The present invention generally relates to improved methods for fabricating thermal ink jet printheads—especially as relates to precisely controlling nozzle geometries to improve ink droplet directionality among other properties.
The construction of micro electromechanical systems (MEMS) such as thermal ink jet printheads capable of dispersing small ink drops (on the order of picoliters, for example) during printing operations has become increasingly similar to fabrication techniques for micro electronics.
Ink jet printheads for handling small ink drops are fabricated in several steps. A group of channels is lithographically produced on a substrate, typically a silicon wafer, having actuators and microelectronics on it, by removing regions of photoresist material as is known in the art. The channels are covered with a second substrate that is typically glued to the surface of the photoresist. Many ink jet devices with an array of fluidic channels are created between the pair of substrates. When the rows of devices are diced, the ends of blind channels are exposed on the edge of the sandwiched pair of substrates. The blind channels are created by a thin layer of photopolymer that resides near the front end of the channels, with the channels extending behind the thin wall to the actuator, such as a heater in thermal ink jet. Other actuators could include electrostatic deflection plates or piezoelectric deflection plates. The channels continue further back to an ink supply as is known in the art. The thin wall may be flush with the diced surface or recessed from the diced edges of the substrates. The walls forming the channel ends can be made recessed by using the same photolithographic process used to form the channels. In the absence of further processing to form nozzles in the thin walls at the end of the channels, no fluid will flow through the device. The thin wall protects the interior of the device from being contaminated with dicing debris, detergents or other contaminants. While the channels are still closed at the front, a hydrophobic coating can be applied without contaminating the interior of the fluidic structures. Finally nozzles are formed in the thin end walls of the blind channels using a laser ablation process. The nozzles not only provide continuity of the fluid path, they provide the exit aperture from which drops are ejected and propelled toward a substrate.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,139,674 (hereafter “Markham patent”) issued to Roger G. Markham, et al., and also assigned to the assignee of the present Application for Letters Patent, discloses other general details about the fabrication of ink jet printheads, including the fabrication of filters for filtering impurities in the ink supply before ink enters the nozzle channels. The reader is referred to the Markham patent for other general details about the thermal ink jet printhead fabrication process.
Irregular or otherwise asymmetric nozzles can be a serious problem for any jetting device. These irregularities can be the result of limitations to the processing. For example, after the dicing process, surfactants used in the fabrication process and other debris often adhere to the internal channels defined by the nozzles. Further, the dicing process itself can introduce eccentricities around the nozzle in the form of burrs, chips, and other undesirable features of the dicing process. Because they may affect geometries, the aforementioned remnants of the fabrication and dicing processes can often cause exiting ink drops to veer off their intended paths resulting in “directionality” problems that can affect print quality. The prior art approach to addressing the problems of the remnants in the nozzle is to attempt to adequately remove the remnants during a cleaning process such as a plasma treatment. Often, however, remnants that may affect geometry and directionality still remain after cleaning. Also, the application of a hydrophobic coating can contaminate the interior fluidic pathways, leading to air entrapment or “depriming” of the channel.
There are other problems associated with prior art ink jet printhead fabrication techniques which rely on dicing to create the nozzle openings. For example, because there are often variations in distances between the nozzle openings and the heater, the dicing tolerances are often strict.
In view of the above-identified problems and limitations of the prior art, the present invention provides a method of fabricating ink jet printheads including: an array of lithographically fabricating channels having side walls formed from a photopolymer in which the end of the channels are closed by a thin layer of photopolymer; the thin layer forming the ends of the blind channels is exposed by dicing through the two substrates near the thin wall but outside the channel region leaving the thin wall intact; and nozzles are formed at the end of each channel by laser ablation through the thin wall at the end of each to facilitate exiting print drops during printing.
The present invention also provides an ink jet printhead that includes: a plurality of nozzles formed by laser ablation in a thin photopolymer that block the ends of photo lithographically formed channels; a substrate containing actuators and a capping substrate sandwiching the fluid structure in photopolymer so that the actuator can import motion to fluid in the channels; and a nozzle formed in the thin wall so that the actuator can drive ink drops out the nozzle; the two substrates and photopolymer are arranges so that dicing leaves the channel-blocking wall intact; and wherein for each channel, the thin wall includes a laser-ablated, well-defined hole to facilitate the formation of drops during actuation.
Features of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following description with reference to the drawings, in which:
The reader is again referred to the Markham patent for general details about the fabrication of ink jet printheads, and the general operation of ink jet printheads, as said reference is also incorporated by reference. Of note in the Markham patent is the use of laser ablation to construct a printhead filter, as the present invention also employs laser ablation, but for an entirely different purpose-to construct nozzle exit holes.
It can also be seen from
The front view of the fully fabricated ink jet printhead 300 is shown in
A side view of a single drop ejector 400 down the middle of the device is shown in
Experimental results are listed in Table 1 below for measurements of the undesirable touching of exiting ink drops against printhead structure members.
It has also been experimentally shown that for the worst case conditions, with a maximum Y (scan) misdirection of 80 microns at 1.3 mm, a total maximum wall height is 20 microns, assuming the nozzles are centered and have diameters of 15 microns (which is appropriate for drops of 5 picoliters), and the roof 250 and floor 260 can extend up to 40 microns before the drops will touch them.
Thus has been disclosed, an improved thermal ink jet printhead fabrication method which improves over prior art methods in several ways: improved directionality of ejected ink drops; a relaxing of dicing tolerances; a reduction or elimination of cleaning operations; increased dicing speeds; and reduced fluid friction, because of the thin front wall in which the nozzle is formed relative to large channel dimensions, leading to increased ink drop velocity, latency and recoverability, while maintaining favorable ink drop volume control, among other advantages.
Variations and modifications of the present invention are possible, given the above description. However, all variations and modifications which are obvious to those skilled in the art to which the present invention pertains are considered to be within the scope of the protection granted by this Letters Patent.