Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6409322
-
Patent Number
6,409,322
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, November 23, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, June 25, 200222 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 347 85
- 347 86
- 347 87
- 347 49
- 141 308
- 141 309
- 141 198
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
An ink supply pipe 70 is inserted into a sponge 44 to reach a central or lower portion thereof where ink density higher. Thereby, the ink can be fed stably to a nozzle 42 and to reduce influence of the air introduced through an ink supply tube 60 and an ink supply pipe 70. Lateral holes 72 for ink discharge are provided on a side wall of the ink supply pipe 70. Thereby, a sufficient amount of the ink can be supplied from the lateral holes 72 of the supply holes 70, even when the sponge 44 is crushed upon insertion of the ink supply pipe 70 to narrow the tip orifice of the ink supply pipe 70.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates to an ink supply device for supplying an ink for an ink-jet type image formation apparatus, and a method for filling the ink.
BACKGROUND TECHNIQUE
Ink-jet type image formation apparatuses have been widely used for formation of an image on a recording medium. The ink-jet type image formation apparatus, for example, has a printing head having a nozzle for ejecting an ink, and a carriage reciprocating in a prescribed direction with the printing head held thereon. The maximum amount of the ink stored in the printing head is limited to avoid an excessive weight of the reciprocating carriage.
To solve this problem, ink supply device
10
as shown in
FIG. 17
is used in which ink tank
12
of a large capacity is placed separately from the carriage (not shown in the drawing), and from this ink tank
12
an ink is supplied through ink supply tube
14
to printing head
16
. Printing head
16
has ink pool
20
therein for storing liquid ink (raw ink)
18
. This ink
18
stored in ink pool
20
is ejected from nozzle
22
. Ink pool
20
of printing head
16
may be constructed from a hard wall, or a soft bag expandable by a plate spring from the periphery.
In the ink pool constructed of a hard wall, the volume of air in ink pool
20
changes with the use of the ink. The volume of the air changes also depending on the environmental temperature. As the results, the pressure exerting on the ink stored in ink pool
20
varies to vary the amount of the ink to be fed to nozzle
22
. Therefore, the variation of the use of the ink and the environmental temperature will cause variation of the amount of ink ejection through nozzle
22
, which can deteriorate the image quality. Further, since printing head
16
moves with the carriage, the ink in ink supply tube
14
is moved by inertial force to vary the amount of the ink stored in ink pool
20
to vary the air volume in ink pool
20
. In this case also, the image quality can be deteriorated by variation of the amount of ejection of the ink.
On the other hand, in ink pool
20
constructed from a soft bag expandable by a plate spring, the amount of the air in the tank is controlled by the plate spring to decrease the variation thereof to stabilize relatively the amount of the ink ejected from nozzle
22
. However, the use of the plate spring and the soft bag complicates the structure of ink tank, disadvantageously.
In the both cases of the solid wall-surrounded ink pool and the soft bag type ink pool an impurity may contaminate the ink in operation of connection or disconnection of ink supply tube
14
, or exchange of ink tank
12
. The impurity contaminating the ink can reach nozzle
22
to clog nozzle
22
, disadvantageously.
Furthermore, the liquid surface level of the ink stored in ink tank
12
goes down with consumption of the ink, so that the vertical distance between the liquid surface level and nozzle
22
becomes larger with consumption of the ink, causing variation of the amount of the ink ejected through nozzle
22
to deteriorate the image quality. This ink level lowering can be prevented by making ink tank
12
flat to decrease the depth of the ink, but it requires a larger space therefor. Otherwise, a float or a valve may be provided in ink tank
12
, or a negative pressure-generating mechanism may be provided in the printing head to decrease the variation of the amount of the ink ejected through nozzle
22
. With any of the above techniques, the construction becomes complicated, disadvantageously.
For filling the ink for the first time from ink tank
12
into ink supply tube
14
, the ink is usually sucked by a head-recovering suction pump for the printing head recovery, or sucked by a negative pressure generated by connection of a negative pressure-generating means such as a syringe to the outlet of ink supply tube
14
.
