1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an inkjet printing apparatus and an inkjet printing method, and specifically relates to a configuration for reducing density unevenness that occurs when printing is performed by reciprocal, bidirectional scanning.
2. Description of the Related Art
Personal computers, word processors, and other office automation devices have come to be used widely in recent years, and various printing apparatuses are provided for printing out information processed by such devices. As a trend of such printing apparatuses, high image quality and high speed are being demanded, and various techniques for these purposes are provided.
As an example of a high image quality technology, a so-called multi-scan method is known. With this method, scanning of a print head is performed a plurality of times on a same region and in the plurality of scans, different ink ejection ports are set to be used to perform printing.
In a case of performing printing using a print head that is provided with a plurality of printing elements, such as ink ejection ports, etc., a quality of a printed image is largely dependent on a precision of the print head. In a print head manufacturing process, for example, fluctuations may arise in shapes of the ejection ports of the print head or in a set position of an ejection heater for generating energy for ejection. Such fluctuations become apparent as slight differences in ejection amount, ejection direction, and other ejection characteristics among the plurality of ejection ports in the print head and, cause density unevenness in an image finally formed to decrease the grade of the image.
However, as mentioned above, in actuality, there are fluctuations in the respective ejection characteristics of the plurality of ejection ports in many cases. As a result, fluctuations may occur in the sizes and directions of ink droplets ejected from the respective ejection ports as shown in
A multi-scan method resolves such a problem of density unevenness to improve the image quality.
With the above-described multi-scan method, even when the print head having the ejection characteristics shown in
At the same time, a bidirectional printing is known as an example of a high speed printing technology. This printing method is a method in which, in a serial type printing apparatus, after performing printing by a forward direction scan of a print head, conveying a paper by a predetermined amount is performed, and a printing scan is also performed in a subsequent movement of the print head in a backward direction. With this printing method, in comparison to unidirectional printing, in which printing is performed in the forward direction scan but printing is not performed in the returning movement of the print head in the backward direction, double the printing speed or the throughput, by simple calculation, can be achieved.
The bidirectional printing can be used in both so-called one-pass printing, in which printing of a scan area having a length corresponding to an ejection port arrangement width of a print head is completed in a single scan of the print head, and the above-described multi-scan printing, in which printing of the scan area is completed with a plurality of scans between which a paper conveyance is performed. Thus by performing bidirectional printing with use of the multi-scan method, both high quality image printing and high speed printing can be realized.
However, it is also known that when bidirectional printing is performed with use of the multi-scan method, density unevenness (time interval unevenness) occurs due to a difference of a time intervals in the plurality of scans, between positions in a scan area.
The above described phenomenon occurs due to differences in a time during which a precedently landing ink droplet permeates into an interior of a printing medium and becomes adsorbed into paper fibers or an ink receiving layer, etc., and then landing of a subsequent ink droplet is performed. If there is sufficient time for adsorption of the precedently landing ink into the paper fibers or the ink receiving layer, the subsequently landing ink droplet permeates gradually in a direction of gravity while seeking a portion into which it can become adsorbed comparatively smoothly. On the other hand, if there is not enough time for the precedently landing ink to become adsorbed into the paper fibers or the ink receiving layer, the subsequently landing ink droplet joins the precedently landing ink and permeates gradually in the gravity direction as a single aggregate of ink droplets. In the latter case, the precedently landing ink joins the subsequently landing ink before becoming adequately adsorbed by near a paper surface and becomes adsorbed at a lower portion. Consequently, the image density becomes comparatively low. In a case where printing of a secondary color is performed, the density unevenness appears as a color unevenness corresponding to the scan time intervals.
