The present application claims priority to Japanese Application(s) No(s). P2003-030125 filed Feb. 6, 2003, which application(s) is/are incorporated herein by reference to the extent permitted by law.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to ink ejecting heads incorporated in, for example, inkjet printers, and also relates to methods for making the ink ejecting heads. In particular, the present invention relates to an ink ejecting head having no opening on a nozzle sheet for bonding to a head chip and no constraints on the height of a liquid chamber, and also relates to a method for making the ink ejecting head for appropriate bonding of the head chip without raising the production costs.
2. Description of the Related Art
A known ink ejecting head for inkjet printers requires an electrical connection between a head chip having an energy generator for applying energy to ink for ejecting ink droplets, and a printed circuit board controlling the actuation of this head chip.
A known method for establishing the electrical connection therebetween is to connect each terminal of both the head chip and the printed circuit board by wire bonding (see, for example, Japanese Examined Patent application Publications Nos. 6-4325 (in particular,
In particular,
In the known method described above, however, the structure of the ink ejecting head requires that wire bonding between the head chip and the printed circuit board be performed on the surface from which ink droplets are ejected (in
To perform wire bonding, openings must be formed on a member having nozzles (orifices) and must be sealed with, for example, resin (in
Moreover, as shown in
The projections may cause feeding problems (such as jamming) of a printing medium or may scratch the printing medium, since the printing medium such as paper slides over the ink ejecting surface. Therefore, the openings to be sealed must be away from the path where the printing medium slides over.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to perform bonding of a head chip in the process of producing an ink ejecting head, without forming openings for bonding on a nozzle sheet, without suffering from constraints on the distance between the head chip and the nozzle sheet, without sacrificing reliability, and without raising the production costs.
The object of the present invention can be achieved by the following.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, an ink ejecting head includes a nozzle sheet having nozzles for ejecting droplets; a head chip having an energy generator opposing each of the nozzles; a chamber-forming member interposed between the nozzle sheet and the head chip for defining the space for a liquid chamber between the energy generator and the nozzle; an electrode provided in a surface of the head chip, the surface opposing the nozzle sheet, and provided in at least a part of an area where no chamber-forming member is disposed; a wiring layer having a first terminal and disposed on a surface of the nozzle sheet, the surface adjacent to the head chip; and a bonding layer disposed on the first terminal of the wiring layer and being at least in contact with the electrode of the head chip; wherein the energy generator applies energy to liquid in the liquid chamber for ejecting the liquid from the nozzle; and wherein the bonding layer and the electrode of the head chip are bonded by ultrasonic bonding.
As described above, the nozzle sheet, the chamber-forming member, and the head chip are stacked in layers. The head chip has the electrode on the surface opposing the nozzle sheet. The nozzle sheet has the wiring layer and the first terminal on the surface opposing the head chip. The bonding layer disposed on the first terminal of the wiring layer is at least in contact with the electrode of the head chip. Then the electrode of the head chip and the bonding layer are bonded by ultrasonic bonding.
The bonding in the electrode of the head chip can thus be made without forming openings for bonding on the nozzle sheet. Further, ultrasonic bonding can be made without providing the bonding layer such as a bump to the head chip, whereas providing it to the nozzle sheet. Moreover, since the bonding layer to the nozzle sheet can be formed by plating, the height of the bonding layer can be adjusted to any level. Since the bonding layer can thus be formed according to the thickness of the chamber-forming member, the thickness of the chamber-forming member, that is, the height of the ink chamber can be adjusted to a desired level.
An embodiment of the present invention will now be described with reference to the drawings.
Referring to
The nozzle sheet 11 has a plurality of nozzles 11a for ejecting ink droplets.
Further, the nozzle sheet 11 has a barrier layer 13 and the head chip 12 stacked thereon. The head chip 12 has a plurality of the energy generators 12b (heating elements in this embodiment) precipitated out on one surface (lower surface in
The barrier layer 13 serves as a chamber-forming member for defining an ink chamber P and is made of, for example, photosensitive cyclized rubber resist or dry film resist of an exposure hardening type. To form the barrier layer 13, such material is first stacked on the entire surface of the semiconductor substrate 12a, the surface on which the energy generators 12b are formed. Then, unnecessary parts of the material are removed by a photolithography process to form the barrier layer 13. The barrier layer 13 has adhesiveness with the nozzle sheet 11.