The negative pressure generated by the head-recovering suction pump is not sufficient, so that the suction operation should be repeated several times for filling the ink into ink supply tube
14
, which takes a long time. When the negative pressure-generating means is used for filling the ink into ink supply tube
14
, the operation is not simple, and may cause soiling of hands and other disadvantages.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION
The present invention intends, under the above circumstances, firstly to provide an ink supply device which is capable of supplying the ink in an stable amount to eject through the nozzle. The present invention intends secondly to provide an ink filling method for filling smoothly an ink into an ink supply tube.
In an ink-jet type image formation apparatus having a carriage reciprocating in a prescribed direction and forming an image by ejection of ink on a recording medium, the ink supply device of the present invention for achieving the above first object comprises a printing head having a nozzle and being mounted on the carriage, an ink tank for storing the ink to be supplied to the printing head, and an ink supply tube for supplying ink from the ink tank to the printing head, wherein
(1) the printing head has a built-in porous mass of an open-cell structure communicating with the nozzle, and
(2) the ink supply tube is connected at the one end to the porous mass, and the ink tank, the ink supply tube, and the printing head are connected hermetically.
The porous mass of an open-cell structure means the one which has holes communicating with each other.
The ink supply device may have
(3) an ink supply pipe which is connected to the one end of the ink supply tube and is inserted into the porous mass.
(4) The tip of the ink supply pipe may be inserted into the center portion of the porous mass or into the portion thereof nearer to the nozzle than the center portion.
(5) The ink supply pipe may have an ink supplying through-hole on the side wall thereof.
(6) The porous mass may be the one which is capable of absorbing the pressure variation in the ink supply tube by capillarity.
The ink tank may comprise
(7) an open tank which contains the ink with the surface of the ink open to the atmospheric air, and
(8) additionally a closed ink tank which is placed above the open ink tank, storing the ink in a closed state, and having a connection pipe extending vertically to come into contact with the ink in the open tank.
The open ink tank
(9) may be placed such that the surface level of the stored ink is lower than the position of the nozzle of the printing head.
The ink supply device
(10) may have a joint member which is attached to the tip end of the ink supply tube and connects the ink supply tube detachably and hermetically to the printing head.
The ink supply device
(11) may have a joint housing room formed in the carriage for housing the joint member.
The joint housing room
(12) may be provided in the same number as the number of the joint members connected to the printing head mounted on the carriage.
The ink supply device
(13) may have a cover for covering the joint housing room.
The joint member may have
(14) a first connection orifice for connection with the tip portion of the ink supply tube,
(15) a second connection orifice for connection of the ink supply pipe,
(16) a third connection orifice separated from the first and second openings, and further
(17) a sucking device connected to the third connection orifice to suck the ink.
The sucking device may have
(18) an ink-filling adapter to be inserted into the third connection orifice to communicate with the first connection orifice and not to communicate with the second connection orifice.
(19) The third connection orifice may have a groove extending in the direction of insertion of the ink-filling adapter on the inside wall thereof, and
(20) the ink-filling adapter may have, on the outer face thereof, a rib to fit to the groove.
The ink filling method of the present invention for achieving the above second object comprises ink filling steps:
(21) connecting a sucking device for sucking of the ink with the third connection orifice, closing the second joint opening of the joint member, and
(22) sucking the ink with the sucking device to fill the ink into the ink supply tube.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a perspective view showing schematically the constitution of an ink supply device of a first embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2
is a schematic view of the printing head of the ink supply device shown in
FIG. 1
with a portion thereof broken away.
FIG. 3
is a schematic view of an ink supply pipe inserted into the printing head shown in FIG.
2
.
FIG. 4
is a perspective view showing schematically the constitution of an ink supply device of a second embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 5
is a side view of the ink supply device shown in FIG.
4
.
FIG. 6
is a plan view of a carriage with printing heads mounted thereon.
FIG. 7
is a side view of the carriage shown in
FIG. 7
with a portion thereof broken away.