As explained above, in accordance with the difference in time intervals between a plurality of times of printing for performing printing on one region, a density difference occurs between the left end and the right end regions of a unit area for which printing is completed in the plurality of times of scan. Also as shown in
As a technology for suppressing such time interval unevenness caused by the time difference of printing, there is a technology described in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2003-34021. In this document is described a switching of a printing mode from bidirectional printing to unidirectional printing when a possibility of occurrence of density unevenness is high. Specifically, a printing area is divided into a plurality of areas in a main scan direction, and numbers of dots of black ink and color ink to be applied to each area are counted. When there are areas, in which threshold values are exceed for both black and color inks, the number of such areas is counted, and when this number of areas is no less than a predetermined number, it is deemed that the possibility of occurrence of time interval unevenness is high and switching to unidirectional printing is performed. The time interval unevenness that occurs at opposite end regions of a printed image can thus be suppressed. It is also described in the document that a width of printed image data, that is, a width of a range in which a print head scans is detected and when the width is small, it is deemed that a degree of time interval unevenness is small and switching to unidirectional printing is avoided even when the number of areas is no less than the predetermined number.
As another technology for suppressing time interval unevenness, Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2005-144868 describes that by making the number of passes of multi-scan increased when a printing width is long, the time interval unevenness between bands can be made inconspicuous. It is also described in the same document that the time interval unevenness can be made less recognizable by making the time interval unevenness be repeated at a high frequency. It is also described that when the printing width is long, the time interval unevenness can be reduced by raising a scan speed of a print head to shorten time intervals among multiple passes or by switching to unidirectional printing to make a printing time in each band the same.
However, in the case where switching to unidirectional printing is performed when the possibility of occurrence of density unevenness is high as described in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2003-34021 and Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2005-144868, the significance of bidirectional printing, which is employed to achieve high speed of printing, becomes lost. Further, increasing the number of passes of multi-scan leads to lowering of an overall throughput. The change of scan speed requires a change of printing resolution.
Conventional methods of resolving time interval unevenness thus accompany comparatively large changes in printing operation or process details and cause various problems such as those mentioned above.
An object of the present invention is to provide an inkjet printing apparatus and an inkjet printing method that enable density unevenness, due to a difference in printing time intervals according to scans in bidirectional printing, to be resolved without causing changes in printing operation as much as possible.
In a first aspect of the present invention, there is an ink jet printing apparatus capable of performing bidirectional printing in which scans of a print head, on which a plurality of ejection ports for ejecting ink are arranged, are performed in forward and backward directions, and ink is ejected from the print head during the scans in the forward and backward directions so as to print an image on a printing medium, the apparatus comprising: a controller for executing the bidirectional printing by performing a plurality of scans of the print head, between which conveying of the printing medium is performed by a predetermined amount that is smaller than an arrayed range of the plurality of ejection ports, for each of unit areas adjacent to each other in a conveying direction of the printing medium, wherein the controller performs the conveying of the printing medium by an amount greater than the predetermined amount, between a last scan for printing one of the adjacent unit areas and a first scan for printing the other of the adjacent unit areas, and wherein a length of the unit area along the conveying direction is a length corresponding to a number of ejection ports that overlap among the plurality of scans for printing the unit area.
In a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ink jet printing apparatus capable of performing bidirectional printing in which scans of a print head, on which a plurality of ejection ports for ejecting ink are arranged, are performed in forward and backward directions, and ink is ejected from the print head during the scans in the forward and backward directions so as to print an image on a printing medium, the apparatus comprising: a controller for executing the bidirectional printing by performing a plurality of scans of the print head, between which conveying of the printing medium is performed by a predetermined amount that is smaller than an arrayed range of the plurality of ejection ports, for each of unit areas adjacent to each other in a conveying direction of the printing medium, wherein the controller performs the conveying of the printing medium by an amount of (N−2q(k−1))·p here, N is a number of the plurality of ejection ports, q is the predetermined amount, k is a number of the plurality of scans, and p is an array pitch of the plurality of ejection ports, and wherein a length of the unit area along the conveying direction is a length of (N−q(k−1))·p that corresponds to a number of ejection ports that overlap among the plurality of scans for printing the unit area.
In a third aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ink jet printing apparatus capable of performing bidirectional printing for a unit area of a printing medium in which printing, scans of a print head, on which a plurality of ejection ports for ejecting ink are arranged, are performed in forward and backward directions, and ink is ejected from the print head during the scans in the forward and backward directions so as to print an image on a printing medium, the apparatus comprising: a unit for differentiating a maximum ink applying amount depending on positions in a scan direction in the unit area.