Here, the nozzle sheet 11, the barrier layer 13, and the head chip 12 are bonded together such that the nozzles 11a of the nozzle sheet 11 oppose the energy generators 12b. That is, the central axes of the nozzles 11a and the energy generators 12b are collinearly arranged. The ink chamber P is defined by the nozzle sheet 11, the barrier layer 13, and the head chip 12.
As shown in
The thickness of the barrier layer 13, which constitutes the height of the ink chamber P, is adjusted to about 8 to 30 μm. Less thickness of the barrier layer 13 causes unstable ejection of ink droplets, whereas excessive thickness interferes with fine patterning as described below. Therefore, the thickness of the barrier layer 13 preferably ranges from about 8 to 30 μm, and more preferably, from about 10 to 15 μm.
The head chip 12 has a pad (electrode) 12c on the surface adjacent to the nozzle sheet 11 (lower surface in
A bump (bonding layer) 16A is disposed on the first terminal 14a of the wiring layer 14. At least the top sublayer of the bump 16A is made of gold. The bump 16A and the pad 12c of the head chip 12 are bonded together. The area where the pad 12c, the bump 16A, and the first terminal 14a are connected is sealed with sealant 18 such as resin.
The printed circuit board 21 is provided at a certain distance from the position where the barrier layer 13 and the head chip 12 are stacked on the nozzle sheet 11 as shown in
A bump 16B (second bonding layer), which is similar to the bump 16A, is provided on the second terminal 14b of the wiring layer 14 disposed on the nozzle sheet 11. The bump 16B and the wiring layer 21a disposed on the printed circuit board 21 are bonded together.
Some possible methods for performing bonding to a head chip, without providing openings on a nozzle sheet, will now be described. However, these methods are inappropriate due to some problems described below.
As shown in
The nozzle sheet 101 has a wiring layer 104 on the surface adjacent to the head chip 102. The head chip 102 has a pad (electrode) 102a made of aluminum on the surface adjacent to the nozzle sheet 101. The pad 102a of the head chip 102 opposes the wiring layer 104 disposed on the nozzle sheet 101.
To bond the pad 102a of the head chip 102 to the wiring layer 104 on the nozzle sheet 101, a ball-shaped stud bump 105 made of gold is formed on the pad 102a, whereas a gold-plated layer 106 is formed on the wiring layer 104. The stud bump 105 and the gold-plated layer 106 are then bonded together. The stud bump 105 is formed by adding a ball to a wire bonding process and is used when cost-justified, for example, when points to be bonded are few in number.
The stud bump 105 has a height of, for example, about 65 μm and still has a height of about 25 μm after bonding. Therefore, in
In the barrier layer 103 made of, for example, photosensitive resin, its photosensitive properties determine, to a certain extent, the ratio of the thickness of the barrier layer 103 to the pattern width of the ink chamber P. Since, for example, the ratio of the thickness to the width is generally one or less, excessive thickness interferes with the formation of fine patterns. Therefore, the barrier layer 103 has a certain upper limit on thickness to achieve a desired pattern density. The thickness L2 of the barrier layer 103 preferably ranges from about 8 to 30 μm, and more preferably, from about 10 to 15 μm. In the bonding method where the stud bump 105 is formed on the pad 102a of the head chip 102, however, limiting the thickness L2 of the barrier layer 103 within these ranges is difficult.
Another method illustrated in
However, it is difficult and undesirable for reliability to rapidly bend the nozzle sheet 101 made of FPC within the length of the head chip 102 (horizontal direction in
Moreover, both methods illustrated in
Alternatively, a bump on the pad 102a of the head chip 102 may be formed by plating, instead of forming the stud bump 105, to reduce the height of the bump. To plate the head chip 102, however, resist must be subjected to a masking process prior to the process for plating the bump. This adds complexity to the production process and thus raises the production cost.
For the reasons described above, the bumps 16A and 16B are provided on the wiring layer 14 in the present invention.
The above-described structure disclosed in the present invention enables the head chip 12 and the printed circuit board 21 to be electrically connected via the pad 12c of the head chip 12, the bump 16A, the wiring layer 14, the bump 16B, and the wiring layer 21a. A signal from the printed circuit board 21 can thus be transmitted to the head chip 12.
Although not shown, the printed circuit board 21 is electrically connected further to a control unit in a main body of a printer.
In the ink ejecting head 10 structured as described above, the energy generators 12b are selected according to the instructions from the control unit of the printer, whereas pulsed current based on image data etc. is supplied to the selected energy generators 12b for a short period of time such as 1 to 3 μsec. The energy generators 12b are thus rapidly heated, and bubbles of ink, which is in the vapor phase, are produced in the vicinity of the energy generators 12b. The expansion of the ink bubbles pushes the ink aside.
