This invention relates to inkjet print cartridges and methods of making them.
The flexible printed circuit 16 is shown flat in
The conventional printhead 12 has two rows of edge contacts on its outer surface, i.e. on the same side of the printhead as the orifices 18, and in the assembled cartridge with the printhead 12 seated in the recess 14 each edge contact is electrically connected to a respective one of the flex beams 20 (for simplicity, the edge contacts and flex beams are not shown in
The conventional inkjet cartridge described above has certain disadvantages. Since the connections between the edge contacts of the printhead and the flex beams 20 are made at the outer surface of the printhead, the print head has to be attached to the flexible printed circuit 16 before the latter is attached to the cartridge body 10. Rework of the assembly is therefore very difficult. Furthermore, the construction is complex and costly.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,328,423 discloses a method of making an inkjet print cartridge in which a cartridge body is provided having a plurality of channels, recessed into the surface of the body, extending between a first set of terminal regions and a second set of terminal regions. The channels are filled with a conductive material to form first and second sets of electrical terminals selectively interconnected by conductive tracks, the first set of terminals being adapted for electrical connection with a printhead, and the second set of terminals being adapted for electrical connection to printer circuitry.
According to a first aspect the present invention provides a method of making an inkjet print cartridge comprising providing a cartridge body and selectively applying conductive material directly to the surface of the body to form first and second sets of electrical terminals selectively interconnected by conductive tracks, the first set of terminals being adapted for electrical connection with a printhead and the second set of terminals being adapted for electrical connection to printer circuitry, wherein at least a portion of the conductive material is applied to the body by inkjet printing.
According to a second aspect the present invention provides a method of making an inkjet print cartridge comprising providing a cartridge body having a plurality of channels extending between a first set of terminal regions and a second set of terminal regions, the channels and terminal regions being recessed in the surface of the body, depositing a conductive material in the recessed terminal regions and channels, and plating the conductive material, the plated conductive material forming first and second sets of electrical terminals selectively interconnected by conductive tracks, the first set of terminals being adapted for electrical connection with a printhead and the second set of terminals being adapted for electrical connection to printer circuitry.
According to a third aspect the present invention provides a method of making an inkjet print cartridge comprising providing a cartridge body having a plurality of channels extending between a first set of terminal regions and a second set of terminal regions, the channels and terminal regions being recessed in the surface of the body, and depositing a conductive material into the recessed terminal regions and channels, the conductive material forming first and second sets of electrical terminals selectively interconnected by conductive tracks, the first set of terminals being adapted for electrical connection with a printhead and the second set of terminals being adapted for electrical connection to printer circuitry, wherein at least a portion of the conductive material is squeegeed into the recessed terminal regions and channels through a stencil.
The invention avoids the need for a flexible printed circuit, and allows a printhead, for example of the kind described in our copending British patent application No. 0401943.6 (HP Ref: PD No. 200315512 Attorney ref: pg10142ie00), to be directly connected to the first set of electrical terminals.
As used herein, the terms “inkjet”, “ink supply slot” and related terms are not to be construed as limiting the invention to devices in which the liquid to be ejected is an ink. The terminology is shorthand for this general technology for printing liquids on surfaces by thermal, piezo or other ejection from a printhead, and while one application is the printing of ink, the invention will also be applicable to printheads which deposit other liquids in like manner, for example, liquids intended to form conductors and resistors in miniature electrical circuits.
Furthermore, the method steps as set out herein and in the claims need not be carried out in the order stated, unless implied by necessity.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The plastics material from which the body is moulded has, in one embodiment, to withstand the reflow temperature (138 deg. C.) of a solder paste to be deposited in the terminal regions 40, 42 and channels 44. A suitable plastics materials for this purpose is polyethylene containing carbon and/or glass fibre filler. For example, polyethylene with 30% by weight glass filler will withstand temperatures in the region of 230-250 deg. C. Another suitable plastics material is poly phenyl sulphide filled with 10% by weight carbon fibre and 10% by weight glass fibre. In other embodiments the glass fibre may be replaced by miniature glass beads.
