The present disclosure relates to an ink jet printing apparatus that prints an image by ejecting ink and also to an ink tank.
Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2018-140556 discloses an ink supply container and an ink tank. Ink is supplied from the ink supply container to the ink tank through multiple flow channels inserted into the inside the ink tank through an opening thereof. The flow channels serve as flow paths for ink and for air and enable gas-liquid exchange between the ink supply container and the ink tank during ink replenishment. Thus, a user can supply ink from the ink supply container to the ink tank without squashing the ink supply container.
In this system, a gap is provided between a needle disposed in the ink tank and an outlet port of the ink supply container to facilitate alignment between the ink supply container and the ink tank and also to facilitate insertion of the needle into the outlet port. In this configuration disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2018-140556, however, the ink supply container may not be fixed securely to the ink tank and may become unstable during ink injection for replenishment due to the gap being provided between the needle of the ink tank and the outlet port.
The present disclosure provides a technique that enables reliable ink injection operation.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided an ink jet printing apparatus, comprising: an ink tank including: an ink chamber that stores ink to be supplied to a printhead configured to eject the ink; an injection port through which the ink is injected into the ink chamber; and a first shape portion formed near the injection port; and a flow channel member configured to be disposed inside the injection port and form a channel through which the ink is injected into the ink chamber; wherein the ink is injected to the ink chamber from an ink supply container which includes: an outlet port configured to be inserted into the injection port and configured for the ink to flow through; and a second shape portion formed near the outlet port and configured to engage the first shape portion, the flow channel member is displaceable in a direction intersecting an inserting direction of inserting the outlet port into the injection port, and the ink supply container is fixed to the ink tank by engagement between the second shape portion and the first shape portion.
Further features of the present disclosure will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Embodiments of the present disclosure will be described with reference to the drawings. The embodiments described herein are not intended to limit the present disclosure. All of the combinations of the features described in the embodiments are not necessarily essential to the present disclosure. Shapes, relative dispositions, or the like of the elements described in the embodiments are merely examples, and the scope of the present invention is not limited to such examples.
Apparatus Configuration
A scanner unit 2 for scanning documents is disposed at the top of the housing 5 so as to be openable with respect to the housing 5.
The print medium on which the printhead 3 has performed printing is discharged onto a sheet discharge tray 43 by a discharge roller 41 (discharge unit 41). The sheet discharge tray 43 is disposed above the sheet feeding cassette 6.
Note that the direction in which the print medium is conveyed by the conveyance roller 40 (i.e., Y direction in
The printhead 3 is mounted in a carriage 31, which reciprocally moves in a main scanning direction (i.e., X direction in
Among various ink jet printing methods, a process of using thermal energy for ejecting ink is adopted in the printhead 3. The printhead 3 includes elements (for example, heat elements) that generate thermal energy, and the thermal energy causes the ink to change its state (film boiling) for ejection. This enables high-density and high-resolution image printing. Note that the present disclosure may be applied not only to the printing process using thermal energy but also to a printing process using vibrational energy generated by piezoelectric elements.
A maintenance unit is provided in the printing apparatus 1 at a position inside the scanning region of the carriage 31 and outside the printing region in which the printhead 3 performs printing. The maintenance unit, which is a unit for performing maintenance of the printhead 3 to maintain ejection performance, is disposed so as to oppose an ejection orifice surface of the printhead 3 on which ejection orifices for ejecting ink are arrayed.
In
Note that in the present embodiment, a serial head in which the printhead 3 is mounted in the carriage 31 is described by way of example. The present disclosure, however, is not limited to this but may be applied to a line head in which ejection orifices are arrayed so as to cover a region that corresponds to the width of the print medium.
The ink tanks 11 of respective color inks to be ejected from the printhead 3 are provided in the printing apparatus 1. In the present embodiment, the printing apparatus 1 has four ink tanks 11, in other words, an ink tank 11K for black ink, an ink tank 11C for cyan ink, an ink tank 11M for magenta ink, and an ink tank 11Y for yellow ink, which are collectively referred to as the “ink tanks 11”. Note that cyan, magenta, yellow are merely examples of color inks, and other color inks may be used.
As illustrated in
The printing apparatus 1 has a tank cover 12Bk for black and a tank cover 12Cl for color inks. The tank cover 12Bk for black covers the top surface of the ink tank 11K for black. The tank cover 12Cl for color inks covers all of the top surfaces of the ink tank 11C for cyan, the ink tank 11M for magenta, and the ink tank 11Y for yellow. The tank cover 12Bk for black and the tank cover 12Cl for color inks are hereinafter collectively referred to as “tank covers 12”.