FIG. 8
a plan view of a carriage housing all of the joint members and all of the ink supply pipes in a joint housing room.
FIG. 9
is a side view of the carriage shown in
FIG. 8
with a portion thereof broken away.
FIG. 10
is a plan view of a carriage housing joint members disconnected from printing head and stored in a joint housing room.
FIG. 11
is a side view of a carriage with a portion thereof broken away.
FIG. 12
illustrates a state in which a joint member is capped and no ink is filled yet in the second tube.
FIG. 13
illustrates a state in which the joint member is uncapped.
FIG. 14
illustrates a state in which a sucking device is connected to the third connection orifice of the joint member.
FIG. 15
illlustrates a state of filling an ink with the sucking device into the second tube.
FIG. 16
illustrates a state in which the cap is put on after completion of ink filling into the second tube.
FIG. 17
is a perspective view showing roughly a constitution of a conventional ink supplying device.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT INVENTION
The embodiments of the present invention are explained below by reference to drawings.
A first embodiment of the ink supply device is explained by reference to
FIGS. 1-3
.
FIG. 1
is a perspective view showing schematically the constitution of an ink supply device of a first embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2
is a schematic view of the printing head of the ink supply device shown in
FIG. 1
with a portion thereof broken away.
FIG. 3
is a schematic view of an ink supply pipe inserted into the printing head shown in FIG.
2
.
Ink supply device
30
, which is incorporated into a conventional ink-jet type image formation apparatus (not shown in the drawing), has printing head
40
mounted on a carriage (not shown in the drawing) reciprocating in arrow-A direction. Printing head
40
ejects, while reciprocating in arrow-A direction, an ink through nozzle
42
to form an image on a recording medium (not shown in the drawing). Ink supply device
30
has also ink tank
50
for storing ink
52
to be supplied to printing head
40
, and ink supply tube
60
for supplying ink
52
to printing head
40
. Ink supply tube
60
includes first tube
62
immersed into ink
52
, and second tube
66
connected to first tube
62
by connector
64
and connected also to printing head
40
with each of the connection portion sealed hermetically.
The ink tank
50
is placed such that the surface level of ink
52
in ink tank
50
is lower than nozzle
42
of printing head
40
. With ejection of the ink through nozzle
42
, ink
52
is sucked up from ink tank
50
by capillary force (capillarity) of the orifice of nozzle
42
to be supplied through ink supply tube
60
to printing head
40
.
Printing head
40
has sponge
44
(an example of the open-cell porous mass in the present invention) built therein as shown in
FIGS. 2 and 3
. The ink absorbed by sponge
44
is supplied to nozzle
42
formed in the lower portion of printing head
40
. Ink is ejected through nozzle
42
by heat generation of a heater (not shown in the drawing) in correspondence with a signal from the main body of the ink-jet type image formation apparatus.
In supplying ink
52
from ink tank
50
through ink supply tube
60
to printing head
40
, cover
46
is removed from the entry of ink supply metal pipe
70
as shown in
FIG. 3
, and ink supply pipe
70
connected through joint member
80
to second tube
66
is inserted into sponge
44
. Thereby, printing head
40
and ink tank
50
communicate with each other, and ink
52
in the ink tank is supplied through supply tube
60
to printing head
40
.
Ink supply pipe
70
is inserted into the central or lower portion of the sponge
44
where the ink density is higher. The supply of the ink by ink supply pipe
70
into the portion of high ink density in sponge
44
enables stable supply of the ink, and reduces the influence of the air introduced from ink supply tube
60
and ink supply pipe
70
. On the side wall of ink supply pipe
70
, lateral holes
72
are formed for ink introduction. Thereby, even if the tip opening of ink supply pipe
70
is narrowed by crush of sponge
44
by insertion of ink supply pipe
70
into sponge
44
, necessary amount of ink can be supplied through lateral holes
72
of ink supply pipe
70
.
