Fluid ejection device with a through-chip micro-electromechanical actuator

Abstract
A fluid ejection device includes a substrate that defines a plurality of nozzle chambers. A drive circuitry layer is positioned on one side of the substrate and contains drive circuitry. A structural layer is positioned on an opposite side of the substrate and defines a plurality of ink ejection ports in fluid communication with respective nozzle chambers. A plurality of micro-electromechanical actuators is fast at one end with the substrate and extends into respective nozzle chambers. Each actuator comprises an actuating member that is connected to the drive circuitry and anchored at one end to the substrate. Each actuating member is displaceable between a quiescent position and an active position to eject fluid from the respective ejection ports.
Description
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

Not applicable.


FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to ink jet printing and in particular discloses a shape memory alloy ink jet printer.


The present invention further relates to the field of drop on demand ink jet printing.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Many different types of printing have been invented, a large number of which are presently in use. The known forms of print have a variety of methods for marking the print media with a relevant marking media. Commonly used forms of printing include offset printing, laser printing and copying devices, dot matrix type impact printers, thermal paper printers, film recorders, thermal wax printers, dye sublimation printers and ink jet printers both of the drop on demand and continuous flow type. Each type of printer has its own advantages and problems when considering cost, speed, quality, reliability, simplicity of construction and operation etc.


In recent years, the field of ink jet printing, wherein each individual pixel of ink is derived from one or more ink nozzles has become increasingly popular primarily due to its inexpensive and versatile nature.


Many different techniques on ink jet printing have been invented. For a survey of the field, reference is made to an article by J Moore, “Non-Impact Printing: Introduction and Historical Perspective”, Output Hard Copy Devices, Editors R Dubeck and S Sherr, pages 207-220 (1988).


Ink Jet printers themselves come in many different types. The utilisation of a continuous stream ink in ink jet printing appears to date back to at least 1929 wherein U.S. Pat. No. 1,941,001 by Hansell discloses a simple form of continuous stream electro-static ink jet printing.


U.S. Pat. No. 3,596,275 by Sweet also discloses a process of a continuous ink jet printing including the step wherein the ink jet stream is modulated by a high frequency electro-static field so as to cause drop separation. This technique is still utilized by several manufacturers including Elmjet and Scitex (see also U.S. Pat. No. 3,373,437 by Sweet et al)


Piezoelectric ink jet printers are also one form of commonly utilized ink jet printing device. Piezoelectric systems are disclosed by Kyser et. al. in U.S. Pat. No. 3,946,398 (1970) which utilizes a diaphragm mode of operation, by Zolten in U.S. Pat. No. 3,683,212 (1970) which discloses a squeeze mode of operation of a piezoelectric crystal, Stemme in U.S. Pat. No. 3,747,120 (1972) discloses a bend mode of piezoelectric operation, Howkins in U.S. Pat. No. 4,459,601 discloses a piezoelectric push mode actuation of the ink jet stream and Fischbeck in U.S. Pat. No. 4,584,590 which discloses a shear mode type of piezoelectric transducer element.


Recently, thermal ink jet printing has become an extremely popular form of ink jet printing. The ink jet printing techniques include those disclosed by Endo et al in GB 2007162 (1979) and Vaught et al in U.S. Pat. No. 4,490,728. Both the aforementioned references disclosed ink jet printing techniques rely upon the activation of an electrothermal actuator which results in the creation of a bubble in a constricted space, such as a nozzle, which thereby causes the ejection of ink from an aperture connected to the confined space onto a relevant print media. Printing devices utilizing the electro-thermal-actuator are manufactured by manufacturers such as Canon and Hewlett Packard.


As can be seen from the foregoing, many different types of printing technologies are available. Ideally, a printing technology should have a number of desirable attributes. These include inexpensive construction and operation, high speed operation, safe and continuous long term operation etc. Each technology may have its own advantages and disadvantages in the areas of cost, speed, quality, reliability, power usage, simplicity of construction operation, durability and consumables.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is an object of the present invention to provide for a new form of ink jet printing device that utilizes a shape memory alloy in its activation method.


According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a micro-electromechanical fluid ejection mechanism, the fluid ejection mechanism comprising:

    • a substrate that incorporates drive circuitry;
    • a nozzle chamber structure arranged on the substrate to define a nozzle chamber and a fluid ejection port in fluid communication with the nozzle chamber; and
    • an actuator that is fast at one end with the substrate and that extends into the nozzle chamber, the actuator comprising:
      • an actuating member that is connected to the drive circuitry and anchored at one end to the substrate, the actuating member being displaceable between a quiescent position and an active position to eject fluid from the ejection port, at least a portion of the actuating member being of a shape memory alloy which is configured so that, when the shape memory alloy makes a phase transformation, the actuating member is displaced between the quiescent and active positions, the actuating member being connected to the drive circuitry so that the shape memory alloy can be heated above its phase change temperature on receipt of an electrical signal from the drive circuitry.


The actuating member may incorporate a heating circuit of the shape memory alloy, the heating circuit being connected to the drive circuitry of the substrate.


The actuating member may be a laminated structure, with the heater circuit defining one layer of the actuating member.


The actuating member may include a pre-stressing layer positioned on, and mechanically fast with, the heating circuit. The shape memory alloy may have a generally planar form when in the austenitic phase and the pre-stressing layer may serve to curl the actuating member away from the ejection port when the shape memory alloy is in the martensitic phase such that, when heated, the shape memory alloy drives the actuating member into a planar form, thereby ejecting a drop of ink from the ejection port.


The shape memory alloy may be a nickel titanium alloy. The pre-stressing layer may be high stress silicon nitride.


The heating circuit may be interposed between the pre-stressing layer and a stress reference layer for the pre-stressing layer.


The nozzle chamber structure may be defined by the substrate as a result of an etching process carried out on the substrate, such that one of the layers of the substrate defines the ejection port on one side of the substrate and the actuator is positioned on an opposite side of the substrate.


According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of ejecting ink from a chamber comprising the steps of: a) providing a cantilevered beam actuator incorporating a shape memory alloy; and b) transforming said shape memory alloy from its martensitic phase to its austenitic phase or vice versa to cause the ink to eject from said chamber. Further, the actuator comprises a conductive shape memory alloy panel in a quiescent state and which transfers to an ink ejection state upon heating thereby causing said ink ejection from the chamber. Preferably, the heating occurs by means of passing a current through the shape memory alloy. The chamber is formed from a crystallographic etch of a silicon wafer so as to have one surface of the chamber substantially formed by the actuator. Advantageously, the actuator is formed from a conductive shape memory alloy arranged in a serpentine form and is attached to one wall of the chamber opposite a nozzle port from which ink is ejected. Further, the nozzle port is formed by the back etching of a silicon wafer to the epitaxial layer and etching a nozzle port hole in the epitaxial layer. The crystallographic etch includes providing side wall slots of non-etched layers of a processed silicon wafer so as to the extend the dimensions of the chamber as a result of the crystallographic etch process. Preferably, the shape memory alloy comprises nickel titanium alloy.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Notwithstanding any other forms which may fall within the scope of the present invention, preferred forms of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings which:



FIG. 1 is an exploded perspective view of a single ink jet nozzle as constructed in accordance with the preferred embodiment;



FIG. 2 is a top cross sectional view of a single ink jet nozzle in its quiescent state taken along line A-A in FIG. 1;



FIG. 3 is a top cross sectional view of a single ink jet nozzle in its actuated state taken along line A-A in FIG. 1;



FIG. 4 provides a legend of the materials indicated in FIG. 5 to 15; and



FIG. 5 to FIG. 15 illustrate sectional views of the manufacturing steps in one form of construction of an ink jet printhead nozzle.




DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED AND OTHER EMBODIMENTS

In the preferred embodiment, shape memory materials are utilised to construct an actuator suitable for injecting ink from the nozzle of an ink chamber.


Turning to FIG. 1, there is illustrated an exploded perspective view 10 of a single ink jet nozzle as constructed in accordance with the preferred embodiment. The ink jet nozzle 10 is constructed from a silicon wafer base utilizing back etching of the wafer to a boron doped epitaxial layer. Hence, the ink jet nozzle 10 comprises a lower layer 11 which is constructed from boron doped silicon. The boron doped silicon layer is also utilized a crystallographic etch stop layer. The next layer comprises the silicon layer 12 that includes a crystallographic pit 13 having side walls etched at the usual angle of 54.74. The layer 12 also includes the various required circuitry and transistors for example, CMOS layer (not shown). After this, a 0.5 micron thick thermal silicon oxide layer 15 is grown on top of the silicon wafer 12.


After this, comes various layers which can comprise a two level metal CMOS process layers which provide the metal interconnect for the CMOS transistors formed within the layer 12. The various metal pathways etc. are not shown in FIG. 1 but for two metal interconnects 18, 19 which provide interconnection between a shape memory alloy layer 20 and the CMOS metal layers 16. The shape memory metal layer is next and is shaped in the form of a serpentine coil to be heated by end interconnect/via portions 21,23. A top nitride layer 22 is provided for overall passivation and protection of lower layers in addition to providing a means of inducing tensile stress to curl upwards the shape memory alloy layer 20 in its quiescent state.


The preferred embodiment relies upon the thermal transition of a shape memory alloy 20 (SMA) from its martensitic phase to its austenitic phase. The basis of a shape memory effect is a martensitic transformation which creates a polydemane phase upon cooling. This polydemane phase accommodates finite reversible mechanical deformations without significant changes in the mechanical self energy of the system. Hence, upon re-transformation to the austenitic state the system returns to its former macroscopic state to displaying the well known mechanical memory. The thermal transition is achieved by passing an electrical current through the SMA. The actuator layer 20 is suspended at the entrance to a nozzle chamber connected via leads 18, 19 to the lower layers.


In FIG. 2, there is shown a cross-section of a single nozzle 10 when in its quiescent state, the section basically being taken through the line A-A of FIG. 1. The actuator 30 is bent away from the nozzle when in its quiescent state. In FIG. 3, there is shown a corresponding cross-section for a single nozzle 10 when in an actuated state. When energized, the actuator 30 straightens, with the corresponding result that the ink is pushed out of the nozzle. The process of energizing the actuator 30 requires supplying enough energy to raise the SMA above its transition temperature, and to provide the latent heat of transformation to the SMA 20.


Obviously, the SMA martensitic phase must be pre-stressed to achieve a different shape from the austenitic phase. For printheads with many thousands of nozzles, it is important to achieve this pre-stressing in a bulk manner. This is achieved by depositing the layer of silicon nitride 22 using Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapour Deposition (PECVD) at around 300° C. over the SMA layer. The deposition occurs while the SMA is in the austenitic shape. After the printhead cools to room temperature the substrate under the SMA bend actuator is removed by chemical etching of a sacrificial substance. The silicon nitride layer 22 is under tensile stress, and causes the actuator to curl upwards. The weak martensitic phase of the SMA provides little resistance to this curl. When the SMA is heated to its austenitic phase, it returns to the flat shape into which it was annealed during the nitride deposition. The transformation being rapid enough to result in the ejection of ink from the nozzle chamber.