Ink Injection
An injection port 14 for ink injection is formed at the top surface of the ink tank 11, and a tank cap 13 is configured to seal the injection port 14. The tank cap 13 includes a cap member 13a for sealing the injection port 14 and a lever member 13b that supports the cap member 13a. The lever member 13b is turnably fixed to the main body of the printing apparatus 1. A user can handle the lever member 13b.
A user detaches the cap member 13a from the injection port 14 by turning the lever member 13b in the S2 direction in
The cap member 13a of the tank cap 13 is formed of a member having rubber elasticity, and the lever member 13b is formed of a plastic member or the like. According to the present embodiment, lever members 13b are colored so as to correspond to respective colors of inks stored in the ink tanks 11.
In other words, the lever member 13b for black ink is colored black or gray, the lever member 13b for cyan ink is colored cyan, the lever member 13b for magenta ink is colored magenta, and the lever member 13b for yellow ink is colored yellow. This can reduce the likelihood of a user injecting a wrong ink when the user injects inks into respective ink tanks 11. Note that not only the lever members 13b but also the cap members 13a may be colored accordingly.
Configuration of Ink Tank
In normal operation, ink is supplied from the ink chamber 16 to the printhead 3 as the printhead 3 ejects ink. Meanwhile, a volume of air equal to the volume of ink supplied to the printhead 3 is supplied from the air chamber 18 to the ink chamber 16 via the gas-liquid exchange region.
If the air in the ink chamber 16 expands due to fluctuation in temperature or atmospheric pressure or the like and the meniscus at the gas-liquid exchange region is thereby broken, the ink in the ink chamber 16 drops into the air chamber 18 due to head difference. Accordingly, the air chamber 18 has such a volume as to be able to accommodate a full amount of ink that can be stored in the ink chamber 16. Thus, the air chamber 18 also serves as a buffer chamber that prevents ink from spilling from the atmospheric communication port 19 into the printing apparatus.
Ink Supply
In the ink tank 11 illustrated in
In the present embodiment, the opening and closing of the valve 23 are linked to user's opening and closing of the corresponding tank cover 12. In other words, when the tank cover 12 is closed, the valve 23 opens the supply tube 8 and the atmospheric communication tube 30. On the other hand, when the tank cover 12 is opened, the valve 23 closes the supply tube 8 and the atmospheric communication tube 30. Note that the valve 23 may be opened or closed by a member other than the tank cover 12. Moreover, the supply tube 8 and the atmospheric communication tube 30 may have separate valves 23.
As illustrated in
The ink tank 11 also includes a needle 22 disposed inside the injection port 14. The needle 22 serves as a flow channel member (injection support member) for facilitating ink injection through the injection port 14. The needle 22 is formed of a first channel 22a and a second channel 22b that enable the inside and the outside of the ink tank 11 to communicate with each other. Note that the needle 22 is made of a material different from that of the ink tank 11.
In
When a user injects ink into an ink tank 11, the user first open the tank cover 12 (see
Next, the user detaches the cap 13 from the injection port 14 to expose the injection port 14 and the needle 22. The user subsequently inserts (mounts) the ink bottle 15 in the injection port 14 in such a manner as to insert the needle 22 into an outlet port 15a of the ink bottle 15.
When the needle 22 is inserted into the outlet port 15a, a valve (not illustrated) disposed inside the ink bottle 15 is opened, thereby causing the inside of the ink bottle 15 to communicate with the inside of the ink tank 11. Gas-liquid exchange between the ink in the ink bottle 15 and the air in the ink chamber 16 occurs while the first channel 22a and the second channel 22b of the needle 22 function as channels for air and ink, which enables ink to be injected into the ink tank 11.
As ink injection progresses, the surface of the ink in the ink chamber 16 reaches the bottom end of the needle 22 (especially to the bottom end of the second channel 22b functioning as the air channel). As a result, air cannot flow out of the ink chamber 16, and the gas-liquid exchange stops. This stops ink flow from the ink bottle 15 to the ink chamber 16, and the ink injection is completed. In the present embodiment, as described above, ink injection is performed while the gas-liquid exchange occurs.
The mechanical identification shape portion 25 and the mechanical identification groove 24 are configured to engage each other only when the ink bottle 15 containing the same ink as that stored in the ink tank 11 is inserted into the injection port 14. Moreover, the needle 22 can be inserted into the outlet port 15a only when the mechanical identification shape portion 25 engages the mechanical identification groove 24.
Accordingly, even if a user tries to insert an ink bottle 15 containing an ink different from that stored in the ink tank 11, the mechanical identification shape portion 25 does not engage the mechanical identification groove 24, and accordingly the needle 22 cannot enter the outlet port 15a. Thus, providing the ink tank 11 with the mechanical identification groove 24 and providing the ink bottle 15 with the mechanical identification shape portion 25 reduce the likelihood of a user injecting a wrong ink by mistake.