During the printing, ink supply tube
66
connected to printing head
40
moves in reciprocation in arrow-A direction with the reciprocating movement of printing head
40
mounted on a carriage (not shown in the drawing) in arrow-A direction. Therefore, the pressure of the ink applied to printing head
40
will vary by an inertial force exerting to the ink in ink supply tube
66
. This pressure variation can make instable the amount of the ink ejected through nozzle
42
, deteriorating the image quality. However, the pressure variation is offset by the capillarity of sponge
44
, which stabilizes the amount of the ink ejected through nozzle
42
and prevents deterioration of image quality.
In the upper portion of printing head
40
, rib
48
extending inside is formed. This rib
48
presses sponge
44
. Thereby, sponge
44
is held in a compressed state in printing head
40
. Further, nozzle
42
is placed below joint member
80
. Consequently, the density of the absorbed ink is higher in the portion near to nozzle
42
than other portions in the sponge
44
.
Nozzle
42
has, at the tip portion, fine orifice holes (not shown in the drawing) of several tens of microns in the hole diameter, which induces an ink-holding power of not less than −250 Aq as a water head by the surface tension. This compensates immediately the slight decrease of the pressure in printing head
40
caused by consumption of the ink by ink ejection from nozzle
42
. Further, the ink can be sucked up from the open ink face at a negative water head position to printing head
40
.
Furthermore, any impurity, which may introduced into ink supply tube
60
or ink head
40
in exchange of the ink tank or exchange of printing head
40
by detaching joint member
80
from printing head
40
, will be removed by sponge
44
serving as a filter to prevent failure of ink ejection by clogging of nozzle
42
.
Next, a second embodiment of the present invention is explained by reference to
FIGS. 4 and 5
.
FIG. 4
is a perspective view showing roughly the constitution of an ink supply device of a second embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 5
is a side view of the ink supply device shown in FIG.
4
. In these drawings, the same symbols and numerals are used for the corresponding constitutional elements as in
FIGS. 1-3
.
Ink supply device
90
of the second embodiment is characterized by the structure of the ink tank. Ink supply device
90
has an open ink tank
94
in which the surface of stored ink
92
is open to the atmospheric air, and a closed ink tank
96
placed above the open ink tank
94
. Closed ink tank
96
stores ink
98
in a closed state. At the middle portion of the bottom wall of closed ink tank
96
, a connection pipe
100
is provided which extends vertically to come into contact with ink
92
stored in open ink tank
94
.
Open ink tank
94
is positioned such that the liquid surface level of ink
92
in open ink tank
94
is lower than the position of nozzle
42
of printing head
40
. Therefore, ink is sucked and fed by the capillary force of an orifice hole (not shown in the drawings) of nozzle
42
from open ink tank
94
through ink supply tube
60
to printing head
40
in correspondence with the ejection of the ink from nozzle
42
.
When the liquid surface level of ink
92
is lowered by consumption of ink
92
stored in ink tank
94
, air is introduced through connection pipe
100
to the upper space
96
a,
whereby ink is supplied from closed ink tank
96
to open ink tank
94
. With elevation of the liquid surface level of ink
92
in open ink tank
94
by supply of the ink, feed opening
100
a
of connection pipe
100
is shut by ink
92
to stop the ink supply from closed ink tank
96
to the open ink tank
94
. Thus, the liquid surface level of ink
92
in open ink tank
94
is kept constant by repetition of the above ink supply process. Consequently, the ink is supplied constantly to nozzle
42
to stabilize the amount of the ejected ink without causing deterioration of image quality.
A third embodiment of the present invention is explained by reference to
FIGS. 6-11
.
FIG. 6
is a plan view of a carriage with printing heads mounted thereon.
FIG. 7
is a side view of the carriage with a portion thereof broken away.
FIG. 8
is a plan view of a carriage housing all of the joint members and all of the ink supply pipes in a joint housing room.
FIG. 9
is a side view of the carriage shown in
FIG. 8
with a portion thereof broken away. In these drawings, the same symbols and numerals are used for the corresponding constitutional elements as in
FIGS. 1-3
.