There is one SMA bend actuator 30 for each nozzle. One end 31 of the SMA bend actuator is mechanically connected to the substrate. The other end is free to move under the stresses inherent in the layers.


Returning to FIG. 1 the actuator layer is therefore composed of three layers:

    • 1. An SiO2 lower layer 15. This layer acts as a stress ‘reference’ for the nitride tensile layer. It also protects the SMA from the crystallographic silicon etch that forms the nozzle chamber. This layer can be formed as part of the standard CMOS process for the active electronics of the printhead.
    • 2. A SMA heater layer 20. A SMA such as nickel titanium (NiTi) alloy is deposited and etched into a serpentine form to increase the electrical resistance.
    • 3. A silicon nitride top layer 22. This is a thin layer of high stiffness which is deposited using PECVD. The nitride stoichiometry is adjusted to achieve a layer with significant tensile stress at room temperature relative to the SiO2 lower layer. Its purpose is to bend the actuator at the low temperature martensitic phase.


As noted previously the ink jet nozzle of FIG. 1 can be constructed by utilizing a silicon wafer having a buried boron epitaxial layer. The 0.5 micron thick dioxide layer 15 is then formed having side slots 45 which are utilized in a subsequent crystallographic etch. Next, the various CMOS layers 16 are formed including drive and control circuitry (not shown). The SMA layer 20 is then created on top of layers 15/16 and being interconnected with the drive circuitry. Subsequently, a silicon nitride layer 22 is formed on top. Each of the layers 15, 16, 22 include the various slots eg. 45 which are utilized in a subsequent crystallographic etch. The silicon wafer is subsequently thinned by means of back etching with the etch stop being the boron layer 11. Subsequent boron etching forms the nozzle hole eg. 47 and rim 46 (FIG. 3). Subsequently, the chamber proper is formed by means of a crystallographic etch with the slots 45 defining the extent of the etch within the silicon oxide layer 12.


A large array of nozzles can be formed on the same wafer which in turn is attached to an ink chamber for filling the nozzle chambers.


One form of detailed manufacturing process which can be used to fabricate monolithic ink jet printheads operating in accordance with the principles taught by the present embodiment can proceed utilizing the following steps:

    • 1. Using a double sided polished wafer deposit 3 microns of epitaxial silicon heavily doped with boron.
    • 2. Deposit 10 microns of epitaxial silicon, either p-type or n-type, depending upon the CMOS process used.
    • 3. Complete drive transistors, data distribution, and timing circuits using a 0.5 micron, one poly, 2 metal CMOS process. This step is shown in FIG. 5. For clarity, these diagrams may not be to scale, and may not represent a cross section though any single plane of the nozzle. FIG. 4 is a key to representations of various materials in these manufacturing diagrams, and those of other cross referenced ink jet configurations.
    • 4. Etch the CMOS oxide layers down to silicon or aluminum using Mask 1. This mask defines the nozzle chamber, and the edges of the printheads chips. This step is shown in FIG. 6.
    • 5. Crystallographically etch the exposed silicon using, for example, KOH or EDP (ethylenediamine pyrocatechol). This etch stops on <111> crystallographic planes, and on the boron doped silicon buried layer. This step is shown in FIG. 7.
    • 6. Deposit 12 microns of sacrificial material. Planarize down to oxide using CMP. The sacrificial material temporarily fills the nozzle cavity. This step is shown in FIG. 8.
    • 7. Deposit 0.1 microns of high stress silicon nitride (Si3N4).
    • 8. Etch the nitride layer using Mask 2. This mask defines the contact vias from the shape memory heater to the second-level metal contacts.
    • 9. Deposit a seed layer.
    • 10. Spin on 2 microns of resist, expose with Mask 3, and develop. This mask defines the shape memory wire embedded in the paddle. The resist acts as an electroplating mold. This step is shown in FIG. 9.
    • 11. Electroplate 1 micron of Nitinol. Nitinol is a ‘shape memory’ alloy of nickel and titanium, developed at the Naval Ordnance Laboratory in the US (hence Ni—Ti-NOL). A shape memory alloy can be thermally switched between its weak martensitic state and its high stiffness austenic state.
    • 12. Strip the resist and etch the exposed seed layer. This step is shown in FIG. 10.
    • 13. Wafer probe. All electrical connections are complete at this point, bond pads are accessible, and the chips are not yet separated.
    • 14. Deposit 0.1 microns of high stress silicon nitride. High stress nitride is used so that once the sacrificial material is etched, and the paddle is released, the stress in the nitride layer will bend the relatively weak martensitic phase of the shape memory alloy. As the shape memory alloy—in its austenic phase—is flat when it is annealed by the relatively high temperature deposition of this silicon nitride layer, it will return to this flat state when electrothermally heated.
    • 15. Mount the wafer on a glass blank and back-etch the wafer using KOH with no mask. This etch thins the wafer and stops at the buried boron doped silicon layer. This step is shown in FIG. 11.
    • 16. Plasma back-etch the boron doped silicon layer to a depth of 1 micron using Mask 4. This mask defines the nozzle rim. This step is shown in FIG. 12.
    • 17. Plasma back-etch through the boron doped layer using Mask 5. This mask defines the nozzle, and the edge of the chips. At this stage, the chips are still mounted on the glass blank. This step is shown in FIG. 13.
    • 18. Strip the adhesive layer to detach the chips from the glass blank. Etch the sacrificial layer. This process completely separates the chips. This step is shown in FIG. 14.
    • 19. Mount the printheads in their packaging, which may be a molded plastic former incorporating ink channels which supply different colors of ink to the appropriate regions of the front surface of the wafer.
    • 20. Connect the printheads to their interconnect systems.
    • 21. Hydrophobize the front surface of the printheads.
    • 22. Fill with ink and test the completed printheads. A filled nozzle is shown in FIG. 15.


It would be appreciated by a person skilled in the art that numerous variations and/or modifications may be made to the present invention as shown in the specific embodiment without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as broadly described. The present embodiment is, therefore, to be considered in all respects to be illustrative and not restrictive.


The presently disclosed ink jet printing technology is potentially suited to a wide range of printing systems including: color and monochrome office printers, short run digital printers, high speed digital printers, offset press supplemental printers, low cost scanning printers, high speed pagewidth printers, notebook computers with inbuilt pagewidth printers, portable color and monochrome printers, color and monochrome copiers, color and monochrome facsimile machines, combined printer, facsimile and copying machines, label printers, large format plotters, photograph copiers, printers for digital photographic ‘minilabs’, video printers, PHOTO CD (PHOTO CD is a registered trademark of the Eastman Kodak Company) printers, portable printers for PDAs, wallpaper printers, indoor sign printers, billboard printers, fabric printers, camera printers and fault tolerant commercial printer arrays.


Ink Jet Technologies


The embodiments of the invention use an ink jet printer type device. Of course many different devices could be used. However presently popular ink jet printing technologies are unlikely to be suitable.


The most significant problem with thermal ink jet is power consumption. This is approximately 100 times that required for high speed, and stems from the energy-inefficient means of drop ejection. This involves the rapid boiling of water to produce a vapor bubble which expels the ink. Water has a very high heat capacity, and must be superheated in thermal ink jet applications. This leads to an efficiency of around 0.02%, from electricity input to drop momentum (and increased surface area) out.


The most significant problem with piezoelectric ink jet is size and cost. Piezoelectric crystals have a very small deflection at reasonable drive voltages, and therefore require a large area for each nozzle. Also, each piezoelectric actuator must be connected to its drive circuit on a separate substrate. This is not a significant problem at the current limit of around 300 nozzles per printhead, but is a major impediment to the fabrication of pagewidth printheads with 19,200 nozzles.


Ideally, the ink jet technologies used meet the stringent requirements of in-camera digital color printing and other high quality, high speed, low cost printing applications. To meet the requirements of digital photography, new ink jet technologies have been created. The target features include:

    • low power (less than 10 Watts)
    • high resolution capability (1,600 dpi or more)
    • photographic quality output
    • low manufacturing cost
    • small size (pagewidth times minimum cross section)
    • high speed (<2 seconds per page).


All of these features can be met or exceeded by the ink jet systems described below with differing levels of difficulty. Forty-five different ink jet technologies have been developed by the Assignee to give a wide range of choices for high volume manufacture. These technologies form part of separate applications assigned to the present Assignee as set out in the table under the heading Cross References to Related Applications.


The ink jet designs shown here are suitable for a wide range of digital printing systems, from battery powered one-time use digital cameras, through to desktop and network printers, and through to commercial printing systems.


For ease of manufacture using standard process equipment, the printhead is designed to be a monolithic 0.5 micron CMOS chip with MEMS post processing. For color photographic applications, the printhead is 100 mm long, with a width which depends upon the ink jet type. The smallest printhead designed is IJ38, which is 0.35 mm wide, giving a chip area of 35 square mm. The printheads each contain 19,200 nozzles plus data and control circuitry.


Ink is supplied to the back of the print head by injection molded plastic ink channels. The molding requires 50 micron features, which can be created using a lithographically micromachined insert in a standard injection molding tool. Ink flows through holes etched through the wafer to the nozzle chambers fabricated on the front surface of the wafer. The printhead is connected to the camera circuitry by tape automated bonding.


Tables of Drop-on-Demand Ink Jets


Eleven important characteristics of the fundamental operation of individual ink jet nozzles have been identified. These characteristics are largely orthogonal, and so can be elucidated as an eleven dimensional matrix. Most of the eleven axes of this matrix include entries developed by the present assignee.


The following tables form the axes of an eleven dimensional table of ink jet types.

    • Actuator mechanism (18 types)
    • Basic operation mode (7 types)
    • Auxiliary mechanism (8 types)
    • Actuator amplification or modification method (17 types)
    • Actuator motion (19 types)
    • Nozzle refill method (4 types)
    • Method of restricting back-flow through inlet (10 types)
    • Nozzle clearing method (9 types)
    • Nozzle plate construction (9 types)
    • Drop ejection direction (5 types)
    • Ink type (7 types)


The complete eleven dimensional table represented by these axes contains 36.9 billion possible configurations of ink jet nozzle. While not all of the possible combinations result in a viable ink jet technology, many million configurations are viable. It is clearly impractical to elucidate all of the possible configurations. Instead, certain ink jet types have been investigated in detail. These are designated IJ01 to IJ45 which match the docket numbers in the table under the heading Cross Referenced to Related Application.


