The subject disclosure is generally directed to color printing.
Drop on demand ink jet technology for producing printed media has been employed in commercial products such as printers, plotters, and facsimile machines. Generally, an ink jet image is formed by selective placement on a receiver surface of ink drops emitted by a plurality of drop generators implemented in a printhead or a printhead assembly. For example, the printhead assembly and the receiver surface are caused to move relative to each other, and drop generators are controlled to emit drops at appropriate times, for example by an appropriate controller. The receiver surface can be a transfer surface or a print medium such as paper. In the case of a transfer surface, the image printed thereon is subsequently transferred to an output print medium such as paper. Some ink jet printheads employ melted solid ink.
The printing apparatus 10 further includes a substrate guide 20 and a media preheater 27 that guides a print media substrate 21, such as paper, through a nip 22 formed between opposing acutated surfaces of a transfer roller 23 and the intermediate transfer surface 12 supported by the print drum 14. The transfer roller is selectively movable into contact with the intermediate transfer surface 12. Stripper fingers 24 can be pivotally mounted to assist in removing the print medium substrate 21 from the intermediate transfer surface 12 after an image 26 comprising deposited ink drops is transferred to the print medium substrate 21.
Printing an image on the transfer surface 12 can be accomplished for example by rotating the print drum in a first direction (e.g., clockwise as viewed in
An image can also be printed in a single pass or revolution of the print drum, in which case the X-axis dot density would be defined by the spacing between the columnar arrays of nozzles.
The deposited image can further include a Y-axis density that is measured orthogonally to the X-axis, for example along the direction of rotation of the print drum. The Y-axis dot density can be visualized as being parallel to the Y-axis when the image is flattened to plane that is parallel to the X-axis and the Y-axis. The Y-axis dot density can be controlled by the rotation speed of the print drum and the drop timing of the printhead. In this manner, the deposited image has a two-dimensional dot density X by Y which can be expressed as X×Y.
After an entire image is deposited onto the transfer surface 12, the deposited image is transferred to the print media substrate by moving the transfer roller into contact with the transfer surface 12 and moving the print media substrate 21 into the nip formed between the transfer roller and the intermediate transfer surface 12. Continued rotation of the print drum 14 causes the print media substrate to pass through the nip, and a combination of pressure in the nip and heat causes the deposited image to transfer from the print drum and fuse to the print media substrate 21. The transfer roller 23 is moved away from the print drum 14 after the image has been transferred.
The second two-dimensional dot density X2×Y2 is less than the first two-dimensional dot density X1×Y1 in the sense that the product of X2 times Y2 is less than the product of X1 times Y1. Alternatively, the second two-dimensional dot density X2×Y2 can be less than the first two-dimensional dot density X1×Y1 in the sense that X2 is less than X1 and Y2 is not greater than Y1, or X2 is not greater than X1 and Y2 is less than Y1.
By way of illustrative example, the first image can comprise interlaced scan lines that are deposited using a plurality of print drum revolutions, while the second image can comprise non-interlaced scan lines that are deposited using at most a single print drum revolution. More generally, the first image can be printed using a first number of revolutions of the print drum, and the second image can be printed using a second number of revolutions of the print drum that is less than the first number of revolutions. In the case where the second image is printed using a single revolution of the print drum, the X-axis dot density is determined by the physical X-axis dot density of the printhead.
For the particular example of a printhead having an X axis nozzle density of 100 nozzles per inch, a first number of drum revolutions of 6 would provide a first image resolution of 600 dots per inch along the X axis. If the jet firing frequency is 30 KHz and the drum surface velocity is 50 inches per second, then the first image resolution in the Y axis is also 600 dots per inch. This results in a two-dimensional dot density of 600×600, which provides for 360000 dots per square inch. Printing a second image in a single drum revolution at a jet firing frequency of 15 KHz and a drum surface velocity of 50 inches per second yields a two-dimensional dot density of 100×300, which provides for 30000 dots per square inch.
By way of illustrative example, the selected portions of the substantially solid fill regions can comprise line segments formed of at least a predetermined number of contiguous dots. As another example, a selected portion of a substantially solid fill region can comprise a plurality of contiguously adjacent line segments, each line segment formed of at least a predetermined number of contiguous dots. Also, a selected portion of a substantially solid fill region can comprise a region wherein substantially all of the dots (e.g., at least about 95 percent) are of the same color.
By way of illustrative examples, a solid or dithered fill region of the second image can be printed using a single primary color or a plurality of primary colors that form a secondary color. The color (primary or secondary) of a solid or dithered fill region of the second image can correspond to the color of the corresponding portion of a substantially solid fill region of the first image. As another example, the color of a solid or dithered fill region of the second image can be one of a plurality of primary colors printed in the corresponding portion of a substantially solid fill region of the first image.
By way of specific example, a solid or dithered fill region of the second image can comprise cyan, magenta and yellow where the corresponding portion of a substantially solid fill region of the first image is black.
The claims, as originally presented and as they may be amended, encompass variations, alternatives, modifications, improvements, equivalents, and substantial equivalents of the embodiments and teachings disclosed herein, including those that are presently unforeseen or unappreciated, and that, for example, may arise from applicants/patentees and others.
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20070030323 A1 | Feb 2007 | US |