This description relates to ink jetting.
Ink jetting can be done using an ink jetting printhead that includes jetting assemblies. Ink is introduced into the ink jetting printhead and when activated, the jetting assemblies jet ink and form images on a substrate.
In one aspect, for use in ink jetting, a method includes reducing an anticipated variation in a characteristic of ink drops being jetted from an ink jet assembly, the reducing comprising causing a voltage that is applied on a jetting assembly to respond to the anticipated variation.
In another aspect, for use in ink jet printing, a method comprising determining a quantitative relationship between a jetting frequency of a jetting assembly and a characteristic of ink drops jetted from the jetting assembly; and providing the determined quantitative relationship for use in varying the characteristic of the ink drop.
In another aspect, an ink jet printing system includes a jetting assembly and a unit for determining an anticipated variation in a characteristic of ink drops jetted from the jetting assembly and applying a voltage to the jetting assembly based on the anticipated variation.
Implementations may include one or more of the following features. The characteristic of ink drops comprises the mass of the ink drops. The characteristic of ink drops comprises the speed of the ink drops. The characteristic of ink drops is anticipated based on a frequency of jetting of the ink drops. The frequency is determined based on transport speed of a substrate on which the ink drops are jetted. The characteristic of the ink drops jetted at the frequency is determined using a pre-determined quantitative relationship between the frequency and the characteristic. The anticipated variation of the characteristic is determined by comparing the characteristic to a standard. The voltage applied on the jetting assembly is in the form of pulses. Causing the voltage to respond to the variation comprises varying an amplitude of the pulses. Causing the voltage to respond to the variation comprises varying a width of the pulses. The pulses have a form that comprises at least square, triangle, and trapezoidal. The voltage is generated based on the anticipated variation. The generated voltage is amplified and applied to the jetting assembly. The voltage applied on the jetting assembly ranges between about 70 V to about 150 V. The ink drops have a size of about 1 pico-liter to about 80 pico-liter. The ink drops have a speed of about 1 m/s to about 12 m/s. The frequency ranges from about 1 KHz to about 25 KHz.
Implementations may also include one or more of the following features. The quantitative relationship is non-linear. The characteristic of the ink drops is varied by varying a voltage applied to the jetting assembly.
Implementations may also include one or more of the following features. The ink jet printing system also includes an encoder to determine a transport speed of a substrate on which the ink drops are jetted and a microprocessor to calculate a frequency of the jetting assembly based on the transport speed. The unit comprises a controller for receiving the frequency. The controller is connected to a microprocessor for determining the anticipated variation in the characteristic and the voltage to reduce the anticipated variation. The microprocessor determines a pulse magnitude of the voltage. The microprocessor determines a pulse width of the voltage. The microprocessor includes a medium that stores a pre-determined relationship between the frequency and the characteristic of the ink drops. The unit comprises a pulse generator for generating the voltage. The jetting assembly comprises 100 to 2000 jets. The ink jet printing system also includes an amplifier to amply the voltage applied on the jetting assembly. The ink jet printing system also includes additional jetting assemblies, each having a pre-determined relationship between a jetting frequency of the corresponding jetting assembly and characteristics of ink drops jetted from the jetting assembly.
All mentioned publications, patent applications, patents, and other references are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description, and from the claims.
Referring to
Referring to
Generally, each pumping chamber, together with its corresponding ink jetting passage, the opening and the orifice can be referred to as a jet of the jetting assembly. Information about the jetting assembly 4 is also provided in U.S. Ser. No. 12/125,648, filed May 22, 2008, which is incorporated here by reference.
The jetting assembly 4 also includes electronic components 29 to trigger the pumping chambers formed from the wells 22 to jet ink. For example, the electronic components include two sets of electrodes 33 and 33′ on the polymer films 32 and 32′, which are connected by leads (not shown) to respective flexible circuits 31, 31′ and integrated circuits 34 and 34′, to which the information about the image to be printed is loaded. Piezoelectric elements 36 and 36′ are attached to the outer side of each of the polymer films 32 and 32′, respectively and each includes a set of electrodes 35 and 35′ that contacts the polymer films 32 and 32′.
The integrated circuits 34 and 34′ each includes a set of switches, each switch corresponding to one of the pumping chambers in the body 20. Based on the loaded image data, in one jetting event, the switches corresponding to the pumping chambers that are required to jet ink are set to be on and the switches corresponding to the rest of the pumping chambers are set to be off. The integrated circuits 34 and 34′ then forward voltage pulses to the electrodes 35 that address those pumping chambers corresponding to switches in the “on” state to activate the portion of piezoelectric elements 34 and 34′ over these chambers.
