This disclosure relates generally to fluid level sensing and, in particular, to fluid level sensing in reservoirs containing materials to be ejected in three-dimensional object printing.
In general, printers include at least one printhead or ejector head that ejects drops of liquid ink in two dimensional printers and drops of material in three-dimensional object printing onto a surface. In some cases, monitoring of the volume or the head height of the ink or materials stored for ejection is important. Accurate monitoring of the head height is especially important where the head height of a stored fluid affects the mechanism or system that draws or uses the fluid. For example, restricting the head height range within an ink reservoir and precisely controlling the replenishment to an on-board ink reservoir of a printhead are often needed to prevent overfill-caused dripping of ink from the printhead jet orifices and to prevent the introduction of air if the fluid level is depleted below tolerable levels. Air can cause ink to foam and render a printhead inoperative.
Currently available fluid sensing systems suffer from a number of drawbacks. For instance, applications in which small reservoirs or holding tanks are needed to store a fluid may not offer the space or fluid height required to accommodate known fluid sensing systems, such as float-based systems. Also, many “sense and fill” systems suffer from significant hysteresis problems in that these systems tend to respond late or overfill before flow is stopped. Moreover, fluid sensing systems that sense fluid materials by detecting a resistance change upon attaining a liquid level are dependent on consistent material properties, which may change over the life of the mechanism or system that uses the fluid. For example, the properties of a fluid may deteriorate over time due to age degradation, or the fluid may be replaced with a fluid having different properties. This problem is more frequently encountered in three-dimensional object printing because these printers typically store a wider range of materials than inkjet printers. Therefore, improvements to sensing systems that enable fluid sensing in small reservoirs and that can detect fluids with varying properties are desired.
A reservoir includes a sensor that enables measurement of a height of fluid in small volume reservoirs. The reservoir includes a reservoir having a housing with a volume for containing a fluid, a plurality of chambers, each chamber having a wall that encloses a volume that is connected pneumatically with the volume within the housing, the chambers being arranged vertically within the volume, a plurality of piezoelectric transducers, each chamber having one of the piezoelectric transducers mounted to the wall of the chamber in a one-to-one correspondence, and at least one electrical conductor electrically connected to each piezoelectric transducer in the plurality of piezoelectric transducers to enable each piezoelectric sensor to receive an electrical signal to bend a portion of the wall of the chamber on which the piezoelectric transducer is located to produce an acoustical wave in the chamber and to transmit an electrical signal from each piezoelectric transducer in response to a fluctuating pressure on each piezoelectric transducer produced by the acoustical wave.
A printhead incorporates the reservoir and fluid level sensor to improve the measurement accuracy of ink head height within the printhead. The printhead includes a reservoir having a housing with a volume for containing a fluid, the reservoir is pneumatically connected to the apertures in the nozzle plate, a plurality of apertures in the housing that communicate with the volume within the housing, a plurality of chambers, each chamber having a wall that encloses a volume that is connected pneumatically with the volume within the housing, the chambers being arranged vertically within the volume, a plurality of piezoelectric transducers, each chamber having one of the piezoelectric transducers mounted to the wall of the chamber in a one-to-one correspondence, and at least one electrical conductor electrically connected to each piezoelectric transducer in the plurality of piezoelectric transducers to enable each piezoelectric sensor to receive an electrical signal to bend a portion of the wall of the chamber on which the piezoelectric transducer is located to produce an acoustical wave in the chamber and to transmit an electrical signal from each piezoelectric transducer in response to a fluctuating pressure on each piezoelectric transducer produced by the acoustical wave.
