A thermal printer refers to a printer that is able to print images onto a heat-sensitive print medium without dispensing printing fluids such as ink. A thermal printhead of the thermal printer generates heat that is applied onto a thermochromic print medium (hereinafter referred to as a “thermal print medium”).
Some implementations of the present disclosure are described with respect to the following figures.
Throughout the drawings, identical reference numbers designate similar, but not necessarily identical, elements. The figures are not necessarily to scale, and the size of some parts may be exaggerated to more clearly illustrate the example shown. Moreover, the drawings provide examples and/or implementations consistent with the description; however, the description is not limited to the examples and/or implementations provided in the drawings.
In the present disclosure, use of the term “a,” “an”, or “the” is intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. Also, the term “includes,” “including,” “comprises,” “comprising,” “have,” or “having” when used in this disclosure specifies the presence of the stated elements, but do not preclude the presence or addition of other elements.
Heat produced by a thermal printhead of a thermal printer activates portions of a thermal print medium to generate a colored image on the thermal print medium. A thermal print medium can include heat-sensitive color-forming layers with dyes (of respective colors, such as yellow, magenta, and cyan, or other colors) that are initially colorless (or transparent). For example, a dye of a heat-sensitive color-forming layer can include crystals of amorphochromic dye that convert to a colored form by melting due to application of heat produced by a thermal printhead. The dye retains its color after re-solidification when heat is removed.
In other examples, instead of using multiple heat-sensitive color-forming layers, a thermal print medium can include one color-forming layer that includes dyes of different colors that can be activated by heat.
An issue that can occur with thermal printing is color crosstalk and/or whitespace caused by the presence of hotspots in a thermal printhead. The thermal printhead includes an array of heating elements, where each heating element includes a resistor. Each resistor in the array is connected between electrical conductors. Electrical current is passed through a resistor between the electrical conductors. The resistor can be divided into three portions: a first end portion connected to a first electrical conductor, a second end portion connected to a second electrical conductor, and a central portion between the first and second end portions.
A thermal profile of heat generated by the resistor can be a Gaussian profile, caused by the central portion of the resistor generating a greater amount of heat than the end portions of the resistor. Thus, the thermal profile can have a higher temperature near the center of the resistor and lower temperatures at the ends of the resistor. The higher temperature near the center corresponds to a hotspot of the resistor.
Crosstalk occurs when heat applied by a thermal printhead to activate a first heat-sensitive color-forming portion (for a first color) of a thermal print medium also inadvertently activates a second heat-sensitive color-forming portion (for a second color) of the thermal print medium. As a result, instead of activating just the first color of the thermal print medium, heat applied by the thermal printhead (and in particular heat from hotspots of the thermal printhead) can also activate the second color of the thermal print medium, which results in an image portion formed on the thermal print medium that does not have a target color (i.e., instead of the image portion having the first color, the image portion has a color based on a mixture of the first and second colors). In some cases, hotspots in the thermal printhead can activate multiple other heat-sensitive color-forming portions for respective other colors.
Whitespace occurs when insufficient heat is applied to a heat-sensitive color-forming portion of a thermal print medium. A thermal printer may compensate for the presence of hotspots in the resistors by reducing the amount of power applied to the thermal printhead. However, this may result in the end portions of each resistor not generating sufficient heat, which can lead to a heat-sensitive color-forming portion of a thermal print medium not activating and therefore not providing a target color.
In the ensuing discussion, reference is made to a thermal printer that includes a thermal printhead for forming images on thermal print media. In other examples, techniques or mechanisms according to some implementations can be applied in non-printing imaging devices that employ thermal imaging heads that include resistors for generating heat.
In accordance with some implementations of the present disclosure, a resistor of a thermal imaging head (e.g., a thermal printhead) is configured with a specified structure such the thermal profile of the resistor is flattened, as compared to the Gaussian profile of a resistor without the specified structure. In some examples, the thermal imaging head includes a resistor, conductors connected to end portions of the resistor to pass an electrical current through the resistor, where the resistor includes thermal control gaps at the end portions of the resistor, each of the thermal control gaps reducing a cross-sectional area of a respective end portion of the end portions of the resistor relative to a cross-sectional area of a central portion of the resistor.
A circuit board (not shown) in the thermal printer 100 includes electronic components that are used to drive activation signals to the array of heating elements of the printhead 102. The circuit board can be mounted on a surface of the backing plate 106 or on the printhead 102. The circuit board can include an integrated circuit (IC) device that has driving circuitry to drive electrical current over conductors to the array of heating elements of the printhead 102.
The cross-sectional view of
The array of heating elements 114 is formed on a glaze layer 118, which can include a glass material (e.g., silicon dioxide). Additionally, the glaze layer 118 is formed on a ceramic layer 120. The ceramic layer can include alumina (Al2O), for example. In other examples, the layers 118 and 120 can be formed of other materials. For example, the layer 120 can be formed of a material including silicon or another material.
In further examples, other arrangements of a printhead 102 can be used (with some of the layers shown in
Although not shown, the thermal printer 100 can include a receiving slot through which the thermal print medium 104 is passed to allow a portion of the thermal print medium 104 to be brought into proximity with the array of heating elements 114. Selective activation of heating elements of the array of t heating elements 114 causes different portions of the thermal print medium 104 to be activated to produce an image containing respective colors. The thermal print medium can be moved relative to the thermal printhead 102 to cause the formation of the image on a target area of the thermal print medium 104.
The longitudinal gap 210 separates the resistor segments 208-1 and 208-2, and also separates the conductors 204 and 206.
In other examples, the longitudinal gap 210 is omitted such that a split resistor design is not used. In such examples, the conductors 204 and 206 become one conductor that couples through the resistor 208 to the conductor 202.
