1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for performing ink-jet application accurately in application of a liquid material on a smooth member by an ink jet technique in such a manner that data obtained by an image-capturing unit are subjected to image processing to calculate a current position of a groove to be subjected to application and calculate a displacement quantity from a reference position for a next application time to correct the position of an application head and move the application head to the corrected position.
2. Description of the Background Art
The ink jet technique is a technique for discharging a small amount of liquid drops accurately from an ink-jet head using air bubbles or piezoelectric elements. An apparatus for applying a liquid material on a target member by the accurate discharge of liquid drops is an ink-jet application apparatus. The ink-jet application apparatus has recently attracted attention as an apparatus capable of achieving high-definition application. The applicability of the ink-jet application apparatus not only to printing on paper but also to all industrial fields has been explored, so that the ink-jet application apparatus has been already put into practical use.
There has been heretofore proposed a technique in which pattern application is performed on a substrate to eliminate the influence due to a difference in injection state between heads and a positional displacement of the application dots is measured by a camera to calculate the quantity of movement and move the head in XYθ directions to thereby perform correction so that the head approaches a target position. In this manner, the technique can reduce position variation in accordance with each application dot so that a uniform, even and high-quality panel can be produced (e.g. see JP-A-2009-95690).
Factors for determining accuracy of application position in ink-jet application are roughly classified into two factors. The first factor is position variation in accordance with each application dot based on a direction of injection of liquid drops from nozzle holes of an ink-jet application head. The second factor is the degree of coincidence of the nozzle holes of the ink-jet application head with the position of application on a target to be subjected to application.
The technique described in JP-A-2009-95690 can give solution for the first factor but cannot give sufficient solution for the second factor in accordance with the kind of the member to be subjected to application.
In the following description, the member to be subjected to application is a flexible laminated film with long groove-like patterns (hereinafter referred to as scribes) formed in a surface of the film. Although such scribes are formed by laser beams or the like, irradiation position error of laser beams occurs because the film is made of a flexible material.
There may be also conceivable a method in which alignment marks provided at regular intervals are image-captured by a camera to be recognized after the member to be subjected to application is positioned to an application place, so that the positioning state of the member to be subjected to application is measured. However, because the film is heated/cooled in a process before the application process, expansion/contraction arises in the laminated film to cause a positional displacement of the alignment marks. There arises a problem that the position of the nozzle holes of the ink-jet application head is displaced from the position where application should be performed.
In order to solve the aforementioned problem, an object of the invention is to provide an ink-jet application apparatus and method in which a target position of a surface of a flexible laminated film to be subjected to application is corrected and liquid drops are injected from nozzle holes of ink-jet application heads to a correct position so that the quality of application on the film can be improved.
To achieve the foregoing object, the invention provides an ink-jet application apparatus including an upstream side guide roller which pays out and conveys a roll-like film, a suction table which adsorptively holds the paid-out film, an application head which applies a liquid coating material on the film adsorptively held by the suction table, and a downstream side guide roller which conveys the film coated with the coating material and winds up the film like a roll, wherein: an image-capturing camera is disposed so as to be adjacent to the application head and integrated with the application head in terms of position of installation to thereby form an application head unit portion; the application head unit portion is moved above the suction table by a three-dimensionally movable XYZ-direction driving unit; an image of a position where the coating material will be applied next is captured by the image-capturing camera during an applying operation due to the application head; and a result of image-capturing due to the image-capturing camera is processed by an image processing unit to thereby correct a displacement quantity from an initially set application position and move the application head to the position where the coating material will be applied next.
In the apparatus, a plurality of application head unit portions each having the same configuration as defined above are provided; and the XYZ-direction driving unit is formed so that the application head unit portions can operate integrally in a Y-axis direction as a width direction of the film but the application head unit portions can move individually in an X-axis direction as a length direction of the film and in a Z-axis direction as a height direction of the film.
Further, alignment marks are provided in the application position of the film; the alignment marks are image-captured by the image-capturing camera in a state where the paid-out film is adsortively held; and a positional displacement quantity due to adsorptive holding of the film is corrected so that the application head is moved to the position where the coating material will be applied next.
Further, the application position whose image is captured by the image capturing camera in advance is shaped like striped grooves in section.
According to the invention, a target position of a film surface to be subjected to application is directly measured and corrected and liquid drops are injected from nozzle holes of ink-jet application heads to a correct position to thereby improve quality of application on the film.
Embodiments of the invention will be described below with reference to the drawings.
