Ink-jet recording head that minutely vibrates ink meniscus

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6431674
  • Patent Number
    6,431,674
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, January 29, 1997
    27 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 13, 2002
    21 years ago
Abstract
An ink-jet recording apparatus having an ink-jet recording head including pressure generating chambers communicatively connected to a nozzle opening and a reservoir, pressure generating member for pressurizing the pressure generating chambers, and a control device for applying drive signals to the pressure generating member. The control device applies drive signals to the pressure generating member. The drive signals contain signals corresponding to print data and signals which minutely vibrate the meniscus of ink in the nozzle openings to such an extent as to not eject ink droplets during a nonprint period. The control device causes ejection of ink droplets from the nozzle openings in accordance with print data during printing operations, and minutely vibrates the meniscuses of ink formed at the nozzle openings a preset period of time before or after the discharging of the ink droplets in a printing operation.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to an ink-jet recording apparatus having a recording head which ejects ink droplets through nozzles by varying the amount of pressure in a pressure generating chamber, which is communicatively connected to the nozzle opening and a reservoir of ink, in accordance with print data. More particularly, the invention relates to a technique for preventing the nozzle openings from being clogged.




An ink-jet recording head of the on-demand type includes many nozzle openings and pressure generating chambers associated with the nozzle openings. The pressure generating chambers expand and contract in accordance with print signals, to eject ink droplets through the nozzle openings. In the recording head, fresh ink is successively supplied to selected nozzle openings for carrying out a printing operation. Accordingly, there is little chance that those nozzle openings will become clogged. On the other hand, the nozzle openings that are infrequently used to eject ink droplets, such as those orifices located at upper and lower ends of the recording head, frequently clog. This is a problem.




To overcome this problem, after the printing operation is continued for a predetermined period of time, a flushing operation is performed in which the recording head is returned to the capping means in a nonprint area, and a drive signal is applied to the piezoelectric transducers, to eject ink droplets forcibly through all of the nozzle openings toward the cap.




In performing the flushing operation, the printing operation is interrupted, thereby decreasing the printing speed, and consuming a relatively large amount of ink. To solve these problems, many techniques have been proposed. According to one technique, a drive signal having an amplitude as not to eject ink droplets is applied to the piezoelectric transducers provided in the pressure generating chambers communicatively connected to the nozzle openings which eject no ink droplets during the printing operation. By the application of such a drive signal, the meniscuses present near the orifices are minutely vibrated, to thereby prevent the orifices from being clogged (See, for example, Japanese Patent Laid-Open Publication Nos. Sho. 55-123476 and 57-61576, and U.S. Pat. No. 4,350,467 989).




In this connection, a proposal has been made for a bubble jet recording head, in which the pressure applied to eject ink droplets depends on the evaporation of ink. According to this proposal, a piezoelectric transducer is attached to the reservoir, wherein the ink pressure is varied by the transducer. A varied pressure is transmitted through the ink supply port to the pressure generating chamber, to thereby minutely vibrate a meniscus formed at the nozzle opening.




Thus, by minutely vibrating the meniscuses at fixed time intervals, the number of flushing operations is reduced, thereby preventing the decrease of the printing speed and the increase of the ink consumption. Moreover, this method substantially eliminates the possibility that the nozzle openings will become clogged. However, by vibrating the meniscuses even minutely adversely affects the discharging operation of ink droplets when forming dots in a print operation. This deteriorates the print quality and is thus a problem. Moreover, the audible sound caused by the minute vibration of the meniscuses is noisy, because the number of piezoelectric transducers being driven is considerably larger than the number for discharging ink droplets. Because of this, the lifetime of the piezoelectric transducers is reduced and hence the lifetime of the recording head is also reduced.




Where the type of ink used is suitable for printing very small dots and likely to form a film, the minute vibration of the meniscuses (for the purpose of preventing the nozzle openings from clogging) promotes the volatilization of the ink solvent in the nozzle openings which are not used for printing in a printing operation, and helps the progress of the clogging of the nozzle openings. Since the viscosity of the ink depends largely on temperature, if the ambient temperature rises the ink viscosity decreases, and the minute vibration excessively moves the meniscus, so that ink wets the nozzle plate. The result is to deviate the flying path of the ink droplet when it ejects for printing.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




Accordingly, a first object of the present invention is to provide an ink-jet recording apparatus which can prevent the nozzle openings from being clogged, and maintain very high print quality even with residual vibration of the minute vibration of the meniscuses.




A second object of the present invention is to provide an ink-jet recording apparatus which can reliably eliminate the clogging of the nozzle openings by reducing the frequency of vibrations of the piezoelectric transducer.




A third object of the present invention is to provide an ink-jet recording apparatus which can maximize the time until the nozzle opening becomes clogged, independently of a variation of the ambient temperature and without deviating the flying path of the ejecting ink droplet.




According to the above and other objects of the present invention, there is provided an ink-jet recording apparatus having an ink-jet recording head including pressure generating chambers each communicatively connected to a nozzle opening and a reservoir, pressure generating means for pressurizing the pressure generating chambers, and control means for applying drive signals corresponding to print data to the recording head and for minutely vibrating the meniscuses in the nozzle openings to such an extent as to not eject ink droplets during a nonprint period. The improvement is characterized in that the control means eject ink droplets from the nozzle openings in accordance with print data every print cycle during a print period, and minutely vibrates the meniscuses a preset period of time before the discharging of the ink droplets or a preset period of time after the discharging of the ink droplets.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a perspective view showing an embodiment of a printing mechanism of an ink-jet recording apparatus according to the present invention;





FIG. 2

is a sectional view showing an ink-jet recording head used in the ink-jet recording apparatus of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

is a sectional view showing still another ink-jet recording head that may be used in the ink-jet recording apparatus;





FIG. 4

is a sectional view showing yet another ink-jet recording head that may be used in the ink-jet recording apparatus;





FIG. 5

is a block diagram showing a control system for controlling the operation of an ink-jet recording head as shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 6

is a circuit diagram showing a drive voltage generating circuit used in the control means of

FIG. 5

;





FIG. 7

is a timing diagram of input signals and an output signal of the drive voltage generating circuit of

FIG. 6

;





FIG. 8

is a circuit diagram showing a head drive circuit in the control system of

FIG. 5

;





FIG. 9

is a timing diagram showing a printing operation of the head drive circuit of

FIG. 8

;





FIG. 10

is a timing diagram showing another printing operation of the head drive circuit;





FIG. 11

is a circuit diagram showing another head drive circuit in the control means;





FIG. 12

is a timing diagram showing a printing operation of the head drive circuit of

FIG. 11

;





FIG. 13

is a block diagram showing a control system for controlling the operation of an ink-jet recording head as shown in

FIG. 2

;




FIGS.


14


(


a


) to


14


(


c


) are waveforms of first to third drive signals applied to a piezoelectric transducer;





FIG. 15

is a circuit diagram showing a drive voltage generating circuit in the control system of

FIG. 13

;





FIG. 16

is a diagram showing drive signals applied to the piezoelectric transducer during a print rest period with respect to the movement of a carriage;





FIG. 17

is a waveform diagram showing first and third drive signals applied to piezoelectric transducers operated for discharging ink droplets and piezoelectric transducers not operated for discharging ink droplets when the recording head is in a print period;




FIGS.


18


(


a


) and


18


(


b


) are diagrams showing how a third drive signal is applied to the piezoelectric transducer when the recording head completes a printing operation of one pass, and decelerates to a standstill position;





FIG. 19

is a diagram showing another method of applying drive signals to the piezoelectric transducer during a print rest period with respect to the movement of a carriage;





FIG. 20

is a diagram showing arrays of nozzle openings of an ink-jet recording head to which the present invention is applicable;





FIG. 21

is a diagram showing still another method of applying driving signals to the piezoelectric transducer during a print rest period with respect to the carriage movement;





FIG. 22

is a block diagram showing another control system for controlling the operation of an ink-jet recording head as shown in

FIG. 2

;





FIG. 23

is a graph showing a pressure variation, expressed in terms of relative value, in a pressure generating chamber for causing a minute vibration with respect to a loading period of an ink cartridge;





FIG. 24

is a graph showing a variation of a drive voltage, which is applied to the pressure generating means for causing a minute vibration, with respect to ambient temperature;





FIG. 25

is a graph showing a variation of a drive frequently at the time of minute vibration with respect to ambient temperature;




FIGS.