Other ink jet configurations can readily be derived from these forty-five examples by substituting alternative configurations along one or more of the 11 axes. Most of the IJ01 to IJ45 examples can be made into ink jet printheads with characteristics superior to any currently available ink jet technology.


Where there are prior art examples known to the inventor, one or more of these examples are listed in the examples column of the tables below. The IJ01 to IJ45 series are also listed in the examples column. In some cases, a print technology may be listed more than once in a table, where it shares characteristics with more than one entry.


Suitable applications for the ink jet technologies include: Home printers, Office network printers, Short run digital printers, Commercial print systems, Fabric printers, Pocket printers, Internet WWW printers, Video printers, Medical imaging, Wide format printers, Notebook PC printers, Fax machines, Industrial printing systems, Photocopiers, Photographic minilabs etc.


The information associated with the aforementioned 11 dimensional matrix are set out in the following tables.

ACTUATOR MECHANISM (APPLIED ONLY TO SELECTED INK DROPS)DescriptionAdvantagesDisadvantagesExamplesThermalAn electrothermalLarge forceHigh powerCanon Bubblejetbubbleheater heats the ink togeneratedInk carrier1979 Endo et al GBabove boiling point,Simplelimited to waterpatent 2,007,162transferring significantconstructionLow efficiencyXerox heater-in-heat to the aqueousNo moving partsHighpit 1990 Hawkins etink. A bubbleFast operationtemperaturesal U.S. Pat. No. 4,899,181nucleates and quicklySmall chip arearequiredHewlett-Packardforms, expelling therequired for actuatorHigh mechanicalTIJ 1982 Vaught etink.stressal U.S. Pat. No. 4,490,728The efficiency of theUnusualprocess is low, withmaterials requiredtypically less thanLarge drive0.05% of the electricaltransistorsenergy beingCavitation causestransformed intoactuator failurekinetic energy of theKogation reducesdrop.bubble formationLarge print headsare difficult tofabricatePiezoelectricA piezoelectric crystalLow powerVery large areaKyser et al U.S. Pat. No.such as leadconsumptionrequired for actuator3,946,398lanthanum zirconateMany ink typesDifficult toZoltan U.S. Pat. No.(PZT) is electricallycan be usedintegrate with3,683,212activated, and eitherFast operationelectronics1973 Stemmeexpands, shears, orHigh efficiencyHigh voltageU.S. Pat. No. 3,747,120bends to applydrive transistorsEpson Styluspressure to the ink,requiredTektronixejecting drops.Full pagewidthIJ04print headsimpractical due toactuator sizeRequireselectrical poling inhigh field strengthsduring manufactureElectrostrictiveAn electric field isLow powerLow maximumSeiko Epson,used to activateconsumptionstrain (approx.Usui et all JPelectrostriction inMany ink types0.01%)253401/96relaxor materials suchcan be usedLarge areaIJ04as lead lanthanumLow thermalrequired for actuatorzirconate titanateexpansiondue to low strain(PLZT) or leadElectric fieldResponse speedmagnesium niobatestrength requiredis marginal (˜10 μs)(PMN).(approx. 3.5 V/μm)High voltagecan be generateddrive transistorswithout difficultyrequiredDoes not requireFull pagewidthelectrical polingprint headsimpractical due toactuator sizeFerroelectricAn electric field isLow powerDifficult toIJ04used to induce a phaseconsumptionintegrate withtransition between theMany ink typeselectronicsantiferroelectric (AFE)can be usedUnusualand ferroelectric (FE)Fast operationmaterials such asphase. Perovskite(<1 μs)PLZSnT arematerials such as tinRelatively highrequiredmodified leadlongitudinal strainActuators requirelanthanum zirconateHigh efficiencya large areatitanate (PLZSnT)Electric fieldexhibit large strains ofstrength of around 3 V/μmup to 1% associatedcan be readilywith the AFE to FEprovidedphase transition.ElectrostaticConductive plates areLow powerDifficult toIJ02, IJ04platesseparated by aconsumptionoperate electrostaticcompressible or fluidMany ink typesdevices in andielectric (usually air).can be usedaqueousUpon application of aFast operationenvironmentvoltage, the platesThe electrostaticattract each other andactuator willdisplace ink, causingnormally need to bedrop ejection. Theseparated from theconductive plates mayinkbe in a comb orVery large areahoneycomb structure,required to achieveor stacked to increasehigh forcesthe surface area andHigh voltagetherefore the force.drive transistorsmay be requiredFull pagewidthprint heads are notcompetitive due toactuator sizeElectrostaticA strong electric fieldLow currentHigh voltage1989 Saito et al,pullis applied to the ink,consumptionrequiredU.S. Pat. No. 4,799,068on inkwhereuponLow temperatureMay be damaged1989 Miura et al,electrostatic attractionby sparks due to airU.S. Pat. No. 4,810,954accelerates the inkbreakdownTone-jettowards the printRequired fieldmedium.strength increases asthe drop sizedecreasesHigh voltagedrive transistorsrequiredElectrostatic fieldattracts dustPermanentAn electromagnetLow powerComplexIJ07, IJ10magnetdirectly attracts aconsumptionfabricationelectromagneticpermanent magnet,Many ink typesPermanentdisplacing ink andcan be usedmagnetic materialcausing drop ejection.Fast operationsuch as NeodymiumRare earth magnetsHigh efficiencyIron Boron (NdFeB)with a field strengthEasy extensionrequired.around 1 Tesla can befrom single nozzlesHigh localused. Examples are:to pagewidth printcurrents requiredSamarium CobaltheadsCopper(SaCo) and magneticmetalization shouldmaterials in thebe used for longneodymium iron boronelectromigrationfamily (NdFeB,lifetime and lowNdDyFeBNb,resistivityNdDyFeB, etc)Pigmented inksare usuallyinfeasibleOperatingtemperature limitedto the Curietemperature (around540 K)SoftA solenoid induced aLow powerComplexIJ01, IJ05, IJ08,magneticmagnetic field in a softconsumptionfabricationIJ10, IJ12, IJ14,core electromagneticmagnetic core or yokeMany ink typesMaterials notIJ15, IJ17fabricated from acan be usedusually present in aferrous material suchFast operationCMOS fab such asas electroplated ironHigh efficiencyNiFe, CoNiFe, oralloys such as CoNiFeEasy extensionCoFe are required[1], CoFe, or NiFefrom single nozzlesHigh localalloys. Typically, theto pagewidth printcurrents requiredsoft magnetic materialheadsCopperis in two parts, whichmetalization shouldare normally heldbe used for longapart by a spring.electromigrationWhen the solenoid islifetime and lowactuated, the two partsresistivityattract, displacing theElectroplating isink.requiredHigh saturationflux density isrequired (2.0-2.1 Tis achievable withCoNiFe [1])LorenzThe Lorenz forceLow powerForce acts as aIJ06, IJ11, IJ13,forceacting on a currentconsumptiontwisting motionIJ16carrying wire in aMany ink typesTypically, only amagnetic field iscan be usedquarter of theutilized.Fast operationsolenoid lengthThis allows theHigh efficiencyprovides force in amagnetic field to beEasy extensionuseful directionsupplied externally tofrom single nozzlesHigh localthe print head, forto pagewidth printcurrents requiredexample with rareheadsCopperearth permanentmetalization shouldmagnets.be used for longOnly the currentelectromigrationcarrying wire need belifetime and lowfabricated on the print-resistivityhead, simplifyingPigmented inksmaterialsare usuallyrequirements.infeasibleMagnetostrictionThe actuator uses theMany ink typesForce acts as aFischenbeck,giant magnetostrictivecan be usedtwisting motionU.S. Pat. No. 4,032,929effect of materialsFast operationUnusualIJ25such as Terfenol-D (anEasy extensionmaterials such asalloy of terbium,from single nozzlesTerfenol-D aredysprosium and ironto pagewidth printrequireddeveloped at the NavalheadsHigh localOrdnance Laboratory,High force iscurrents requiredhence Ter-Fe-NOL).availableCopperFor best efficiency, themetalization shouldactuator should be pre-be used for longstressed to approx. 8 MPa.electromigrationlifetime and lowresistivityPre-stressingmay be requiredSurfaceInk under positiveLow powerRequiresSilverbrook, EPtensionpressure is held in aconsumptionsupplementary force0771 658 A2 andreductionnozzle by surfaceSimpleto effect droprelated patenttension. The surfaceconstructionseparationapplicationstension of the ink isNo unusualRequires specialreduced below thematerials required inink surfactantsbubble threshold,fabricationSpeed may becausing the ink toHigh efficiencylimited by surfactantegress from theEasy extensionpropertiesnozzle.from single nozzlesto pagewidth printheadsViscosityThe ink viscosity isSimpleRequiresSilverbrook, EPreductionlocally reduced toconstructionsupplementary force0771 658 A2 andselect which drops areNo unusualto effect droprelated patentto be ejected. Amaterials required inseparationapplicationsviscosity reduction canfabricationRequires specialbe achievedEasy extensionink viscosityelectrothermally withfrom single nozzlespropertiesmost inks, but specialto pagewidth printHigh speed isinks can be engineeredheadsdifficult to achievefor a 100:1 viscosityRequiresreduction.oscillating inkpressureA hightemperaturedifference (typically80 degrees) isrequiredAcousticAn acoustic wave isCan operateComplex drive1993 Hadimioglugenerated andwithout a nozzlecircuitryet al, EUP 550,192focussed upon theplateComplex1993 Elrod et al,drop ejection region.fabricationEUP 572,220Low efficiencyPoor control ofdrop positionPoor control ofdrop volumeThermoelasticAn actuator whichLow powerEfficient aqueousIJ03, IJ09, IJ17,bendrelies upon differentialconsumptionoperation requires aIJ18, IJ19, IJ20,actuatorthermal expansionMany ink typesthermal insulator onIJ21, IJ22, IJ23,upon Joule heating iscan be usedthe hot sideIJ24, IJ27, IJ28,used.Simple planarCorrosionIJ29, IJ30, IJ31,fabricationprevention can beIJ32, IJ33, IJ34,Small chip areadifficult1135, IJ36, IJ37,required for eachPigmented inksIJ38, IJ39, IJ40,actuatormay be infeasible,IJ41Fast operationas pigment particlesHigh efficiencymay jam the bendCMOSactuatorcompatible voltagesand currentsStandard MEMSprocesses can beusedEasy extensionfrom single nozzlesto pagewidth printheadsHigh CTEA material with a veryHigh force canRequires specialIJ09, IJ17, IJ18,thermoelastichigh coefficient ofbe generatedmaterial (e.g. PTFE)IJ20, IJ21, IJ22,actuatorthermal expansion.Three methods ofRequires a PTFEIJ23, IJ24, IJ27,(CTE) such asPTFE deposition aredeposition process,IJ28, IJ29, IJ30,polytetrafluoroethyleneunder development:which is not yetIJ31, IJ42, IJ43,(PTFE) is used. Aschemical vaporstandard in ULSIIJ44high CTE materialsdeposition (CVD),fabsare usually non-spin coating, andPTFE depositionconductive, a heaterevaporationcannot be followedfabricated from aPTFE is awith highconductive material iscandidate for lowtemperature (aboveincorporated. A 50 μmdielectric constant350° C.) processinglong PTFE bendinsulation in ULSIPigmented inksactuator withVery low powermay be infeasible,polysilicon heater andconsumptionas pigment particles15 mW power inputMany ink typesmay jam the bendcan provide 180 μNcan be usedactuatorforce and 10 μmSimple planardeflection. Actuatorfabricationmotions include:Small chip areaBendrequired for eachPushactuatorBuckleFast operationRotateHigh efficiencyCMOScompatible voltagesand currentsEasy extensionfrom single nozzlesto pagewidth printheadsCoaduct-iveA polymer with a highHigh force canRequires specialIJ24polymercoefficient of thermalbe generatedmaterialsthermoelasticexpansion (such asVery low powerdevelopment (HighactuatorPTFE) is doped withconsumptionCTE conductiveconducting substancesMany ink typespolymer)to increase itscan be usedRequires a PTFEconductivity to about 3Simple planardeposition process,orders of magnitudefabricationwhich is not yetbelow that of copper.Small chip areastandard in ULSIThe conductingrequired for eachfabspolymer expandsactuatorPTFE depositionwhen resistivelyFast operationcannot be followedheated.High efficiencywith highExamples ofCMOStemperature (aboveconducting dopantscompatible voltages350° C.) processinginclude:and currentsEvaporation andCarbon nanotubesEasy extensionCVD depositionMetal fibersfrom single nozzlestechniques cannotConductive polymersto pagewidth printbe usedsuch as dopedheadsPigmented inkspolythiophenemay be infeasible,Carbon granulesas pigment particlesmay jam the bendactuatorShapeA shape memory alloyHigh force isFatigue limitsIJ26memorysuch as TiNi (alsoavailable (stressesmaximum numberalloyknown as Nitinol -of hundreds of MPa)of cyclesNickel Titanium alloyLarge strain isLow strain (1%)developed at the Navalavailable (more thanis required to extendOrdnance Laboratory)3%)fatigue resistanceis thermally switchedHigh corrosionCycle ratebetween its weakresistancelimited by heatmartensitic state andSimpleremovalits high stiffnessconstructionRequires unusualaustenic state. TheEasy extensionmaterials (TiNi)shape of the actuatorfrom single nozzlesThe latent heat ofin its martensitic stateto pagewidth printtransformation mustis deformed relative toheadsbe providedthe austenic shape.Low voltageHigh currentThe shape changeoperationoperationcauses ejection of aRequires pre-drop.stressing to distortthe martensitic stateLinearLinear magneticLinear MagneticRequires unusualIJ12Magneticactuators include theactuators can besemiconductorActuatorLinear Inductionconstructed withmaterials such asActuator (LIA), Linearhigh thrust, longsoft magnetic alloysPermanent Magnettravel, and high(e.g. CoNiFe)Synchronous Actuatorefficiency usingSome varieties(LPMSA), Linearplanaralso requireReluctancesemiconductorpermanent magneticSynchronous Actuatorfabricationmaterials such as(LRSA), LineartechniquesNeodymium ironSwitched ReluctanceLong actuatorboron (NdFeB)Actuator (LSRA), andtravel is availableRequiresthe Linear StepperMedium force iscomplex multiphaseActuator (LSA).availabledrive circuitryLow voltageHigh currentoperationoperation















