An inkjet printing system may include one or more printheads that eject ink drops through a plurality of orifices or nozzles. The nozzles are typically arranged in one or more arrays, such that properly sequenced ejection of ink from the nozzles causes characters or other images to be printed on print medium.
In a thermal inkjet printing system, the printhead ejects ink drops through nozzles by rapidly heating small volumes of ink located in vaporization chambers. The ink is heated with small electric heaters, such as thin film resistors also referred to as firing resistors. Heating the ink causes the ink to vaporize and be ejected through the nozzles.
One way printing speed and quality has been increased in inkjet printheads is by the increase of nozzles per printhead. However, as the number of nozzles per printhead increases, it is a challenge to efficiently provide electronic signals to appropriately coordinate the firing of nozzles at the appropriate time.
In order to store the data, at least temporarily, inkjet printer 10 includes a memory unit 34. For example, memory unit 34 is divided into a plurality of storage areas that facilitate printer operations. The storage areas include a data storage area 44, driver routines storage 46, and algorithm storage area 48 that holds the algorithms that facilitate the mechanical control implementation of the various mechanical mechanisms of inkjet printer 10.
Data area 44 receives data files that define the individual pixel values that are to be printed to form a desired object or textual image on medium 35. Driver routines 46 contain printer driver routines. Algorithms 48 include the routines that control a sheet feeding stacking mechanism for moving a medium through the printer from a supply or feed tray to an output tray and the routines that control a carriage mechanism that causes a printhead carriage unit to be moved across a print medium on a guide rod. Alternatively, in printers where printhead location is fixed, such as in printers that use a page-wide printhead array, no carriage mechanism is needed.
In operation, inkjet printer 10 responds to commands by printing full color or black print images on print medium 35. In addition to interacting with memory unit 34, controller 32 controls a sheet feeding stacking mechanism 36 and a carriage mechanism 38. Controller 32 also forwards firing data to one or more fluid ejection devices, represented in
Before reaching firing cell 50 and firing cell 60, a data-in signal on line 71 is clocked through a clocked latch switch 81 by a data clock signal on a data clock line 72. The resulting latched data signal on a data line 76 is additionally latched by a data latch transistor 82 that includes a drain-source path electrically coupled between data line 76 and a shared data line 77. Shared data line 77 functions as a shared latch data node for both firing cell 50 and firing cell 60. In some embodiments, some or all of the data can bypass clocked latch switch 81. For example, half the data can travel through clocked latch switch 81 and the other half of the data can be placed directly onto data line 76 (or the equivalent) bypassing clocked latch switch 81.
While
The gate of data latch switch 82 is electrically coupled to a control line 78. Control line 78 can be electrically connected to (i.e., receive the same signal as) a pre-charge line 74. Pre-charge line 74 receives a pre-charge signal for pre-charge cell 50. In another embodiment, control line 78 is connected to a different signal line than pre-charge line 74. For example, control line 78 can be connected to a pre-charge line used to fire other firing cells, or to another available signal line on fluid ejection device 40 that provides an appropriately timed pulsed signal.
Data latch switch 82 passes data from data line 76 to shared data line 77 via a high level pre-charge signal on control line 78. The data is latched onto the latched data line 76 as the pre-charge signal transitions from a high level to a low level. The data-in signal on line 71 and the latched data signal on data line 76 are active when low.
In one embodiment, the data latch switch 82 is a minimum sized transistor to minimize charge sharing between the shared data line 77 and the gate to source node of data latch switch 82 as the pre-charge signal (or other pulsed signal) on control line 78 transitions from a high voltage level to a low voltage level. This charge sharing reduces high voltage level latched data. Also, in one embodiment, the drain of the data latch switch 82 determines the capacitance seen at data line 76 when the pre-charge signal is at a low voltage level and a minimum sized transistor keeps this capacitance low.
As shown in
For, example, a separate capacitance placed at data line 77 used to store latched data is typically not used since data line 77 is connected to multiple firing cells. The multiple firing cells provide the needed capacitance to store latched data and to protect performance from electrical disturbances. Thus, connecting multiple firing cells to data line 77 reduces the amount of space used to implement the firing cells.
Firing cell 50 includes a drive switch 54, a firing resistor 57, a pre-charge transistor 52, a select transistor 53, a first address transistor 55, a second address transistor 56 and a data switch 51 connected to each other and to a ground line 70 as shown. Address lines 58 and 59 are used to determine in what address cycle firing cell 50 is to be fired.
