The present invention is directed to electronic digital printing devices. More particularly, one embodiment of the present invention is directed to a dual input bi-directional printhead driver integrated circuit.
Many electronic digital printers apply print characters to paper via multiple exposure elements of an exposure device. In some printers, such as the NexPress 2100 from NexPress Solutions LLC, the exposure elements are light emitting diodes (“LEDs”) and the exposure device is an LED printhead.
The LEDs are typically controlled by a printhead driver integrated circuit (“IC”). Each driver IC may control many LEDs, and a printer may include multiple driver ICs.
From the viewpoint of the host data board driver, the number of loads being driven by each data line on board 10 to the driver ICs is very high, since many driver ICs connect to the data traces in parallel and each data line has different signal path lengths. A transmission line analysis of printing systems that include board 10 shows complicated waveform reflections as a result of the uneven paths and unmatched lengths. This causes data speed limitations as well as excessive electromagnetic interference (“EMI”) emissions.
The large number of wire bonds, as well as the long and unmatched in length signal paths on board 10 limit the speed of operation for high-speed data transmission. The parallel traces and the high number of wire bonds also add significant cost to the manufacturing materials and processes.
As the demand for higher speed operation of exposure devices such as LED printheads continues to rise, the need for higher speed transmission of data to the drivers also rises. Further, as the speed of transmission rises, EMI emissions also rise.
Based on the foregoing, there is a need for an improved printhead driver IC and data transfer method that allows for higher data transmission speed, with reduced EMI emissions.
The present invention is a driver IC for a printhead that includes a first set of data side input/output pads and a second set of data side input/output pads. The driver IC further includes circuitry that is adapted to selecting that data will be input at the first set of pads and output at the second set of pads. The driver IC may also include a third set of front input pads. The circuitry can select any of three inputs and select either of two outputs to achieve a desired direction of data flow—right to left or left to right.
The use of side data bussing allows for more efficient connection of multiple drivers and also helps accomplish an increased speed demand with lower EMI emissions.
One embodiment of the present invention is a printhead driver IC that includes side data bussing and bi-directional data flow. The use of side data bussing allows for more efficient connection of multiple drivers and also helps accomplish an increased speed demand with lower EMI emissions.
In one embodiment, each driver IC on board 40 is coupled to 96 LEDs, and each driver IC is approximately ⅓ inch long. Therefore, in most embodiments board 40 will include many driver ICs to form the entire width of the printhead.
In one embodiment, each driver IC on board 40 includes logic circuitry for selecting whether host data will be transmitted on the front or on the sides, as well as whether the data will flow from left to right, or from right to left. Driver ICs 50, 60, includes an input pad for a right token selection (pad 56) and a left token selection (pad 55). Driver ICs further include an input pad for an SCLK clock input (pad 57).
Token selection is used for token control, which is direction control of data loading inside driver ICs 50, 60. Data for multiple exposure elements is passed from right to left or left to right in a serial fashion so that multiple exposure element registers can be loaded by one external data path. The token shifts by one element on every SCLK transition.
Bit-0 controls the data flow direction. When set to zero the loading data flows from the right end of the driver IC to the left end. When set to one the loading data flows from the left end of the IC to the right end.
Bit-1 selects the input data source pins. When bit-1 is set to zero the side pins become the input data source. If bit-0 is zero then the right side pins become the input data path (“DataRight”) and the data exits out the left side pins (“DataLeft”). If bit-0 is one then the left side pins become the input data path (“DataLeft”) and the data exits out the right side pins (“DataRight”). When bit-1 set to one the front pins become the input data source. If bit-0 is zero then the front pins become the input data path (“DataFront”) and the data exits out the left side pins (“DataLeft”). If bit-0 is one then the front pins become the input data path and the data exits out the right side pins (“DataRight”).
The table below summarizes the functionality of control register 70.
The input data source can be any of three sources: side data (“DataLeft” or “DataRight”), or “DataFront” selected by bits 0 and 1 of Control register 112. Output data is either “DataLeft” or “DataRight” dictated by bit-0 of Control register 112. Token control is cascaded from the first data latch register to the last data latch register for each element within the driver ICs.
Token control is passed from the IC TOKEN output pad of the previous driver IC to the IC TOKEN input pad of the next driver IC connected to the chain. LTOKEN and RTOKEN are also bi-directional with input/output dictated by the direction bit. When bit-0 is zero, RTOKEN is the input token and LTOKEN is the output token pin. When bit-0 is one the reverse is true. RTOKEN DELAY 122 and LTOKEN DELAY 120 are flip-flops that keep the DATA and SCLK inputs in synchronization up through the exit points of the IC.
As described, embodiments of the present invention have a dual input selection (either front input or one of the sides input) that provides flexibility so that the driver IC to be used for a broader number of applications. The use of side data bussing to the driver IC allows for more efficient connection of multiple drivers and also helps accomplish increased speed demand with lower EMI emissions. As shown in
In addition, embodiments of the present invention result in reduced loading on the host-driving component. Only the first driver needs to be driven directly by the host data path system. Each data bus connection from the host interface pads to the first IC are of similar length, as well as each connection set from IC to IC. This vastly improves the achievable data speeds and eliminates the stub like multiple connections shown in the prior art in
In addition, embodiments of the present invention greatly increase data flow options. Breaking down the substrate into multiple sections helps achieve faster data rates. Data can enter sections of the driver ICs from front pads or side pads or any combination that maximizes the efficiency of the physical layout. The multiple input source flexibility allows for better ease of sectioning the substrate while at the same time using methods of data bussing that lower EMI emissions.
The side-to-side pin data flow in embodiments of the present invention produces several advantages over the front pin architecture. Loading and current requirements of the host board data-driving components is greatly reduced. One load per bit is driven versus multiple loads, which reduces the current required to drive the transmission lines. EMI is greatly reduced due to single load connection, shorter signal paths and with much closer matched signal lengths. Signal paths are point-to-point connection instead of parallel busses with multiple stub-like connections.
In addition, with embodiments of the present invention reliability is improved and cost of manufacturing is reduced due to reduction of point-to-point connections required. Using side to side bussing vs. front connection can attain at least a 50% reduction of connections.
Further, in embodiments where the side pins are bi-directional and a selection of direction is made by use of a software accessible control bit, the driver IC can be used on a two-sided substrate where each side has an opposite direction of data flow. Further, more flexibility of data connection can be accomplished in embodiments of the present invention by also implementing the front pins. By allowing selection of front data inputs or side data inputs by use of a software accessible control bit, the driver IC can be used for many applications. Because data can be driven from the driver IC paths through the front or side pins, one driver IC can be compatible with multiple print head designs. The dual pin selection can be used for any combination of location inputs and could easily be expanded to more than two selections.
Several embodiments of the present invention are specifically illustrated and/or described herein. However, it will be appreciated that modifications and variations of the present invention are covered by the above teachings and within the purview of the appended claims without departing from the spirit and intended scope of the invention.
Reference is made to and priority claimed from U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/531,920, filed Dec. 23, 2003, entitled DUAL INPUT BI-DIRECTIONAL PRINTHEAD DRIVER INTEGRATED CIRCUIT.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050200661 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60531920 | Dec 2003 | US |