BASIC OPERATION MODE












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples





Actuator
This is the simplest
Simple operation
Drop repetition
Thermal ink jet


directly
mode of operation: the
No external
rate is usually
Piezoelectric ink


pushes ink
actuator directly
fields required
limited to around 10 kHz.
jet



supplies sufficient
Satellite drops
However, this
IJ01, IJ02, IJ03,



kinetic energy to expel
can be avoided if
is not fundamental
IJ04, IJ05, IJ06,



the drop. The drop
drop velocity is less
to the method, but is
IJ07, IJ09, IJ11,



must have a sufficient
than 4 m/s
related to the refill
IJ12, IJ14, IJ16,



velocity to overcome
Can be efficient,
method normally
IJ20, IJ22, IJ23,



the surface tension.
depending upon the
used
IJ24, IJ25, IJ26,




actuator used
All of the drop
IJ27, IJ28, IJ29,





kinetic energy must
IJ30, IJ31, IJ32,





be provided by the
IJ33, IJ34, IJ35,





actuator
IJ36, 1137, IJ38,





Satellite drops
IJ39, IJ40, IJ41,





usually form if drop
IJ42, IJ43, IJ44





velocity is greater





than 4.5 m/s


Proximity
The drops to be
Very simple print
Requires close
Silverbrook, EP



printed are selected by
head fabrication can
proximity between
0771 658 A2 and



some manner (e.g.
be used
the print head and
related patent



thermally induced
The drop
the print media or
applications



surface tension
selection means
transfer roller



reduction of
does not need to
May require two



pressurized ink).
provide the energy
print heads printing



Selected drops are
required to separate
alternate rows of the



separated from the ink
the drop from the
image



in the nozzle by
nozzle
Monolithic color



contact with the print

print heads are



medium or a transfer

difficult



roller.


Electrostatic
The drops to be
Very simple print
Requires very
Silverbrook, EP


pull
printed are selected by
head fabrication can
high electrostatic
0771 658 A2 and


on ink
some manner (e.g.
be used
field
related patent



thermally induced
The drop
Electrostatic field
applications



surface tension
selection means
for small nozzle
Tone-Jet



reduction of
does not need to
sizes is above air



pressurized ink),
provide the energy
breakdown



Selected drops are
required to separate
Electrostatic field



separated from the ink
the drop from the
may attract dust



in the nozzle by a
nozzle



strong electric field.


Magnetic
The drops to be
Very simple print
Requires
Silverbrook, EP


pull on ink
printed are selected by
head fabrication can
magnetic ink
0771 658 A2 and



some manner (e.g.
be used
Ink colors other
related patent



thermally induced
The drop
than black are
applications



surface tension
selection means
difficult



reduction of
does not need to
Requires very



pressurized ink).
provide the energy
high magnetic fields



Selected drops are
required to separate



separated from the ink
the drop from the



in the nozzle by a
nozzle



strong magnetic field



acting on the magnetic



ink.


Shutter
The actuator moves a
High speed (>50 kHz)
Moving parts are
IJ13, IJ17, IJ21



shutter to block ink
operation can
required



flow to the nozzle. The
be achieved due to
Requires ink



ink pressure is pulsed
reduced refill time
pressure modulator



at a multiple of the
Drop timing can
Friction and wear



drop ejection
be very accurate
must be considered



frequency.
The actuator
Stiction is




energy can be very
possible




low


Shuttered
The actuator moves a
Actuators with
Moving parts are
IJ08, IJ15, IJ18,


grill
shutter to block ink
small travel can be
required
IJ19



flow through a grill to
used
Requires ink



the nozzle. The shutter
Actuators with
pressure modulator



movement need only
small force can be
Friction and wear



be equal to the width
used
must be considered



of the grill holes.
High speed (>50 kHz)
Stiction is




operation can
possible




be achieved


Pulsed
A pulsed magnetic
Extremely low
Requires an
IJ10


magnetic
field attracts an ‘ink
energy operation is
external pulsed


pull on ink
pusher’ at the drop
possible
magnetic field


pusher
ejection frequency. An
No heat
Requires special



actuator controls a
dissipation
materials for both



catch, which prevents
problems
the actuator and the



the ink pusher from

ink pusher



moving when a drop is

Complex



not to be ejected.

construction






















AUXILIARY MECHANISM (APPLIED TO ALL NOZZLES)












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples















None
The actuator directly
Simplicity of
Drop ejection
Most ink jets,



fires the ink drop, and
construction
energy must be
including



there is no external
Simplicity of
supplied by
piezoelectric and



field or other
operation
individual nozzle
thermal bubble.



mechanism required.
Small physical
actuator
IJ01, IJ02, IJ03,




size

IJ04, IJ05, IJ07,






IJ09, IJ11, IJ12,






IJ14, IJ20, IJ22,






IJ23, IJ24, IJ25,






IJ26, IJ27, IJ28,






IJ29, IJ30, IJ31,






IJ32, IJ33, IJ34,






IJ35, IJ36, IJ37,






IJ38, IJ39, IJ40,






IJ41, IJ42, IJ43,






IJ44


Oscillating
The ink pressure
Oscillating ink
Requires external
Silverbrook, EP


ink pressure
oscillates, providing
pressure can provide
ink pressure
0771 658 A2 and


(including
much of the drop
a refill pulse,
oscillator
related patent


acoustic
ejection energy. The
allowing higher
Ink pressure
applications


stimulation)
actuator selects which
operating speed
phase and amplitude
IJ08, IJ13, IJ15,



drops are to be fired
The actuators
must be carefully
IJ17, IJ18, IJ19,



by selectively
may operate with
controlled
IJ21



blocking or enabling
much lower energy
Acoustic



nozzles. The ink
Acoustic lenses
reflections in the ink



pressure oscillation
can be used to focus
chamber must be



may be achieved by
the sound on the
designed for



vibrating the print
nozzles



head, or preferably by



an actuator in the ink



supply.


Media
The print head is
Low power
Precision
Silverbrook, EP


proximity
placed in close
High accuracy
assembly required
0771 658 A2 and



proximity to the print
Simple print head
Paper fibers may
related patent



medium. Selected
construction
cause problems
applications



drops protrude from

Cannot print on



the print head further

rough substrates



than unselected drops,



and contact the print



medium. The drop



soaks into the medium



fast enough to cause



drop separation.


Transfer
Drops are printed to a
High accuracy
Bulky
Silverbrook, EP


roller
transfer roller instead
Wide range of
Expensive
0771 658 A2 and



of straight to the print
print substrates can
Complex
related patent



medium. A transfer
be used
construction
applications



roller can also be used
Ink can be dried

Tektronix hot



for proximity drop
on the transfer roller

melt piezoelectric



separation.


ink jet






Any of the IJ






series


Electrostatic
An electric field is
Low power
Field strength
Silverbrook, EP



used to accelerate
Simple print head
required for
0771 658 A2 and



selected drops towards
construction
separation of small
related patent



the print medium.

drops is near or
applications





above air
Tone-Jet





breakdown


Direct
A magnetic field is
Low power
Requires
Silverbrook, EP


magnetic
used to accelerate
Simple print head
magnetic ink
0771 658 A2 and


field
selected drops of
construction
Requires strong
related patent



magnetic ink towards

magnetic field
applications



the print medium.


