The present invention relates to inkjet printing apparatuses, and particularly to inkjet printheads.
An inkjet printhead generally has an ejector chip, such as a heater chip. The heater chip typically includes logic circuitry, a plurality of power transistors, and a set of heaters or resistors. A hardware or software printer driver will selectively address or energize the logic circuitry such that appropriate resistors are heated for printing. For example, when the resistors are heated, the temperature of the resistors is raised, and the ink is subsequently vaporized and ejected from the nozzles as ink droplets. To assure good print quality, it is important to accurately eject a precise amount of ink. In order to effect this goal, the temperature at the printhead has to be monitored and controlled.
Various techniques are used to measure the heat generated by or the temperature of the resistors during printing operation. For example, some printheads position a temperature sense resistor (“TSR”) near the heaters on a substrate such that the TSR can sense or detect the temperature of the heaters. The TSR is typically grounded at the heater chip, which is connected to the substrate of the printhead. The heater chip ground potential may fluctuate with respect to the voltage of the TSR during printing, which results in a ΔV (i.e., a voltage shift between ground of the printer and the ground of the printhead). While the TSR can measure a heater temperature that ranges in a few mV per ° C., the ΔV caused by the ground fluctuation may create a noise as high as 200 mV per ° C. The amplitude of the noise is much greater than the signals to be measured, is difficult to filter, and may affect the overall accuracy of the temperature measurement. Any inaccuracy may lead to inadequate control of the heaters, which in turn may result in poor print quality.
Accordingly, there is a need for an improved method and apparatus for measuring temperature in an inkjet ejector chip. In one form, the invention provides an inkjet printhead that includes a temperature-sensing resistor. The temperature-sensing resistor has a low voltage end that is coupled to a ground structure (also referred to herein as a ground plane). In one form, the ground structure is a guard ring that at least partially encloses the temperature-sensing resistor. In other embodiments, the ground structure can assume any form or shape depending upon the components on the ejector chip.
In yet another form, the invention provides a method of reducing noise in a temperature-sensing resistor implanted on an ejector chip having an ejector chip ground. The method includes the act of determining a lower voltage end of the temperature-sensing resistor that is electrically spaced apart from the ejector chip ground. Thereafter, the method comprises the acts of at least partially enclosing the temperature-sensing resistor with a ground structure, and connecting the ground structure to the lower voltage end of the temperature-sensing resistor.
In yet another form, the invention provides an inkjet printing apparatus. The inkjet printing apparatus comprises a printing apparatus ground, and a printhead. The printhead has a printhead chip ground and a ground structure that at least partially encloses a temperature-sensing resistor. The temperature sensing resistor has a low voltage end that is coupled to the ground structure and the printing apparatus ground thereby bypasses the printhead chip ground.
In yet another form, the invention provides an ejector chip. The ejector chip comprises an ejector chip ground that has a first ground potential of the ejector chip. The ejector chip also comprises a bond pad that is electrically spaced apart from the ejector chip ground and is coupled to a second ground that has a second ground potential. The ejector chip also comprises a ground structure that is coupled to the bond pad and thus has the second ground potential, and a temperature sensing resistor that is coupled to the bond pad and thus also has the second ground potential.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon review of the following detailed description, claims, and drawings.
In the drawings:
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including,” “comprising,” or “having” and variations thereof herein is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. Unless limited otherwise, the terms “connected,” “coupled,” and “mounted” and variations thereof herein are used broadly and encompass direct and indirect connections, couplings, and mountings. In addition, the terms “connected” and “coupled” and variations thereof are not restricted to physical or mechanical connections or couplings.
The invention generally relates to a printhead having a nozzle portion used to produce multiple print drop-volumes for printing in a variety of modes, including without limitation, draft mode, high-quality mode and a combination thereof. As used herein and in the appended claims, the term “ink” can refer to at least one of inks, dyes, stains, pigments, colorants, tints, a combination thereof, and any other material commonly used for inkjet printers. As used herein and in the appended claims, the term “printing medium” can refer to at least one of paper (including without limitation stock paper, stationary, tissue paper, homemade paper, and the like), film, tape, photo paper, a combination thereof, and any other medium commonly used in inkjet printers.