26


(


a


) and


26


(


b


) are waveform diagrams showing signals for adjusting the amplitude of a minute vibration; and





FIG. 27

is a waveform diagram showing another signal for causing a minute vibration.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT





FIG. 1

shows a structure of a printing mechanism and related components in a printer which is a type of an ink-jet recording apparatus according to the present invention. Referring to

FIG. 1

, reference numeral


1


designates a carriage connected to a carriage drive motor


3


through a timing belt


2


. The carriage


1


is reciprocatively moved in the width-wise direction of a recording sheet


5


, while being guided by the guide member


4


. The position of the moving carriage is detected by a linear encoder


6


. Ink-jet recording heads


7


and


8


are firmly attached to the side of the carriage


1


which faces the recording sheet


5


, or the lower side thereof. With the movement of the carriage


1


, the recording heads


7


and


8


, which receive ink from ink cartridges


9


and


10


mounted on the carriage


1


, eject ink droplets toward the recording sheet


5


to form dots thereon by which characters and pictures are formed. Cap members


11


and


12


, provided in a nonprint region, tightly cover the nozzle openings of the recording heads


7


and


8


when the recording heads are at rest, and receive ink ejecting from the recording heads


7


and


8


in the flushing operation during a printing operation. Reference numeral


13


designates cleaning means having, for example, a rubber plate for wiping the nozzle openings of the recording heads


7


and


8


clean. Numeral


14


indicates a paper feed motor.





FIG. 2

shows an example of each of the recording heads


7


and


8


. Reference numeral


20


designates a first cover member, which is constituted by a zirconia thin plate of about 10 μm thick. A drive electrode


22


is formed on one of the major surfaces of the first cover member


20


, while facing a pressure generating chamber


21


. A piezoelectric transducer


23


made of PZT, for example, is formed on the surface of the drive electrode


22


, and an electrode


19


is formed on the piezoelectric transducer


23


. The pressure generating chamber


21


receives a flexural vibration of the piezoelectric transducer


23


, so that the chambers are expanded and contracted to eject ink droplets from a nozzle opening


24


, and receives ink from a reservoir


26


through an ink supply port


25


. A spacer


27


is a bored, ceramic plate made of zirconia (ZrO


2


) or the like and having a thickness of 150 μm, for example, suitable for forming the pressure generating chamber


21


. One side of the spacer


27


is sealed with a second cover member


28


, whereas the other side of spacer


27


is sealed with the first cover member


20


, where the pressure generating chamber


21


is formed. The second cover member


28


is also a ceramic plate made of zirconia, for example, having connecting holes


29


, each communicating with an ink supply port


25


and a pressure generating chamber


21


, and connecting holes


30


, each communicatively connecting a pressure generating chamber


21


and a nozzle opening


24


. The second cover member


28


is firmly attached to the other major side of the spacer


27


. These members


20


,


27


and


28


are assembled into an actuator unit


31


without using adhesive, in such a manner that granular ceramic material is properly shaped into thin plates which are layered and sintered.




An ink-supply-port forming plate


32


serves as a fixing plate for fixing the actuator unit


31


. The plate


32


is made of a metal of ink resistance, such as stainless steel or ceramic, so as to serve as a connecting member to the ink cartridges


9


and


10


. The ink-supply-port forming plate


32


has the ink supply ports


25


each formed at a location close to one end of the pressure generating chamber


21


. The ink supply port


25


connects the reservoir


26


to the pressure generating chamber


21


. Further, the port


25


has connecting holes


33


each formed at a location close to the other end of the pressure generating chamber


21


. The connecting hole


33


communicatively connects the nozzle opening


24


and a connecting hole


30


of the actuator unit


31


.




A reservoir-forming plate


34


is a plate-like member which is made of a corrosion resistance material such as, for example, stainless steel, and has a thickness suitable for forming the reservoir


26


, for example, of 150 μm. A through-hole corresponding to the shape of the reservoir


26


and a connecting hole


36


for communicatively connecting the nozzle opening


24


of the nozzle plate


35


and the connecting hole


30


are formed in the reservoir-forming plate


34


. The ink-supply-port forming plate


32


, the reservoir-forming plate


34


and the nozzle plate


35


are bonded together into a fluid passage unit


37


, by hot-melt films or adhesion inserted therebetween. The actuator unit


31


is bonded onto the surface of the ink-supply-port forming plate


32


of the fluid passage unit


37


by adhesive, to thereby form an ink-jet recording head


7


.




In operation, a drive signal is applied to the thus constructed recording head while controlling the carriage


1


in accordance with a position signal derived from the linear encoder


6


. Then, the piezoelectric transducer


23


is charged, and is flexurally displaced to contract the pressure generating chamber


21


. The chamber


21


compresses ink therein and an ink droplet ejects through the nozzle opening


24


. After a preset time elapses, the piezoelectric transducer


23


is discharged, and the piezoelectric transducer


23


returns to its original state. The pressure generating chamber


21


is now expanded. In turn, ink flows from the reservoir


26


to the pressure generating chamber


21


through the ink supply port


25


. As a result, ink is supplied to the pressure generating chamber


21


for the next printing operation.




A voltage which is too small to cause ink to eject is applied to the piezoelectric transducer


23


. In turn, a minute flexural displacement is caused in the piezoelectric transducer


23


, and the pressure generating chamber


21


is minutely contracted. A meniscus present near the nozzle opening


24


is then pushed up a small distance toward the nozzle opening


24


. Thereafter, the piezoelectric transducer


23


is discharged, so that it returns to its original state, and the pressure generating chamber


21


is minutely expanded. The meniscus descends toward the pressure generating chamber


21


from the nozzle opening side. If the piezoelectric transducer


23


is minutely bent and restored from its bent state in synchronism with the printing operation, the meniscus present near the nozzle opening minutely vibrates. As a result, old ink staying near the nozzle opening is replaced with fresh ink, thereby eliminating the clogging of the nozzle opening.




The above-described recording head uses a piezoelectric transducer that flexurally vibrates. The ink-jet recording head


7


of which the pressure generating means may also be a piezoelectric transducer which is axially displaced, or which is of the longitudinal oscillation mode type, as shown in FIG.


3


. To be more specific, an elastic plate


41


is a thin plate which is elastically deformed in contact with the end of a piezoelectric transducer


42


. The elastic plate


41


, a passage-forming plate


43


and a nozzle plate


44


are assembled to be liquid-tight, while the plate


43


is sandwiched in between the plates


41


and


42


, into a fluid passage unit


45


. A base member


46


includes a transducer accommodating chamber


47


which supports a piezoelectric transducer


42


allowing the transducer to vibrate, and has a surface with an opening


48


for supporting a fluid passage unit


45


. The fluid passage unit


45


is fastened to the surface of the base plate


46


such that the end of the piezoelectric transducer


42


is brought into contact with an island


41




a


of the elastic plate


41


.




In the thus constructed recording head, when the piezoelectric transducer


42


is charged, it contracts and the pressure generating chamber


49


of the passage-forming plate


43


is expanded. In turn, ink flows from the reservoirs


50


into the pressure generating chamber


49


, through the ink supply ports


51


. After a preset time elapses, the piezoelectric transducer


42


is discharged and the piezoelectric transducer


42


resumes its original state. Then, the pressure generating chamber


49


is contracted to compress ink therein and to eject an ink droplet through a nozzle opening


52


toward the recording sheet. The ink droplet forms a dot on the recording sheet.




A pulse signal that is too small to cause ink to eject is applied to the piezoelectric transducer


42


. The piezoelectric transducer


42


minutely contracts. The pressure generating chamber


49


is minutely expanded. Accordingly, a meniscus present near the nozzle opening


52


descends to the pressure generating chamber


49


. Then, the piezoelectric transducer


42


is caused to resume its original state. The pressure generating chamber


49


is contracted to move the meniscus toward the nozzle opening


52


.




If the piezoelectric transducer


42


is caused to minutely expand and contract in synchronism with the printing operation, the meniscus present near the nozzle opening also minutely vibrates. Consequently, as in the recording head, old ink staying near the nozzle opening is replaced with fresh ink from the pressure generating chamber


49


, thereby preventing the nozzle opening from clogging.





FIG. 4

shows another ink-jet recording head that may be used in the ink-jet recording apparatus in accordance with the present invention. A passage forming plate


61


includes a pressure generating chamber


65


which is connected at one end to a nozzle opening


62


and at the other end to a reservoir


64


through an ink supply port


63


. A heating means


66


which, in response to a drive signal, vaporizes ink, is placed at a location to vaporize ink in the pressure generating chamber


65


. A cover


67


tightly covers an opening of the passage forming plate


61


. A pressure generating means


68


, which varies the pressure of the ink in the reservoir


64


, is provided on the passage forming plate


61


at a location corresponding to the reservoir


64


of the passage forming plate.




In operation, a drive signal is first applied to the recording head


7


. Then, the heating means


66


generates heat. Part of the ink is vaporized in the pressure generating chamber


65


, and the ink pressure rises. An ink droplet ejects from the nozzle opening


62


in synchronism with a drive signal. The application of the drive signal is stopped, and the heating means


66


naturally cools down. The pressure in the pressure generating chamber


65


decreases accordingly. Ink flows from the reservoir


65


into the pressure generating chamber


65


through the ink supply port


63


, in preparation for the next ink discharging.




