This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-035319, filed Feb. 21, 2012; the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Embodiments described herein relate to an inkjet head that ejects ink to form a picture on a recording medium, and an inkjet printer/recorder.
For an inkjet head used in an inkjet printer or the like, ink is ejected selectively from a plurality of nozzles to form a picture on a recording medium.
As a method for ejecting ink from the nozzles of the inkjet head, there is the following method: the volume of a pressure chamber arranged for each nozzle is changed by an actuator and the ink in the pressure chamber is ejected when the volume of the pressure chamber is decreased by the actuator.
When the ink is ejected from a nozzle using such a method, the ink in the pressure chamber vibrates. It is assumed that such vibration (hereinafter to be referred to as residual vibration) has an adverse influence on subsequent ink ejections and may impact the quality of the printed image produced by the printer. This vibration problem can be alleviated/mitigated by forming an appropriate voltage waveform (driving signal) for driving the actuator.
However, as the viscosity of the ink varies with temperature, the damping state of the residual vibration of the ink also varies. Consequently, the residual vibration in the pressure chamber cannot be suppressed appropriately by only using a single sequence of voltage waveforms (driving signals) for driving the actuator.
The challenge is to provide an inkjet head that can suppress the residual vibration after ink ejection even with changes in ink temperature, so that high quality pictures can be formed, and to provide an inkjet printer/recorder having such an inkjet head.
In general, embodiments of the present disclosure will be explained with reference to figures.
An inkjet head according to an embodiment of the present disclosure has a pressure chamber for storing ink, an actuator that changes the volume of the pressure chamber, a nozzle or nozzles through which ink is ejected from the pressure chamber when the volume of the pressure chamber is varied, a temperature sensor that detects the temperature of the ink, and a controller, which outputs an ejecting waveform sequentially containing an expansion pulse for expanding the volume of the pressure chamber, a first contraction pulse for contracting the volume of the pressure chamber and a second contraction pulse for contracting the volume of the pressure chamber as a driving signal to the actuator. The controller varies the pulse width or voltage value of the second contraction pulse when the temperature of the ink detected by the temperature sensor varies. For example, the controller may decrease the pulse width or voltage value of the second contraction pulse in the ejecting waveform when the temperature detected by the temperature sensor becomes higher.
The inkjet recorder 1 according to this embodiment has a CPU (central processing unit) 2 that functions as a control center. The following parts are connected to the CPU 2 via a CPU bus 3: a ROM (read-only memory) 4, a RAM (random access memory) 5, a data memory 6, an input port 7, an interface 8, a drive signal controller 9 (controller), a head maintenance controller 10, a media transporting controller 11, etc. In addition, an operation panel 12 is connected to the input port 7, a temperature sensor 13 and a head 14 are connected to the drive signal controller 9, a head maintenance device 15 is connected to the head maintenance controller 10, and a media transporting device 16 (transporting device) is connected to the media transporting controller 11.
The CPU 2 executes various types of functions/treatments related to control of the inkjet recorder 1. The ROM 4 has the control programs for realizing various functions/treatments executed in the CPU 2 and the fixed values, parameters, etc., used in the functions/treatments stored in it. The RAM 5 has storage regions for various types of operations corresponding to the various treatment scenarios.
Stored in data memory 6 are the image data input from the outside the inkjet recorder 1 and the spread data as a collection of tone value data that convert each of the pixels contained in the image data to an ejection number (drop number) of the ink drops.
The operation panel 12 contains various types of operation buttons, a display unit equipped with a touch panel, or similar user interface components. Operation panel is used to input the information related to the start of printing and the printing condition parameters, or similar information. The operation panel 12 also shows the control state of the inkjet recorder 1 by displaying information, for example, status information, on the display.
The interface 8 is connected with a cable or the like for communication with a host computer and other external equipment.
The drive signal controller 9, the temperature sensor 13, and the head 14 form the inkjet head 100. Details of the drive signal controller 9, the temperature sensor 13 and the head 14 will be explained with reference to
The head maintenance device 15 can move towards the head 14 to clean the nozzle surface of the head 14. The head maintenance controller 10 controls the head maintenance device 15.