Cross
The print head is
Does not require
Requires external
IJ06, IJ16


magnetic
placed in a constant
magnetic materials
magnet


field
magnetic field. The
to be integrated in
Current densities



Lorenz force in a
the print head
may be high,



current carrying wire
manufacturing
resulting in



is used to move the
process
electromigration



actuator.

problems


Pulsed
A pulsed magnetic
Very low power
Complex print
IJ10


magnetic
field is used to
operation is possible
head construction


field
cyclically attract a
Small print head
Magnetic



paddle, which pushes
size
materials required in



on the ink. A small

print head



actuator moves a



catch, which



selectively prevents



the paddle from



moving.






















ACTUATOR AMPLIFICATION OR MODIFICATION METHOD












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples





None
No actuator
Operational
Many actuator
Thermal Bubble



mechanical
simplicity
mechanisms have
Ink jet



amplification is used.

insufficient travel,
IJ01, IJ02, IJ06,



The actuator directly

or insufficient force,
IJ07, IJ16, IJ25,



drives the drop

to efficiently drive
IJ26



ejection process.

the drop ejection





process


Differential
An actuator material
Provides greater
High stresses are
Piezoelectric


expansion
expands more on one
travel in a reduced
involved
IJ03, IJ09, IJ17,


bend
side than on the other.
print head area
Care must be
IJ18, IJ19, IJ20,


actuator
The expansion may be

taken that the
IJ21, IJ22, IJ23,



thermal, piezoelectric,

materials do not
IJ24, IJ27, IJ29,



magnetostrictive, or

delaminate
IJ30, IJ31, IJ32,



other mechanism. The

Residual bend
IJ33, IJ34, IJ35,



bend actuator converts

resulting from high
IJ36, IJ37, IJ38,



a high force low travel

temperature or high
IJ39, IJ42, IJ43,



actuator mechanism to

stress during
IJ44



high travel, lower

formation



force mechanism.


Transient
A trilayer bend
Very good
High stresses are
IJ40, IJ41


bend
actuator where the two
temperature stability
involved


actuator
outside layers are
High speed, as a
Care must be



identical. This cancels
new drop can be
taken that the



bend due to ambient
fired before heat
materials do not



temperature and
dissipates,
delaminate



residual stress. The
Cancels residual



actuator only responds
stress of formation



to transient heating of



one side or the other.


Reverse
The actuator loads a
Better coupling
Fabrication
IJ05, IJ11


spring
spring. When the
to the ink
complexity



actuator is turned off,

High stress in the



the spring releases,

spring



This can reverse the



force/distance curve of



the actuator to make it



compatible with the



force/time



requirements of the



drop ejection.


Actuator
A series of thin
Increased travel
Increased
Some


stack
actuators are stacked.
Reduced drive
fabrication
piezoelectric ink jets



This can be
voltage
complexity
IJ04



appropriate where

Increased



actuators require high

possibility of short



electric field strength,

circuits due to



such as electrostatic

pinholes



and piezoelectric



actuators.


Multiple
Multiple smaller
Increases the
Actuator forces
IJ12, IJ13, IJ18,


actuators
actuators are used
force available from
may not add
IJ20, IJ22, IJ28,



simultaneously to
an actuator
linearly, reducing
IJ42, IJ43



move the ink. Each
Multiple
efficiency



actuator need provide
actuators can be



only a portion of the
positioned to control



force required.
ink flow accurately


Linear
A linear spring is used
Matches low
Requires print
IJ15


Spring
to transform a motion
travel actuator with
head area for the



with small travel and
higher travel
spring



high force into a
requirements



longer travel, lower
Non-contact



force motion.
method of motion




transformation


Coiled
A bend actuator is
Increases travel
Generally
IJ17, IJ21, IJ34,


actuator
coiled to provide
Reduces chip
restricted to planar
IJ35



greater travel in a
area
implementations



reduced chip area
Planar
due to extreme




implementations are
fabrication difficulty




relatively easy to
in other orientations.




fabricate.


Flexure
A bend actuator has a
Simple means of
Care must be
IJ10, IJ19, IJ33


bend
small region near the
increasing travel of
taken not to exceed


actuator
fixture point, which
a bend actuator
the elastic limit in



flexes much more

the flexure area



readily than the

Stress



remainder of the

distribution is very



actuator. The actuator

uneven



flexing is effectively

Difficult to



converted from an

accurately model



even coiling to an

with finite element



angular bend, resulting

analysis



in greater travel of the



actuator tip.


Catch
The actuator controls a
Very low
Complex
IJ10



small catch. The catch
actuator energy
construction



either enables or
Very small
Requires external



disables movement of
actuator size
force



an ink pusher that is

Unsuitable for



controlled in a bulk

pigmented inks



manner.


Gears
Gears can be used to
Low force, low
Moving parts are
IJ13



increase travel at the
travel actuators can
required



expense of duration,
be used
Several actuator



Circular gears, rack
Can be fabricated
cycles are required



and pinion, ratchets,
using standard
More complex



and other gearing
surface MEMS
drive electronics



methods can be used.
processes
Complex





construction





Friction, friction,





and wear are





possible


Buckle plate
A buckle plate can be
Very fast
Must stay within
S. Hirata et al,



used to change a slow
movement
elastic limits of the
“An Ink-jet Head



actuator into a fast
achievable
materials for long
Using Diaphragm



motion. It can also

device life
Microactuator”,



convert a high force,

High stresses
Proc. IEEE MEMS,



low travel actuator

involved
February 1996,



into a high travel,

Generally high
pp 418-423.



medium force motion.

power requirement
IJ18, IJ27


Tapered
A tapered magnetic
Linearizes the
Complex
IJ14


magnetic
pole can increase
magnetic
construction


pole
travel at the expense
force/distance curve



of force.


Lever
A lever and fulcrum is
Matches low
High stress
IJ32, IJ36, IJ37



used to transform a
travel actuator with
around the fulcrum



motion with small
higher travel



travel and high force
requirements



into a motion with
Fulcrum area has



longer travel and
no linear movement,



lower force. The lever
and can be used for



can also reverse the
a fluid seal



direction of travel.


Rotary
The actuator is
High mechanical
Complex
IJ28


impeller
connected to a rotary
advantage
construction



impeller. A small
The ratio of force
Unsuitable for



angular deflection of
to travel of the
pigmented inks



the actuator results in
actuator can be



a rotation of the
matched to the



impeller vanes, which
nozzle requirements



push the ink against
by varying the



stationary vanes and
number of impeller



out of the nozzle.
vanes


Acoustic
A refractive or
No moving parts
Large area
1993 Hadimioglu


lens
diffractive (e.g. zone

required
et al, EUP 550,192



plate) acoustic lens is

Only relevant for
1993 Elrod et al,



used to concentrate

acoustic ink jets
EUP 572,220



sound waves.


Sharp
A sharp point is used
Simple
Difficult to
Tone-jet


conductive
to concentrate an
construction
fabricate using


point
electrostatic field.

standard VLSI





processes for a





surface ejecting ink-





jet





Only relevant for





electrostatic ink jets






















ACTUATOR MOTION












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples















Volume
The volume of the
Simple
High energy is
Hewlett-Packard


expansion
actuator changes,
construction in the
typically required to
Thermal Ink jet



pushing the ink in all
case of thermal ink
achieve volume
Canon Bubblejet



directions,
jet
expansion. This





leads to thermal





stress, cavitation,





and kogation in





thermal ink jet





implementations


Linear,
The actuator moves in
Efficient
High fabrication
IJ01, IJ02, IJ04,


normal to
a direction normal to
coupling to ink
complexity may be
IJ07, IJ11, IJ14


chip surface
the print head surface.
drops ejected
required to achieve



The nozzle is typically
normal to the
perpendicular



in the line of
surface
motion



movement.


Parallel to
The actuator moves
Suitable for
Fabrication
IJ12, IJ13, IJ15,


chip surface
parallel to the print
planar fabrication
complexity
IJ33, , IJ34, IJ35,



head surface. Drop

Friction
IJ36



ejection may still be

Stiction



normal to the surface.


Membrane
An actuator with a
The effective
Fabrication
1982 Howkins


push
high force but small
area of the actuator
complexity
U.S. Pat. No. 4,459,601



area is used to push a
becomes the
Actuator size



stiff membrane that is
membrane area
Difficulty of



in contact with the ink,

integration in a





VLSI process


Rotary
The actuator causes
Rotary levers
Device
IJ05, IJ08, IJ13,



the rotation of some
may be used to
complexity
IJ28



element, such a grill or
increase travel
May have



impeller
Small chip area
friction at a pivot




requirements
point


Bend
The actuator bends
A very small
Requires the
1970 Kyser et al



when energized. This
change in
actuator to be made
U.S. Pat. No. 3,946,398



may be due to
dimensions can be
from at least two
1973 Stemme



differential thermal
converted to a large
distinct layers, or to
U.S. Pat. No. 3,747,120



expansion,
motion.
have a thermal
IJ03, IJ09, IJ10,



piezoelectric

difference across the
IJ19, IJ23, IJ24,



expansion,

actuator
IJ25, IJ29, IJ30,



magnetostriction, or


IJ31, IJ33, IJ34,



other form of relative


IJ35



dimensional change.


Swivel
The actuator swivels
Allows operation
Inefficient
IJ06



around a central pivot.
where the net linear
coupling to the ink



This motion is suitable
force on the paddle
motion



where there are
is zero



opposite forces
Small chip area



applied to opposite
requirements



sides of the paddle,



e.g. Lorenz force.


Straighten
The actuator is
Can be used with
Requires careful
IJ26, IJ32



normally bent, and
shape memory
balance of stresses



straightens when
alloys where the
to ensure that the



energized.
austenic phase is
quiescent bend is




planar
accurate


Double
The actuator bends in
One actuator can
Difficult to make
IJ36, IJ37, IJ38


bend
one direction when
be used to power
the drops ejected by



one element is
two nozzles.
both bend directions



energized, and bends
Reduced chip
identical.



the other way when
size.
A small



another element is
Not sensitive to
efficiency loss



energized.
ambient temperature
compared to





equivalent single





bend actuators.