The reservoir


64


is pressurized by applying a signal to the pressure generating means


68


of the reservoir. The ink pressure increases in the reservoir


64


. The increase of the pressure propagates through the ink supply port


63


to the pressure generating chamber


65


. In turn, a meniscus near the nozzle opening


62


is displaced. If the pressure generating means


68


provided in association with the reservoir


64


is driven in synchronism with the printing operation (as in the ink-jet recording head


7


having the pressure generating source of the piezoelectric transducer


23


or


42


), the meniscus near the nozzle opening is minutely vibrated. With the minute vibration of the meniscus, ink present near the nozzle opening is replaced with fresh ink from the pressure generating chamber


65


. Accordingly, the ink-jet recording head of this example is also capable of preventing the nozzle opening from clogging.




An embodiment of a control system for an ink-jet recording apparatus according to the present invention will be described.

FIG. 5

shows a control system for controlling the operation of an ink-jet recording head in which the pressure generating means is a piezoelectric transducer of the type which is axially displaced, or a piezoelectric transducer of the longitudinal vibration mode type. In the present embodiment, of the two recording heads


7


and


8


, the ink-jet recording head


7


will be described. In

FIG. 5

, a control means


70


receives print command signals and print data from a host computer, and controls a drive voltage generating circuit


71


, a head drive circuit


72


, a carriage drive circuit


73


, and a paper-transporting drive circuit


75


in accordance with those received signals and data, for various printing and other related operations. Examples of these operations include executing a printing operation, minutely vibrating a meniscus in order to prevent the ink-jet recording head


7


from being clogged, discharging ink from all the nozzle openings, and executing a maintenance operation to forcibly eject ink from the nozzle openings of the head by applying a negative pressure to the head.




The drive voltage generating circuit


71


is designed so as to produce first and second drive voltage signals. The first drive voltage signal is used for reciprocatively displacing a meniscus present near the nozzle opening at a magnitude too small to eject an ink droplet. The second drive voltage signal is used for discharging ink droplets from nozzle openings. The drive signal may be a voltage signal of a trapezoidal waveform consisting of a rising region where the voltage rises at a fixed gradient, a constant region where the voltage maintains a constant value for a given time period, and a falling region where the voltage falls at a fixed gradient. The drive signal may take any other waveform than the trapezoidal waveform if it is suitable for driving the pressure generating means, e.g., a piezoelectric transducer. Another example of a drive signal is a pulse signal of a rectangular waveform.




The head drive circuit


72


outputs the first or second drive voltage signal to the piezoelectric transducer in accordance with print data. A print timing signal generating circuit


74


outputs a print timing signal to the control means


70


in synchronism with a position signal representative of a current position of the ink-jet recording head


7


, which is output from the linear encoder


6


with the movement of the carriage


1


.





FIG. 6

shows a specific example of the drive voltage generating circuit


71


. In

FIG. 6

, numerals


79




a


through


79




c,


and


80




a


and


80




b


designate pulse signals of a fixed pulse width supplied from the control means


70


. These signals include a first charging pulse signal


79




a,


a second charging pulse signal


79




b,


a third charging pulse signal


79




c,


a first discharging pulse signal


80




a,


and a second discharging pulse signal


80




b.


These pulse signals are input to the drive voltage generating circuit


71


at timings as shown in FIG.


7


. The first charging pulse signal


79




a


is applied to the base of an NPN transistor


81




a


to render it conductive. In turn, a constant current circuit


92


made up of NPN transistors


82




a


and


84




a


and a resistor


86




a


operates to charge a capacitor


83


at a constant current Ira till the voltage across the capacitor


83


reaches a first charging voltage Vra.




The capacitor


83


is charged up to a second charging voltage Vrb at a constant current Irb caused by the second charging pulse


79




b.


The capacitor


83


is charged to a third charging voltage Vrc at a constant current Irc caused by the third charging pulse


79




c.


The first discharging pulse signal


80




a


is applied to a constant current circuit


95


made up of NPN transistors


85




b


and


88




b,


and a resistor


87




b.


In turn, the capacitor


83


is discharged at a constant current Ira till the voltage across the capacitor drops to a first discharging voltage Vfa. Similarly, when the second discharging pulse signal


80




b


is applied to a constant current circuit


96


, the capacitor


83


is discharged by a constant current Irb to a second discharging voltage Vfb. Assuming that a base-emitter voltage of the transistor


84




b


is Vbe


84




a,


and a resistance of the resistor


86




a


is Rra, Ira=Vbe84


a


/Rra. If a capacitance of the capacitor


83


is C


0


, the time Tra taken for the voltage across the capacitor to increase to the first charging voltage Vra is: Tra=C


0


×Vra/Ira.




The same theory is true and applies to other charging circuits. The charging currents Irb and Irc are: Irb=Vbe


84




b


/Rrb and Irc=Vbe


84




c


/Rrc. The charging rise times Trb and Trc are: Trb=C


0


×Vrb/Irb and Trc=C


0


×Vrc/Irc. Assuming that a base-emitter voltage of the transistor


85




a


is Vbe


85




a


and a resistance of the resistor


87




a


is Rra, Iras=Vbe


85




a


/Rra. The time TFa taken for the voltage across the capacitor to increase to the first discharging voltage Vfa is; Tfa=C


0


×Vfa/Ifa.




Similarly, the discharging current Ifb is: Ifb=Vbe


85




b


/Rfb, and a falling time Tfb: Tfb=C


0


×Vfb/Ifb. An NPN transistor


89


and a PNP transistor


90


from a current amplifier. A relationship between the pulse signals


79




a


to


79




c,




80




a


and


80




b


input to the drive voltage generating circuit and a drive voltage signal output at the output terminal thereof is as shown in FIG.


7


. The output drive voltage signal takes a trapezoidal waveform, which consists of regions where the amplitude of the signal rises at fixed gradients, regions where the amplitude is constant, and regions where the amplitude falls at fixed gradients. The rising and falling regions are coincident with the pulse widths of the pulse signals, as shown.




The operation of the drive voltage generating circuit


71


will be described. While the drive voltage generating circuit receives the first charging pulse signal


79




a


from the control means


70


, the constant current circuit


92


is enabled and a drive voltage signal


91


rises from Vrc to Vra at a fixed gradient. After a preset time elapses, a first discharging pulse signal


80




a


is input to the drive voltage generating circuit, and then the constant current circuit


93


operated. A drive voltage signal appearing at the output terminal


91


drops by the voltage Vfa at a fixed gradient. The drive voltage signal of a trapezoidal waveform vibrates a meniscus at such an amplitude as not to eject an ink droplet (this signal will be referred to as a minute vibration voltage waveform).




After a preset time elapses from the termination of the first discharging pulse signal


80




a,


that is, a time taken for the minutely vibrating meniscus to settle down, a second charging signal


79




b


is input to the drive voltage generating circuit and the output terminal


91


increases by the voltage Vrb. At this time, switching elements T (FIG.


8


), such a transmission gates, which are connected to the piezoelectric transducers


42


and driven for printing operations, are turned on by the head drive circuit


72


, and the corresponding piezoelectric transducers


42


are charged to a voltage Vrb+Vrc and greatly contract accordingly. In turn, the pressure generating chambers


49


connected to the transducers are expanded. Ink flows from the reservoirs


50


to the pressure generating chambers


49


through the ink supply ports


51


. After a preset time elapses from the termination of the second charging pulse


79




b,


a second discharging signal


80




b


is input to the drive voltage generating circuit. The drive voltage signal


91


decreases by the voltage Vfb. As a result, the piezoelectric transducers


42


are discharged to greatly expand. In turn, the pressure generating chambers


49


are greatly contracted, so that ink droplets for printing eject from the nozzle openings


52


.




After the discharging of ink droplets, a third charging pulse


79




c


is input to the drive voltage generating circuit, so that the drive voltage signal


91


rises by the voltage Vrc. Here, a sequence of one period ends (hereinafter, a waveform ranging from the inputting of the second charging pulse


79




b


to the inputting of the third charging pulse


79




c


will be referred to as a discharge voltage waveform).





FIG. 8

shows an example of the head drive circuit


72


. In

FIG. 8

, a shift register


100


is constructed with flip-flops F


1


connected in series. The register


100


successively shifts print data in synchronism with a shift clock signal. A latch circuit


101


, which consists of flip-flop F


2


, latches output signals from the flip-flops F


1


in response to a latch signal, and outputs control signals to the switching elements T, such as transmission gates, for supplying a drive voltage signal from the output terminal


91


to the piezoelectric transducers


42


.





FIG. 9

shows a relationship between transfer timings of print data and minute vibration data and a drive voltage applied to the piezoelectric transducer


42


. In

FIG. 9

, reference numeral


102


designates a pair of print data and minute vibration data during one print period. Numeral


103


represents minute vibration data, and numeral


104


, print data. For a piezoelectric transducer, the print data


104


is inverted with respect to the minute vibration data


103


.