The heater chip 16, hidden from view in the assembled printhead 10 illustrated in
The conductive traces 17 can be provided on the tape member 18 by a variety of methods, including without limitation, plating processes, photolithographic etching, and any other method known to those of ordinary skill in the art. Each conductive trace 17 connects, directly or indirectly, at one end to the heater chip 16 at some bond pads. Similarly, each conductive trace 17 also connects, directly or indirectly, at the other end to a contact pad 28. Each contact pad 28 also extends through to the outer surface 29 of the tape member 18. The contact pads 28 are positioned to mate with corresponding contacts on a carriage (not shown) to communicate between a microprocessor-based printer controller 30 and components of the printhead 10 such as the heat transducers or heaters 32, as will be described in greater detail below. The tape member 18 can be formed of a variety of other polymers or materials capable of providing conductive traces 17 to electrically connect the nozzle portion 15 of the printhead 10 to the contact pads 28, the bond pads, and the printer controller 30.
The nozzles 22, the chamber 102, a channel 103, and ink recesses (not shown), can be collectively referred to as flow features 104. In some embodiments, the nozzle plate 20 can include more than one layer or substrate, and the flow features can be defined in any of the layers or substrates by methods known to those skilled in the art. For example, defining the flow features 104 can include, without limitation, at least one of laser ablation, vapor deposition, lithography, plasma etching, metal electrode position, and a combination thereof. In other embodiments, the flow features 104 can be defined in one layer. In addition, the flow features 104 do not need to be defined in the same layer(s), but rather, some of the flow features can be defined in one or more first layers, and other flow features (e.g., the nozzles 22) can be defined in a second layer. Furthermore, in embodiments employing more than one nozzle plate layer, the layers do not need to be made of the same materials, and the method(s) used to define flow features in one layer do not need to be same method(s) used to define flow features in the other layers(s). For example, the nozzle plate 20 can include one or more thin or thick film layers that have flow features defined by methods including at least one of lithography, vapor deposition and plasma etching, and the nozzle plate 20 can include one or more layers of polyimide having flow features defined by laser ablation.
Referring back to
Furthermore, a temperature sensing resistor (“TSR”) 105 is positioned adjacent the heaters 32 to measure or sense the amount of heat generated by the heaters 32 to effectuate ink droplet control. Typically, implanting an N-type material or negatively charged material into the P-type substrate or positively charged material such as silicon forms N+ source drain (“NSD”) TSR resistors. A ground structure 108 of P-type material generally encloses, at least partially, the TSR 105 to provide an electrical shield at least partially surrounding the TSR 105. The ground structure 108 is also connected to the TSR 105 at a bond pad 109 that shunts the current flowing between the P-type material substrate and the TSR ground structure 108 to a printer or printing apparatus ground (not shown) through a low voltage side of the TSR 105, and the bond pad 109. Specifically, the TSR 105 is typically forced, but not limited to being forced, to have a low voltage end. In particular, the low voltage end can be driven (and a high voltage end detected, measured, sensed or determined), and is thereafter coupled to the bond pad 109 that is electrically spaced apart or has a different voltage potential. Coupling the ground structure 108 to the low voltage end, the bond pad 109 and the printing apparatus ground thus avoids a ΔV shift.
The heater chip 16 also includes a plurality of field effect transistors (“FET”) collectively referred to as a FET area 111 to address or energize the resistive elements or the heaters 32 in a manner known in the art. The FET area 111 is electrically connected to a chip ground 114. The FET area 111 is sandwiched between the ground structure 108 and a chip ground bus 119 which is connected to a chip ground 120 having a chip ground potential. More specifically, the NSD TSR 105 is partially or fully enclosed by the ground structure 108, i.e. the substrate contacts to a metal conductor. In this way, since the chip ground 120 is electrically spaced apart from the bond pad 109, the ground structure 108 around the TSR 105 provides a lower impedance path for noise generated during printing. That is, ground structure 108 eliminates the ΔV shift, and thereby minimizes the noise measured during temperature determinations while printing.
Various features and advantages of the invention are set forth in the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060001689 A1 | Jan 2006 | US |