For example, the mechanical identification shape portion 25 of the ink bottle 15 containing magenta ink engages the mechanical identification groove 24 of the ink tank 11M for magenta, which enables a user to insert the ink bottle 15 into the injection port 14. On the other hand, the mechanical identification shape portion 25 of the ink bottle 15 containing cyan ink does not engage the mechanical identification groove 24 of the ink tank 11M for magenta, which prevents the user from inserting the ink bottle 15 into the injection port 14.
Detailed configurations of the mechanical identification groove 24 and the mechanical identification shape portion 25 will be described with reference to
The mechanical identification groove 24 is formed so as to have a smaller cross section at a deeper side (downstream side) in the insertion direction of the ink bottle 15 (in the −Z direction). Accordingly, when the mechanical identification shape portion 25 engages the mechanical identification groove 24, the mechanical identification shape portion 25 is positioned stationarily with respect to the mechanical identification groove 24. A user can inject ink reliably due to the ink bottle 15 being stationary with respect to the ink tank 11. Moreover, the user does not necessarily hold the ink bottle 15 during ink injection, which leads to an improvement in ink injection work.
As illustrated in
Here, an example of an openable and closable valve disposed inside the ink tank 11 is described with reference to
The ink bottle 15 has an elastic member 50, a displaceable member 51, a fixing member 52, and an urging member 53 that are disposed inside the outlet port 15a. The elastic member 50 is made, for example, of a rubber and disposed near the outlet port 15a. The elastic member 50 has a through hole having a diameter slightly smaller than the outer diameter of the needle 22 so that the needle 22 can penetrate the through hole. When the needle 22 is inserted into the outlet port 15a, the needle 22 engages the through hole of the elastic member 50 as illustrated in
The displaceable member 51 and the fixing member 52 are disposed at positions deeper inside the ink tank 11 with respect to the elastic member 50. An end of the urging member 53, such as a spring, is attached to the displaceable member 51, thereby urging the displaceable member 51 toward the elastic member 50. In other words, in the state of the ink bottle 15 being not inserted in the ink tank 11, the displaceable member 51 abuts the elastic member 50 to serve as a valve as illustrated in
The fixing member 52 is disposed around the displaceable member 51, and the other end of the urging member 53 is attached to the fixing member 52. The displaceable member 51 is displaceable with respect to the fixing member 52.
When a user inserts the ink bottle 15 into the ink tank 11, the needle 22 abuts the displaceable member 51. As illustrated in
In the example illustrated in
Refer back to
On the other hand, the needle 22 is not stationary relative to the ink tank 11 and is displaceable in the X and Y directions. In other words, the needle 22 is configured such that the central axis 27 of the needle 22 can be inclined so as to align the central axis 26 of the ink bottle 15 inserted by a user.
In
In the present embodiment, the needle 22 can be displaced in the X and Y directions. With this configuration, when the tip of the needle 22 abuts the outlet port 15a, the central axis 27 of the needle 22 is caused to incline (see
As described above, the ink bottle 15 is positioned stationarily with respect to the ink tank 11 using the mechanical identification shape portion 25 and the mechanical identification groove 24. This enables a user to inject ink reliably into the ink tank 11.
The needle 22 is configured to move in the X and Y directions and can be equalizedly inserted into the outlet port 15a of the ink bottle 15. This enables the needle 22 and the outlet port 15a to be aligned appropriately with each other, which reduces the likelihood of the user performing a wrong operation that may cause, for example, the needle 22 to break the ink bottle 15.
In the above description, the engagement of the identification shape portion 25 and the identification groove 24 is achieved using the protrusion of the mechanical identification shape portion 25 and the recess of the mechanical identification groove 24. However, the present invention is not limited to this. The recess may be formed in the ink bottle 15, and the protrusion may be formed in the ink tank 11. Moreover, it has been described that the ink bottle 15 is fixed onto the ink tank 11 by the engagement of the mechanical identification shape portion and the mechanical identification groove. However, the fixation of the ink bottle 15 to the ink tank 11 may be achieved using an engagement shape that does not form a mechanical identification specific to a type of ink.
A second embodiment of the present disclosure will be described with reference to
When the ink bottle 15 engages the ink tank 11 appropriately, a user can feel clicking produced by engagement of the pressing members 29 with the recesses 25a. This enables the user to confirm the ink bottle 15 is securely mounted in the injection port 14, which can reduce the likelihood of the user inserting (mounting) the ink bottle 15 wrongly.
Moreover, the engagement of the pressing members 29 with the recesses 25a enhances secure fixing of the ink bottle 15 onto the ink tank 11, which can achieve more reliable ink injection. Thus, ink can be injected reliably also with the configuration of the present embodiment.
While the present disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2019-198685, filed Oct. 31, 2019, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2019-198685 | Oct 2019 | JP | national |