1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to improving print quality for fluid-jet printers.
2. Description of Related Art
In fluid jet printing, the fluid ejecting head typically includes one or more fluid ejectors. Each ejector includes a channel that communicates with a fluid supply chamber, or manifold, at one end of the fluid ejector, and with an opening at the opposite end of the fluid ejector. The opening at the opposite end of the fluid ejector is generally referred to as a nozzle. Fluid is expelled from each nozzle by known printing processes, such as “drop-on-demand” printing or continuous stream printing.
In a fluid jet printing apparatus, the fluid ejecting head typically includes one or more linear arrays of fluid ejectors. The fluid ejecting head is moved relative to the surface of the receiving medium, either by moving the receiving medium relative to a stationary fluid ejecting head, or vice versa, or both. In known fluid jet printing devices, a fluid ejecting head reciprocates across a receiving medium numerous times in the course of printing an image. Each pass of the fluid ejecting head across the receiving medium is referred to as a swath. There may be one or more fluid ejecting heads, one or more fluids ejected from each head, or some combination of both.
As the fluid ejecting head and the receiving medium are moved relative to each other, image-type digital data is used to selectively activate the fluid ejectors in the fluid ejecting head to generate a desired image.
A ubiquitous challenge in fluid-jet printing technology is the proper placement of fluid, such as, for example, ink on the receiving medium. The many manifestations of spot misplacement have many root causes. One example is the fluid ejecting head tilt error. The fluid ejecting head tilt error occurs when a line printed on the receiving medium that is intended to be perpendicular to the reciprocating motion of the head is slightly off-angle. In some cases, improper mechanical placement of the fluid ejecting head with respect to the carriage motion is responsible. Misalignment causes the defect of jagged edges in vertical lines and vertical edges, as well as other non-horizontal lines, which can span multiple swaths. While correct mechanical placement of the head is essential, there is also a more subtle cause dependent on the carriage speed, the fluid ejector firing sequence, and the time needed to step through one cycle of the firing sequence.
In modern printing devices or any other fluid jet printer which has hundreds or thousands of fluid ejectors, simultaneous operation of all nozzles requires prohibitively high currents and data rates, and would likely cause high fluidic cross-talk, degrading print quality. As a result, not all fluid ejectors are fired simultaneously. Instead, the fluid ejectors are partitioned into blocks, where each block consists of one or a small number of fluid ejectors. The fluid ejectors in a single block are fired simultaneously, and the blocks are fired sequentially. Then, for a fluid ejecting head moving left to right, the fluid fired from the fluid ejectors fired early on in a firing sequence will land on the receiving medium to the left of the fluid fired from fluid ejectors that are fired later in the firing sequence.
If the line of fluid ejectors is mechanically aligned perpendicular to the carriage direction, and if the firing sequence is such that the fluid ejectors located on the top of the fluid ejecting head are fired before the fluid ejectors situated below and printing occurs left to right, then the line of printed pixels will have a left-bent lean, as opposed to being arranged as a perfectly straight vertical line, as desired. Alternatively, when printing right to left, a vertical line tilted to the right may result. Alternatively, when printing right to left, with fluid ejectors at the bottom of the head firing before fluid ejectors situated at the top, a vertical line tilted to the left results. The magnitudes of the leans in all three examples are equal. When printing in both left to right and right to left directions, those skilled in the art will pair the left-bent leans rather than mixing left-bent and right-bent leans and introducing another defect.
A simple left-bent lean can be compensated for by design in the mechanical alignment of the head and carriage. Mechanical mechanisms, such as screws or micrometers, are known in the art to adjust the fluid ejecting head tilt. However, macroscopic mechanical tolerances are typically of the order of a 0.001 inches or 25.4 microns. This accuracy is not sufficient for the high image quality required by today's standards. The electronic system proposed in this patent has sub-micron resolution. Moreover, electronic solutions avoid mechanical hysteresis problems and are often inexpensive to implement.
Furthermore, the printer may be utilized in several print modes which require multiple carriage speeds and/or multiple times for one cycle of the firing sequence. Changing either the carriage speed or the time for one cycle of the firing sequence results in a changed tilt angle. A mechanical tilt in the design can typically compensate for only one tilt angle, not multiple tilt angles. The electronic system described in this patent permits a range of tilt angle settings for use at any time.