In the embodiments described below, a film for a solar cell, which film contains a non-silicon-based semiconductor material (such as a CIGS thin film), is used as an example of a target for application so that an electrode material or an insulating material is applied on this film by an ink-jet application head to form a film such as an electrode, an insulating film, etc. Incidentally, the CIGS thin film is a semiconductor material thin film composed of Cu (copper), In (indium), Ga (gallium) and Se (selenium), that is, “CIGS” is an arrangement of initial letters of these materials.
In
In the feed portion 16, the feed side film roll 2 is wound with the film 1 as a target for application of an electrode material or an insulating material in the application portion 17 so that the film 1 is shaped like a roll. The film 1 is paid out from the feed side film roll 2, passes through the application portion 17 and is wound up on the take-up side film roll 3 in the take-up portion 18. Here, the lengthwise direction and the widthwise direction of the film 1 are an X-axis direction and a Y-axis direction respectively, while a direction perpendicular to the plane of the film 1 is a Z-axis direction.
In the application portion 17, the film 1 is vacuum-adsorbed by the suction table 10 so that the position of the film 1 is fixed.
As shown in
Although the number of combinations of application heads 15 and image-capturing cameras 19 for forming the camera unit portions may be one, a plurality of combinations of application heads 15 and image-capturing cameras 19 can be used in order to improve processing speed. In this embodiment, four combinations are used. The four combinations are fixed to the common Y-axis gantry 23 so as to be movable along the Y-axis stage 24 in the Y-axis direction parallel to the lengthwise direction of the scribes 29 (
A liquid electrode material, a liquid insulating material, etc. (hereinafter generically referred to as “coating material”) are applied on the film 1 by the ink-jet application heads 15 fixed to the Y-axis gantry 23 as described above, so that an electrode and an insulating film are formed.
Referring back to
Incidentally, each of the application target areas is an area of the film 1 on which the coating material will be applied by one application head 15 in the application portion 17. As shown in
The film 1 is conveyed from the feed side film roll 2 side to the take-up side film roll 3 side so that next application target areas of the film 1 (application target areas on which the coating material will be applied by the application heads 15 respectively) can be located in positions where the coating material can be applied in the application portion 17. On this occasion, the film 1 paid out from the feed side film roll 2 driven to rotate by the feed side shaft motor 11 is supported by the guide roller 4 and the lifting guide roller 6 in the feed portion 16 but the lifting guide roller 6 on this occasion is lifted up to a higher position than an adsorption surface of the suction table 10, while the film 1 is supported by the lifting guide roller 7 and the guide roller 5 in the take-up portion 18 and wound up on the take-up side film roll 3 but the lifting guide roller 7 on this occasion is lifted up to a higher position than the adsorption surface of the suction table 10. In this manner, the film 1 moves in the X-axis direction without any contact with the suction bars 8 and 9 and the suction table 10.
As described above, when the film 1 is conveyed from the feed portion 16 side to the take-up portion 18 side, the film 1 is lifted up by the lifting guide rollers 6 and 7 so that the film 1 can be conveyed without any contact with the suction table 10 to prevent the rear surface of the film 1 from being scratched.
When the film 1 is conveyed by the lifting guide rollers 6 and 7 without any contact with the suction bars 8 and 9 and the suction table 10 as described above so that next application target areas of the film 1 reach the application portion 17, conveyance of the film 1 is terminated and the application target areas are positioned in the X-axis direction in the application portion 17. Incidentally, the positioning is first performed in such a manner that the position of each application target area is adjusted roughly while the wind-up quantity of the take-up side film roll 3 is monitored.
The take-up side shaft motor 12 is braked to fix the take-up portion 18 side of the film 1. In addition, the feed side shaft motor 11 is torqued in a rotation direction opposite to the rotation direction of paying-out of the film 1 to give predetermined tension to the film 1.
In this manner, even when conveyance of the film 1 is terminated, the film 1 is kept under tension in the lengthwise direction of the film 1 (i.e. in the X-axis direction in which the film 1 is conveyed) so that the film 1 can be prevented from slacking.
In such a state, the lifting guide rollers 6 and 7 are lifted down in the application portion 17 so that the film 1 is adsorptively held on the suction table 10 by the suction bars 8 and 9 adsorptively holding the lower surface of the film 1.