When the head drive circuit receives a print timing signal from the control means


70


, the latch circuit


101


latches the minute vibration data


103


that has been transferred in the preceding print timing period, and outputs it as control signals to the switching elements T. In response to the control signals, a minute vibration voltage waveform is applied only to the piezoelectric transducers


42


which have not been driven for the discharging of ink droplets in the preceding print period, through the switching elements T. As a result, only the meniscuses of the nozzle openings


52


which have not ejected ink droplets are minutely vibrated.




Then, the print data


104


is transferred in synchronism with a shift clock signal, and after the minute vibration voltage waveform terminates, at a time where the residual vibration of the minute vibrating meniscus has settled down, a latch signal is output. The switching elements T are controlled in accordance with print data


104


. Under the control of the switching elements, a discharge voltage waveform is applied only to the piezoelectric transducers


42


which are to be driven for ink discharging, and ink droplets eject from the corresponding nozzle openings


52


. Finally, minute vibration data


103


as the inversion of the print data


104


is transferred in synchronism with a shift clock signal, to thereby complete the sequence of one print period.




In case where the print data and the minute vibration data are transferred in a manner as shown in

FIG. 9

, a time interval between the discharge voltage waveform and the minute vibration voltage waveform may be set large. If the time interval is large, the vibration characteristic of the meniscus immediately after the ink droplet discharging is not adversely affected. Therefore, there will be very little chance of an unwanted discharging of ink droplets when the minute vibration voltage waveform is applied. Poor print quality and the clogging of the orifices as well are successfully prevented.




A timing chart shown in

FIG. 10

shows a case where the minute vibration data


103


and the print data


104


are transmitted with a print timing signal being interposed therebetween. A minute vibration voltage waveform is applied to the piezoelectric transducer


42


at the beginning of the nonprint period. In case where the nonprint period follows the print period, a minute vibration voltage waveform is applied for preventing clogging when in a state that a residual vibration of the meniscus caused by the discharging of ink droplets is present. Therefore, the vibration of the meniscus will be greater than that generated by the signals illustrated in FIG.


9


. However, that vibration creates no problem in practical use.





FIG. 11

shows another example of the head drive circuit


72


. In this example, a data inverting circuit


105


including exclusive-OR gates G is inserted between the latch circuit


101


and the switching elements T. An inverting signal is input to one input terminal of each exclusive-OR gate G, while a signal output from the latch circuit


101


is input to the other input terminal of the gate. With such an arrangement, when the inverting signal is low, the output signal of the latch circuit


101


is straightforwardly applied to the switching element T. When the inverting signal is high, the output signal of the latch circuit


101


is inverted and then applied to the switching element T. The circuit may be arranged such that only the print data


104


is serially transferred with a print timing signal as a trigger signal as shown in

FIG. 12

, and the print data is latched by the latch circuit


101


at the termination of a minute vibration voltage waveform. In this case, if the inverting signal is set high during only the period where the minute vibration voltage waveform is output, only the print data is transferred. Accordingly, the data transfer rate may be doubled for a clock frequency.




Another embodiment of a control system for an ink-jet recording apparatus according to the present invention will be described.





FIG. 13

shows another control system for controlling the operation of an ink-jet recording head as shown in FIG.


2


. In

FIG. 13

, a control means


110


receives print command signals and print data from a host computer, and controls a drive voltage generating circuit


111


, a head drive circuit


112


, and a carriage drive circuit


113


in accordance with those received signals and data, for printing and other related control operations. Examples of those control operations include executing a printing operation, performing a flushing operation at the capping position in accordance with clock data from a print timer


116


, adjusting the amplitudes of the second and third drive signals for minutely vibrating the meniscuses for preventing the nozzle openings from being chopped, and printing periods and continuation times.




The drive voltage generating circuit


111


is arranged so as to generate a first drive signal (FIG.


14


(


a


)) which has a trapezoidal waveform, and is at a voltage V


1


high enough to cause an ink droplet to eject from the nozzle openings, and second and third drive signals (FIGS.


14


(


b


) and


14


(


c


)), which have trapezoidal, waveforms for minutely vibrating the meniscuses present near the nozzle openings


24


.




A period t


1


of the first drive signal may be set to equal a natural vibration period Tc of the pressure generating chamber


21


, which is derived by the equation








Tc=


2π✓[(


Cv+Cin


)


×Ln×Li


]/(


Ln+Li


)






wherein:




Ln: inertance of the nozzle opening


24






Li: inertance of the ink supply port




Cv: compliance of the first cover




Cin: compliance of ink




If so set, a displacement of the piezoelectric transducer


23


can effectively be converted into a motion of the meniscus.




The head drive circuit


112


is arranged so as to apply a first drive signal (FIG.


14


(


a


)) to those piezoelectric transducers


23


corresponding to print data. In a nonprint mode in which the recording head is positioned in a nonprint area, while waiting for the next printing operation, a second drive signal (FIG.


14


(


b


)) is applied to the piezoelectric transducers


23


. The voltage of the second drive signal is within a range of 30% to 90% of the voltage of the first drive voltage. When the recording head is moved in the print area, a third drive voltage (FIG.


14


(


c


)) is applied to the piezoelectric transducers


23


, irrespective of whether or not ink droplets eject for printing (by the first drive signal). The voltage of the third drive signal is approximately 20% of the first drive signal.




A minute-vibration memory means


115


stores the voltage values of the second and third drive signals, data for adjusting a gradient of the second drive signal in accordance with temperature, and data for adjusting a level of the second drive signal in accordance with the amount of ink consumed by the printing operation.




The print timer


116


is a timer for counting the duration of the printing operation. The timer is driven to start the counting when a printing operation starts, and to stop when a flushing operation starts. A print-amount counter


117


counts the number of dots printed in a print mode to detect the amount of consumed ink. A temperature sensing means


118


senses the temperature around the ink-jet recording head


7


.





FIG. 15

shows a specific example of the drive voltage generating circuit


111


. In

FIG. 15

, a one-shot multibrator


120


converts a timing signal received from an external device to a pulse signal of a fixed width. The multivibrator outputs a positive signal and a negative signal in synchronism with a timing signal. One of the output terminals of the one-shot multivibrator is connected through a resistor to the base of an NPN transistor


121


of which the collector is connected through a resistor to the base of a PNP transistor


122


. When the multivibrator receives a timing signal, a capacitor


123


is charged at a constant current Ir till the voltage across the capacitor


123


reaches a power source voltage VH. The other terminal of the one-shot multivibrator


120


is connected to an NPN transistor


128


. When the timing signal changes states, the transistor


22


is turned off, while the transistor


128


is turned on. As a result, the capacitor


123


is discharged at a constant current If to about zero (0) volts.




The charging current Ir is given by








Ir=Vbe




124


/


Rr








wherein:




Vbe


124


: base-emitter voltage of the transistor


124






Rr: resistance of the resistor


126






A rise time T of the charging voltage is given by:








T=C


0


=VH/Tr








The discharging current If of the drive signal is given by:








If=Vbe




125


/


Rr








wherein:




Vbe


125


: base-emitter voltage of the transistor


125






Rr: resistance of the resistor


127






A falling time is given by:








Tf=C


0


×VH/If








Accordingly, a voltage across the capacitor


123


has a trapezoidal waveform consisting of a rising region where the voltage rises at a fixed gradient α, a constant region where the voltage maintains a constant value, and a falling region where the voltage falls at a fixed gradient β, as shown in FIG.


14


(


a


). The capacitor voltage is amplified by the transistor


129


and


130


. The amplified voltage is output in the form of a drive signal from an output terminal


131


to the piezoelectric transducers


23


.




An operation of the drive voltage generating circuit


111


will be described.




The switching elements T, such as switching transistors, are turned on for a short period of time in response to a signal from the head drive circuit


112


. Then, the piezoelectric transducers


23


are charged under the voltage from the drive voltage generating circuit


111


. During the charging operation, the pulse signal falls to turn off the switching elements T. The charging operation stops at a voltage determined by a time period till the switching elements are turned off.




By properly selecting a charging time in the drive voltage generating circuit


111


shown in FIG.


15


and the resistance values of the resistor


126


and the like, it is possible to generate a second drive signal (FIG.


14


(


b


)) having a charging gradient α′ which is capable of causing a minute vibration at an amplitude suitable to prevent clogging and a third drive signal (FIG.


14


(


c


)) having a charging gradient α″ which is capable of causing a minute vibration at such an amplitude as to be suitable for preventing clogging when the recording head moves in the print area. It is preferable that the charging gradients α′ and α″ of the second and third drive voltages are selected to be within 5% to 50% of the gradient α when the charging is performed by the first drive signal.




The voltage values V


2


and V


3


of the second and third drive signals are each smaller than the voltage value V


1


of the first drive signal (FIG.