Surfactants may be added to the mix prior to moulding the plastics body to alter the wettability of the body by conductive material (solder paste, conductive ink and/or catalyst, according to the embodiment) subsequently deposited in the terminal regions and channels. Subsequent to moulding, the surface of the body can be roughened to achieve a textured finish conducive to better adhesion of the conductive material. Such roughening can be achieved mechanical etching (e.g. by sand blasting), by chemical etching (e.g. using a mixture of concentrated hydrochloric and sulphuric acids or sodium hydroxide), or by plasma etching (e.g. O2, N2, NH3 corona discharge treatment). In addition, the surface of the polymer body, at least in the terminal regions and channels, can be coated with a mixture of alumina or silica microparticles to produce a porous surface offering a large surface area for absorbing solder paste or conductive ink, or for catalyst deposition. A surfactant may also or alternatively be added to the conductive material to increase its wettability to the plastics body.
In the method according to the first embodiment the next step comprises placing a stencil 50,
Next,
Next,
The stencils 50 and 60 may be any conventional screen printing stencil such as a photo-patterned polyester weave, or a laser defined stainless steel stencil, although in any case it should be sufficiently flexible to allow deformation at least partly around the radiused edge 36 as described above. After each use the stencils 50 and 60 are cleaned with a lint-free tape which passes around a roller which bears under pressure on the stencil as the roller is moved across the stencil surface.
In this embodiment the conductive paste 54 consists of copper powder, mean particle size 0.25 microns, 70% by weight, and solder paste 30% by weight. The solder paste is a mixture of flux, such as Superior Safe* No. 30 general purpose organic flux from the superior Flux and Manufacturing Company, USA, and a eutectic mixture of Tin (42% by weight) and Bismuth (58% by weight).
A heat gun (hot air blower) is now applied to the two surface portions 32, 34 of the cartridge body 30, as well as to the radiused edge 36, to heat the flux above the eutectic melting point of the solder (138 deg. C.) to cause the solder paste to melt and reflow, improving the conductivity of the paste. Typically the heat gun heats the flux to 160 deg. C. for one minute to reflow the solder. The result is a first set of electrically conductive terminals 40a inset in the cartridge body in the terminal regions 40, a second set of electrically conductive terminals 42a inset in the cartridge body in the terminal regions 42, and a plurality of electrically conductive tracks 44a, selectively joining the two sets of terminals, inset in the cartridge body in the channels 44.
Now, using further stencils, not shown, a UV curable encapsulant such as a phenolic resin or acrylic is applied to the cartridge body. The stencils have apertures corresponding to the tracks 44a but not to the terminals 40a and 42a. Thus the encapsulant is applied only to the tracks 44a, the terminals 40a and 42a being masked by the stencils to prevent their coverage by the encapsulant. After its application the encapsulant is exposed to UV light to cause it to permanently crosslink.
Next,
In a modification of the first embodiment, the conductive material squeegeed into the terminal regions 40, 42 and channels 44 could be colloidal palladium catalyst in glycerine. Before attaching the printhead 66 this would be baked dry and plated with copper by electroless plating to form the terminals 40a, 42a and tracks 44a.
In a second embodiment of the invention, instead of screen printing a conductive material into the recessed terminal regions 40, 42 and channels 44 of the moulded cartridge body 30, a suspension of palladium metal catalyst is inkjet printed into the terminal regions and channels and, after drying, is electrolessly plated with copper.
Thus,
The body 30 is now immersed in a commercial electroless copper plating bath 84,
During the inkjet printing of the palladium suspension, some overspray may have landed on the unrecessed portions of the cartridge body, and would act as a nucleation site for copper deposition. This may be avoided by wiping the body with a lint-free tape to remove such deposits, and repeating the process again after plating to remove any extraneous copper deposits.
Finally, a UV curable encapsulant is screen printed onto the pen body to cover the tracks 44a joining the terminals 40a and 42a, as previously described. The further processing then continues as described with reference to
Modifications of the second embodiment include:
(a) Inkjet printing colloidal palladium into the recessed terminal regions and tracks, baking it dry and electrolessly plating the palladium.
(b) Inkjet printing a conductive ink into the recessed terminal regions and tracks and baking it dry.
(c) Inkjet printing an organometallic copper into the recessed terminal regions and tracks, and reducing the organometallic copper to metal with a laser or excimer lamp.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments described herein which may be modified or varied without departing from the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0409001.5 | Apr 2004 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/051681 | 4/15/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/30/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/102709 | 11/3/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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