As shown in
The scribes 29 are classified into two types, that is, groove-like scribes formed in the transparent electrode layer 28 and the buffer layer 27, and groove-like scribes formed in the transparent electrode layer 28 and the buffer layer 27 and reaching the CIGS thin film layer 26. A material is applied on the groove-like recess portions by an ink jet technique so that the scribes 29 perform intralayer electrical connection or interlayer electric connection. Roughly, the groove width of each scribe 29 is in a range of from about tens of gm to about 100 μm, and the depth of each scribe 29 is in a range of from about several μm to about 10 μm.
Referring back to
When application of coating materials on predetermined application target areas on the film 1 in the application portion 17 is completed as described above, the film 1 is paid out from the feed side roll film 2 while the film 1 is wound up on the take-up side film roll 3. The coating materials are applied on respective application target areas on the continuous film 1 successively by the application heads 15 in the application portion 17.
In
The control unit 36 controls driving of air-driven devices such as the air cylinders 33, etc. and roll motors such as the feed side shaft motor 11, the take-up side shaft motor 12, etc. through the external interface 36c. The control unit 36 further controls the vacuum valves 30 each of which is switched from the vacuum pump which is a vacuum source when the film 1 is vacuum-adsorbed by the suction bars 8 and 9 (
For application positional displacement quantity correction or film absorptive fixation positional displacement quantity correction, each displacement quantity is calculated by the image processing controller 36e and a result of the calculation is converted by the micro-computer 36a so as to be reflected on the amount of movement of each motor in the motor controller 36f. Then, coating materials are injected from the nozzles of the application heads 15 by the application head controller 36d so as to be applied on the film 1.
In
In the step 110, a moving image of the scribes 29 in the application target area on the film 1 is captured by the image-capturing camera 19 attached to a side of the application head 15. On this occasion, when the coating material cannot be applied on the application target area entirely at once, the application target area is divided into a plurality of areas (hereinafter referred to as partial areas) so that the coating material is applied on the partial areas successively. In the following description, the application target area is assumed so that the coating material is applied in accordance with each partial area. Accordingly, each partial area in the application target area is subjected to image capturing performed by the image-capturing camera 19.
In the step 120, the captured image is subjected to image processing to calculate a correction value at application time based on a displacement quantity from the visual field center of the image-capturing camera 19. In the step 130, the correction value is reflected on the position where the coating material should be applied originally, so that X and Y coordinates of the target position are subjected to addition or subtraction to move the application head 15 onto the application target area accurately.
In the step 140, a judgment is made as to whether application on one whole application target area is completed or not. When application is not completed, the applying operation designated by the steps 150 to 180 which will be described below is repeated in accordance with each partial area. When application of one whole application target area is completed after repetition of the applying operation, the applying process is terminated in the step 190.
When application of the whole application target area (i.e. all partial areas in the application target area) is not completed, an operation of application on one partial area is performed in the step 150. Simultaneously with the applying operation, a moving image of the scribes 29 on a next partial area in the same application target area on the film 1 is captured by the image-capturing camera 19 attached to a side of the application head 15 in the step 160. In the next step 170, the image captured during the applying operation is subjected to image processing so that a correction value for application on a next partial area is calculated based on a displacement quantity from the visual field center of the image-capturing camera 19. Finally, in the step 180, the application head 15 is moved onto the next partial area in consideration of the correction value for the position where the coating material should be applied originally. As described above, the coating material can be applied on partial areas successively in a state where the displacement quantity of the application position is corrected.
Incidentally, each partial area contains a plurality of scribes 29. Generally, each partial area contains several (about five) scribes 29. That is, about 10 scribes 29 are regarded as one group, so that each partial area contains one group of scribes 29. A correction value for a next group (i.e. a next partial area) is measured during the current applying operation in advance.
In
In the image-capturing portion 39a, an image of scribes 29 in the first partial area is captured by the image-capturing camera 19 disposed on a side of the application head 15 to obtain the position of the scribes 29. This image capturing is performed while the image-capturing camera 19 is moved together with the application head 15 in the Y-axis direction.
When this image capturing is completed, the application head 15 is moved toward the partial area initially subjected to application (in the X-axis direction) in order to perform application in the first partial area. During the movement of the application head 15, data of the captured image of scribes 29 in the first partial area as an image capturing portion 39a captured by the image-capturing camera 19 are subjected to image processing to calculate a correction value for the position of scribes 29 in the partial area on which the coating material will be applied initially (i.e. the partial area serving as the image capturing portion 39a) to thereby obtain correction data for correcting the moving position of the application head 15 for application on the partial area as the first application target.