14


(


a


)) for discharging the ink droplet. Accordingly, the second or third drive signal displaces the piezoelectric transducer


23


at such a magnitude as not to eject the ink droplet from the nozzle opening, and minutely expands and contracts the pressure generating chamber


21


to minutely vibrate a meniscus near the nozzle opening


24


. If the period t


1


of the second or third drive signal is selected to be equal to that of the first drive signal for discharging the ink droplet, it is equal to the natural vibration period of the pressure generating chamber


21


. As a result, the meniscus can efficiently be vibrated at an amplitude high enough to prevent the clogging of the nozzle opening, through little displacement of the piezoelectric transducer


23


.




A print signal output from the control means


110


turns the transistors


122


and


123


on and off to generate a voltage signal of a trapezoidal waveform, or a first drive signal. The switching elements T connected to other piezoelectric transducers


23


to be driven for the printing operations are turned on by the head drive circuit


112


. Accordingly, those transducers are charged to the voltage VH by the drive signal. As a result, a drive signal generated in the drive voltage generating circuit


111


flows into the piezoelectric transducers


23


and charges them at constant current. Those transducers to be driven for the printing operation displace toward the pressure generating chambers


12


, so that these chambers are contracted to eject ink droplets from the nozzle openings


24


. After a preset time elapses, the transistor


128


is turned on to discharge the capacitor


123


. In turn, the piezoelectric transducers


23


are discharged to restore from their displaced state. The pressure generating chambers


21


are expanded, so that ink flows from the reservoirs


26


into the pressure generating chambers


21


. Subsequently, when the recording head is moving in the print area, the piezoelectric transducers


23


receive a third drive signal capable of causing a minute vibration of the meniscus before the discharging of ink droplets, in synchronism with a timing signal. Then, the transducers receive a first drive signal capable of discharging ink droplets. The piezoelectric transducers


23


, which are not driven in a printing operation, receive only a third drive signal. Therefore, the meniscuses near all the nozzle openings


24


are minutely vibrated in print periods.




When the ink-jet recording head


7


is placed in a nonprint area, the piezoelectric transducers


23


receive a second drive signal of which the voltage is within a range of 30% to 90% of that of the first drive signal. Accordingly, the meniscus is minutely vibrated by a drive force larger than when the recording head is in the print area.




An operation of the control system for an ink-jet recording apparatus will be described with reference to the timing charts shown in

FIGS. 16 and 17

.




When the ink-jet recording head


7


is positioned in a nonprint area and not sealed by the cap member


11


, the control means


110


reads out data to determine a minute vibration during a rest period, from the minute-vibration memory means


115


, and applies a second drive signal to the piezoelectric transducer for a time duration T


2


at periods T


1


.




The period T


1


is preferably shorter than the sum (T


2


+T


5


) of the duration T


2


of the second drive signal and a period (printable period) T


5


required for the ink-jet recording head


7


to move in the print area. In the case of an ink-jet recording apparatus having a printable period T


5


of 750 ms, for example, a cycle consisting of a period T


1


, a period T


2


and an additional period may be repeated. In this case, the period T


1


is 755 ms, the period T


2


for causing a succession of minute vibrations (e.g., 1080 vibrations) during the period T


1


is 75 ms, and the additional period is 680 ms, which follows the period T


2


, during which the minute vibration is suspended.




Thus, the meniscus is minutely vibrated for the period T


2


at the periods T


1


shorter than a time period causing the clogging of the nozzle opening, whereby the mixing of ink near the nozzle opening with ink in the pressure generating chamber


21


is promoted, to decrease the viscosity of ink present near the nozzle opening and hence to prevent the clogging of the orifice. Further, the minute vibration is suspended after a preset time. Thus, before the piezoelectric transducer


23


is heated, it then is cooled down (by the lose of Joule's heat), and fatigue of the piezoelectric transducer


23


is lessened; otherwise, the transducer is continuously operated and fatigue becomes great.




As the recording head waits for the next printing operation, a plurality of minute vibrations are intermittently repeated. When a print signal is applied to the recording head, the carriage


1


starts to move. In turn, the control means


110


suspends the intermittent minute vibrations at fixed periods T


1


, and accelerates the carriage


1


to a printable speed. When the minute vibration is suspended, a print signal is input to the control system for the recording head, a movement of the carriage


1


is detected and a second drive signal is applied to the recording head


7


. During a period T


3


where the carriage


1


is being accelerated, the meniscus is minutely vibrated, so that the viscosity of ink which is increasing because of the air passing the nozzle opening is mixed with ink of relatively low viscosity in the pressure generating chamber


31


, to thereby minimize the rise of the ink near the nozzle opening. After the carriage


1


is accelerated and its speed reaches a printable speed, the application of the second drive signal is suspended at time T


4


, e.g., 10 ms, prior to the time where the drive voltage signal is applied to the piezoelectric transducers, to suspend the minute vibration of the meniscus that has continued during the acceleration period and to settle down the meniscus in a state suitable for the printing. During the printing, for example, at the beginning of the print period, a third drive signal (


3


) is first output to the piezoelectric transducer


23


, to thereby minutely vibrate a meniscus present near the nozzle opening


24


. Then, a first drive signal (


1


) corresponding to print data is output thereto. A third drive signal (


3


) is applied to the piezoelectric transducer (FIG.


17


(II), to prevent the clogging of the nozzle opening.




While the recording head


7


is moved in the width-wise direction of the recording sheet


5


, a third drive signal (


3


) is applied to the piezoelectric transducer


23


associated with the nozzle opening


24


to be used for dot formation, to minutely vibrate the meniscuses near the nozzle openings and hence to decrease an increased viscosity of the ink near the nozzle opening to a viscosity level suitable for printing, by mixing that ink with the ink in the pressure generating chamber


21


. At the time when the application of the third drive signal (


3


) ends, the third drive signal is applied to the piezoelectric transducer. As the result of its voltage rise, the pressure generating chamber


21


is contracted, so that an ink droplet ejects through the nozzle opening to form a dot. After a preset time elapses, the voltage of the first drive signal (


1


) drops, so that the pressure generating chamber


21


resumes its original state to suck ink from the reservoir


26


.




A third drive signal (


3


) is applied to the piezoelectric transducers


23


associated with the nozzle openings not used for dot formation, as it is applied to the piezoelectric transducers


23


driven for printing operations, whereby the meniscuses near those nozzle openings are minutely vibrated. By the minute vibration of the meniscuses, the ink near the nozzle openings which are not discharging ink droplets is mixed with the ink in the pressure generating chambers


21


, so that the viscosity of the former is decreased.




When the printing of one pass ends and the recording head


7


starts to decelerate is suspend operation, the control means


110


applies a second rive signal to all the piezoelectric transducers


23


. In turn, during the deceleration period T


6


, the carriage


1


is decelerated to a stop position while the meniscuses near the nozzle openings


24


are minutely vibrated. When the carriage


1


stops, a second rive signal is continuously applied for the duration T


2


at periods T


1


. As already stated, the period T


1


is preferably shorter than the sum (T


2


+T


5


) of the period T


2


of the second drive signal and a period (printable period) T


5


required for the ink-jet recording head


7


to move in the print area. Thus, the meniscus is minutely vibrated for the period T


2


at the periods T


1


shorter than a time period causing the clogging of the nozzle opening, whereby the mixing of ink near the nozzle opening with ink in the pressure generating chamber


21


is promoted, to decrease the viscosity of ink present near the nozzle opening and hence to prevent the clogging of the orifice. Further, the minute vibration is suspended, whereby the piezoelectric transducer


23


that is heated is cooled down (by the loss of Joule's heat), such that fatigue of the piezoelectric transducer


23


is lessened; otherwise, the transducer is continuously operated and fatigue becomes great.




In the present embodiment, when the printing of one path ends, the recording head


7


starts to decelerate for stopping its operation, and all the piezoelectric transducers


23


come to a standstill while receiving the second drive signal, the control means


110


detects a time period T


1


from the deceleration starting point, and at this time applies a second drive signal to be applied at the rest of printing for the time duration T


2


at periods T


1


, to the piezeoelectric transducer to minutely vibrate the transducer.




Another manner as shown in FIG.


18


(


a


) illustrates another alternative. As shown, the control system for the recording head receives a print signal and starts to accelerate the carriage


1


when a time shorter than the period T


1


of the second drive signal elapses from the deceleration start point. At this time, the second drive signal is applied for an acceleration time T


3


of the carriage


1


, not the duration T


2


. As in the previous case, when the speed of the carriage


1


reaches a constant speed, the minute vibration is suspended for a period T


4


, and then the recording head starts a printing operation.




In the present embodiment, the second drive signal is applied during the deceleration of the carriage


1


. The second drive signal may be applied in a manner as shown in FIG.


18


(


b


). In this manner, the second drive signal is applied at a time when deceleration of the carriage ends and the carriage stops, not during the deceleration, and the application of the second drive signal continues for a period of T


2


, to thereby minutely vibrate the related meniscus. When a rest time T


7


of the carriage


1


is shorter than the duration T


2


of the second drive signal and the carriage


1


is accelerated again, the second drive signal being applied is immediately stopped and a second drive signal that is to be applied when the carriage


1


is accelerated is applied instead.