A printhead has been configured with at least two of the fluid sensors to enable a controller to detect the orientation of a printhead and the fluid level within the printhead. The printhead includes a reservoir having a housing with a volume for containing a fluid, the reservoir is pneumatically connected to the apertures in the nozzle plate, a plurality of apertures in the housing that communicate with the volume within the housing, at least two fluid level sensors arranged orthogonally within the volume of the housing, each fluid level sensor having: a plurality of chambers, each chamber having a wall that encloses a volume that is connected pneumatically with the volume within the housing, the chambers being arranged vertically within the volume, a plurality of piezoelectric transducers, each chamber having one of the piezoelectric transducers mounted to the wall of the chamber in a one-to-one correspondence, and at least one electrical conductor electrically connected to each piezoelectric transducer in the plurality of piezoelectric transducers to enable each piezoelectric sensor to receive an electrical signal to bend a portion of the wall of the chamber on which the piezoelectric transducer is located to produce an acoustical wave in the chamber and to transmit an electrical signal from each piezoelectric transducer in response to a fluctuating pressure on each piezoelectric transducer produced by the acoustical wave.
The foregoing aspects and other features of a reservoir with a fluid sensor configured to measure a height of a fluid are explained in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
For a general understanding of the present embodiments, reference is made to the drawings. In the drawings, like reference numerals have been used throughout to designate like elements.
The natural frequency of chamber 10 corresponds to the round trip travel time of a pressure wave bouncing between the ends 14 and 18. The size of the chamber is no more than 5 mm, and in some embodiments it is less than 500 μm. The more viscous the fluid in the reservoir, the smaller the chamber size is to minimize energy dissipation by the viscous fluid. The oscillation of the wave is eventually dampened by the viscosity of the fluid and the chamber structure since the walls of the chamber are not fully elastic.
The signal 60 is proportional to the total pressure on the transducer surface. The circuit in
In one embodiment, the piezoelectric sensor 108 includes a vertically oriented housing 112 having an upper opening 116 and a lower opening 120. Each opening has a filter 124 positioned across the opening to enable ink to enter and exit the housing 112 at openings 116 and 120, respectively. A channel 128 extends through the housing 112 between openings 116 and 120. As shown in the exploded view of
As noted previously, when the chamber is filled with fluid, the resonant frequency of the signal produced by the transducer is at a frequency that is significantly higher than the resonant frequency of the signal when the chamber is filled with air. Thus, the frequency of the response indicates whether the chamber is filled or empty. Consequently, the controller can activate the transducers sequentially or simultaneously and detect the responses of the transducers individually. By identifying the transducer that generates a fluid filled frequency and the adjacent transducer that generates an air filled frequency, the controller is able to determine where the fluid level is. If one sensor chamber is partially filled with fluid, the fluid level is detected with reference to the resonant frequency being between the resonant frequency for a fluid filled chamber and the resonant frequency for an air filled chamber. Appropriate action can then be taken, such as operating a pump to urge more ink into the reservoir when one of the transducers near the lower end of the channel 128 indicates the chamber is air filled. The structure of the sensor 108 in
Using the same reference numbers for like elements, a second embodiment of an ejector head 100′ having an ink level sensor 108′ is shown in
As noted previously, when the chamber is filled with fluid, the resonant frequency of the signal produced by the transducer is at a frequency that is significantly higher than the resonant frequency of the signal when the chamber is filled with air. Thus, the frequency of the response indicates whether the chamber is filled or empty. Consequently, the controller can activate the transducers sequentially or simultaneously and detect the responses of the transducers individually. By identifying the transducer that generates a fluid filled frequency and the adjacent transducer that generates an air filled frequency, the controller is able to determine where the fluid level is. If one sensor chamber is partially filled with fluid, the fluid level is detected with reference to the resonant frequency being between the resonant frequency for a fluid filled chamber and the resonant frequency for an air filled chamber. Appropriate action can then be taken, such as operating a pump to urge more ink into the reservoir when one of the transducers near the lower end of the channel 128′ indicates the chamber is air filled. The structure of the sensor 108′ in
The sensors 108 can be positioned within an ejector head 504 as shown in
It will be appreciated that various of the above-disclosed and other features, and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art, which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
This application is a continuation application of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/568,523, which is entitled “Ink Level Sensor Formed With An Array Of Self-Sensing Piezoelectric Transducers” and was filed on Dec. 12, 2014, and which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 9,162,457 on Oct. 20, 2015.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14568523 | Dec 2014 | US |
Child | 14814046 | US |