Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. §119(a) and 365(b), the present application claims priority from PCT Application No. PCT/US2008/059545 entitled, “Fluid Interconnection” filed on Apr. 7, 2008, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Inkjet printers typically utilize a printhead that includes an array of orifices (also called nozzles) through which ink is ejected on to paper or other print media. One or more printheads may be mounted on a movable carriage that traverses back and forth across the width of the paper feeding through the printer, or the printhead(s) may remain stationary during printing operations, as in a page width array of printheads. A printhead may be an integral part of an ink cartridge or part of a discrete assembly to which ink is supplied from a separate, often detachable ink container. For printhead assemblies that utilize detachable ink containers, it is important that the operative fluid connection between the outlet of the ink container and the inlet to the printhead assembly, commonly referred to as a fluid interconnection or “FI”, provide reliable ink flow from the container to the printhead assembly.
Ink is drawn from the ink container through a filter on the inlet to the printhead assembly. Poor contact between the capillary material at the outlet of the ink container and the filter at the inlet to the printhead assembly in a conventional fluid interconnection may impede proper ink flow. Air leaking into the printhead assembly at this fluid interconnection may also impede ink flow. Thus, it is desirable that the fluid interconnection provide adequate contact in an airtight connection throughout repeated installations and removals of the ink container. The fluid inlet to the printhead assembly should also protect against losing backpressure and ink prime in the printhead assembly when an ink container is not installed, for example when the ink container is being changed.
Embodiments of the disclosure were developed in an effort to improve the fluid interconnection between a printhead assembly and a detachable/replaceable ink container—to construct a fluid interconnection providing a robust, reliable ink flow interface throughout repeated installations and removals of the ink container while protecting against the loss of backpressure and ink prime in the printhead assembly when an ink container is removed and the printhead assembly inlet is exposed to the atmosphere. Embodiments will be described, therefore, with reference to an inkjet printhead assembly that holds detachable/replaceable ink containers. Embodiments of the disclosure, however, are not limited to such implementations. Embodiments of the disclosure, for example, might also be implemented in other types of ink or fluid dispensing components. The example embodiments shown in the Figures and described below, therefore, illustrate but do not limit the scope of the disclosure.
A print media transport mechanism 26 advances print media 28 lengthwise past carriage 12 and printhead assembly 14. For a stationary carriage 12, media transport 26 may advance media 28 continuously past carriage 12. For a movable, scanning carriage 12, media transport 26 may advance media 28 incrementally past carriage 12, stopping as each swath is printed and then advancing media 28 for printing the next swath.
An electronic controller 30 is operatively connected to a moveable, scanning carriage 12, printhead assembly 14 and media transport 26. Controller 30 communicates with external devices through an input/output device 32, including receiving print data for inkjet imaging. The presence of an input/output device 32, however, does not preclude the operation of printer 10 as a stand alone unit. Controller 30 controls the movement of carriage 12 and media transport 26. Controller 30 is electrically connected to each printhead in printhead assembly 14 to selectively energize the firing resistors, for example, to eject ink drops on to media 28. By coordinating the relative position of carriage 12 with media 28 and the ejection of ink drops, controller 30 produces the desired image on media 28.
While this Description is at least substantially presented herein to inkjet-printing devices that eject ink onto media, those of ordinary skill within the art can appreciate that embodiments of the present disclosure are more generally not so limited. In general, embodiments of the present disclosure pertain to any type of fluid-jet precision dispensing device or ejector assembly for dispensing a substantially liquid fluid. The fluid-jet precision dispensing device precisely prints or dispenses a substantially liquid fluid in that the latter is not substantially or primarily composed of gases such as air. Examples of such substantially liquid fluids include inks in the case of inkjet printing devices. Other examples of substantially liquid fluids include drugs, cellular products, organisms, chemicals, fuel, and so on, which are not substantially or primarily composed of gases such as air and other types of gases. Therefore, while the Description is described in relation to an inkjet printer and inkjet printhead assembly for ejecting ink onto media, embodiments of the present disclosure more generally pertain to any type of fluid-jet precision dispensing device or fluid ejector structure for dispensing a substantially liquid fluid.
Referring to
Inlet wick 56 may protrude slightly from the top of an inlet tube 72, as shown, so that wicks 54 and 56 are compressed together slightly to optimize contact between uniformly wetted surfaces and, accordingly, help provide robust wick-to-wick ink flow. Also, wicks 54 and 56 made from the same materials, or otherwise having substantially the same wicking characteristics, will improve the consistency of the wetted contact surfaces to help improve ink flow. To function more effectively, wicks 54 and 56 should have a higher capillarity than the capillary media 60 in container 16 or, in a free ink container, having a capillarity sufficiently high to remain wetted while exposed when changing the ink container. The diameter (or other cross sectional dimension if not round) of downstream surface 62 of outlet wick 54 should be larger than that of upstream surface 64 of inlet wick 56 to reduce the risk of misalignment that might leave inlet wick 56 exposed to the atmosphere, thus reducing the risk of ingesting air into printhead assembly 14 through inlet wick 56.
Inlet tube 72 is sometimes referred to as an inlet “tower” 72 because it will usually extends out from the surrounding structure. Container outlet structure 74 fits around inlet tower 72 and seals against an elastomeric gasket or other suitable seal 76 to help prevent air from entering fluid interconnection 52. In the embodiment shown, inlet wick 56 and filter 68 are seated in a recess 78 along the inside perimeter of tower 72. Inlet wick 56 should be compressed slightly within tower 72 (i.e., an interference fit) and extend beyond the edges of filter 68, as shown, to help ensure that no outside air reaches filter 68 even when an ink container 16 is being changed and inlet wick 56 is temporarily exposed to the atmosphere—venting to the atmosphere through tower 72 may cause loss of backpressure in and depriming of printhead 48. In the embodiment shown, filter 68 is staked into position in tower recess 78 using a stake ring 80. Although filter 68 may be affixed to tower 72 using any suitable technique or structural configuration, the resulting structure should allow inlet wick 56 to overlap the edge(s) of filter 68 by at least 1 mm to help protect against unwanted venting.
The wick-to-wick interface of fluid interconnection 52 helps prevent “installation drool” in which ink drools from the printhead orifices as air is pushed into the printhead when an ink container is installed on to the printhead assembly tower. In addition, once the inlet wicks 56 are wetted and the printheads 48 and 50 primed with ink, inlet wick 56 will effectively seal each inlet 34 from the atmosphere during container changes, maintaining proper backpressure and thus allowing printheads 48 and 50 to stay primed and not drool. Unlike some conventional fluid interconnects in which the filter sits atop the inlet tower, exposed to the ink container outlet structure, inlet wick 56 in fluid interconnection 52 protects filter 68 from damage by container outlet structure 74 when a container is installed in and removed from printhead assembly 14.
As noted at the beginning of this Description, the example embodiments shown in the figures and described above illustrate but do not limit the disclosure. Other forms, details, and embodiments may be made and implemented. Therefore, the foregoing description should not be construed to limit the scope of the disclosure, which is defined in the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2008/059545 | 4/7/2008 | WO | 00 | 10/5/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/126137 | 10/15/2009 | WO | A |
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