Then the ink with the same volume as that pushed aside is ejected from the nozzles 11a in the form of ink droplets and dropped on the printing paper. That is, the ink in the ink chamber P corresponding to the energy generators 12b is ejected from the nozzles 11a provided in the bottom wall of the ink chamber P.
Subsequently, the ejected volume of ink is fed from the left side (in
A method for producing the ink ejecting head 10 will now be described.
As illustrated, no bump etc. is provided on the pad 12c of the head chip 12. On the other hand, the wiring layer 14 is disposed on the nozzle sheet 11. The first terminal 14a and the second terminal 14b (not shown in
Here, the height of the bump 16A (the height L3 in
The thickness L4 of the barrier layer 13 disposed under the head chip 12 is set at about 15 μm.
Referring to
When the head chip 12 above the nozzle sheet 11 is arranged in a predetermined position, the top sublayer of the bump 16A attached to the nozzle sheet 11 and the pad 12c of the head chip 12 are opposed, and at least in contact with each other.
This compresses the bump 16A by α until its height becomes equal to the thickness L4 of the barrier layer 13, whereas the gold-plated sublayer 16b on top of the bump 16A and the pad 12c, which is made of aluminum and included in the head chip 12, are bonded together by ultrasonic bonding (metal bonding) at a contact surface S1.
Subsequent to the ultrasonic bonding of the pad 12c and the bump 16A, the bonded part is covered and sealed with the sealant 18 such as resin (see
On the other hand, the bump 16B similar to that used in bonding to the head chip 12 is provided on the second terminal 14b of the wiring layer 14 disposed on the nozzle sheet 11. The bump 16B has the same layer structure as that of the bump 16A illustrated in one of
The top sublayer (gold-plated sublayer) of the wiring layer 21a is in contact with the bump 16B on the second terminal 14b. Similarly to the case of the head chip 12, the vibrator 30 is placed on the upper surface (in
There are other possible bonding methods in addition to those described above.
In
Moreover, the one formed on the second terminal 14b of the wiring layer 14 disposed on the nozzle sheet 11 is (1) the bump 16B having the gold-plated sublayer on top, similarly to the above, or (2) the projected solder-plated sublayer.
Then the top sublayer (solder-plated sublayer) of the wiring layer 21a is solder-bonded to the bump 16B or the solder-plated layer on the second terminal 14b by, for example, applying pressure through reflowing or a heat bar. The wiring layer 21a on the printed circuit board 21 is thus bonded to the wiring layer 14 on the nozzle sheet 11.
The bonding between the wiring layer 14 on the nozzle sheet 11 and the printed circuit board 21 may be performed either prior to or subsequent to the ultrasonic bonding between the bump 16A on the wiring layer 14 disposed on the nozzle sheet 11 and the pad 12c of the head chip 12. When using ultrasonic bonding, the bonding between the bump 16B on the wiring layer 14 disposed on the nozzle sheet 11 and the wiring layer 21a disposed on the printed circuit board 21, may be performed simultaneously with the bonding between the bump 16A on the wiring layer 14 disposed on the nozzle sheet 11 and the pad 12c of the head chip 12.
In the present embodiment, as described above, the head chip 12 and the printed circuit board 21 can be electrically connected without providing openings on the nozzle sheet 11. Since the projections, which are created on the openings after sealing, are thus eliminated, the ink ejecting surface (lower surface in
In the present embodiment, moreover, only the pad 12c made of aluminum is disposed on the head chip 12 and no gold-plated layer is provided. This eliminates the process for forming the gold-plated layer on the pad 12c and thus can reduce the production cost.
On the other hand, ultrasonic bonding to the wiring layer 14 on the nozzle sheet 11 requires the gold-plated layer to be formed on the first terminal 14a of the wiring layer 14. Therefore, the bump 16A can be formed in the process for forming the gold-plated layer on the first terminal 14a of the wiring layer 14, and no additional process is required. Ultrasonic bonding can thus be performed without raising the production cost.
As described above, the height of the bonded part between the head chip and the wiring layer constitutes the height of the ink chamber. Further, since bonding to the head chip requires no opening on the nozzle sheet, the process for sealing the openings can be eliminated. Accordingly, the projections created by sealing and on the surface of the nozzle sheet are eliminated, and the plane surface can thus be maintained.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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P2003-030125 | Feb 2003 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4942408 | Braun | Jul 1990 | A |
6616269 | Nozawa | Sep 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060132545 A1 | Jun 2006 | US |