Media transporting device 16 includes, for example, a pickup roller the picks up a paper sheet as the recording medium from a paper sheet cassette (not shown in the figure), a suction drum that sucks the paper sheet picked up by the roller on its outer peripheral surface and transports the paper sheet to the ink ejecting position by the head 14, a separating mechanism that separates the paper sheet from the drum after the formation of the picture by the head 14, a paper releasing roller that exhausts the paper sheet separated by the separating mechanism to a released paper tray, and similar or related components. The media transporting controller 11 controls the various parts of the media transporting device 16.
In the following, the details of the various parts that form the inkjet head 100 will be explained.
As shown in
The vibration plates 106 and piezoelectric elements 107 form a plurality of actuators that change the volumes of the pressure chambers 103.
In synchronization with a transport rate of the paper sheet by the media transporting device 16, the drive signal controller 9 outputs the drive voltage signals to the corresponding piezoelectric elements 107 for ejecting ink drops, the number of ink drops ejected from a nozzle 105 corresponding to the tone (gradation) value data of the various pixels contained on each image line, respectively, in order, from the head line of the spread data stored in the data memory 6.
The drive voltage signal to an actuator can include a combination of ejecting waveforms each waveform for ejecting a separate ink drop.
As shown in
According to the present embodiment, a 4-tone multi-drop system is used as an example. In a 4-tone multi-drop system, the ejecting waveform may be repeated up to 3 cycles in the drive signal output to the same actuator, with one pixel being formed on the paper sheet with a tone/gradation corresponding to zero to three ink drops dispensed through the nozzle by the actuator. That is, a first pixel tone would correspond to zero ink drops dispensed, a second pixel tone would correspond to one ink drop dispensed, a third pixel tone would correspond to two ink drops dispensed, etc.
As depicted, the expansion pulse P1 has a negative polarity, and the first contraction pulse P3 and the second contraction pulse P5 have a positive polarity. However, one may also use a scheme wherein the polarities of the expansion pulse P1 and the first contraction pulse P3 and second contraction pulse P5 are swapped, the volume of the pressure chamber 103 is expanded by the positive polarity expansion pulse P1, and the volume of the pressure chamber 103 is contracted by the negative polarity first contraction pulse P3 and second contraction pulse P5.
Here, the pulse width (time period) of the expansion pulse P1 is T1, the time period of the ground potential (pulse pause) P2 is T2, the pulse width (time period) of the first contraction pulse P3 is T3, the time period of the ground potential (pulse pause) P4 is T4, the pulse width (time period) of the second contraction pulse P5 is T5, and the time period of the ground potential (pulse pause) P6 is T6. The time period from the starting point of the expansion pulse P1 to the end of the first contraction pulse P3 (T1+T2+T3) is set to be shorter than half of the resonance period between the ink in the pressure chamber 103 and the pressure chamber 103 (half of the resonance period=AL). The time period from the middle point of the period that includes the starting point of the expansion pulse P1 to the end of the first contraction pulse P3 (said middle point coincidentally corresponds to the start of P2 in
In the state before input of the ejecting waveform, the meniscus of ink formed inside the nozzles 105 is undisturbed (time t1). Next, for example, when ejecting waveforms for 3 drops are input consecutively to the piezoelectric elements 107, at the start of the input of the first ejecting waveform, the meniscus in the nozzle 105 starts to vibrate (times t2, t3). Immediately after the end of input of the ejecting waveforms the pressure wave generated in the pressure chamber 103 due to the operation of the actuator corresponding to the first ejecting waveform causes the first ink drop to be ejected from the nozzle 105 (time t4). Next, under the influence of the pressure waves generated in the pressure chamber 103 due to the operation of the actuator corresponding to the second and third ejecting waveforms, the second and third ink drops are ejected from the nozzle 105 (times t5, t6). The 3 ink drops are integrated with each other in space to form a single combined/integrated ink drop (time t7), and then the integrated ink drop strikes the recording medium. The relationship between the input timing of the ejecting waveforms and the ejected ink drops ejected from the nozzle 105 is merely an example. In practice, this relationship varies depending on the shapes of the pressure chamber 103 and the nozzle 105, the shape of the ejecting waveform, the type of ink, among other factors.
As seen in
In the following, the relationship between the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 and the residual vibration will be explained.