In the recording head of the type in which ink is hard to evaporate and the nozzle openings


24


are hard to clog, or in a case where a suspending time T


2


′ of the carriage


1


is very short as when continuous printing is being performed, the second drive signal is applied to the piezoelectric transducers at periods T


1


when the carriage


1


stops, not during the deceleration period of the carriage


1


, as shown in FIG.


19


. Also, in this case, to prevent the clogging at the start of the printing, as in the previous case, it is preferable to apply the second drive signal when the acceleration of the carriage


1


starts, to minutely vibrate the related meniscuses.




Thus, a printing operation is carried cut while the carriage


1


repeatedly accelerates, maintains a constant speed, and decelerates. When the print timer


116


counts a preset time, e.g., 10 seconds, the control means


110


moves the recording head


7


to a flushing position, or a position facing an ink receptacle, for example, the cap member


11


, and ejects a predetermined number of ink droplets, e.g., 1000 dots, through the nozzle openings for a periodical flushing. When the flushing operation ends, the print timer


116


is reset and begins counting, and the recording head starts a printing operation again, through the sequence of operations as mentioned above. Subsequently, the periodic flushing is carried out every time the drive voltage generating circuit


111


counts a preset time, to eject ink droplets through all the nozzle openings and thus to prevent clogging.




Recording heads


140


and


141


are illustrated in FIG.


20


. In these recording heads, linear arrays of nozzle openings are independently driven. The orifice arrays include an orifice array B for discharging black ink, an orifice array C for discharging cyan ink, an orifice array N for discharging magenta ink, and an orifice array Y for discharging yellow ink. Those orifice arrays B, C, N and T are arranged into two groups


142


and


143


. In this case, it is preferable that the second drive signal which is to be applied at the rest of printing is applied to those groups


142


and


143


, while being staggered by a time difference T


2


. If so staggered, the audible sound caused by the minute vibration is reduced to a factor of the number of groups. Accordingly, the total noise generated by the apparatus is reduced.




In the present embodiment, the removal of a rest state is detected by the movement of the carriage


1


. It may also be detected depending on the presence or absence of the inputting of a print signal coming from an external device.




In the embodiment mentioned above, the level of the second drive signal applied to the piezoelectric transducer


23


during a rest period in the nonprint area for minutely vibrating the meniscus, is kept constant. In an alternative, the recording head


7


detects a print area or an amount of ink ejecting in the periodic flushing on the basis of data from the print-amount counter


117


. When the amount of ejecting ink is large, the voltage of the second drive signal is decreased. When the amount of ejecting ink is small, the second drive signal is increased within a range of such values as not to eject the ink droplet, and the meniscus is minutely vibrated, allowing for the viscosity of ink in the pressure generating chamber


21


. The alternative minimizes the load of the piezoelectric transducer


23


during a reset period and further reliably prevents the clogging of the nozzle openings. The level of the second drive signal corresponding to the amount of ejecting ink during the print periods can easily be set in a manner that relationships between the amounts of ejecting ink and the voltage values are stored in advance in the minute-vibration memory means


115


, and a voltage value corresponding to ejecting ink amount data from the print-amount counter


117


is read out of the memory.




The viscosity of ink used by the ink-jet recording apparatus of the invention depends largely on temperature. Accordingly, when a low voltage signal is applied to the piezoelectric transducer


23


to minutely vibrate a meniscus associated therewith, the amplitude of a minute vibration is greatly influenced by temperature. One of the possible ways to solve the problem is the adjust a voltage level. In this case, the control of a charging time is essential, so that the related circuit is complicated. In the present invention, the second drive signal is kept at a constant voltage value (V


2


), while a rising gradient and a falling gradient are adjusted in accordance with the ambient temperature. Specifically, for room temperature (25° C.), the rising gradient α is set at 4V/μs, and the falling gradient β is set at 6.7 V/μs. For low temperatures, such as 5° C., the rising gradient α1 is set at 5V/μs, and the falling gradient β1 is 8.4 V/μs. For higher temperatures, the rising gradient α2 is set at 3V/μs, and the falling gradient β2 is 5 V/μs. A flexural displacing velocity and a restoring velocity of the piezoelectric transducer


23


are increased as the temperature decreases, to thereby increase the fluidity of ink whose viscosity is increased as the result of the low temperature. The rising and falling gradients α, α1 and α2, and β, β1 and β2 for those respective temperatures may readily be adjusted in a manner that the relationships between temperatures and those gradients α, α1 and α2, and β, β1 and β2 are stored in advance in the memory, and desired gradients are read out of the memory by addressing the memory with a temperature signal from the temperature sensing means


118


.




In the present embodiment, the third drive signal is set at a fixed value, which is about 20% of the drive signal with respect to room temperature, e.g., 25° C. For the ink whose viscosity depends largely on temperature, the value is set at a value which is about 10% of the drive signal when the temperature is low, about 10° C., and about 30% of the drive signal when temperature is high, about 40° C. By adjusting the value in this manner, the meniscus may be minutely vibrated in a satisfactory manner while compensating for variations in temperature.




In the above-mentioned embodiment, the recording head is operated for printing such that a third drive signal is first applied to the piezoelectric transducer to minutely vibrate the transducer and the related meniscus, and after the meniscus settles down, a first drive signal is applied to eject ink droplets for printing. Alternatively, after the first drive signal is applied, the third drive signal is applied to minutely vibrate the piezoelectric transducer and the like for preventing clogging.





FIG. 22

shows yet another control system for controlling the operation of an ink-jet recording head as shown in

FIG. 2. A

control means


160


receives print command signals and print data from a host computer, and controls a drive voltage generating circuit


161


, a head drive circuit


162


, and a carriage drive circuit


163


in accordance with those received signals and data, for various purposes. Through the control, the control means causes the recording head to execute a printing operation. Further, the control means determines the time to vibrate the meniscus on the basis of clock data from a print timer


164


, and causes the head drive circuit


162


to output a drive signal to the piezoelectric transducers


23


to minutely vibrate the transducers at a drive frequency, a pressure variation and a time duration, which are suitable for the current circumstances, on the basis of data from a memory means


167


.




The print timer


164


starts its counting operation at the start of a printing operation, and is reset at a time when minute vibration starts. A cartridge loading time detecting means


165


receives a signal from a means for detecting the loading and unloading of an ink cartridge


9


to and from a cartridge holding portion, for example, the carriage


1


. The means


165


starts to operate when an ink cartridge


9


is loaded anew, and is reset when it is unloaded. A temperature sensing means


166


senses ambient temperature and head temperature.




The memory means


167


stores data of ratios to increase the amplitude of a minute vibration of a meniscus in proportion to a loading time of the ink cartridge


9


, for example, ratios to increase expansion quantities and contraction quantities of the pressure generating chamber


21


(FIG.


23


), data to reduce a pressure variation in the pressing generating chamber


21


for causing a minute vibration as temperature becomes higher as shown in

FIG. 24

, and data to decrease a frequency of a drive signal for causing a minute vibration as temperature becomes higher as shown in FIG.


25


.




A pressure variation in the pressure generating chamber


21


for causing a minute vibration of a meniscus may be adjusted by controlling a drive signal applied to a pressure generating means, for example, the piezoelectric transducer


23


,


42


, or


68


. A ratio of the drive voltage at the time of minute vibration to the drive voltage at the time of printing is varied in accordance with temperature, as shown in

FIG. 24

, by varying an attenuation factor of a variable attenuator, for example. Specifically, the voltage ratio is set to a value that is 0.3 a the drive voltage at the time of printing in a low temperature region (10° C. to 15° C.). In a normal temperature region (15° C. to 25° C.), the voltage ratio linearly falls to a value of 0.25 times as large as the drive voltage. In a first high temperature region (25° C. to 30° C.), the voltage ratio is set to a value 0.25 times as large as the drive voltage. In a second high temperature region (30° C. to 40° C.), the voltage ratio linearly falls to a value of 0.2 times as large as the drive voltage.




A drive frequency of a minute vibration of the meniscus can readily be obtained by selecting any of the following frequencies in accordance with temperature. In the low temperature region (10° C. to 15° C.), the drive frequency is (1/integer number)×the maximum drive frequency at the time of printing)×the integer number. In this embodiment, the drive frequency is 7.2 kHs (={fraction (1/16)}×maximum drive frequency×16). In the normal temperature region (15° C. to 25° C.), the drive frequency is 5.4 kHz (={fraction (1/16)}×maximum drive frequency×12). In the first high temperature region (25° C. to 30° C.), the drive frequency is 3.6 kHz (={fraction (1/16)}×maximum drive frequency×8). In the second high temperature region (30° C. to 40° C.), the drive frequency is 1.8 kHz (={fraction (1/16)}×maximum drive frequency×4). Thus, a frequency×(1/integer) of the drive frequency at the time of printing is used as a unit frequency. The product of the unit frequency×the integer is need for the frequency of the minute vibration of the meniscus. This can be realized by using a frequency dividing circuit, not an oscillator capable of providing a plural number of frequencies for the minute vibration. In this respect, the related circuitry is simplified. Where a more complex circuit is permitted, the nozzle opening can effectively be prevented from being clogged by using a circuit capable of finely varying the amplitude values of the minute vibration and the frequency values with respect to temperature.