In a fourth aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ink jet printing method of performing bidirectional printing in which scans of a print head, on which a plurality of ejection ports for ejecting ink are arranged, are performed in forward and backward directions, and ink is ejected from the print head during the scans in the forward and backward directions so as to print an image on a printing medium, the method comprising: a printing step of executing the bidirectional printing by performing a plurality of scans of the print head, between which conveying of the printing medium is performed by a predetermined amount that is smaller than an arrayed range of the plurality of ejection ports, for each of unit areas adjacent to each other in a conveying direction of the printing medium, wherein in the printing step, the conveying of the printing medium by an amount greater than the predetermined amount is performed between a last scan for printing one of the adjacent unit areas and a first scan for printing the other of the adjacent unit areas, and wherein a length of the unit area along the conveying direction is a length corresponding to a number of ejection ports that overlap among the plurality of scans for printing the unit area.
In a fifth aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ink jet printing method of performing bidirectional printing in which scans of a print head, on which a plurality of ejection ports for ejecting ink are arranged, are performed in forward and backward directions, and ink is ejected from the print head during the scans in the forward and backward directions so as to print an image on a printing medium, the method comprising: a printing step of executing the bidirectional printing by performing a plurality of scans of the print head, between which conveying of the printing medium is performed by a predetermined amount that is smaller than an arrayed range of the plurality of ejection ports, for each of unit areas adjacent to each other in a conveying direction of the printing medium, wherein in the printing step, the conveying of the printing medium by an amount of (N−2q(k−1))·p here, N is a number of the plurality of ejection ports, q is the predetermined amount, k is a number of the plurality of scans, and p is an array pitch of the plurality of ejection ports, is performed, and wherein a length of the unit area along the conveying direction is a length of (N−q(k−1))·p that correspond to a number of ejection ports that overlap among the plurality of scans for printing the unit area.
With the first aspect of the present invention, each unit area, the printing for which is completed in the plurality of scans, is printed by use of the ejection ports that overlap among the plurality of scans. In this case, the printing medium conveying amount between adjacent unit areas, that is, the amount, by which the printing medium is conveyed between the last scan for printing one of the adjacent unit areas and the first scan for printing the other unit area, is made to differ from the predetermined amount of printing medium conveying that is performed between the plurality of scans for printing each unit area. Specifically, the printing medium conveying amount between adjacent unit areas is made larger than the predetermined amount. Or, the printing medium conveying amount between adjacent unit areas is set to be (N−2q(k−1))·p. The mutual printing time intervals between the plurality of scans, which intervals are in accordance with the position in the scan direction of the unit area, can thereby be made the same for all of the plurality of mutually adjacent unit areas.
Consequently, high image quality printing, without differences of density unevenness between unit areas, can be performed, and together with bidirectional printing, high speed printing and high image quality printing can be achieved at the same time.
With the second aspect of the present invention, in the multi-scan printing that completes the printing of each unit area by the plurality of scans of the print head, in which the forward scan and the backward scan are alternated, the maximum ink applying amounts differ according to the printing time intervals between the plurality of scans, which intervals in turn differ according to the positions in the scan direction of each unit area. The density differences according to the positions in the scan direction, which differences caused based on the printing time intervals between the reciprocal scans, can be canceled out by making the maximum ink applying amounts differ, and the density difference can thereby be reduced.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments (with reference to the attached drawings).
Embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail below with reference to the drawings.
Configuration of a Printing apparatus
The print head portions of the head cartridges 1 eject inks of cyan (C), magenta (M), yellow (Y), and black (Bk), respectively, and the C, M, Y, and Bk inks are contained in the corresponding ink tank portions. Each of the head cartridges 1 is positioned and mounted exchangeably on the carriage 2, and the carriage 2 is provide with a connector holder (electrical connecting portion) for transmitting the driving signals, etc., to the respective print heads 1 via the connectors.
The carriage 2 is guided and supported by a guide shaft 3 disposed in a printing apparatus main unit, and is able to move in a main scan direction along the guide shaft 3. The carriage 2 is driven by a main scan motor 4 and via a motor pulley 5, a driven pulley 6, and a timing belt 7 and is controlled in position and movement.