In the aforementioned first and second embodiments, when ink supply pipe
70
is detached from printing head
40
, it may scatter the ink adhering to ink supply pipe
70
to soil the environment, or ink supply tube
60
may be caught by carriage
120
if carriage
120
is reciprocated with ink supply tube
70
separated. To avoid this disadvantage, the ink supply device of the third embodiment is provided with joint housing room
110
in carriage
120
to store joint member
80
and ink supply pipe
70
. This joint housing room
110
has a cover to prevent drying of joint housing room
110
.
Carriage
120
carries printing heads
40
B,
40
C,
40
M, and
40
Y filled respectively with an ink of black, cyan, magenta, or yellow. To printing heads
40
B,
40
C,
40
M, and
40
Y, second tubes
66
are connected through joint members
80
B,
80
C,
80
M, and
80
Y. Further to joint members
80
B,
80
C,
80
M, and
80
Y, ink supply pipes
70
are correspondingly connected. Ink supply tubes
70
are respectively inserted into sponge
44
(see
FIG. 2
) in printing head
40
B,
40
C,
40
M, or
40
Y.
Usually, during printing or waiting, second tubes
66
and printing heads
40
are kept connected tightly by joint member
80
to supply ink from ink tank
50
(see
FIG. 1
) to printing head
40
.
In exchange of printing head
40
, joint member
80
and ink supply pipe
70
are detached from printing head
40
, and are put into joint housing room
110
. Thereby, ink supply pipe
70
having ink adhering thereto is stored entirely in joint housing room
110
to prevent adherence or scatter of ink to surrounding parts, and the tip of second tube
66
is fixed to prevent entanglement of second tube
66
with carriage
120
when the carriage
120
is reciprocated.
FIG. 10
is a plan view of a carriage storing the joint members
80
C and
80
Y detached from printing head
40
C or
40
Y in joint housing room
110
.
FIG. 11
is a side view of the carriage with a portion thereof broken away.
As described above, carriage
120
carries printing heads
40
B,
40
C,
40
M,
40
Y filled respectively with an ink of black, cyan, magenta, and yellow. In the construction of carriage
120
, printing head
40
B filled with a black ink is displaced by the distance of the breadth of the printing head nozzle. Therefore, by mounting another printing head
40
B filled with the black ink additionally in the position of printing head
40
C, black color can be printed at double the speed. In this case, valve
67
of second tube
66
connected to printing head
40
C is closed, and joint member
80
C is disconnected from printing head
40
C and is stored in joint housing room
110
. Thus, by providing joint member
80
to be disconnectable arbitrarily, another printing head which is not connected to the ink supply tube can also be used. By providing joint housing room
110
and storing the joint member
80
in joint housing room
110
, any color other than conventional black, cyan, magenta, and yellow, such as fluorescent color, can be used for the printing. Otherwise, second tube
66
may be branched into several tubes to supply an ink from one second tube to plural printing heads.
A fourth embodiment of the present invention is explained by reference to
FIGS. 12-16
.
FIGS. 12-16
illustrate a joint member connected to a printing head.
FIG. 12
illustrates a state in which a joint member is capped and no ink is filled yet in second tube
66
.
FIG. 13
illustrates a state in which the joint member is uncapped.
FIG. 14
illustrates a state in which a sucking device is connected to the third connection orifice of the joint member.
FIG. 15
illustrates a state of filling an ink into second tube
66
with the sucking device.
FIG. 16
illustrates a state in which the cap is put on after completion of ink filling into second tube
66
. In these drawings, the same symbols and numerals are used for the corresponding constitutional element as in
FIGS. 1-3
.
Joint member
130
has first connection orifice
132
for connection with the end of second tube
66
, second connection orifice
134
for connection with ink supply tube
70
, and third connection orifice
136
for connection of sucker
140
for sucking an ink. Thus, joint member
130
has a structure like a three-way valve. Joint member
130
has also a cap
138
for closing and opening third connection orifice
136
.