Shear
Energizing the
Can increase the
Not readily
1985 Fishbeck



actuator causes a shear
effective travel of
applicable to other
U.S. Pat. No. 4,584,590



motion in the actuator
piezoelectric
actuator



material.
actuators
mechanisms


Radial constriction
The actuator squeezes
Relatively easy
High force
1970 Zoltan U.S. Pat. No.



an ink reservoir,
to fabricate single
required
3,683,212



forcing ink from a
nozzles from glass
Inefficient



constricted nozzle.
tubing as
Difficult to




macroscopic
integrate with VLSI




structures
processes


Coil/uncoil
A coiled actuator
Easy to fabricate
Difficult to
IJ17, IJ21, IJ34,



uncoils or coils more
as a planar VLSI
fabricate for non-
IJ35



tightly. The motion of
process
planar devices



the free end of the
Small area
Poor out-of-plane



actuator ejects the ink.
required, therefore
stiffness




low cost


Bow
The actuator bows (or
Can increase the
Maximum travel
IJ16, IJ18, IJ27



buckles) in the middle
speed of travel
is constrained



when energized.
Mechanically
High force




rigid
required


Push-Pull
Two actuators control
The structure is
Not readily
IJ18



a shutter. One actuator
pinned at both ends,
suitable for ink jets



pulls the shutter, and
so has a high out-of-
which directly push



the other pushes it.
plane rigidity
the ink


Curl
A set of actuators curl
Good fluid flow
Design
IJ20, IJ42


inwards
inwards to reduce the
to the region behind
complexity



volume of ink that
the actuator



they enclose.
increases efficiency


Curl
A set of actuators curl
Relatively simple
Relatively large
IJ43


outwards
outwards, pressurizing
construction
chip area



ink in a chamber



surrounding the



actuators, and



expelling ink from a



nozzle in the chamber.


Iris
Multiple vanes enclose
High efficiency
High fabrication
IJ22



a volume of ink. These
Small chip area
complexity



simultaneously rotate,

Not suitable for



reducing the volume

pigmented inks



between the vanes.


Acoustic
The actuator vibrates
The actuator can
Large area
1993 Hadimioglu


vibration
at a high frequency.
be physically distant
required for
et al, EUP 550,192




from the ink
efficient operation
1993 Elrod et al,





at useful frequencies
EUP 572,220





Acoustic





coupling and





crosstalk





Complex drive





circuitry





Poor control of





drop volume and





position


None
In various ink jet
No moving parts
Various other
Silverbrook, EP



designs the actuator

tradeoffs are
0771 658 A2 and



does not move.

required to
related patent





eliminate moving
applications





parts
Tone-jet






















NOZZLE REFILL METHOD












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples















Surface
This is the normal way
Fabrication
Low speed
Thermal ink jet


tension
that ink jets are
simplicity
Surface tension
Piezoelectric ink



refilled. After the
Operational
force relatively
jet



actuator is energized,
simplicity
small compared to
IJ01-IJ07, IJ10-IJ14,



it typically returns

actuator force
IJ16, IJ20,



rapidly to its normal

Long refill time
IJ22-IJ45



position. This rapid

usually dominates



return sucks in air

the total repetition



through the nozzle

rate



opening. The ink



surface tension at the



nozzle then exerts a



small force restoring



the meniscus to a



minimum area. This



force refills the nozzle.


Shuttered
Ink to the nozzle
High speed
Requires
IJ08, IJ13, IJ15,


oscillating
chamber is provided at
Low actuator
common ink
IJ17, IJ18, IJ19,


ink pressure
a pressure that
energy, as the
pressure oscillator
IJ21



oscillates at twice the
actuator need only
May not be



drop ejection
open or close the
suitable for



frequency. When a
shutter, instead of
pigmented inks



drop is to be ejected,
ejecting the ink drop



the shutter is opened



for 3 half cycles: drop



ejection, actuator



return, and refill. The



shutter is then closed



to prevent the nozzle



chamber emptying



during the next



negative pressure



cycle.


Refill
After the main
High speed, as
Requires two
IJ09


actuator
actuator has ejected a
the nozzle is
independent



drop a second (refill)
actively refilled
actuators per nozzle



actuator is energized.



The refill actuator



pushes ink into the



nozzle chamber. The



refill actuator returns



slowly, to prevent its



return from emptying



the chamber again.


Positive ink
The ink is held a slight
High refill rate,
Surface spill
Silverbrook, EP


pressure
positive pressure.
therefore a high
must be prevented
0771 658 A2 and



After the ink drop is
drop repetition rate
Highly
related patent



ejected, the nozzle
is possible
hydrophobic print
applications



chamber fills quickly

head surfaces are
Alternative for:,



as surface tension and

required
IJ01-IJ07, IJ10-IJ14,



ink pressure both


IJ16, IJ20, IJ22-IJ45



operate to refill the



nozzle.






















METHOD OF RESTRICTING BACK-FLOW THROUGH INLET












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples















Long inlet
The ink inlet channel
Design simplicity
Restricts refill
Thermal ink jet


channel
to the nozzle chamber
Operational
rate
Piezoelectric ink



is made long and
simplicity
May result in a
jet



relatively narrow,
Reduces
relatively large chip
IJ42, IJ43



relying on viscous
crosstalk
area



drag to reduce inlet

Only partially



back-flow.

effective


Positive ink
The ink is under a
Drop selection
Requires a
Silverbrook, EP


pressure
positive pressure, so
and separation
method (such as a
0771 658 A2 and



that in the quiescent
forces can be
nozzle rim or
related patent



state some of the ink
reduced
effective
applications



drop already protrudes
Fast refill time
hydrophobizing, or
Possible



from the nozzle.

both) to prevent
operation of the



This reduces the

flooding of the
following: IJ01-IJ07,



pressure in the nozzle

ejection surface of
IJ09-IJ12,



chamber which is

the print head.
IJ14, IJ16, IJ20,



required to eject a


IJ22, , IJ23-IJ34,



certain volume of ink.


IJ36-IJ41, IJ44



The reduction in



chamber pressure



results in a reduction



in ink pushed out



through the inlet.


Baffle
One or more baffles
The refill rate is
Design
HP Thermal Ink



are placed in the inlet
not as restricted as
complexity
Jet



ink flow. When the
the long inlet
May increase
Tektronix



actuator is energized,
method.
fabrication
piezoelectric ink jet



the rapid ink
Reduces
complexity (e.g.



movement creates
crosstalk
Tektronix hot melt



eddies which restrict

Piezoelectric print



the flow through the

heads).



inlet. The slower refill



process is unrestricted,



and does not result in



eddies.


Flexible flap
In this method recently
Significantly
Not applicable to
Canon


restricts
disclosed by Canon,
reduces back-flow
most ink jet


inlet
the expanding actuator
for edge-shooter
configurations



(bubble) pushes on a
thermal ink jet
Increased



flexible flap that
devices
fabrication



restricts the inlet,

complexity





Inelastic





deformation of





polymer flap results





in creep over





extended use


Inlet filter
A filter is located
Additional
Restricts refill
IJ04, IJ12, IJ24,



between the ink inlet
advantage of ink
rate
IJ27, IJ29, IJ30



and the nozzle
filtration
May result in



chamber. The filter
Ink filter may be
complex



has a multitude of
fabricated with no
construction



small holes or slots,
additional process



restricting ink flow,
steps



The filter also removes



particles which may



block the nozzle.


Small inlet
The ink inlet channel
Design simplicity
Restricts refill
IJ02, IJ37, IJ44


compared
to the nozzle chamber

rate


to nozzle
has a substantially

May result in a



smaller cross section

relatively large chip



than that of the nozzle,

area



resulting in easier ink

Only partially



egress out of the

effective



nozzle than out of the



inlet.


Inlet shutter
A secondary actuator
Increases speed
Requires separate
IJ09



controls the position of
of the ink-jet print
refill actuator and



a shutter, closing off
head operation
drive circuit



the ink inlet when the



main actuator is



energized.


The inlet is
The method avoids the
Back-flow
Requires careful
IJ01, IJ03, 1J05,


located
problem of inlet back-
problem is
design to minimize
IJ06, IJ07, IJ10,


behind the
flow by arranging the
eliminated
the negative
IJ11, IJ14, IJ16,


ink-pushing
ink-pushing surface of

pressure behind the
IJ22, IJ23, IJ25,


surface
the actuator between

paddle
IJ28, IJ31, IJ32,



the inlet and the


IJ33, IJ34, IJ35,



nozzle.


IJ36, IJ39, IJ40,






IJ41


Part of the
The actuator and a
Significant
Small increase in
IJ07, IJ20, IJ26,


actuator
wall of the ink
reductions in back-
fabrication
IJ38


moves to
chamber are arranged
flow can be
complexity


shut off the
so that the motion of
achieved


inlet
the actuator closes off
Compact designs



the inlet.
possible


Nozzle
In some configurations
Ink back-flow
None related to
Silverbrook, EP


actuator
of ink jet, there is no
problem is
ink back-flow on
0771 658 A2 and


does not
expansion or
eliminated
actuation
related patent


result in ink
movement of an


applications


back-flow
actuator which may


Valve-jet



cause ink back-flow


Tone-jet



through the inlet.






















NOZZLE CLEARING METHOD












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples















Normal
All of the nozzles are
No added
May not be
Most ink jet


nozzle firing
fired periodically,
complexity on the
sufficient to
systems



before the ink has a
print head
displace dried ink
IJ01, IJ02, IJ03,



chance to dry. When


IJ04, IJ05, IJ06,



not in use the nozzles


IJ07, IJ09, IJ10,



are sealed (capped)


IJ11, IJ12, IJ14,



against air.


IJ16, IJ20, IJ22,



The nozzle firing is


IJ23, IJ24, IJ25,



usually performed


IJ26, IJ27, IJ28,



during a special


IJ29, IJ30, IJ31,



clearing cycle, after


IJ32, IJ33, IJ34,



first moving the print


IJ36, IJ37, IJ38,



head to a cleaning


IJ39, IJ40, IJ41,



station.


IJ42, IJ43, IJ44,






IJ45


Extra
In systems which heat
Can be highly
Requires higher
Silverbrook, EP


power to
the ink, but do not boil
effective if the
drive voltage for
0771 658 A2 and


ink heater
it under normal
heater is adjacent to
clearing
related patent



situations, nozzle
the nozzle
May require
applications



clearing can be

larger drive



achieved by over-

transistors



powering the heater



and boiling ink at the



nozzle.


Rapid
The actuator is fired in
Does not require
Effectiveness
May be used


success-ion
rapid succession. In
extra drive circuits
depends
with: IJ01, IJ02,


of actuator.
some configurations,
on the print head
substantially upon
IJ03, IJ04, IJ05,


pulses
this may cause heat
Can be readily
the configuration of
IJ06, IJ07, IJ09,



build-up at the nozzle
controlled and
the ink jet nozzle
IJ10, IJ11, IJ14,



which boils the ink,
initiated by digital

IJ16, IJ20, IJ22,



clearing the nozzle. In
logic

IJ23, IJ24, IJ25,



other situations, it may


IJ27, IJ28, IJ29,



cause sufficient


IJ30, IJ31, IJ32,



vibrations to dislodge


IJ33, IJ34, IJ36,



clogged nozzles.