An electrical current is passed between the electrical conductors 202 and 204 through the resistor segment 208-1, and an electrical current is passed between the conductors 202 and 206 through the resistor segment 208-2.
In accordance with some implementations of the present disclosure, thermal control gaps 212-1, 212-2, 212-3, and 212-4 are formed in the resistor 208. A thermal control gap is formed by removing the resistive material of the resistor 208, such that an opening is formed in the resistor 208. The opening can be filled with a material that is different form the resistive material of the resistor 208. For example, the thermal control gaps 212-1, 212-2, 212-3, and 212-4 can be filled with the material of an overcoat layer covering the resistor 208. An example of an overcoat material can include silicon nitride (SiN), or another dielectric (i.e., electrically insulating) material.
The resistor 208 includes a first end portion 214-1 connected to the electrical conductor 202, and a second end portion 214-2 electrically connected to the electrical conductors 204 and 206, respectively. The first end portion 214-1 includes first end segment portions 215-1 and 215-2 of the resistor segments 208-1 and 208-2, respectively, and the second end portion 214-2 includes second end segment portions 215-3 and 215-4 of the resistor segments 208-1 and 208-2, respectively. Additionally, the resistor 208 includes a central portion 216 between the end portions 214-1 and 214-2. The central portion 216 incudes central segment portions 217-1 and 217-2 of the resistor segments 208-1 and 208-2, respectively.
Due to the presence of the thermal control gaps 212-1, 212-2, 212-3, and 212-4, the end portions of each resistor segment 208-1 or 208-2 is fork-shaped with two prongs separated by the corresponding thermal control gap.
The presence of the thermal control gaps 212-1, 212-2, 212-3, and 212-4 in the end portions 214-1 and 214-4 of the resistor 208 is to effectively reduce the cross-sectional area available for electrical current flow in the end portions 214-1 and 214-2, as compared to the cross-sectional area available for electrical current flow in the central portion 216 of the resistor 208.
The effective cross-sectional area that includes a resistive material of the central portion 216 of the resistor 208 (
The thermal profile 302 for the resistor without thermal control gaps is Gaussian, with a sharp peak at the center (which can lead to a hotspot of the resistor). The thermal profile 304 for the resistor 208 with the thermal control gaps is more flattened, with the temperature at the center 306 closer to the temperatures at the ends 308 and 310 as compared to the Gaussian profile 302.
In addition, a heating element (114 in
The thermal printhead 102 further includes an overcoat layer 402 (
The thermal print medium 104 includes a number of layers, including heat-sensitive color-forming layers 404, 406, and 408 that correspond to different colors. For example, the heat-sensitive color-forming layer 404 closest to the thermal printhead 102 in the orientation shown in
Also, in further examples, instead of using different heat-sensitive color-forming layers to form different colors, one layer of the thermal print medium 104 can include different heat-sensitive color-forming portions for different colors.
The heat-sensitive color-forming layers 404, 406, and 408 are separated from one another by interlayers, which can be formed of a polymer or another material. The different heat-sensitive color-forming layers 404, 406, and 408 are activated at different temperatures. For example, the heat-sensitive color-forming layer 404 (e.g., yellow) activates at a first temperature, the heat-sensitive color-forming layer 406 (e.g., magenta) activates at a second temperature less than the first temperature, and the heat-sensitive color-forming layer 408 (e.g., cyan) activates at a third temperature less than the second temperature.
For example, if the heating element 114 generates heat sufficient to heat the heat-sensitive color-forming layer 408 to the third temperature, but insufficient to heat cause the other heat-sensitive color-forming layers 404 and 406 to reach their respective activation temperatures, then just the heat-sensitive color-forming layer 408 will activate.
The first end portion 514-1 includes first end segment portions 515-1 and 515-2 of the resistor segments 508-1 and 508-2, respectively, and the second end portion 514-2 includes second end segment portions 515-3 and 515-4 of the resistor segments 508-1 and 508-2, respectively.
In the example of
Each end segment portion 515-1, 515-2, 515-3, or 515-4 is fork-shaped with three prongs.
In other examples, end portions of a resistor can include a different number of thermal control gaps (different from that shown in
In the foregoing examples, thermal control gaps are depicted as being generally polygonal blank openings, such as the rectangular openings shown in
In other examples, instead of using blank openings, a thermal control gap can include resistive material portions. As shown in
Note that the number of resistive material blocks 706, 712, 718, and 724 in the thermal control gaps 702, 708, 714, and 720, respectively, can be different from that shown. For example, instead of using three resistive material blocks 706 or 712 or two resistive material blocks 718 and 724 on each side as shown in
In other examples, other types of thermal control gaps with different shapes can be employed.
Each corresponding resistor 908 of the array of resistors includes thermal control gaps 914-1 and 914-2 at the end portions of the corresponding resistor 908. The end portions of the corresponding resistor 908 are connected to the respective conductors 910 and 912. Each thermal control gap of the thermal control gaps 914-1 and 914-2 reduces a cross-sectional area of a respective end portion of the end portions of the corresponding resistor 908 relative to a cross-sectional area of a central portion of the corresponding resistor 908.
The process 1000 further includes forming (at 1004) gaps in end portions of the resistor, each gap of the gaps reducing a cross-sectional area of a respective end portion of the end portions of the resistor relative to a cross-sectional area of a central portion of the resistor.
In the foregoing description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the subject disclosed herein. However, implementations may be practiced without some of these details. Other implementations may include modifications and variations from the details discussed above. It is intended that the appended claims cover such modifications and variations.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2018/041669 | 7/11/2018 | WO | 00 |