Ink leakage detecting apparatus

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6431678
  • Patent Number
    6,431,678
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, September 1, 1998
    26 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 13, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
An apparatus and method for detecting ink leakage in a print head. Conductive material is provided on a print head substrate that functions as a detector for ink that has leaked out of the established ink well or conduit. The detector conductive material is preferably arranged in proximity to power and/or control signal conductors and senses when leaked ink is threatening these conductors.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to inkjet printers and, more specifically, to the detection of ink leakage in a print head of such a printer.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Inkjet and like printers and cartridges are known in the art and include those made by Hewlett-Packard, Canon and Epson, amongst others. Inkjet printers include an ink supply and a print head to which ink is delivered for controlled discharge. Typically, an inkjet print head includes a substrate on or in which an expulsion mechanism is formed, a barrier plate that provides channels for delivering ink to the expulsion mechanism and an orifice plate positioned over the barrier layer such that ink is expelled through openings in the orifice plate. Power supply lines and signal processing or control lines are coupled to componentry in or on the substrate.




A disadvantage of known inkjet print head arrangements, however, is that the ink used therein is generally invasive and with time will leak outside of its confined area. For example, ink may leak in between the substrate and barrier layer or between the barrier layer and orifice plate, amongst other leakage channels. The escaped ink may seep onto the interconnect region(s) of the substrate where it can cause a short between the power and control lines or otherwise cause a malfunction of the print head.




Hence, a need exists for detecting when ink in an inkjet print head has escaped its confined area and may cause a malfunction of the print head. Furthermore, a need exists for a print head ink leakage detector that can be implemented in an economical, non-overly complex manner.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an inkjet print head that includes a mechanism that detects when ink has escaped its confined space.




It is another object of the present invention to provide such a print head that (1) can be economically implemented and (2) can uniquely identify itself when it has failed.




It is another object of the present invention to provide such a print head that utilizes conductive material adjacent the power and/or control lines to detect undesired leakage.




It is also an object of the present invention to provide an inkjet printer that incorporates such a print head.




These and related objects of the present invention are achieved by use of a ink leakage detecting apparatus as described herein.




The attainment of the foregoing and related advantages and features of the invention should be more readily apparent to those skilled in the art, after review of the following more detailed description of the invention taken together with the drawings.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a partial cutaway isometric view of an inkjet printhead in accordance with the present invention.





FIG. 2

is a top view of an inkjet print head in accordance with the present invention.





FIG. 3

is a schematic diagram of a detection circuit in accordance with the present invention.





FIG. 4

is an alternative embodiment of a detection circuit in accordance with the present invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION




Referring to

FIG. 1

, a partial isometric view of an inkjet print head


10


in accordance with the present invention is shown. Print head


10


includes a substrate


20


to which a power line


12


, a control line


14


and a detect line


16


are coupled.




Substrate


20


includes an ink expulsion device


22


formed therein or thereon that they may be thermally, mechanically or otherwise actuated. In a preferred embodiment, the expulsion device is thermally (resistively) actuated as is known. Substrate


20


is preferably made of a semiconductive material such as silicon, Si, and includes a detection circuit


26


(not shown in

FIG. 1

; discussed in more detail below with respect to

FIG. 3

) and may optionally include a control circuit (i.e., on-chip as opposed to off-chip control logic; not shown in FIG.


1


).




A passivation layer


21


, for example of Si02, preferably forms the top layer of the substrate. A plurality of other layers are formed in substrate


20


that permit operation of the thermal ink expulsion device and electrical connection to detection circuit


26


. These layers and the photolithographic steps or the like used to form them are known in the art and for clarity of the drawing these layers are not shown in FIG.


1


.




Power line


12


, control line


14


and detect line


16


are coupled to contact pads


13


,


15


and


17


, respectively, which are typically formed of gold or a like conductive material. An interface conductive layer


19


as is known is provided to couple the contact pads to the passivation layer. Tantalum, Ta, or the like is a suitable interface conductive material. Power line


12


, control line


14


and detect line


16


are coupled to expulsion device


22


, control circuitry (not shown) and detection circuit


26


respectively. The power line connection is shown as a phantom line.




A barrier layer


40


is provided on substrate


20


and an orifice plate


50


having an orifice or nozzle


51


is provided over barrier layer


40


. Amongst other implementation, the orifice plate may be formed of kapton or a like material that is lazer abladed to form the nozzle orifices. The substrate, barrier layer and orifice plate combine to form an ink conduit or well


45


that directs ink over the expulsion mechanism. An ink supply (not shown) is coupled to ink conduit


45


.




As mentioned above in the Background of the Invention section, the ink used in conventional inkjet printers is invasive and with time (i.e., towards the end of life of the print head) will begin to seep between the orifice plate and barrier layer or between the barrier layer and substrate or through cracks in the passivation layer or through other channels. If this ink is permitted to flow across the substrate such that it electrically interconnects the power line and the control line, then the print head will malfunction.