A printing medium 8, such as a sheet of paper, a thin plastic plate, etc., is conveyed (sheet fed) by rotation of two sets of conveying rollers 9, 10 and 11, 12 so as to pass a position (printing portion) opposite to ejection port surfaces of the print heads 1. The conveyed printing medium has its rear surface held by a platen (not shown) so that a flat printing surface can be formed at the printing portion. The two conveying roller pairs (9/10 and 11/12) also serve a role of supporting the printing medium 8 from both sides of the printing portion so that a distance between the ejection port surfaces of the respective print heads 1, mounted on the carriage 2, and the printing medium 8 on the platen is maintained at a predetermined amount.
Although not shown in
In an ejection process, a predetermined voltage is applied to each electro-thermal converter 25 based on an ejection signal. The electro-thermal converter 25 is thereby made to convert electrical energy to heat energy and the generated heat causes film boiling to occur in the ink inside the flow path 24. By a pressure of rapidly generated bubbles, the ink is pushed out to the ejection port 22 and a predetermined amount of the ink is ejected as a droplet. In the present embodiment, the inkjet print head, which thus ejects ink from the ejection port 22 using a pressure change resulting from growth and shrinkage of an air bubble caused by film boiling, is used.
In the present embodiment, each print head 1 is installed on the carriage 2 with the plurality of ejection ports 22 being in a positional relationship of being arrayed in a direction that intersects the scan direction of the carriage 2.
In
In the control configuration shown in
Printing data from a host computer 101 or digital camera 102 are transmitted via the interface 1010 to a receiving buffer 1101 and stored therein. The receiving buffer 1101 has a capacity of several dozen kilobytes to several hundred kilobytes. The printing data stored in the receiving buffer 1101 undergo command analysis by a command analysis part 1041 and are thereafter transmitted to a text buffer 1102. In the text buffer 1102, the printing data are held in an intermediate form corresponding to a single line, and a process of adding a printing position, modification type, size, character code, font address, etc., of each character is performed. The text buffer 1102 differs in capacity according to device model and has a capacity corresponding to several lines in a case of a serial printer and a capacity corresponding to a single page in a case of a page printer. The printing data stored in the text buffer 1102 are decompressed by a expansion part 1042 and stored in a binarized state in a print buffer 1103. In a final stage, these data are transmitted as printing data to the print head for performing printing.
As shall be described later, in the present embodiment, the binary data stored in the print buffer are subject to a thinning process with use of a mask for each unit area for which printing is completed in a plurality of scans, to generate printing data for each of the plurality of scans by which the printing of the unit area is completed. With this process, a mask process for printing data corresponding to unused nozzles is also performed. In the above-described configuration, a mask pattern can be set after looking at the data in the state of being stored in the print buffer. Also instead of the above-described configuration, the text buffer does not have to be provided and the printing data stored in the receiving buffer may be decompressed at the same time as undergoing command analysis and then written into the print buffer.
In
Reference numeral 1205 denotes a register that is connected to an MPU data bus and is for storing mask patterns. Reference numeral 1206 denotes a selector for selecting column positions of the mask patterns, reference numeral 1207 denotes a selector for selecting line positions of the mask patterns, and reference numeral 1211 denotes a column counter for managing the column positions.
The data transfer circuit with the above configuration performs serial transfer of the printing data corresponding to the number of nozzles for the print head in accordance with the printing signal sent from the MPU 1011. Specifically, the printing data stored in the print buffer 1103 are temporarily stored in the data register 1201 and then converted into serial data by the parallel-serial converter 1202. The converted serial data are subject to the mask process by the AND gate 1203 and are thereafter transferred to the print head. The transfer counter 1204 counts the number of transfer bits and when a value corresponding to the number of nozzles is reached, the data transfer is ended.
The mask register 1205 is constituted of four mask registers A, B, C, and D and stores the mask patterns written by the MPU 1101. Each register stores a mask pattern of 4 vertical bits×4 horizontal bits. The selector 1206 selects mask pattern data corresponding to a column position by using a value of the column counter 1211 as a selection signal. The selector 1207 selects mask pattern data corresponding to a line position by using a value of the transfer counter 1204 as a selection signal. By using the mask pattern data selected by the selector 1206 and 1207, the mask is applied to the transferred data using the AND gate 1203.