The ejecting velocity of the ink drop will tend to increase as the pulse width T5 becomes longer at a low temperature, ambient temperature, or high temperature. This tendency is caused by the following fact: because the vibration generated due to the operation of the actuator corresponding to each ejecting waveform is not cancelled out the influence of the residual vibration generated by the ejecting waveforms amplifies the pressure in the pressure chamber 103, so that the ejecting energy of the ink drops becomes higher.
That is, the longer the pulse width T5, the higher the ejection efficiency. Here, the ejection efficiency refers to the proportion of the energy of the ejected ink drop compared to the energy input to the actuator. However, while a longer pulse width T5 may improve ejection efficiency, the residual vibration also becomes larger when the pulse width T5 is increased. On the other hand, when the pulse width T5 is shorter the ejection efficiency is lower, but the residual vibration is also smaller. The residual vibration may have an adverse influence on the ejection of the subsequent ink drops. When the ink temperature is low, damping of the residual vibration becomes easier due to increased ink viscosity.
As shown in
The pulse width T5 can be adjusted according to requirements related to the residual vibration, and the ejecting velocity. Specifically, the pulse width T5 can be set based on the ink temperature so as to achieve a desired ejecting velocity while suppressing the residual vibration below levels which might degrade the quality of the printed image. For example, the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 contained in the ejecting waveform as shown in
Also, the value of the Helmholtz resonance period varies depending on the ink temperature. Here, the drive signal controller 9 computes the value of the Helmholtz resonance period using a pre-determined formula, algorithm, or the like on the basis of the ink temperature determined by the temperature sensor 13, and it adjusts the periods T1, T2 and T3 of the expansion pulse P1, ground potential P2, and first contraction pulse P3 so that the relationship between the AL and the expansion pulse P1, ground potential P2, and first contraction pulse P3 (T1+T2+T3≦AL) explained above with reference to
In addition, corresponding to the value of the Helmholtz resonance period computed at the ink temperature detected with the temperature sensor 13, the drive signal controller 9 sets the output timing of the second contraction pulse P5 so that the relationship between the AL and the second contraction pulse P5 is such that, as explained with reference to
As explained above, with the inkjet head 100 and the inkjet recorder 1 according to the present embodiment, the required pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 decreases as the temperature of the ink detected by the temperature sensor 13 rises. As a result, while the desired ejecting velocity is maintained, it is possible to appropriately suppress the residual vibration that is generated in the pressure chamber 103 when ink ejection takes place. Thus, an excellent printed image may be formed independent of the temperature of the ink.
The constitution of the inkjet recorder 1 shown in
However, the drive signal controller 9 in this embodiment controls so that as the temperature detected by the temperature sensor 13 rises, the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is not decreased; instead, as shown in
In
Judging from this relationship, it can be seen that by incorporating the second contraction pulse P5 with its voltage value adjusted corresponding to the ink temperature to the ejecting waveform, it is possible to efficiently dampen the residual vibration.
Also, the drive signal controller 9 computes the value of the Helmholtz resonance period using a pre-determined formula or the like on the basis of the ink temperature determined by the temperature sensor 13, and it adjusts the periods T1, T2 and T3 of the expansion pulse P1, ground potential P2, and first contraction pulse P3 so that the relationship between the AL and the expansion pulse P1, ground potential P2, and first contraction pulse P3 (T1+T2+T3≦AL), explained above with reference to
In addition, corresponding to the value of the Helmholtz resonance period computed corresponding to the ink temperature detected with the temperature sensor 13, the drive signal controller 9 sets the output timing of the second contraction pulse P5 so that the relationship between the AL and the second contraction pulse P5 as explained with reference to
As explained above, with the inkjet head 100 and the inkjet recorder 1, the voltage value H5 of the second contraction pulse P5 required to achieve a desired ejection velocity decreases as the temperature of the ink rises. As a result, while the desired ejecting velocity is maintained, it is possible to appropriately suppress the residual vibration, which is generated in the pressure chamber 103 when ink ejection takes place. Thus, independent of the temperature an excellent printed image may be formed.
When a pixel is formed by a multi-drop system, there is, in addition to the problem related to the residual vibration, a problem related to deviation in the striking points (impact locations of the drops on the paper/recording medium) of the plurality of ink drops ejected from the nozzle 105 for forming the pixel.