Referring to
To print each line 38 of the two-dimensional image 8 on the substrate 18 (
The mass and velocity of the jetted ink drops vary with the frequency of jetting and therefore with the transport speed of the substrate.
In
The encoder 50 can be a shaft angle encoder in communication with the transport 52 and can provide a stream of signals from which a transport speed of the substrate 48 can be determined. The transport speed of the substrate 48 is associated with a jetting frequency at which voltage pulses are delivered to the ink jet printhead 40 and ink is jetted from the pumping chambers. In some embodiments, the jetting frequency of the ink jet printhead 40 can be computationally determined using a microprocessor based on the transport speed. For example, the encoder 50 is located on a transport belt (not shown) that transports the substrate 18 and produces a stream of pulses related to the speed of the belt. For example, the higher the transport speed the higher number of pulses/sec and therefore the higher the frequency of change. A microprocessor (not shown) can be used to measure the time period between the rising edges of the stream of pulses and then determine the operational jetting frequency of the ink jet printhead 40 using the following formula Frequency (Hertz)=1/Period (sec).
Alternatively, a frequency to voltage converter can be used to generate an analog voltage, for example, between 1 to 10 volts, based on the transport speed. A digital representation of the transport speed and the jetting frequency are converted from the voltage by an analog to digital converter in communication with the frequency to voltage converter. For example, the frequency to voltage converter uses the repetitive pulses from the encoder 50 to charge a circuit to produce an analog voltage representative of the speed of the transport of the substrate 18.
The jetting assemblies performs ink jetting differently in response to different jetting frequencies, which vary accordingly with the variation in the transport speed of the substrate 18, and/or the variation in properties of the jetting assemblies, the properties of the ink used, for example, viscosity, and/or the operational temperature of the ink jetting. For example, the ink drops 42 out of the orifices 44 jetted at different jetting frequencies can have different characteristics, for example, mass or speed. To achieve high quality printing, it is desirable to have the jetting assemblies' performance uniform at different jetting frequencies.
To produce ink drops with uniform characteristics, it is therefore desirable to understand the relationship between the transport speeds of the substrate 48 or jetting frequency of the ink jet printhead 40 and the characteristic of the ink drops 42 and reduce the variations in the characteristic of the ink drops 42. The jetting frequency of the ink jet printhead 40 is the frequency at which the printhead 40 places an ink drop at every pixel. The individual jets in the printhead 40 can be operating at an operating frequency different from the jetting frequency of the printhead 40.
Referring to
The quantitative relationship between the jetting frequency of the printhead 40 and the mass of the ink drops and the quantitative relationship between the jetting frequency and the velocity at which the ink drops are jetted are both nonlinear and have a similar trend. To make the ink drop mass and velocity more uniform at all frequencies, the voltage pulses to be applied on the jetting assemblies can be adjusted based on these known quantitative relationships. For example, at a jetting frequency 14.5 KHz, a higher voltage pulse can be delivered to the ink jet printhead 40 to cause the piezoelectric element to generate higher pressures over the pumping chambers to compensate the anticipated low drop mass and drop velocity implied by the known relationships. By contrast, at a jetting frequency of 25.5 KHz, a lower voltage can be delivered to cause the piezoelectric element to provide proper pressures on the pumping chambers to reduce the anticipated high drop mass and drop velocity.
In some embodiments, ink jet printheads of the same type demonstrate similar trends in these quantitative relations, for example, when using the same type of ink. This allows use of these quantitative relationships in producing uniform ink drops with uniform velocities for high quality images on ink jet printers that include the same type of ink jet printheads in a systematic way. In practice, the quantitative relationships like the ones shown in
Based on the chosen standard and the determined quantitative relationships, at each jetting frequency, an anticipated variation of the ink drop mass and velocity with respect to the standard is calculated. To reduce the anticipated variation and make the ink drop characteristics conform uniformly to the standard, a compensating voltage additional to the original voltage pulse associated with that jetting frequency is calculated and added to the original voltage pulse to provide a compensated voltage pulse. In some embodiments, the compensating voltage has a negative magnitude and is deducted from the original voltage pulse to decrease the ink drop mass and velocity. In some embodiments, the compensating voltage has a positive magnitude and is added to the original voltage to increase the ink drop mass and velocity.