When the application head 15 is moved in the X-axis direction so that the first partial area located in the image capturing portion 39a reaches an application start position, the first partial area serves as an application portion 40a and the second partial area serves as a next image capturing portion 39b as shown in
In the image capturing portion 39b, an image of scribes 29 in the second partial area as the image capturing portion 39b is captured by the image-capturing camera 19 to obtain the position of the scribes 29. When the applying operation on the first partial area in the application portion 40a is completed, the application head 15 is moved toward the second partial area (in the X-axis direction). During the movement of the application head 15, the image data previously captured in the image capturing portion 39b by the image-capturing camera 19 is subjected to image processing to calculate a correction value for the position of the scribes 29 in the second partial area which will be subjected to application to thereby obtain correction data for correcting the moving position of the application head 15 moving for application on the second partial area. This processing corresponds to the steps 160 to 180 in
When the application head 15 reaches the second partial area which will be subjected to application next, the second partial area serves as an application portion 40b and the third partial area to be subjected to application next serves as an image capturing portion 39c as shown in
Such a series of operations is repeated in accordance with each partial area. When application on all groups in the same application target area is completed, this processing is terminated (step 190 in
A method of calculating the displacement quantity in the step 120 or 170 in
Description will be made here in the case where an image of scribes 29 is captured in a position Y2 in
In the example of
In
Because the displacement quantity ΔX2 and the slope angle Δθ2 in the position Y2 in the scribe 29 can be calculated, an X-direction displacement quantity in the application start estimated position Y1 can be calculated from
ΔX2+ΔY12·tan(Δθ2)
The X-direction displacement quantity in the position Y1 can be corrected based on this value.
The X-direction displacement quantity in the application end estimated position Y3 in the scribe 29 can be calculated as follows.
ΔX2+ΔY23·tan(Δθ2)
in which ΔY23 is the distance from the position Y2 to the application end estimated position Y3. Similarly, the X-direction displacement quantity in the position Y3 can be corrected based on this value. An X-direction displacement quantity at another intermediate point can be calculated in the same manner as described above, so that the positional displacement can be corrected. When the positions Y1 and Y3 do not indicate the application start estimated position and the application end estimated position, positions outside the positions Y1 and Y3 can be corrected in the same manner as described above.
Another method further improved in accuracy in calculation of a displacement quantity compared with the example shown in
This method calculates a correction value not based on one center point of a scribe 29 but based on two, upper and lower points of a scribe 29. The two points correspond to two points of the positions Y1 and Y3 in
In
In the camera visual fields 41a and 41b in which images have been captured by the image-capturing camera 19, while attention is paid to an intermediate white object W2 (scribe 29) in the images, let points N1 and N3 be intersection points of the line LH as the respective Y-direction centers of the camera visual fields 41a and 41b of the image-capturing camera 19 and the positions Y1 and Y3 of the white object W2 and let ΔX1 and ΔX3 be the X-direction distances from the center point C of the camera visual fields 41a and 41b to the points N1 and N3. Because the center point C is the center position of the scribes 29 on design, the distances ΔX1 and ΔX3 are X-direction displacement quantities at the respective points of the film 1. Because the value of (ΔY12+ΔY23) indicating the distance between the two points of the positions Y1 and Y3 is determined when image capturing is performed by the image-capturing camera 19, the positions X1 and X3 based on the displacements ΔX1 and ΔX3 can be calculated. Accordingly, the slope angle Δθ13 of the scribe 29 subjected to application, to the Y-axis direction can be calculated.
Similarly, X-direction displacement quantities in respective positions between the positions Y1 and Y3 can be corrected. Moreover, positions outside the positions Y1 and Y3 can be calculated and corrected on the assumption of virtual lines.
When the slope angle Δθ2 is obtained based on a result of image capturing at one point of the position Y2 as shown in
In
In
That is, a process of step 135 is performed in place of the step 130 in
Similarly, the process of step 185 is performed in place of the step 180 shown in
As described above, the position of the scribes 29 is image-captured, the positional displacement of the scribes 29 is image-captured to correct the position of the application head 15 so that the positional displacement of the scribes 29 in a partial area which will be subjected to application next can be corrected. Accordingly, liquid drops can be injected from the nozzle holes of the ink-jet application head to a correct position so that quality of application on the film is improved. In addition, correction is performed in consideration of the positional displacement of the whole of the film so that quality of application on the film is improved more greatly.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2010-008270 | Jan 2010 | JP | national |