IJ37, IJ38, IJ39,






IJ40, IJ41, IJ42,






IJ43, IJ44, IJ45


Extra
Where an actuator is
A simple
Not suitable
May be used


power to
not normally driven to
solution where
where there is a
with: IJ03, IJ09,


ink pushing
the limit of its motion,
applicable
hard limit to
IJ16, IJ20, IJ23,


actuator
nozzle clearing may be

actuator movement
IJ24, IJ25, IJ27,



assisted by providing


IJ29, IJ30, IJ31,



an enhanced drive


IJ32, IJ39, IJ40,



signal to the actuator.


IJ41, IJ42, IJ43,






IJ44, IJ45


Acoustic
An ultrasonic wave is
A high nozzle
High
IJ08, IJ13, IJ15,


resonance
applied to the ink
clearing capability
implementation cost
IJ17, IJ18, IJ19,



chamber. This wave is
can be achieved
if system does not
IJ21



of an appropriate
May be
already include an



amplitude and
implemented at very
acoustic actuator



frequency to cause
low cost in systems



sufficient force at the
which already



nozzle to clear
include acoustic



blockages. This is
actuators



easiest to achieve if



the ultrasonic wave is



at a resonant



frequency of the ink



cavity.


Nozzle
A microfabricated
Can clear
Accurate
Silverbrook, EP


clearing
plate is pushed against
severely clogged
mechanical
0771 658 A2 and


plate
the nozzles. The plate
nozzles
alignment is
related patent



has a post for every

required
applications



nozzle. A post moves

Moving parts are



through each nozzle,

required



displacing dried ink.

There is risk of





damage to the





nozzles





Accurate





fabrication is





required


Ink
The pressure of the ink
May be effective
Requires
May be used


pressure
is temporarily
where other
pressure pump or
with all IJ series ink


pulse
increased so that ink
methods cannot be
other pressure
jets



streams from all of the
used
actuator



nozzles. This may be

Expensive



used in conjunction

Wasteful of ink



with actuator



energizing.


Print head
A flexible ‘blade’ is
Effective for
Difficult to use if
Many ink jet


wiper
wiped across the print
planar print head
print head surface is
systems



head surface. The
surfaces
non-planar or very



blade is usually
Low cost
fragile



fabricated from a

Requires



flexible polymer, e.g.

mechanical parts



rubber or synthetic

Blade can wear



elastomer.

out in high volume





print systems


Separate
A separate heater is
Can be effective
Fabrication
Can be used with


ink boiling
provided at the nozzle
where other nozzle
complexity
many IJ series ink


heater
although the normal
clearing methods

jets



drop e-ection
cannot be used



mechanism does not
Can be



require it. The heaters
implemented at no



do not require
additional cost in



individual drive
some ink jet



circuits, as many
configurations



nozzles can be cleared



simultaneously, and no



imaging is required.






















NOZZLE PLATE CONSTRUCTION












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples















Electroformed
A nozzle plate is
Fabrication
High
Hewlett Packard


nickel
separately fabricated
simplicity
temperatures and
Thermal Ink jet



from electroformed

pressures are



nickel, and bonded to

required to bond



the print head chip.

nozzle plate





Minimum





thickness constraints





Differential





thermal expansion


Laser
Individual nozzle
No masks
Each hole must
Canon Bubblejet


ablated or
holes are ablated by an
required
be individually
1988 Sercel et


drilled
intense UV laser in a
Can be quite fast
formed
al., SPIE, Vol. 998


polymer
nozzle plate, which is
Some control
Special
Excimer Beam



typically a polymer
over nozzle profile
equipment required
Applications, pp.



such as polyimide or
is possible
Slow where there
76-83



polysulphone
Equipment
are many thousands
1993 Watanabe




required is relatively
of nozzles per print
et al., U.S. Pat. No.




low cost
head
5,208,604





May produce thin





burrs at exit holes


Silicon
A separate nozzle
High accuracy is
Two part
K. Bean, IEEE


micromachined
plate is
attainable
construction
Transactions on



micromachined from

High cost
Electron Devices,



single crystal silicon,

Requires
Vol. ED-25, No. 10,



and bonded to the

precision alignment
1978, pp 1185-1195



print head wafer.

Nozzles may be
Xerox 1990





clogged by adhesive
Hawkins et al., U.S. Pat. No.






4,899,181


Glass
Fine glass capillaries
No expensive
Very small
1970 Zoltan U.S. Pat. No.


capillaries
are drawn from glass
equipment required
nozzle sizes are
3,683,212



tubing. This method
Simple to make
difficult to form



has been used for
single nozzles
Not suited for



making individual

mass production



nozzles, but is difficult



to use for bulk



manufacturing of print



heads with thousands



of nozzles.


Monolithic,
The nozzle plate is
High accuracy
Requires
Silverbrook, EP


surface
deposited as a layer
(<1 μm)
sacrificial layer
0771 658 A2 and


micromachined
using standard VLSI
Monolithic
under the nozzle
related patent


using VLSI
deposition techniques.
Low cost
plate to form the
applications


lithographic
Nozzles are etched in
Existing
nozzle chamber
IJ01, IJ02, IJ04,


processes
the nozzle plate using
processes can be
Surface may be
IJ11, IJ12, IJ17,



VLSI lithography and
used
fragile to the touch
IJ18, IJ20, IJ22,



etching.


IJ24, IJ27, IJ28,






IJ29, IJ30, IJ31,






IJ32, IJ33, IJ34,






IJ36, IJ37, IJ38,






IJ39, IJ40, IJ41,






IJ42, IJ43, IJ44


Monolithic,
The nozzle plate is a
High accuracy
Requires long
IJ03, IJ05, IJ06,


etched
buried etch stop in the
(<1 μm)
etch times
IJ07, IJ08, IJ09,


through
wafer. Nozzle
Monolithic
Requires a
IJ10, IJ13, IJ14,


substrate
chambers are etched in
Low cost
support wafer
IJ15, IJ16, IJ19,



the front of the wafer,
No differential

IJ21, IJ23, IJ25,



and the wafer is
expansion

IJ26



thinned from the back



side. Nozzles are then



etched in the etch stop



layer.


No nozzle
Various methods have
No nozzles to
Difficult to
Ricoh 1995


plate
been tried to eliminate
become clogged
control drop
Sekiya et al U.S. Pat. No.



the nozzles entirely, to

position accurately
5,412,413



prevent nozzle

Crosstalk
1993 Hadimioglu



clogging. These

problems
et al EUP 550,192



include thermal bubble


1993 Elrod et al



mechanisms and


EUP 572,220



acoustic lens



mechanisms


Trough
Each drop ejector has
Reduced
Drop firing
IJ35



a trough through
manufacturing
direction is sensitive



which a paddle moves.
complexity
to wicking.



There is no nozzle
Monolithic



plate.


Nozzle slit
The elimination of
No nozzles to
Difficult to
1989 Saito et al


instead of
nozzle holes and
become clogged
control drop
U.S. Pat. No. 4,799,068


individual
replacement by a slit

position accurately


nozzles
encompassing many

Crosstalk



actuator positions

problems



reduces nozzle



clogging, but increases



crosstalk due to ink



surface waves






















DROP EJECTION DIRECTION












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples















Edge
Ink flow is along the
Simple
Nozzles limited
Canon Bubblejet


(‘edge
surface of the chip,
construction
to edge
1979 Endo et al GB


shooter’)
and ink drops are
No silicon
High resolution
patent 2,007,162



ejected from the chip
etching required
is difficult
Xerox heater-in-



edge.
Good heat
Fast color
pit 1990 Hawkins et




sinking via substrate
printing requires
al U.S. Pat. No. 4,899,181




Mechanically
one print head per
Tone-jet




strong
color




Ease of chip




handing


Surface
Ink flow is along the
No bulk silicon
Maximum ink
Hewlett-Packard


(‘roof
surface of the chip,
etching required
flow is severely
TIJ 1982 Vaught et


shooter’)
and ink drops are
Silicon can make
restricted
al U.S. Pat. No. 4,490,728



ejected from the chip
an effective heat

IJ02, IJ11, IJ12,



surface, normal to the
sink

IJ20, IJ22



plane of the chip.
Mechanical




strength


Through
Ink flow is through the
High ink flow
Requires bulk
Silverbrook, EP


chip,
chip, and ink drops are
Suitable for
silicon etching
0771 658 A2 and


forward
ejected from the front
pagewidth print

related patent


(‘up
surface of the chip.
heads

applications


shooter’)

High nozzle

IJ04, IJ17, IJ18,




packing density

IJ24, IJ27-IJ45




therefore low




manufacturing cost


Through
Ink flow is through the
High ink flow
Requires wafer
IJ01, IJ03, IJ05,


chip,
chip, and ink drops are
Suitable for
thinning
IJ06, IJ07, IJ08,


reverse
ejected from the rear
pagewidth print
Requires special
IJ09, IJ10, IJ13,


(‘down
surface of the chip.
heads
handling during
IJ14, IJ15, IJ16,


shooter’)

High nozzle
manufacture
IJ19, IJ21, IJ23,




packing density

IJ25, IJ26




therefore low




manufacturing cost


Through
Ink flow is through the
Suitable for
Pagewidth print
Epson Stylus


actuator
actuator, which is not
piezoelectric print
heads require
Tektronix hot



fabricated as part of
heads
several thousand
melt piezoelectric



the same substrate as

connections to drive
ink jets



the drive transistors.

circuits





Cannot be





manufactured in





standard CMOS





fabs





Complex





assembly required






















INK TYPE












Description
Advantages
Disadvantages
Examples















Aqueous,
Water based ink which
Environmentally
Slow drying
Most existing ink


dye
typically contains:
friendly
Corrosive
jets



water, dye, surfactant,
No odor
Bleeds on paper
All IJ series ink



humectant, and

May
jets



biocide.

strikethrough
Silverbrook, EP



Modern ink dyes have

Cockles paper
0771 658 A2 and



high water-fastness,


related patent



light fastness


applications


Aqueous,
Water based ink which
Environmentally
Slow drying
IJ02, IJ04, IJ21,


pigment
typically contains:
friendly
Corrosive
IJ26, IJ27, IJ30



water, pigment,
No odor
Pigment may
Silverbrook, EP



surfactant, humectant,
Reduced bleed
clog nozzles
0771 658 A2 and



and biocide.
Reduced wicking
Pigment may
related patent



Pigments have an
Reduced
clog actuator
applications



advantage in reduced
strikethrough
mechanisms
Piezoelectric ink-



bleed, wicking and

Cockles paper
jets



strikethrough.