Other electronic means of tilt adjustment are known to those skilled in the art. For example, rotating the input image data allows one to effectively tilt the printhead by one pixel horizontally for each vertical printhead swath, or multiples thereof. The systems and methods of this invention allow a much more precise adjustment.
The problem of tilted lines occurs in all conventional print-on-demand printers, thermal ink jet printers, piezo ink jet printers, full width array printers, and any type of fluid ejecting head having multiple jets or nozzles.
Therefore, a need exists for an economical and robust printing apparatus and method whereby fluid misplacement and misalignment issues may be corrected or compensated for a plurality of different fluid ejecting heads and of print modes to improve print quality.
This invention provides systems and methods for improving print quality for fluid jet printers by modifying the timing and/or firing sequence of one or more fluid ejectors on a fluid ejecting head.
This invention provides systems and methods for adjusting the tilt of a nominally vertical line of pixels printed by a fluid ejecting head.
This invention provides systems and methods for electronically changing the tilt of any fluid ejecting head. In various exemplary embodiments, the tilt adjustment is accomplished by measuring the current tilt of a particular fluid ejecting head, and by electronically compensating for the tilt. Tilt adjustment only has to be performed once in each print mode for each fluid ejecting head. Multiple tilt correction factors for each printhead can be determined and used as necessary.
This invention additionally provides systems and methods for variable compensation of mechanical tilt misalignment of a fluid ejecting head having a plurality of fluid ejectors. In various exemplary embodiments, the composition is achieved by incorporating switchable “dummy spacer” circuit elements into the fluid ejecting head firing sequence to control the amount of delay before one or more of the fluid ejectors are fired.
In various exemplary embodiments, systems and methods of this invention provide for dummy spacer circuit elements which determine whether an enable wave train is delayed by a particular variable length dummy spacer, or whether the enable wave train avoids a particular dummy spacer time delay and instead continues to next sequential block of fluid ejectors to be fired.
In various exemplary embodiments, systems and methods of this invention provide for dividing the fluid ejectors of a fluid ejecting head into one or more blocks or groups of one or more fluid ejectors each, inserting dummy spacer time delays of variable length between blocks of fluid ejectors, and generating a firing sequence for the fluid ejecting heads which marches through the dummy spacer time delays and blocks of fluid ejectors in sequence.
In various exemplary embodiments, systems and methods of this invention provide for adjusting the tilt of a fluid ejecting head by up to an arbitrary amount. In practice, this system could be used in conjunction with other means of tilt adjustment. For example, electronic image rotation has a resolution of about one or two pixels horizontally for every swath vertically, and this system has a sub-pixel resolution, which depends on system parameters such as the single jetting frequency and the bitshift rate, but can typically be as low as 0.001 pixels. A pixel refers to the fluid drop placement on a receiving medium resulting from the fastest firing of a single fluid ejector.
Various exemplary embodiments of this invention will be described in detail, with reference to the following figures, wherein:
For simplicity and clarification, the operating principles and design factors of various exemplary embodiments of the systems and methods according to this invention are explained with reference to one exemplary embodiment of a carriage-type fluid jet printer 100, as shown in
The fluid ejecting head 140 is mounted on a support base 152, which reciprocally moves along the swath axis D using any known or later-developed apparatus or device, such as two parallel guide rails 154. A cable 158 and a pair of pulleys 156 can be used to reciprocally move the fluid ejecting head 140 along the guide rails 154. One of the pulleys 156 can be powered by a reversible motor 159.
The fluid ejecting head 140 is generally moved across the receiving medium 122 perpendicularly to the direction the receiving medium 122 is moved by the motor 134. Of course, other structures for moving the carriage assembly 143 relative to the receiving medium 122 can be used without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention. For example, according to various exemplary embodiments, the receiving medium may be stationary, while a fluid ejecting head moves horizontally or vertically across the receiving medium. Moreover, the fluid ejectors in the fluid ejecting head may be lined up either vertically, horizontally, or both.
According to various other exemplary embodiments, the systems and methods of the present invention advantageously support a stationary fluid ejecting head and a moving receiving medium.
The fluid jet printer 100 is controlled by a print controller 200. The print controller 200 transmits commands to the motors 134 and 159 and to the fluid ejecting head 140 to produce a pattern of ejected fluid drops on the receiving medium 122. In particular, for an fluid jet printer, this pattern forms an image on an image receiving medium 122.
