions 140 including differences in surface roughness, the presence of grooves, ridges, or combinations thereof.
The drop control surface 110 is positioned to contact the drops 120 formed from the breakup of jet 100 in such a way that the drops 120 simultaneously contact the modified surface regions 130 and the unmodified surface regions 140. Since the properties of the modified surface regions 130 and the unmodified surface regions 140 are different, the motion properties of the drops 120 are altered. As shown, the drops 120 acquire a rotational motion as indicated by arrow 150 due to their simultaneous asymmetric interaction with modified surface region 130 and the unmodified surface region 140 of drop control surface 110. However, it is understood that various other changes in the motion properties of the drops 120 including a change in drop velocity or drop trajectory.
The drop control surface 210 is patterned with a plurality of modified surface regions 230 that have properties different than those of the unmodified surface regions 240 of drop control surface 210. In the preferred embodiment the modified surface regions 230 are substantially hydrophilic, while the unmodified surface regions 240 are substantially hydrophobic. It is understood that the properties of the modified surface regions 230 can be different in many ways from those of the unmodified surface regions 240 including differences in surface roughness, the presence of grooves, ridges, or combinations thereof.
The drop control surface 210 is positioned to contact the drops 220 formed from the breakup of jet 200 in such a way that the drops 220 contact at least one of the modified surface regions 230. The modified surface regions 230 interact with the drops 220 during contact in such a way that the drops 220 substantially maintain contact with the modified surface regions 230 until they separate from control surface 210, thereby altering the trajectory of the drops 220 as shown in
The drop control surface 310 is patterned with a plurality of modified surface regions 340 that have properties different than those of the unmodified surface regions 350 of drop control surface 310. The modified surface regions 340 have properties that act to reduce the velocity of the main drops 320 and satellite drops 330 upon contact. As shown, the modified surface regions 340 are substantially hydrophilic. However, the desired action of the modified surface regions 340 to slow down the main drops 320 and satellite drops 330 upon contact can be accomplished using other techniques, for example, by altering the surface roughness, adding ridges, or grooves to the modified surface regions 340.
The satellite drops 330 that contact the drop control surface 310 experience more deceleration than the main drops 320 because of their lower inertia. This will result in the merging of satellite drops 330 into the trailing main drops 320 to form large drops 360 upon separation from the drop control surface 310. The patterns on the modified surface regions 340 are chosen to guide the main drops 320 and satellite drops 330 upon contact thereby keeping them from undesired displacement left or right from their original trajectory.
The drop control surface 410 has properties that act to reduce the velocity of the drops 420 and upon contact thereby transforming the stream of drops 420 from the breakup of jet 400 into a stream of slowed drops 430. As shown, the control surface 410 is substantially hydrophilic. However, the desired action of the drop control surface 410 to slow down of the drops 420 upon contact can be achieved using other properties of the drop control surface 410, for example, by modifying the surface roughness of the drop control surface 410.
As the drops 420 slow down upon contact with drop control surface 410 their spacing uniformly decreases while their volumes are preserved. The effective λ/D limit of the printing system (not shown) is therefore significantly increased, and the printing speed is proportionally increased. In this case, the impacting jet velocity can be greater than the maximum velocity allowed for drops landing on the receiver 450 (usually determined by the drop velocity at which drop ‘splattering’ occurs). Thus, the maximum fluid flow rate is increased over what would otherwise be possible.
As shown, drop control surface 510 is in the form of a cylinder 505 that is patterned with a plurality of modified surface regions 530 that have properties different than those of the unmodified surface regions 540 of drop control surface 510. The modified surface regions 530 have properties that act to perturb the jet 500 upon contact so as to cause the jet to break into drops 520. Drop control surface 510 is rotating counterclockwise as indicated by rotation arrow 550. The rotation of drop control surface 510 enables a plurality of modified surface regions 530 to contact the jet in a periodic fashion thereby stimulating jet breakup using a periodic perturbation which can be adjusted by varying the rotational speed of drop control surface 510.
The modified surface regions 530 are substantially hydrophilic and the unmodified surface regions 540 are hydrophobic. However, the modified surface regions 530 that cause the jet 500 to breakup into drops 520 upon contact can be achieved using other properties, for example, by modifying the surface roughness of the modified surface regions 530.
The drop control surface 610 is patterned with modified surface regions 620 that have properties different than those of the unmodified surface regions 640 of drop control surface 610. As shown, the modified surface regions 620 are substantially hydrophilic, while the unmodified surface regions 640 are substantially hydrophobic. The modified surface regions 620 are patterned in a periodic array where the spacing between modified regions can be adjusted to actively stimulate breakup of the fluid jet 600. It can be appreciated that other properties of modified surface regions 620 can be different from those of the unmodified surface regions 640 including differences in surface roughness, the presence of grooves, ridges, or combinations thereof.
The drop control surface 710 is patterned with modified surface regions 720 that have properties different than those of the unmodified surface regions 740 of drop control surface 710. As shown, the modified surface regions 720 are substantially hydrophilic, while the unmodified surface regions 740 are substantially hydrophobic. The modified surface regions 720 are patterned in a periodic array where the spacing between modified regions can be adjusted to actively simulate breakup of the fluid jet 700. It can be appreciated that other properties of modified surface regions 720 can be different from those of the unmodified surface regions 740 including differences in surface roughness, the presence of grooves, ridges, or combinations thereof.
The drop control surface 810 is patterned with modified surface regions 820 that have properties different than those of the unmodified surface regions 840 of drop control surface 810. As shown, the modified surface regions 820 are substantially hydrophilic, while the unmodified surface regions 840 are substantially hydrophobic. The modified surface regions 820 interact with the two fluid jets 800 upon contact such that adjacent jets or drops from adjacent jets are caused to merge to form a bigger drop 850 when compared to drops 830.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the scope of the invention.
10 printhead
11 fluid jet
12 drops
13 fluid jet
20 drop control device
21 drop control surface
22 gap regions
31 hydrophilic surface properties
32 hydrophobic surface properties
41 thin wires
51 electrode
52 electrode
53 electrode
54 electrode
58 mechanically controlled steering device
59 camshaft
60 shaft
61 spring
62 fixed location
63 profile
65 deflection device
66 gutter
67 piezo material
68 side
70 hydrophobic control surface
71 micromechanical actuator
80 surface
81 surface pattern
82 surface
85 control surface
86 airflow control mechanism
100 fluid jet
110 drop control surface
120 drops
130 modified surface regions
140 unmodified surface regions
150 arrow
200 fluid jet
210 drop control surface
220 drops
230 modified surface regions
240 unmodified surface regions
300 fluid jet
310 drop control surface
320 main drops
330 satellite drops
340 modified surface regions
350 unmodified surface regions
360 large drops
400 fluid jet
410 drop control surface
420 drops
430 slowed drops
440 receiver
450 receiver
500 fluid jet
510 drop control surface
520 drops
530 plurality of modified surface regions
540 unmodified surface regions
550 rotation arrow
600 fluid jet
610 drop control surface
620 modified surface regions
630 drops
640 unmodified surface regions
700 fluid jet
710 drop control surface
720 modified surface regions
730 drops
740 unmodified surface regions
750 printhead
800 fluid jets
810 drop control surface
820 modified surface regions
830 drops
840 unmodified surface regions
850 drop
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4249188 | Graf | Feb 1981 | A |
4264910 | Graf | Apr 1981 | A |
20020182747 | Beebe et al. | Dec 2002 | A1 |
20060216487 | Fukui | Sep 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 911 161 | Apr 1999 | EP |
WO 02062568 | Aug 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100259584 A1 | Oct 2010 | US |