In an effort to prevent this situation, the present invention provides detectors


30


adjacent to the power and control lines (an arrangement of detector


30


is better shown in FIG.


2


). The detectors are coupled to detect line


16


and detection circuit


26


and when ink electrically interconnects the power or control line to a detector, a voltage is provided to detection circuit


26


which in turn generates an ink leakage signal (as discussed in more detail in reference to FIGS.


3


and


4


). The generated signal uniquely identifies the print head that is failing and may be used to prompt a user to replace that print head. Unique identification, for example in a color printer having cyan, magenta, yellow and black color print heads, permits a user to replace only the failing print head.




Detectors


30


are formed of a conductive material and may be formed of the same conductive interface material


19


used to couple the power, control and detect contact pads to the substrate. The detectors


30


and material


19


may be put down in the same fabrication step. While not shown from the perspective of

FIG. 1

, detector


30


is coupled to layer conductive material or


19


under the detect contact pad.




Referring to

FIG. 2

, a top view of an inkjet print head in accordance with the present invention is shown. The layout of the print head of

FIG. 2

is intended to illustrate a representative print head. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that inkjet layouts including such aspects as where conductors are connected, where the orifice plate is positioned, and how the orifices


51


are oriented may vary depending on a particular design. It should further be understood that the present invention is applicable to all print head arrangements and is in no way limited to the pedagogic embodiments disclosed in

FIGS. 1-2

.





FIG. 2

illustrates orifice plate


50


situated over substrate


20


. Connection regions (


61


,


62


) are respectively provided to the left and right of the orifice plate


50


and each connection region includes power contact pads


13


, control contact pads


15


and detect contact pads


17


. Contact pads


13


and


15


are coupled to substrate


20


by conductive interface material


19


. Contact pads


17


are coupled to the substrate by similar conductive material


19


, however, this material is formed integrally with the material that forms detectors


30


. These detectors or the “detector arrangement” is preferably formed about the power and control contact pads such that the leakage of ink onto both a detector and the power or control lines (as shown by phantom ink blot


70


) causes a voltage to be propagated through the conductive ink to the detector. The detector is in turned coupled to the detection circuit which outputs an ink leakage signal upon receipt of a voltage from a power or control line or other source. While one arrangement of detectors is shown in

FIG. 2

it should be noted that other arrangements could also be utilized.




Referring to

FIG. 3

, a schematic diagram of detection circuit


26


in accordance with the present invention is shown. Detection


26


preferably includes a MOSFET transistor


65


that receives a forward biased gate voltage (preferably 12V). The detect contact pad(s)


17


is/are preferably coupled to the drain MOSFET


65


and the source is preferably coupled through a resistor, R


1


, to ground. The detection circuit output


66


is preferably coupled at the source and buffered by an inverting buffer


67


.




Referring to

FIG. 4

, an alternative embodiment of a detection circuit (labeled


126


) is shown. Detection circuit


126


preferably includes a MOSFET transistor


165


that has a gate which is coupled to detect contact pad(s)


17


through a resistor, R


3


, to ground. The drain is pulled through a resistor, R


2


, to the power supply voltage and the source is tied to ground. The output


166


is coupled to the drain and preferably buffered by inverting buffer


167


. While circuits


26


and


126


provide the same function, the circuit of

FIG. 3

eliminates the input load caused by R


3


.




While the invention has been described in connection with specific embodiments thereof, it will be understood that it is capable of further modification, and this application is intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention following, in general, the principles of the invention and including such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which the invention pertains and as may be applied to the essential features hereinbefore set forth, and as fall within the scope of the invention and the limits of the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A print head apparatus, comprising:a substrate; an ink expulsion mechanism coupled to said substrate; a conduit for channeling ink to said expulsion mechanism; a mechanism that detects ink that has leaked from said conduit; at least one of a group of conductors including a power conductor and a control conductor formed on said substrate; a first layer of conductive interface material that intercouples said one of said power and control conductors to said substrate; and wherein said mechanism that detects ink includes a detector formed on said substrate, said first layer and said detector are formed of the same conductive interface material, and wherein ink detection is achieved by monitoring for electrical interconnection between said detecting mechanism detector and said at least one power and control conductors.
  • 2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said first layer and said detector are applied in the same fabrication step.
  • 3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said conductive interface material is tantalum.
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Number Name Date Kind
5430381 Dower Jul 1995 A
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5538586 Swanson et al. Jul 1996 A
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Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number Date Country
62128101 Jun 1987 JP
07060954 Mar 1995 JP
10086357 Apr 1998 JP
Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry
Millman, Jacob and Grabel, Arvin. Microelectronics, Second Edition. N.Y., McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1987. p. 156-157. TK7874.M527.*
Thermagon, Inc. News Release [online], [retrieved on Nov. 28, 2000]. Retrieved from the Internet <URL: http://www.thermagon.com/news.htm>.*
Millman, Jacob and Grabel, Arvin. Microelectronics, Second Edition. N.Y., McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1987. p. 133. TK7874.M527.