Although with the present embodiment, a configuration with four mask registers is described, the number of mask registers may be another number. Also, although the transferred data to which the mask process is applied are directly supplied to the print head, a configuration where the data are stored once in the print buffer is also possible.
A bidirectional multi-scan method of a first embodiment of the present invention in the ink-jet printing apparatus with the configuration described above using
The figure shows an example where a print head having 16 nozzle blocks is used to complete printing of a unit area in two scans of forward and backward scans. In the present embodiment, one nozzle block is constituted of 16 nozzles. In the printing of the present embodiment, a conveying control, which differs from that of conventional multi-scan printing in a conveying amount of printing medium conveying performed in an interval between scans, is performed. Specifically, as shown in
In the above printing, a length (a length in a vertical direction in
In addition to the above-described mask process for the unused nozzle blocks, a mask process using mask patterns for the multi-scan printing in which printing is completed in two scans, is performed, as described in
According to the above-described printing by the multi-scan method with control of printing time interval difference, in any of the unit areas, such as the “printing area 1, “printing area 2,” etc., printing time intervals between scans are such that, at the same position in the scan direction, the time interval is the same. For example, in any unit area, a region for which the printing in the second scan is performed immediately after the printing in the first scan, is present at a right end and a region for which the printing in the second scan is performed after elapse of a printing scan time substantially corresponding to two scans, after the printing in the first scan, is present at a left end. Thus as shown in
Even with the above-described multi-scan method of printing, differences in printing time interval and thus differences in density according to position in the scan direction in each of the plurality of scans for completing printing cannot be resolved. For example, the density is high at the left end region of a unit area and the density becomes lower toward the right end region. This density difference or variation can be reduced by control of ink applying amount according to position in the scan direction according to an embodiment of the present invention to be described later. Both the density unevenness between unit areas and the density variation in the scan direction in each unit area can thereby be reduced.
Also, thinning masks which can be complemented by each other in the two printing scans, are associated with the used nozzles in each scan. The thinning masks are not restricted in detail and may, for example, be checker pattern and complementary checker pattern masks or may be random masks.
As described above, in performing printing of the same printing area (unit area), the printing of which is completed in a plurality of scans, the non-use mask is set in each printing scan with respect to the print head nozzles used in each scan and printing medium conveying of the amount related to the unused nozzles is performed. Printing, with the density unevenness between unit areas adjacent to each other in the conveying direction being reduced, can thereby be performed without generating a time interval difference between respective printing scans. That is, since, between adjacent unit areas, the time interval between printing scans can be made substantially the same for the same position in the scan direction, high image quality printing without between-band unevenness can be achieved and consequently, realization of high speed printing and high image quality printing at the same time is enabled.
Although with the present embodiment, a description of nozzle control and mask control in block units, with 16 nozzles per block, was provided, the present invention is not restricted to control in block units and the number of nozzles in a block is not restricted to the above. For example, even if the unused nozzle is one nozzle, the same concepts can be applied. The same effects can be obtained as long as the relationship of the number of non-use masks and the printing medium conveying amount is maintained in the printing scan.
However, in a case of a print head with a comparatively large number of nozzles, when ejection is performed from all nozzles simultaneously, a large voltage variation occurs and ejection tends to become unstable due to influences of ejections of adjacent nozzles, etc. Generally, ejection is performed with a drive cycle for performing printing of a single column being divided into a plurality of drive timings. For example, for a single column, the drive cycle is divided into 16 and simultaneous driving of nozzles is performed in 16-nozzle intervals. In the case of using the print head shown in
The between-band unevenness due to time intervals between forward and backward printings, which has been described up to now, becomes significant in multi-scan of an even number of passes but does not become so significant in a case of odd number of passes.