In the present embodiment, the control system for the recording head receives print data from a host computer, and the control means


160


recognizes a temperature of the recording head


7


from a signal derived from the temperature sensing means


166


, and selects a vibration mode suitable for the minute vibration. When the temperature is higher than room temperature, the viscosity of ink decreases, and hence the meniscus tends to vibrate. Therefore, in this case, a pressure variation for causing a minute vibration is set to small value. That is, a voltage of a drive signal to be applied to the piezoelectric transducer


23


is set at a low value. Further, a frequency of a minute vibration is set to be lower than at the normal temperature. For example, in the first high temperature region (25° C. to 30° C.), 3.6 kHz (={fraction (1/16)}×maximum drive frequency×8) is selected for the drive frequency. In the second high temperature region (30° C. to 40° C.), 1.8 kHz (={fraction (1/16)}×maximum drive frequency×4) is selected. In this way, a minute vibration of the meniscus is continued while avoiding the evaporation of ink solvent and the suction of air through the nozzle openings, which arise from a high speed movement of the meniscus. Further, at high temperature, an ink viscosity is low and hence its diffusion rate is high. In this case, by reducing the number of vibrations in one cycle, evaporation of the ink solvent through the nozzle opening


24


, which ensues from the minute vibration, is controlled to be small, and a viscosity of ink near the nozzle opening


24


is swiftly reduced.




Either of the following methods may be used for minutely vibrating a meniscus. A first method in which the pressure generating chamber being minutely expanded at the start of a minute vibration, and then being restored. A second method includes the pressure generating chamber being minutely contracted at the start of a minute vibration. When the first method is used, the meniscus vibrates with respect to a position where the meniscus reaches as the result of pulling the meniscus from the nozzle opening


24


side to the pressure generating chamber. Accordingly, the vibrating meniscus does not wet the nozzle plate


35


since it fails to reach the nozzle opening


24


. The meniscus minutely vibrates at an amplitude high enough to diffuse the ink near the nozzle opening into the ink in the pressure generating chamber


21


.




When temperature is lower than room temperature, the ink viscosity is high, so that the meniscus is hard to vibrate. Then, a pressure variation of the pressure generating chamber


21


for the minute variation is set to large value. That is, the voltage of the drive signal applied to the piezoelectric transducer


23


is set to a high value, and the drive frequency is set to be relatively high; 7.2 kHz (={fraction (1/16)}×maximum drive frequency×16);




Thus, even if the ambient temperature is lower than normal temperature and the ink viscosity is high, the meniscus near the nozzle opening


24


receives a higher pressure than at normal temperature. It can minutely vibrate at an amplitude suitable for preventing clogging, irrespective of the high viscosity of ink. The high viscosity ink near the nozzle opening is diffused into the ink in the pressure generating chamber, so that its viscosity is decreased. Needless to say, a lesser amount of ink solvent is allowed to evaporate because of the low temperature, and no bubbles are pulled into the nozzle opening


24


if the frequency of the minute vibration is set to a high value since the ink viscosity is high.




When the ink cartridge


3


remains loaded with ink for a long time, the amount of ink solvent evaporated from the container (i.e., the ink carriage


9


) is large. Accordingly, ink in the cartridge has a high viscosity. In this case, the pressure variation for the minute vibration is preferably increased on the basis of data received—from the cartridge loading time detecting means


165


, and, if necessary, the vibrating frequency of the meniscus is slightly increased. As a result, the meniscus can be minutely vibrated at the amplitude and the drive frequency that are suitable for the clogging prevention, irrespective of evaporation of ink solvent from the ink cartridge


9


and a variation of the ink viscosity caused by a variation of ambient temperature.




Thus, the recording head is free from clogging and ready for printing. A print signal is then output and a first drive signal for the discharging of ink droplets is output to the piezoelectric transducers


23


. At the start of the printing, the print timer


164


starts to count and outputs a signal when the print time reaches the time for minute vibration. When the recording head reaches a point near the end of a print line and enters its deceleration phase, the control means


160


decreases the pressure for the minute vibration and the frequency of the minute vibration to be lower than at normal temperature when ambient temperature is high, as described above. On the other hand, when the ambient temperature is low, the pressure variation and the frequency of the minute vibration are increased to a value higher than at normal temperature. Further, the control means outputs a signal to vary the pressure for causing a minute vibration corresponding to a time lapse since the ink cartridge


9


is loaded. Accordingly, the meniscus is minutely vibrated at a drive frequency and a pressure, which correspond to ambient temperature and a time length since the ink cartridge


9


is loaded, when it is impossible to print.




The carriage


1


stops at a preset position while the meniscus is minutely vibrating. Then, the carriage


1


is reversed and accelerated toward the printing area along the next print lines. Immediately before the speed of the carriage


1


reaches a constant speed allowing for printing operation, the minute vibration of the meniscus is stopped. The time to minutely vibrate the meniscus for preventing clogging during the print period is retarded and set at a time point where the carriage


1


enters a deceleration phase for the return. Therefore, the meniscus can be minutely vibrated as long as possible without any interruption of the printing operation. Further, the nozzle opening can be prevented from being clogged, without any decrease of the printing speed. Additionally, the viscosity of the ink near the nozzle opening


24


will not increase when the recording head


7


is idling, which is caused by the return operation of the head.




After a predetermined amount of printing ends and a preset waiting time elapses, the recording head


7


moves to a home position, and capped and waits for the next printing operation. If required, in a waiting mode, the meniscus may be minutely vibrated at fixed time intervals for preventing an increase of ink viscosity. When the head is in the waiting mode and the meniscus is minutely vibrated, if a print command is received, the control means


160


accelerates the carriage


1


toward the printing area while keeping the minute vibration of the meniscus, stops the minute vibration immediately before the speed of the carriage reaches a constant speed, and starts the printing by the recording head.




In the above-mentioned embodiment, an amplitude of the minute vibration is controlled by adjusting the voltage of a drive signal applied to the piezoelectric transducer. By adjusting rates α and β of voltage changes of the drive signal applied to the pressure generating chamber


21


as shown in

FIG. 26

, an expanding rate and a contracting rate of the pressure generating chamber


21


can be adjusted when it is minutely expanded, and hence the pressure at the time of expanding of the pressure generating chamber can be adjusted. Further, if the rate β of voltage change when the pressure generating chamber is minutely contracted is set to a value smaller than the rate α of voltage change when it is minutely expanded as shown in

FIG. 27

, the meniscus may rapidly be pulled to the pressure generating chamber


21


, to promote the diffusion of the ink near the nozzle opening


24


into the pressure generating chamber


21


. When the meniscus is pushed back, dynamic energy of the meniscus is reduced, so that the meniscus may be minutely vibrated while not producing from the nozzle opening


24


.




In the embodiments mentioned above, to minutely vibrate the meniscus, a drive signal is applied to the pressure generating means provided in association with the pressure generating chambers. When using a recording head in which the pressure generating means for causing a minute vibration is provided in association with the reservoir, as shown in

FIG. 4

, a drive signal of such as amplitude as to minutely vibrate the meniscus near the nozzle opening


24


is applied to the pressure generating means


68


of the reservoir at the timing of causing a minute vibration. The ink-jet recording apparatus of the on-carriage type in which the ink cartridge


9


is located on the carriage


1


is discussed in the above-mentioned embodiments. However, it is evident that the present invention is applicable to an ink-jet recording apparatus of the type in which the ink cartridge


9


is placed on the frame, and ink is supplied to the recording head by an ink tube.




There has thus been shown and described a novel ink-jet recording head which fulfills all the objects and advantages sought therefor. Many changes, modifications, vibrations and other uses and applications of the subject invention will, however, become apparent to those skilled in the art after considering the specification and the accompanying drawings which disclose preferred embodiments thereof. All such changes, modifications, vibrations and other uses and applications which do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention are deemed to be covered by the invention which is limited only by the claims which follow.