Sucker
140
has syringe
142
for generating a negative pressure, and ink filling adapter
144
at the tip of this syringe
142
. Tip
144
a
of ink filling adapter
144
in the insertion direction is closed and a lateral hole
144
b
is formed a little above tip
144
a.
Therefore, on insertion of ink filling adapter
144
into third connection orifice
136
, lateral hole
144
b
and second tube
66
are communicated with each other, and second connection orifice
134
is closed.
In the step of filling the ink for the first time from ink tank
50
(see
FIG. 1
) into ink supply tube
60
, cap
138
is removed, and syringe
142
having ink filling adapter
144
is inserted in arrow-B direction as shown in FIG.
13
. Thereby, sucker
140
(syringe
142
) is connected to first and third connection orifices
132
,
136
but is not connected to second connection orifice
134
. On the wall of third connection orifice
136
, at the portion counter to the first connection orifice, groove
136
a
is formed, while ink filling adapter
144
has rib
144
c
to fit to this groove
136
a.
Therefore, on insertion of ink filling adapter
144
into third connection orifice so as to fit rib
144
c
into groove
136
a,
lateral hole
144
b
is surely communicated with second tube
66
.
With ink filling adapter
144
connected to third connection orifice
136
, the ink is sucked from ink tank
50
by generating a negative pressure with syringe
142
as shown in FIG.
14
. Thereby, as shown in
FIG. 15
, the ink is filled in second tube
66
and first tube
62
(see FIG.
1
), namely ink supply tube
60
. When the ink has been filled in ink supply tube
60
, valve
67
is closed to prevent backward ink flow caused by water head difference between the surface level of ink
52
in ink tank
50
and nozzle
42
. Thereafter, cap
138
is put on, and valve
67
is opened. In such a manner, by use of joint member
130
and sucker
140
, the initial ink filling can be conducted simple and rapidly, which renders the ink supply device readily handleable.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
In the ink supply device of the present invention, as described above, the printing head contains therein a porous mass having open-cell structure and being connected to a nozzle, and the porous mass is connected to an ink supply tube. Thereby, the amount of ejection of ink is stabilized to prevent deterioration of image quality which will be caused by variation of the amount of the ink ejection from the nozzle.
The amount of the ink ejection from the nozzle is stabilized more by use of an ink supply pipe additionally provided which is connected to the end of the ink supply tube and is inserted into the porous body, whereby the ink can be supplied efficiently to the porous body.
The tip of the ink supply pipe is inserted preferably into the center portion of the porous mass or a portion nearer to the nozzle to stabilize still more the amount of the ink ejection from the nozzle.
The ink supply pipe has preferably ink-discharging holes on the side wall thereof to supply the ink stably and smoothly even when the tip of the ink supply pipe is clogged with the porous mass.
The porous mass is preferably capable of absorbing pressure variation in the ink supply tube by its capillarity to prevent instability of the amount of the ink ejection which will be caused by pressure variation.
The ink tank comprises preferably an open ink tank which contains the ink with the surface of the ink open to the atmospheric air; and a closed ink tank placed above the open ink tank, storing the ink in a closed state, and having a connection pipe extending vertically to come into contact with the ink stored in the open ink tank. Thereby, the surface level of the stored ink in the open ink tank is kept constant to render constant the supply of the ink to the nozzle to stabilize the ink ejection from the nozzle without deteriorating the image quality.
The open ink tank is preferably placed such that the surface level of the stored ink is lower than the position of the nozzle of the printing head. Thereby, the ejection of the ink from the nozzle is stabilized more.
The ink supply device has preferably a joint member which is attached to the tip end of the ink supply tube and connects the ink supply tube detachably and hermetically to the printing head. Thereby, the ink supply tube is readily be connected to the printing head.
The ink supply device has preferably a joint housing room for storing the joint in the carriage. Thereby, scatter of the ink adhering to the joint member is prevented when the joint member is disconnected from the printing head.
The joint housing room is preferably provided in the same number as the number of the joint members connected to the printing head mounted on the carriage. Thereby, scatter of the ink adhering to any of the joint members is prevented when the joint member is disconnected from the printing head.