Similarly, a firing cell 50 includes a drive switch 64, a firing resistor 67, a pre-charge transistor 62, a select transistor 63, a first address transistor 65, a second address transistor 66 and a data transistor 61 connected to each other and to a ground line 70 as shown. Address lines 68 and 69 are used to determine in what address cycle firing cell 60 is to be fired.
Data switch 51 and data transistor 61 are large enough to fully discharge the gate of drive switch 54 and drive switch 64, respectively, before the beginning of an energy pulse in a fire signal placed on a fire line 75.
The operation of firing cell 50 and firing cell 60 are similar. Therefore, for exemplary purposes, just the operation of firing cell 50 is described.
For firing cell 50, the data-in signal is latched first to data line 76 and passed to shared data line 77 via data latch switch 82 by providing a high level voltage pulse on control line 78. For example, the high level voltage pulse is approximately 14 to 16 volts. This compares with a maximum voltage for data clock 72 is approximately 12 to 16 volts. Also, storage node capacitance at the gate of drive switch 54 is pre-charged through a pre-charge transistor 52 via a high level voltage pulse on pre-charge line 74. When pre-charge line 74 is connected to control line 78, data latch switch 82 is turned off to provide latched data signals as the voltage pulse on control line 78 transitions from the high voltage level to a low level voltage. The data to be latched into data line 77 is provided while the pre-charge signal is at a high voltage level and held until after the pre-charge signal transitions to a low voltage level. The data for data line 76 is held until data clock 72 transitions to a low level, which happens before the high voltage pulse on control line 78 transitions to a low level.
When pre-charge line 74 is not connected to control line 78, the data-in signal received by data line 76 is passed to shared data line 77 via data latch switch 82 by providing a high level voltage pulse on control line 78. Data latch switch 82 is turned off to provide the latched data signals as the voltage pulse on the control line 78 transitions from a high voltage level to a low level voltage. The gate of drive switch 54 is pre-charged through pre-charge transistor 52 via the high level voltage pulse on pre-charge line 74. The high voltage pulse on pre-charge line 74 occurs after the transition of control line 78 from a high voltage level to a low voltage level.
In one embodiment of pre-charge firing cell 50, after the high level voltage pulse on pre-charge line 74, address signals on address lines 58 and 59 are used to set the states of first address transistor 55 and second address transistor 56. A high level voltage pulse is provided on select line 73 to turn on select transistor 53 and capacitance at the gate of drive switch 54 discharges if data switch 51, first address transistor 55 and/or second address transistor 56 is on. Alternatively, the capacitance at the gate of drive switch 54 remains charged if data switch 51, first address transistor 55 and second address transistor 56 are all off. In this way, data switch 51, first address transistor 55 and second address transistor 56 act as a memory cell to hold a control value (either a charged signal or an uncharged signal) used to control drive switch 54 when select transistor 53 is turned on. The value on drive switch 54 is set when select transistor 53 is turned on, and then held when select transistor 53 is turned of, until precharged again. When first address transistor 55 and second address transistor 56 are turned off, data switch 51 determines the control value stored in the memory cell based on the latched data signal on shared data line 77.
Firing cell 50 is an addressed firing cell if both address signals on first address transistor 55 and second address transistor 56 are low, and the capacitance at the gate of drive switch 54 either discharges if the latched data signal at shared data line 77 is high or remains charged if latched data signal at latched data line 7 is low. Firing cell 50 is not an addressed firing cell if at least one of the address signals on first address transistor 55 or second address transistor 56 is high, and the capacitance at the gate of drive switch 54 discharges regardless of the voltage level of latched data signal at shared data line 77. The first and second address transistors 55 and 55 comprise an address decoder and, if firing cell 50 is addressed, data switch 51 controls the voltage level on the capacitance at the gate of drive switch 54.
During a firing cycle, when firing cell 50 is addressed and drive switch 54 is turned on, a firing pulse is applied to firing resistor 57 which then acts as a heater that vaporizes ink in a vaporization chamber and ejects the ink through a nozzle toward media 35 (shown in
The foregoing discussion discloses and describes merely exemplary methods and embodiments. As will be understood by those familiar with the art, the disclosed subject matter may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or characteristics thereof. Accordingly, the present disclosure is intended to be illustrative, but not limiting, of the scope of the invention, which is set forth in the following claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 11/263,733, filed Oct. 31, 2005, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11263733 | Oct 2005 | US |
Child | 11975928 | Oct 2007 | US |