The input/output interface 210 allows the print controller 200 to receive the image data from the image data source 180 and process the image data in accordance with the printing systems and methods of this invention in order to eject fluid through the fluid ejecting head 140. The memory 230 stores image data for ejecting fluid onto the receiving medium. The memory 230 can include one or more of an input interface section 231, a current swath data section 232, and a next swath data section 233. The input interface section 231 stores image data input from the image data source 180. The current swath data section 232 stores current data related to, for example, the creation of a first print swath and/or a second print swath that will be printed by the fluid ejecting head 140. The next swath data 233 of the memory 230 stores the next print swath that will be printed by the fluid ejecting head 140.
User interface 250 is used to add, modify, or delete the fluid ejecting head tilt delay values in fluid ejecting head tilt delay value storage 240 using, for example, a print driver user interface to add, modify, replace, or delete the delay values.
A switch SW(j) on each dummy spacer determines whether an initiated enable wave train coming from previous block B(j) passes through the associated dummy spacer D(j) thereby creating a time delay, or continues without delay directly to next block B(j+1).
The timings for the dummy spacers, D1 to D(n−1), are variable. Each dummy spacer D(j) does not have to have the same delay time, and in fact, all D(j) may contain different time values, or a combination of similar and dissimilar time values.
In various exemplary embodiments, the time needed to fire all of the blocks of fluid ejectors ranges from n bitshifts for an exemplary embodiment in which all D(j) are switched off up to ((2*n)−1) bitshifts for an exemplary embodiment in which all D(j) are switched on and equal to one bitshift of delay.
Advantageously, dummy spacers D(j) allow a fine tuning of the time needed to step through one cycle of all the fluid ejectors. Since either or both of the fluid ejecting head carriage and the receiving medium moves as the fluid ejectors are firing, turning the time needed to step through one cycle of all the fluid ejectors advantageously results in a corresponding tuning of the tilt of a printed nominally vertical line.
According to various exemplary embodiments, there may be more than one dummy spacer per switch. Thus, for example, multiple dummy spacers may be grouped into a single subset controlled by a single switch. For example, with five switches, and where the total number of blocks equals n=26, for example, the dummy groups could be grouped into five subsets: {D1, D6, D11, D16, D21}, {D2, D7, D12, D17, D22}, {D3, D8, D13, D18, D23}, {D4, D9, D14, D19, D24}, and {D5, D10, D15, D20, D25}. With such a grouping of dummy spacers, each switch of the five switches has control over one of five subsets. If the delay time for each dummy spacer is set to 1 bitshift, the time needed for one firing of all the fluid ejectors will be n+0, n+5, n+10, n+15, n+20, and n+25 bitshifts, depending on whether 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 switches, respectively, are activated. Advantageously, six levels of equally or nearly equally spaced tilt control thereby result.
Since the delay times are always greater or equal to zero, the tilt adjustment is in one direction only. In order to utilize this invention with the maximum effectiveness, one may intentionally mechanically place the head in the carriage so that the nominal head needs, for example, 15 bitshifts of tilt adjustment. Then, there is latitude to shift the head in both directions by adjusting the delay times.
Typically, different print modes with different carriage speeds and/or different numbers of firing jets require different tilt corrections for a particular fluid ejecting head. Advantageously, the plurality of levels of programmable tilt adjustment possible with this invention provide an expedient and cost effective solution for adjusting the tilt of a fluid ejecting head.
Additionally, each fluid ejection head inserted into a fluid ejecting apparatus may be independently adjusted for tilt correction based on the specifications of a particular fluid ejecting head, the characteristics of a particular print mode, and/or a particular carriage speed.
According various other exemplary embodiments, the fluid ejectors in a block B(i) of fluid ejectors need not be sequentially arranged in fluid ejecting head. For example, any B(i) may include every second, or third, or fourth, etc., of sequentially arranged fluid ejectors physically located in fluid ejecting head. Alternately, a particular B(i) may include the first fluid ejector and the last fluid ejector in fluid ejecting head 140. Thus, the blocks of fluid ejectors may include any number or arrangement of fluid ejectors.
Referring to
Alternately, the dummy spacer delay times may be stored in a computer, and upon boot-up, the dummy spacer times would be transferred to the fluid jet printer 100 using, for example, a data cable or a wireless transfer device, which are both well known in the art.