In
On the other hand, in a case of normal three-pass multi-scan printing, one unit area for which printing is completed in three passes, is printed in a first printing scan to a third printing scan, and a subsequent unit area is printed in a second printing scan to a fourth printing scan. When focusing attention on a left end region of the printing medium, it can be seen that in the unit area for which printing is completed by the first printing scan to the third printing scan, the printing time interval between the first printing scan and the second printing scan is large (A) and the printing time interval between the second printing scan and the third printing scan is small (B). A case where the printing time interval is large (A) and a case where the printing time interval is small (B) are thus present equivalently. In the adjacent unit area for which printing is completed by the second printing scan to the fourth printing scan, the printing time interval between the second printing scan and the third printing scan is small (B) and the printing time interval between the third printing scan and the fourth printing scan is large (A). Thus, a case where the printing time interval is large and a case where the printing time interval is small are present equivalently in this unit area as well. Therefore, for the three-pass multi-scan printing, since the numbers of the large and small printing time intervals are equivalent between adjacent unit areas, density unevenness due to the printing time intervals is inconspicuous.
Likewise, in a case of four-pass multi-scan printing in which printing on a unit area is completed in four printing scans, the printing time intervals A, B, and A (herein after, denoted as “A+B+A”) are present at the left end of the printing medium in one unit area. This becomes B+A+B in the next, adjacent unit area. Thus in the case of four-pass multi-scan printing, the numbers of large and small printing time intervals differ between adjacent unit areas and the density unevenness due to the printing time intervals becomes conspicuous. On the other hand, in a case of five-pass multi-scan printing, the printing time intervals are A+B+A+B for one unit area and are B+A+B+A for the next, adjacent unit area. Thus with the five-pass multi-scan, the numbers of large and small printing time intervals are the same among adjacent unit areas. Consequently, density unevenness due to the printing time intervals in reciprocal printings is inconspicuous.
As described above, in the case of an even number of passes, the between-band unevenness becomes conspicuous and in the case of an odd number of passes, the between-band unevenness becomes inconspicuous. Thus with the present embodiment, the multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference, described in the first embodiment, and the normal multi-scan printing method are switched according to the number of passes taken to complete printing.
Then in step S3, whether the number of passes is an even number or another number, that is, an odd number is judged based on the pass number information. In the case of an even number of passes, the multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference, described in the first embodiment, is set and executed in step S4. Thus, whereas in multi-scan printing with an even number of passes, the between-band unevenness becomes conspicuous, the generation of the between-band unevenness can be reduced by the above-described multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference. Meanwhile, if in step S3, it is judged that the number of passes is not even, a normal multi-scan printing method is set and executed in step S5.
Thus with the present embodiment, the multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference is not applied at all times but is applied as necessary. Although application of this printing method causes lowering of throughput compared to normal multi-scan with the same number of passes, this lowering of throughput can be reduced as much as possible by the above-described switching.
In the present embodiment, one type of multi-scan printing method is set for a single piece of printing data. Although normally, a single number of passes is set for a single printing job, in a case where, for example, the number of passes is switched according to the type of printing data in each printing area, the multi-scan printing method may be set in each printing area in accordance with the number of passes set.
Although in the present embodiment, the multi-scan printing method is switched between even number of passes and odd number of passes, the multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference may be set just in a case of two-pass printing, with which the influence of time interval of the printing scan interval is large. In this case, a judgment of whether the number of passes is two is made in step S3 of
In
If in step S102, it is judged that the present scan is the first printing scan, then on-use mask for the first printing scan is set in step S103 as described in
Next in step S104, a thinning mask for the first pass of the two-pass multi-scan is set for the nozzles used in the first printing scan. The thinning mask set here is in a complementary relationship with a thinning mask used in the printing scan of the second pass performed on one unit area for which printing is to be completed. The printing in the first scan is then performed in step S105. Then in step S106, the printing medium conveying amount after the first printing scan, which was described in
Next, in step S108, it is judged whether there are printing data that are in the middle of printing. Here, “in the middle of printing” refers to a state where the multi-scan printing for one unit area is not completed. If in step S108, it is judged that there are no printing data in the middle of printing, the present sequence is ended. If in step S108, it is judged that there are printing data in the middle of printing and it is judged in step S102 that the present scan is not the first printing scan, it is judged in step S109 whether the present scan is a second printing scan or a different printing scan.