In some implementations, for each type of ink that is used, tests on the characteristics of the ink drops jetted from the printheads are conducted using various compensated voltage pulse parameters, e.g., amplitude, rise/fall time, and width, where a camera is used to visually see how the ink drops are jetted and formed. The parameters describing the compensated voltage pulses are empirically modified or chosen to provide the desired drop formation with consistent print quality across the jetting frequency range.
The jetting frequency obtained from the transport speed of the substrate 48 as described above is associated with all pumping chambers of the ink jet printhead 40 and can be different, for example, larger, than the operating frequency of an individual jet because at each moment, only a portion of the jets are jetting ink based on the requirement of the image to be printed. Therefore, the variations in the characteristics of ink drops from different individual jets at one jetting frequency of the ink jetting printhead 40 are different. For example, at the determined printhead jetting frequency 14.5 KHz, some of the jets are not jetting ink, some are jetting at a frequency of 7.25 KHz if they are printing every other pixel, or some others are jetting at a lower frequency if they are printing fewer than every other pixel. According to the quantitative relationships of
In some embodiments, the compensating voltage is applied to all jets that are printing at the moment when the printhead 40 has the corresponding jetting frequency. Even though only some of the jets are operating at the jetting frequency of the printhead 40, uniform application of the compensating voltage improves the image quality.
In some embodiments, to reduce the overall variations in ink drop characteristics that are jetted from different individual jets, the compensating voltage corresponding to the jetting frequency of the ink jet printhead 40 is further adjusted, for example, the magnitude of the voltage to be 90%, 80%, 70%, 60%, or 50% of the calculated or determined value.
Referring to
In some embodiments, multiple printheads may be used to print an image and each printhead may have an associated look-up table.
Referring back to
The information of the jetting frequency is used by the microprocessor 66, to find the information of the voltage pulse corresponding to that jetting frequency in the stored look-up table.
A voltage pulse to be applied on the piezoelectric element of the printhead 40 is generated in the pulse generation unit 64 of the pulse unit 46, based on the information sent from the pulse control unit 62. The pulse generation unit 64 includes a pulse generator 70 and a pulse shaper 72. The pulse generator 70 includes a digital to analog (D/A) converter that generates a voltage pulse based on the information received from the pulse control unit 62. In some embodiments, the D/A converter generates a voltage pulse that has a magnitude, for example, of about 5 volts, 10 volts, or 15 volts, and/or up to, for example, about 30 volts, a rise time, for example, of about 1 μseconds, or 2 μseconds, and/or up to, for example, about 4 μseconds, or about 5 μseconds, a fall time, for example, of 1 μseconds, or 2 μseconds, and/or up to, for example, about 4 seconds, or about 5 μseconds, and a width, for example, of about 2 μseconds, 4 seconds, 5 μseconds, and/or up to, for example, about 15 μseconds, 20 μseconds, or about 25 μseconds.
Generally, the voltage pulses generated from the D/A converter have low magnitudes and need to be amplified proportionally before applying to the ink jet printhead 40, which will be discussed later. The pulses generated from the pulse generator 70 are filtered by a pulse shaper filter at the pulse shaper 72 to provide a desired waveform.
Examples of pulse shaper filter include, for example, trivial boxcar filter, sinc shaped filter, raised-cosine filter, and Gaussian filter. Examples of waveforms of the voltage pulses include, for example, sine waves, sawtooth waves, square waves, triangle waves, trapezoidal waves and their combinations.
The voltage pulse from the pulse shaper 72 is delivered to an amplifier 76. A high voltage supply 78 is connected to the amplifier 76 to provide a high voltage. The amplified voltage pulse can have a magnitude, for example, of at least about 30 V, 60 V, 65 V, or 70 V, and/or up to, for example, about 160 V, 155 V, or 150 V. The amplified voltage pulse is applied to the ink jet printhead 40 to cause ink to be jetted with desired drop mass and velocity onto the substrate 48.
The system response time of pulse unit 46 to changes in transport speed is in the order of milliseconds. This allows the ink pulse unit 46 to respond to the anticipated variation in the ink drop characteristics associated with a jetting frequency of the ink jet printer 40 and effectively reduce the anticipated variation to produce high quality images.
Other embodiments are in the following claims.
For example, printheads other than that described in
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/076,789, filed Jun. 30, 2008, and incorporated herein by reference.
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