Thermal ink jets






(with significant






restrictions)


Methyl
MEK is a highly
Very fast drying
Odorous
All IJ series ink


Ethyl
volatile solvent used
Prints on various
Flammable
jets


Ketone
for industrial printing
substrates such as


(MEK)
on difficult surfaces
metals and plastics



such as aluminum



cans.


Alcohol
Alcohol based inks
Fast drying
Slight odor
All IJ series ink


(ethanol, 2-
can be used where the
Operates at sub-
Flammable
jets


butanol,
printer must operate at
freezing


and others)
temperatures below
temperatures



the freezing point of
Reduced paper



water. An example of
cockle



this is in-camera
Low cost



consumer



photographic printing.


Phase
The ink is solid at
No drying time-
High viscosity
Tektronix hot


change
room temperature, and
ink instantly freezes
Printed ink
melt piezoelectric


(hot melt)
is melted in the print
on the print medium
typically has a
ink jets



head before jetting.
Almost any print
‘waxy’ feel
1989 Nowak



Hot melt inks are
medium can be used
Printed pages
U.S. Pat. No. 4,820,346



usually wax based,
No paper cockle
may ‘block’
All IJ series ink



with a melting point
occurs
Ink temperature
jets



around 80° C. After
No wicking
may be above the



jetting the ink freezes
occurs
curie point of



almost instantly upon
No bleed occurs
permanent magnets



contacting the print
No strikethrough
Ink heaters



medium or a transfer
occurs
consume power



roller.

Long warm-up





time


Oil
Oil based inks are
High solubility
High viscosity:
All IJ series ink



extensively used in
medium for some
this is a significant
jets



offset printing. They
dyes
limitation for use in



have advantages in
Does not cockle
ink jets, which



improved
paper
usually require a



characteristics on
Does not wick
low viscosity. Some



paper (especially no
through paper
short chain and



wicking or cockle).

multi-branched oils



Oil soluble dies and

have a sufficiently



pigments are required.

low viscosity.





Slow drying


Micro-
A microemulsion is a
Stops ink bleed
Viscosity higher
All IJ series ink


emulsion
stable, self forming
High dye
than water
jets



emulsion of oil, water,
solubility
Cost is slightly



and surfactant. The
Water, oil, and
higher than water



characteristic drop size
amphiphilic soluble
based ink



is less than 100 nm,
dies can be used
High surfactant



and is determined by
Can stabilize
concentration



the preferred curvature
pigment
required (around



of the surfactant.
suspensions
5%)








Claims
  • 1. A fluid ejection device that comprises a substrate that defines a plurality of nozzle chambers; a drive circuitry layer positioned on one side of the substrate and containing drive circuitry; a structural layer positioned on an opposite side of the substrate and defining a plurality of ink ejection ports in fluid communication with respective nozzle chambers; and a plurality of micro-electromechanical actuators fast at one end with the substrate and extending into respective nozzle chambers, each actuator comprising an actuating member that is connected to the drive circuitry and anchored at one end to the substrate, the actuating member being displaceable between a quiescent position and an active position to eject fluid from the respective ejection port.
  • 2. A fluid ejection device as claimed in claim 1, in which at least a portion of each actuating member is of an electrically conductive material that defines a heating circuit configured so that, when the circuit is heated with an electrical current, the actuating member is displaced between the quiescent and active positions, the circuit being connected to the drive circuitry so that the circuit is heated on receipt of an electrical signal from the drive circuitry.
  • 3. A fluid ejection device as claimed in claim 2, in which each heating circuit is of a shape memory alloy.
  • 4. A fluid ejection device as claimed in claim 3, in each actuating member is a laminated structure, with the heating circuit defining one layer of the actuating member.
  • 5. A fluid ejection device as claimed in claim 4, in which each actuating member includes a pre-stressing layer positioned on, and mechanically fast with, the respective heating circuit, the shape memory alloy having a generally planar form when in the austenitic phase and the pre-stressing layer serving to curl the actuating member away from the ejection port when the shape memory alloy is in a martensitic phase, such that, when heated, the shape memory alloy drives the actuating member into a planar form, thereby ejecting a drop of ink from the ejection port.
  • 6. A fluid ejection device as claimed in claim 5, in which the shape memory alloy is a nickel titanium alloy.
  • 7. A fluid ejection device as claimed in claim 5, in which the pre-stressing layer is silicon nitride deposited to generate a pre-stressed condition in the silicon nitride.
  • 8. A fluid ejection device as claimed in claim 5, in which each heating circuit is interposed between the pre-stressing layer and a stress reference layer for the pre-stressing layer.
CROSS REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/893,380 filed Jul. 19, 2004, which is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/307,348 filed Dec. 2, 2002, now issued U.S. Pat. No. 6,764,166, which is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/113,122 filed Jul. 10, 1998, now issued U.S. Pat. No. 6,557,977. The following Australian provisional patent applications are hereby incorporated by reference. For the purposes of location and identification, U.S. patents/patent applications identified by their U.S. patent/patent application serial numbers (U.S. Ser. No.) are listed alongside the Australian applications from which the U.S. patents/patent applications claim the right of priority. CROSS-REFERENCEDUS PATENT/PATENTAUSTRALIANAPPLICATION (CLAIMINGPROVISIONALRIGHT OF PRIORITYPATENTFROM AUSTRALIANDOCKETAPPLICATION NO.PROVISIONAL APPLICATION)No.PO799109/113,060ART01PO850509/113,070ART02PO798809/113,073ART03PO93956,322,181ART04PO801709/112,747ART06PO801409/112,776ART07PO802509/112,750ART08PO803209/112,746ART09PO799909/112,743ART10PO799809/112,742ART11PO803109/112,741ART12PO80306,196,541ART13PO79976,195,150ART15PO797909/113,053ART16PO801509/112,738ART17PO797809/113,067ART18PO798209/113,063ART19PO798909/113,069ART20PO801909/112,744ART21PO79806,356,715ART22PO801809/112,777ART24PO793809/113,224ART25PO80166,366,693ART26PO802409/112,805ART27PO794009/113,072ART28PO793909/112,785ART29PO85016,137,500ART30PO850009/112,796ART31PO798709/113,071ART32PO802209/112,824ART33PO849709/113,090ART34PO802009/112,823ART38PO802309/113,222ART39PO850409/112,786ART42PO800009/113,051ART43PO797709/112,782ART44PO793409/113,056ART45PO799009/113,059ART46PO849909/113,091ART47PO85026,381,361ART48PO79816,317,192ART50PO798609/113,057ART51PO798309/113,054ART52PO802609/112,752ART53PO802709/112,759ART54PO802809/112,757ART56PO93946,357,135ART57PO939609/113,107ART58PO93976,271,931ART59PO93986,353,772ART60PO93996,106,147ART61PO940009/112,790ART62PO94016,304,291ART63PO940209/112,788ART64PO94036,305,770ART65PO94056,289,262ART66PP09596,315,200ART68PP13976,217,165ART69PP237009/112,781DOT01PP237109/113,052DOT02PO80036,350,023Fluid01PO80056,318,849Fluid02PO940409/113,101Fluid03PO80666,227,652IJ01PO80726,213,588IJ02PO80406,213,589IJ03PO80716,231,163IJ04PO80476,247,795IJ05PO80356,394,581IJ06PO80446,244,691IJ07PO80636,257,704IJ08PO80576,416,168IJ09PO80566,220,694IJ10PO80696,257,705IJ11PO80496,247,794IJ12PO80366,234,610IJ13PO80486,247,793IJ14PO80706,264,306IJ15PO80676,241,342IJ16PO80016,247,792IJ17PO80386,264,307IJ18PO80336,254,220IJ19PO80026,234,611IJ20PO80686,302,528IJ21PO80626,283,582IJ22PO80346,239,821IJ23PO80396,338,547IJ24PO80416,247,796IJ25PO800409/113,122IJ26PO80376,390,603IJ27PO80436,362,843IJ28PO80426,293,653IJ29PO80646,312,107IJ30PO93896,227,653IJ31PO93916,234,609IJ32PP08886,238,040IJ33PP08916,188,415IJ34PP08906,227,654IJ35PP08736,209,989IJ36PP09936,247,791IJ37PP08906,336,710IJ38PP13986,217,153IJ39PP25926,416,167IJ40PP25936,243,113IJ41PP39916,283,581IJ42PP39876,247,790IJ43PP39856,260,953IJ44PP39836,267,469IJ45PO79356,224,780IJM01PO79366,235,212IJM02PO79376,280,643IJM03PO80616,284,147IJM04PO80546,214,244IJM05PO80656,071,750IJM06PO80556,267,905IJM07PO80536,251,298IJM08PO80786,258,285IJM09PO79336,225,138IJM10PO79506,241,904IJM11PO794909/113,129IJM12PO806009/113,124IJM13PO80596,231,773IJM14PO80736,190,931IJM15PO80766,248,249IJM16PO807509/113,120IJM17PO80796,241,906IJM18PO805009/113,116IJM19PO80526,241,905IJM20PO794809/113,117IJM21PO79516,231,772IJM22PO80746,274,056IJM23PO794109/113,110IJM24PO80776,248,248IJM25PO805809/113,087IJM26PO805109/113,074IJM27PO80456,110,754IJM28PO795209/113,088IJM29PO804609/112,771IJM30PO93906,264,849IJM31PO93926,254,793IJM32PP08896,235,211IJM35PP088709/112,801IJM36PP08826,264,850IJM37PP08746,258,284IJM38PP139609/113,098IJM39PP39896,228,668IJM40PP25916,180,427IJM41PP39906,171,875IJM42PP39866,267,904IJM43PP39846,245,247IJM44PP398209/112,835IJM45PP08956,231,148IR01PP087009/113,106IR02PP086909/113,105IR04PP088709/113,104IR05PP08856,238,033IR06PP088409/112,766IR10PP08866,238,111IR12PP087109/113,086IR13PP087609/113,094IR14PP087709/112,760IR16PP08786,196,739IR17PP087909/112,774IR18PP08836,270,182IR19PP08806,152,619IR20PP088109/113,092IR21PO80066,087,638MEMS02PO800709/113,093MEMS03PO800809/113,062MEMS04PO80106,041,600MEMS05PO801109/113,082MEMS06PO79476,067,797MEMS07PO794409/113,080MEMS09PO79466,044,646MEMS10PO939309/113,065MEMS11PP087509/113,078MEMS12PP089409/113,075MEMS13

Continuations (3)
Number Date Country
Parent 10893380 Jul 2004 US
Child 11176347 Jul 2005 US
Parent 10307348 Dec 2002 US
Child 10893380 Jul 2004 US
Parent 09113122 Jul 1998 US
Child 10307348 Dec 2002 US