If in step S109 it is judged that the present printing scan is the second printing scan, the non-use mask for the second printing scan is set in step S110. Here, as described in
Although the multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference described in the respective embodiments above concerns two-pass printing, the present invention is obviously not restricted in application to two passes. The multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference of three passes, four passes, or any other number of passes of no less than three may be executed. In this case, whereas with an even number of passes, the printing of the respective unit areas begins with a scan of a fixed direction of forward or return, with an odd number of passes, an only point of difference is that the forward and backward scans are alternated at the beginning of printing of each unit area.
As shown in
In the above-described printing, a length (a length in a vertical direction in
As a matter of course, in addition to the mask process for the unused nozzle blocks, a mask process using mask patterns for performing the multi-scan printing, with which printing is completed in four scans, is also performed.
The above-described printing medium conveying amount, etc., in the multi-scan printing of the respective embodiments can be generalized as follows. When a unit area is completed in k scans, that is, in a case of multi-scan of k passes, the conveying amount of a conveyance performed between respective two consecutive scans of the k scans is set to correspond to one nozzle block in the respective embodiments described above. In this case, the conveying amount for the process of transiting to the next unit area when a print head having N nozzle blocks is used is expressed as: (N−2(k−1))·p. Here, p is the conveying amount corresponding to one nozzle block. Even when nozzles are used as the unit of conveying instead of nozzle blocks, the same formula can be used to express the conveying amount by using the array pitch of nozzles as p above. The same clearly applies to the amounts described below as well. The total masked amount of the printed data corresponds to k−1 nozzle blocks in any scan among the k scans, and the amount of unused nozzle blocks at the upper end in an m-th scan corresponds to (k−1)−(m−1) blocks. Furthermore, the number of used nozzles, that is, the number of nozzles that overlap among the k scans corresponds to N−(k−1) blocks.
If the conveying amount between respective two consecutive scans of k scans is then made to correspond not to one nozzle block but more generally to q nozzle blocks, the above relationship becomes as follows. The conveying amount for the process of transiting to the next unit area is expressed as: (N−2q(k−1))·p. The total masked amount of the printed data corresponds to q (k−1) nozzle blocks in any scan among the k scans, and the amount of the unused nozzle blocks at the upper end in the m-th scan corresponds to q((k−1)−(m−1)) blocks. Furthermore, the number of used nozzles, that is, the number of nozzles that overlap among the k scans corresponds to N−q(k−1) blocks.
For example, in the case shown in
However, a q that satisfies q·p=(N−2q(k−1))·p does exist and such a configuration is also included in the present invention. If in this case, q also satisfies a condition of q=N/k, which is a condition of normal multi-scan, this corresponds to q=N and thus to a case of printing of one pass and thus does not satisfy the condition of multi-scan printing. Thus when in a case of multi-scan printing (of no less than two passes), the conveying amount for transiting to an adjacent unit area is defined as (N−2q(k−1)), these conditions do not cover normal multi-scan.
The process of masking the printing data corresponding to an unused nozzle does not necessarily have to be executed in applying the present invention. Printing data may be generated from the beginning in units of the used nozzles, set by eliminating the unused nozzles, and these data may be made to correspond to the used nozzles in each scan of the plurality of scans. For example, with the example shown in
The normal multi-scan printing method of step S5, shown in
In the case of the normal multi-scan printing method, if the number of passes has been determined, printing can be performed by setting the thinning mask and the conveying amount. On the other hand, the multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference differs from the normal multi-scan method in that the unused nozzles are set and the conveying amount is determined in relation to the number of the unused nozzles.
As described above, with the embodiment according to the present invention, the multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference and the normal multi-scan method are switched and used according to the number of passes by which printing by the multi-scan method is completed. The between-band unevenness between unit areas can thereby be reduced. In the following, an embodiment, which lessens density variations due to printing time interval differences according to position in the scan direction in a unit area, shall be described as a second embodiment of the present invention.