Claims
  • 1. An ink jet recording apparatus having an ink-jet recording head including pressure generating chambers each communicatively connected to a nozzle opening and a reservoir, ink stored in said pressure generating chambers and said reservoirs and forming a meniscus at each of said nozzle openings, pressure generating means for pressurizing the pressure generating chambers to eject ink droplets selectively from said nozzle openings, and means for minutely vibrating a meniscus at each of said nozzle openings to an extent insufficient to eject an ink droplet, said ink jet recording apparatus comprising:a drive voltage generating circuit for generating a drive waveform, wherein said drive waveform contains a first drive waveform for minutely vibrating the meniscus and a second drive waveform for ejecting ink droplets during one print period; and a drive circuit selectively outputting at least one of a signal of said first drive waveform and a signal of said second drive waveform to said pressure generating means and said means for minutely vibrating the meniscus.
  • 2. The ink jet recording apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said drive voltage generating circuit generates said first drive waveform following said second drive waveform in said drive waveform.
  • 3. The ink jet recording apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said drive voltage generating circuit generates said second drive waveform following said first drive waveform in said drive waveform.
  • 4. The ink jet recording apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said means for minutely vibrating the meniscus additionally vibrates the meniscus during a print rest period in such a manner that the meniscus vibrates with a greater amplitude during the print rest period than during the print period.
  • 5. The ink jet recording apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said means for minutely vibrating the meniscus varies an amplitude of the minute vibration of the meniscus in accordance with ambient temperature.
  • 6. The ink jet recording apparatus according to claim 5, wherein, when the ambient temperature is high, the amplitude of the minute vibration of the meniscus is smaller than that at normal temperature, and when the ambient temperature is low, the amplitude of the minute vibration of the meniscus is larger than that at normal temperature.
  • 7. The ink jet recording apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said means for minutely vibrating the meniscus comprises said pressure generating means.
  • 8. The ink jet recording apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said means for minutely vibrating the meniscus comprises a piezoelectric transducer.
  • 9. The ink jet recording apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said drive circuit selectively outputs at least the signal of said second drive waveform during a first print period or the signal of said first drive waveform during a print period immediately following the first print period.
  • 10. A method in an ink jet recording apparatus having an ink-jet recording head including pressure generating chambers each communicatively connected to a nozzle opening and a reservoir, ink stored in said pressure generating chambers and said reservoirs and forming a meniscus at each of said nozzle openings, pressure generating means for pressurizing the pressure generating chambers to eject ink droplets selectively from said nozzle openings, and means for minutely vibrating a meniscus at each of said nozzle openings to an extent insufficient to eject an ink droplet, said method comprising:performing a first operation mode in which the meniscuses of all the nozzle openings are vibrated plural times in succession for a predetermined period of time; placing the meniscuses in a state that said meniscuses are capable of discharging ink droplets; and applying a drive signal for discharging ink droplets to said pressure generating means.
  • 11. The method according to claim 10, further comprising:performing a second operation mode in which said meniscuses of all the nozzle openings are vibrated in succession for a preset period T2 at every period T1 interval when the ink jet recording apparatus is in a non-print operation.
  • 12. The method according to claim 11, further comprising:when said first operation mode is selected during the performance of said second operation mode, suspending said second operation mode and performing said first operation mode.
  • 13. The method according to claim 11,wherein the minute vibration in said first operation mode is performed for a longer duration than said time duration T2 of the minute vibration in said second operation mode.
  • 14. The method according to claim 10, further comprising:performing a third operation mode in which the meniscuses of said nozzle opening are selectively minutely vibrated for one print period during a print period.
  • 15. The method according to claim 14,wherein said third operation mode is performed before the discharging of the ink droplet.
  • 16. The method according to claim 14,wherein said third operation mode is performed after the discharging of the ink droplet.
  • 17. The method according to claim 14,wherein the meniscuses is vibrated such that an amplitude of the minute vibration of each meniscus in said first operation mode is larger than that of the minute vibration of each meniscus in said third operation mode.
  • 18. The method according to claim 10,wherein the meniscuses is vibrated such that the meniscuses are minutely vibrated in said first operation mode, and after substantially 10 ms elapses from the minute vibration, said drive signal is applied to said pressure generating means.
  • 19. The method according to claim 10, further comprising:varying an amplitude of a minute vibration of the meniscus depending on ambient temperature.
  • 20. The method according to claim 19,wherein the amplitude of the minute vibration of the meniscus is varied depending on ambient temperature in such a manner that, when ambient temperature is high, the amplitude of the minute vibration of the meniscus is smaller than that at normal temperature, and when ambient temperature is low, the amplitude of the minute vibration of the meniscus is larger than that at normal temperature.
  • 21. The method according to claim 10,wherein the meniscuses of a plural number of groups of nozzle openings are vibrated at different times in a sequential manner.
  • 22. The method according to claim 10,wherein the minute vibration of the meniscus is produced by said pressure generating means.
  • 23. The method according to claim 10,wherein the minute vibration of the meniscus is produced by a piezoelectric transducer.
  • 24. The method according to claim 10,wherein a frequency of the minute vibration of each meniscus is varied depending on ambient temperature.
  • 25. The method according to claim 10,wherein the recording apparatus further includes a carriage carrying said ink-jet recording head thereon; said method further comprising reciprocative moving said carriage in a direction orthogonal to a transporting direction of a recording sheet, wherein said moving comprises accelerating said carriage; and wherein the meniscuses in said first operation mode is minutely vibrated while said carriage is accelerating to reach such a speed as to allow a printing operation.
  • 26. The method according to claim 25, further comprising:performing a second operation mode in which said meniscuses of all the nozzle openings are vibrated in succession for a preset period T2 at every period T1 interval, the time period T1 being shorter that the sum of the preset period T2 and a time period T5 required for said carriage with said ink-jet recording head mounted thereon to move at a printing speed in a printable region.
  • 27. The method according to claim 25,wherein the meniscuses are vibrated in succession as in said first operation mode when said carriage with said ink-jet recording head mounted thereon, which is being moved at a constant speed, is decelerated.
  • 28. The method according to claim 25, further comprising:wherein detecting a time point of starting the minute vibration of the meniscuses as in said first operation mode, said time point being continued from a time point at which the deceleration of said carriage with said ink-jet recording head mounted thereon starts; and when the deceleration period is shorter than said time period T2, stopping the minute vibration of the meniscuses.
  • 29. The method according to claim 25,wherein the minute vibration in said first operation mode or the minute vibration as in said first operation mode is performed at an instant that an acceleration or a deceleration of said carriage with said ink-jet recording head mounted thereon starts.
  • 30. The method according to claim 25,wherein the minute vibration of the meniscuses in said first operation mode is started at an instant that said carriage with said ink-jet recording head mounted thereon comes to a standstill.
  • 31. The method according to claim 10,wherein a drive signal for causing the vibration that has a charging gradient of 5 to 50% of that of a drive signal for discharging the ink droplet is utilized in said first operation mode.
  • 32. A method in an ink jet recording apparatus having an ink-jet recording head including a pressure generating chambers each communicatively connected to a nozzle opening and a reservoir, ink stored in said pressure generating chamber and said reservoirs and forming a meniscus at each of said nozzle openings, said method comprising:pressurizing the pressure generating chambers to eject ink droplets selectively from said nozzle openings; minutely vibrating a meniscus at each of said nozzle openings to an extent insufficient to eject an ink droplet; and vibrating said meniscuses present at the nozzle openings in succession for a preset period T2 at every period T1 interval when the ink jet recording apparatus is in a non-print operation.
  • 33. The method according to claim 32,wherein the meniscuses are minutely vibrated at fixed periods T1 after a rest period that is longer than said fixed period T2.
  • 34. The method according to claim 33, further comprisingwherein setting an amplitude of the minute vibration during a print period to be smaller than that of the meniscus during a print rest period.
  • 35. The method according to claim 32,wherein, during each print period ink droplets are caused to eject through said nozzle and/or the meniscuses are caused to selectively minutely vibrate.
  • 36. The method according to claim 32, further comprisingvarying an amplitude of a minute vibration of the meniscus depending on ambient temperature.
  • 37. The method according to claim 32, further comprising:varying an amplitude of a minute vibration of the meniscus depending on ambient temperature in such a manner that when ambient temperature is high, an amplitude of a minute vibration of the meniscus is smaller than that at normal temperature, and when ambient temperature is low, the amplitude of a minute vibration of the meniscus is larger than that at normal temperature.
  • 38. The method according to claim 32,wherein the meniscuses of a plural number of groups of nozzle openings are vibrated at different times in a sequential manner.
  • 39. The method according to claim 32,wherein the minute vibration of the meniscus is produced by a pressure generating means.
  • 40. The method according to claim 32,wherein the minute vibration of the meniscus is produced by a piezoelectric transducer.
  • 41. The method according to claim 32, further comprising:varying a frequency of the minute vibration of each meniscus depending on ambient temperature.
Priority Claims (4)
Number Date Country Kind
8-034337 Jan 1996 JP
8-035250 Feb 1996 JP
8-180107 Jun 1996 JP
8-297838 Oct 1996 JP
US Referenced Citations (7)
Number Name Date Kind
4350989 Sagae et al. Sep 1982 A
4609925 Nozu et al. Sep 1986 A
5264865 Shimoda et al. Nov 1993 A
5329293 Liker Jul 1994 A
5541628 Chang et al. Jul 1996 A
5790139 Umeno et al. Aug 1998 A
5818472 Usui et al. Oct 1998 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
0020984 Jan 1981 EP
0574016 Dec 1993 EP
0782924 Jul 1997 EP
57-61576 Apr 1982 JP