In the following, this problem will be explained with reference to
In consideration of this problem, according to the present embodiment, the following scheme is used: the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is adjusted so that the ejecting velocity of the subsequent ink drop is higher than the preceding drop to ensure reliable integration of the various ink drops. The constitution of the inkjet recorder 1 shown in
As shown in
Also, for each of the ejecting waveforms corresponding to the first through third ink drops, the drive signal controller 9 computes the value of the Helmholtz resonance period on the basis of the ink temperature determined by the temperature sensor 13, and it adjusts the periods T1, T2 and T3 of the expansion pulse P1, ground potential P2 and first contraction pulse P3 so that the relationship between the AL and the expansion pulse P1, ground potential P2, and first contraction pulse P3 (T1+T2+T3≦AL) explained above with reference to
In addition, corresponding to the value of the Helmholtz resonance period computed corresponding to the ink temperature detected with the temperature sensor 13, for each of the ejecting waveforms corresponding to the ink drops as the first through third drops, the drive signal controller 9 sets the output timing of the second contraction pulse P5 so that the relationship between the AL and the second contraction pulse P5 as explained with reference to
As explained above, according to the present embodiment, for the ejecting waveform of the subsequent ink drop, the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is made larger, so that the ejecting velocity of the subsequent ink drop is made higher, so that various ejected ink drops integrate. This scheme is not limited to the case in which a pixel is represented by 0 to 3 drops. It may also be used when more drops are used to represent a pixel and when fewer drops are used to represent a pixel.
The constitution of the inkjet recorder 1 shown in
However, in this embodiment, the drive signal controller 9 does not change the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 contained in each ejecting waveform. Instead, as shown in
Also, for each of the ejecting waveforms corresponding to the first through third ink drops, the drive signal controller 9 computes the value of the Helmholtz resonance period on the basis of the ink temperature determined by the temperature sensor 13, and it adjusts the periods T1, T2 and T3 of the expansion pulse P1, ground potential P2 and first contraction pulse P3 so that the relationship between the AL and the expansion pulse P1, ground potential P2, and first contraction pulse P3 (T1+T2+T3≦AL) explained above with reference to
In addition, corresponding to the value of the Helmholtz resonance period computed corresponding to the ink temperature detected with the temperature sensor 13, for each of the ejecting waveforms corresponding to the first through third ink drops, the drive signal controller 9 sets the output timing of the second contraction pulse P5 so that the relationship between the AL and the second contraction pulse P5 as explained with reference to
As explained with reference to Embodiment 2, when the 3-drop ejecting waveform is fed to the actuator, there is a tendency for the ejecting velocity of the ink drop to increase as the voltage value H5 of the second contraction pulse P5 increases. This relationship also holds for the ejecting velocity of the ink drop ejected from the nozzle 105 when a 1-drop ejecting waveform is fed to the actuator. Consequently, by changing the voltage value H5 of the second contraction pulse P5 as mentioned previously, it is possible to have a higher ejecting velocity of the subsequent ink drop, so that the various ink drops can be integrated with each other before they strike the printing medium.
The various additional arrangements can be formed by appropriate modification or combination of the disclosed Embodiments 1 to 4.
For example, Embodiment 1, wherein the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is changed corresponding to the ink temperature, and Embodiment 2, wherein the voltage value H5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is changed corresponding to the ink temperature, may be combined, so that as the ink temperature rises, the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is made narrower and, at the same time, the voltage value H5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is made lower.
Also, Embodiment 1, wherein the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is changed corresponding to the ink temperature, and Embodiment 3, wherein the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is made longer for the ejecting waveform corresponding to the subsequent ink drop, may be combined, so that the pulse width T5 of the second contraction pulse P5 is adjusted to account for both ink temperature and the ejection velocity required to achieve drop integration, so that the pulse may become narrower as the ink temperature rises or wider as needed to integrate with a preceding ink drop.
Similarly, Embodiment 2 and Embodiment 4 may be combined, so that the voltage value H5 of the second contraction pulse P5 becomes lower as the temperature rises, and it becomes higher for the ejecting waveform corresponding to the subsequent ink drop.
In addition, other appropriate combinations of the constitutions disclosed in the various embodiments may also be used.
While certain embodiments have been described, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the inventions. Indeed, the novel embodiments described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the embodiments described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of the inventions. The accompanying claims and their equivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as would fall within the scope and spirit of the inventions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012-035319 | Feb 2012 | JP | national |