According to a second embodiment of the present invention, a process of suppressing density variations due to printing time interval differences according to position in a scan direction, in both the multi-scan printing method with control of printing time interval difference, described in
In
Obviously, such a density variation occurs in a likewise manner with the normal multi-scan method as well. However, as shown in
For the density variation described above, the present embodiment sets a maximum value of the ink applying amount in accordance with a position in the scan direction.
Specifically, a unit area is divided into a plurality of partial areas and a maximum applying amount is set for each divided area.
Here, the setting (correction) of the ink applying amount is performed with respect to printing data before quantization. Specifically, image data, with which a single pixel is expressed in 8 bits, that is, in gray scale values of 0 to 255, are arranged as printing data according to unit area. The printing data according to unit area are then divided into eight sets of divided printing data corresponding to the eight divided areas. Furthermore, for each set of divided printing data, the table shown in
In place of the above-described setting of the upper limit value of the applying amount, a table used for gamma correction may be changed. For example, eight gamma correction tables, with which maximum output values correspond to the respective maximum applying amount values shown in
By thus using the gamma correction tables, density correction can be performed not only in portions in the printed image where the ink applying amount is high but also in portions of intermediate gray level, etc.
As described above, by setting the maximum value of the ink applying amount depending on divided areas in the scan direction, density variations due to printing time interval differences in the scan direction in each unit area can be reduced.
As mentioned above, this control of applying amount is applied to both multi-scan with control of printing time interval difference and normal multi-scan. Thus in multi-scan printing with control of printing time interval difference, the between-band unevenness can be reduced significantly and density variations in the scan direction in each unit area can also be reduced. In normal multi-scan printing, density variations in the scan direction in each unit area can be reduced, and consequently, density differences at the same position in the scan direction between adjacent unit areas (bands) can also be reduced.
Regarding density differences due to ink ejection time interval differences, the influence of the time interval difference on density differs depending on relative characteristics of a printing medium with respect to ink. In the present modification, the maximum value of the ink applying amount is set depending on the type of printing medium.
The characteristics according to the type of above-described printing medium are related to the phenomenon of permeation of ink into the printing medium and there are thus cases where an environmental temperature, humidity, etc., also have an influence. More preferably, by providing a setting table for correcting for the environmental temperature and humidity, the density difference within the printing area due to the time interval differences of printing scans can be suppressed with better precision.
In place of just the upper limit value of the applying amount, gamma correction tables may be set according to the divided areas in accordance with the type of printing medium in the present embodiment as well.
As described above, by setting the maximum value of the ink applying amount depending on the type of printing medium, density variations in the scan direction due to printing time interval differences in the bidirectional multi-scan method can be reduced satisfactorily even when the type of printing medium used changes.
Although with the respective embodiments described above, the applying amount expressed by printing data is changed according to the position in the scan direction, the present invention is not limited in application to such a mode. For example, an ejection amount of each nozzle in the print head may be changed instead. For example, with a head of an arrangement with which an electro-thermal converter is used to generate bubbles and eject ink, the ejection amount can be changed by changing a waveform of an electric pulse supplied to the electro-thermal converter. With an arrangement with which ink is ejected by pressure by electromechanical conversion using a piezoelectric element, the ejection amount can be changed by changing a voltage applied to the piezoelectric element. The amount of ink that is shot onto a fixed region in the final stage can thus be changed by changing the ink amount ejected from the print head in itself according to the position in the scan direction and the time interval unevenness according to position in a unit area can thereby be reduced.
Also, the respective embodiments described above are related to bidirectional multi-scan of a unit area having a length corresponding to a nozzle column, resulting from division of a nozzle array of a print head. That is, for each of a plurality of scans, the printing medium is conveyed by a predetermined amount in a relative manner with respect to the print head and printing is performed using different nozzles in association. However, the present invention is not limited in application to this mode and can obviously be applied to a mode where printing of a unit area is completed by performing reciprocal scans of the print head at the same position with respect to the unit area of the printing medium without performing conveying of the printing medium in between.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application Nos. 2007-214041, filed Aug. 20, 2007 and 2007-214057, filed Aug. 20, 2007, which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2007-214041 | Aug 2007 | JP | national |
2007-214057 | Aug 2007 | JP | national |