The ink supply device has preferably a cover for covering the joint housing room. Thereby, drying of the joint housing room is prevented.
The joint member has preferably a first connection orifice for connection with the tip portion of the ink supply tube, a second connection orifice for connection of the ink supply pipe, and a third connection orifice separated from the first and second orifices. By providing a sucking device for sucking the ink to be connected with the third connection orifice, the ink can be readily be filled into the unfilled ink supply tube by sucking the ink with the sucking device through the third connection orifice.
By employing an ink-filling adapter which communicates with the first connection orifice and does not communicate with the second connection orifice, the ink can be surely filled into the unfilled ink supply tube.
Further, with a groove formed on the third connection orifice, and a rib formed on the ink-filling adapter, the ink-filling adapter can be inserted surely by fitting the rib into the groove.
The ink filling method of the present invention comprises ink filling steps: connecting a sucking device for ink sucking to the third connection orifice, closing the second joint orifice of the joint member, and filling the ink into the ink supply tube by sucking with the sucking device. Thereby, the ink can be filled smoothly into the ink supply tube.
Claims
- 1. An ink supply device of an ink-jet type image formation apparatus having a carriage reciprocating in a prescribed direction and forming an image by ejection of ink on a recording medium, comprising a printing head having a nozzle and being mounted on the carriage, an ink tank for storing the ink to be supplied to the printing head, and an ink supply tube for supplying ink from the ink tank to the printing head,wherein the printing head contains a built-in porous mass of an open-cell structure communicating with the nozzle, and the ink supply tube is connected at the one end to the porous mass hermetically, wherein an ink supply pipe is provided which is connected to the one end of the ink supply tube and is inserted into the porous mass, wherein the tip of the ink supply pipe is inserted into the center portion of the porous mass or into the portion thereof nearer to the nozzle than the center portion, wherein the ink supply pipe has an ink discharging through-hole on the side wall thereof, and wherein the ink tank comprises an open tank in which the whole liquid ink surface is open to the atmosphere, a connection pipe in contact with the ink in the open tank and extending upward therefrom, and a closed ink tank placed above the open ink tank and storing the ink in a closed state.
- 2. The ink supply device according to claim 1, wherein the porous mass is capable of absorbing pressure variation in the ink supply tube by capillarity.
- 3. The ink supply device according to claim 2, wherein a joint member is provided which is attached to the tip end of the ink supply tube and connects the ink supply tube detachably and hermetically to the printing head.
- 4. An ink supply device according to claim 3 further comprises a plurality of said ink discharging through-hole.
- 5. An ink supply device according to claim 2 further comprises a plurality of said ink discharging through-hole.
- 6. The ink supply device according to claim 1, wherein the open ink tank is placed such that the surface level of the ink is lower than the position of the nozzle of the printing head.
- 7. The ink supply device according to claim 6, wherein a joint member is provided which is attached to the tip end of the ink supply tube and connects the ink supply tube detachably and hermetically to the printing head.
- 8. An ink supply device according to claim 7 further comprises a plurality of said ink discharging through-holes.
- 9. An ink supply device according to claim 6 further comprises a plurality of said ink discharging through-hole.
- 10. The ink supply device according to claim 1, wherein a joint member is provided which is attached to the tip end of the ink supply tube and connects the ink supply tube detachably and hermetically to the printing head.
- 11. An ink supply device according to claim 10 further comprises a plurality of said ink discharging through-hole.
- 12. An ink supply device according to claim 1 further comprises a plurality of said ink discharging through-hole.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
9-058101 |
Mar 1997 |
JP |
|
PCT Information
Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
PCT/JP98/01027 |
|
WO |
00 |
Publishing Document |
Publishing Date |
Country |
Kind |
WO98/40216 |
9/17/1998 |
WO |
A |
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A |
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Okamura et al. |
Jan 1996 |
A |
5790158 |
Shinada et al. |
Aug 1998 |
A |
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32 47 875 |
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DE |
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JP |
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JP |
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JP |
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JP |
WO-9840216 |
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WO |