In another embodiment, the dummy spacer delay settings D1 to D(n−1) may be stored in storage 240. An advantage to this embodiment is if the fluid jet 100 is moved and used with another computer, then the dummy spacer delay settings D1 to D(n−1) times are not lost.
Once the printing apparatus determines which delay times to use, the printing apparatus programs these delay times into the fluid ejecting head 140. Delay times may be stored in the firmware and then loaded into the head upon demand.
According to various exemplary embodiments, dummy spacers D(j) may be implemented by, for example, electronics in fluid ejecting head 140.
In various exemplary embodiments, the first row of the matrix may have all dummy spacers equal to zero seconds, i.e., no time delay. The second row have, for example, D1 equal to 1 bitshift, and D2 . . . D(n−1) all equal to zero bitshifts. The third row may have, for example, D1=D2=1 bitshifts, and D3 . . . D(n−1) all equal to zero bitshifts. Further rows may be similarly generated or inputted for any of the possible timing possibilities. It should be appreciated that all of D1 . . . D(n−1) may be assigned similar or distinct time delays of any value, with no limitations imposed thereon.
Next in step S510, at least one data set is generated or inputted. The at least one data set may include, for example, images, text, pixel data, full pixel swath data, and/or, according to various exemplary embodiments, nominally vertical line data. The method then proceeds to step S520, where the at least one data set is printed a plurality of different times—with each printing using a different row of dummy spacer time values D1 . . . D(n−1) from the matrix generated or input at step S500. Thus, according to various exemplary embodiments, the number of printings of the at least one data set is equal to the number of plurality of different dummy spacer time values D1 . . . D(n−1), although it should be appreciated that more or less printings may be alternatively be utilized effectively.
Once the data set(s) are printed, the method continues to step S530, where a determination is made as to which of the plurality of different dummy spacer time values produce the most accurately printed data set. Hence, step S530 identifies the printed data set and associated dummy spacer time values with the least amount (if any) of fluid-spot misplacement. In various exemplary embodiments, this determination may be made by a determination unit which scans and digitizes the printed data sets and determines, based on the angle of the printed vertical lines, for example, which printed data set and associated dummy spacer time values produces the most accurately printed vertical lines, i.e., those vertical lines which are closest to being printed 90 degrees from the horizontal axis.
According to various alternative exemplary embodiments, optimum dummy spacer time values are determined by printing out multiple full-pixel swaths at step S520 using the plurality of dummy spacer time values, and scanning in each full-pixel swath and detecting with the determining unit at step S530, which dummy spacer time values produce a full-pixel swath which is closest to a perfect rectangle.
According to various other exemplary embodiments, the optimum dummy spacer time values at step S530 may be determined by printing out an alignment page using the plurality of dummy spacer time values (at step S520) visually examining the alignment page, and then selecting the settings corresponding to the lines which look the most vertical.
From step S530, processing proceeds to step S540, wherein the determined optimal dummy spacer time values are downloaded into fluid ejecting head, so that at step S550, future printings of swath data using the determined optimal dummy spacer time values may be as accurate to the representative pixels in the swath data as possible.
In another embodiment of the method, a single data set is printed. The determination unit scans the printed data set, measures the angles of the lines or data therein, and calculates the optimal dummy spacer time values. The optimal dummy spacer time values are then stored or transferred into the fluid ejecting head.
In another embodiment of the method, an optical, electronic, or mechanical measurement system is utilized to measure the physical positions of two or more fluid ejectors. The tilt of the fluid ejector head can then be calculated, and the optimal dummy spacer time values determined. This measurement system can be contained within or be independent of the fluid jet printer.
In another embodiment of the method, an optical, electronic, or mechanical drop detection device is utilized to measure the position of the ejected fluid from two or more fluid ejectors. The tilt of the fluid ejector head can then be calculated, and the optimal dummy spacer time values determined. This measurement system can be contained within or be independent of the fluid jet printer.
Any of the methods described above may be repeated for each printhead and/or each print mode in order to determine the optimal adjustment factors for each printhead and/or each print mode.
While this invention has been described in conjunction with the specific exemplary embodiments outlined above, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the exemplary embodiments of the invention, as set forth above, are intended to be illustrative, not limiting. Various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6126261 | Yamanaka | Oct 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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2000-263770 | Sep 2000 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050146547 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |