1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an inkjet printing method and an inkjet printing apparatus which print images on a print medium by using an inkjet print head formed with nozzle arrays, each having ink ejecting nozzles arranged at high density.
2. Description of the Related Art
As information processing devices, such as computers and word processors, and communication devices have come into wide use, there are growing demands for output devices that output digital image information processed by the information processing devices onto a medium. As one such output device, an inkjet printing apparatus that forms an image by ejecting ink droplets to form dots on a print medium is rapidly finding its widespread use. To improve the printing speed and the resolution of printed images, this inkjet printing apparatus uses a print head that has a large number of ejection portions (also referred to nozzles) arranged in arrays, with each nozzle comprised of an ink droplet ejection opening, an ink path and a printing element or heater. There is a growing need in recent years for a capability to produce color printed images. Particularly, in producing photographic images, calls are increasing for reducing the volume of ink droplets to enhance the quality of printed images.
With a technological advance in recent years in enhancing the integration of nozzle arrays, the fabrication of a so-called elongate print head with highly dense nozzles is becoming a reality. This elongate print head can print on a print medium over an area of a greater width by its single scan than that possible with the conventional print head. This is considered a very promising technique in realizing a fast printing that has never been achieved before while maintaining as high a print quality as the conventional one. Active research is under way for further technical development. In general inkjet printing apparatus, it has been known that air currents are produced between the print head and a print medium during the printing operation.
In an inkjet printing apparatus using such an elongate print head, air currents are formed between the print head and the print medium during a printing operation, flowing around the highly dense wall of ejected ink. These wrapping air currents may in turn deflect the direction of ejected ink droplets, resulting in dot landing positions being deviated. As one method of preventing such image quality degradations, a technique is disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2006-192892.
The use of the mask pattern 100, in which the thinning ratio is alternated between two levels, for example, from low to high, to low, to high and so on, forms gaps in a highly dense wall of ejected ink. More specifically, portions in the highly dense ink wall corresponding to the high thinning ratio regions in the mask pattern constitute gaps which are alternated with the dense ink wall portions corresponding to the low thinning ratio regions. These gaps allow air currents to pass through, reducing the amount of the wrapping air currents, which in turn minimizes deviations in dot landing position.
With the technique disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2006-192892, large gaps need to be formed in the ink wall extending in the nozzle-arrayed direction for air currents to flow through the ink wall. In this method, the direction of scan of the print head as it prints the high printing ratio regions Hn and the low printing ratio regions Ln differs between the two areas.
Where the direction of scan, as the print head prints the high printing ratio regions and the low printing ratio regions, differ between the two areas, density unevenness may show in a printed image. For example, if the distance between a main droplet of ejected ink and a satellite, an extremely small ink droplet trailing the main droplet, differs between the forward scan direction and the backward scan direction, resulting in variations in dot-covered area ratio, there occurs a difference in the printed image density between the forward scan direction and the backward scan direction. This density difference is sometimes recognized as density unevenness.
It is therefore an object of this invention to provide an inkjet printing apparatus and an inkjet printing method that can minimize air current disturbances occurring between the print head and the print medium to reduce density unevenness that would otherwise be caused by mask patterns.
The present invention provides an inkjet printing apparatus comprising: a printing unit configured to print an image on a print medium by ejecting ink from nozzles of a print head as the print head is moved a plurality of times relative to the same print area of the print medium, wherein the print head has a first nozzle array and a second nozzle array in each of which a plurality of nozzles to eject the same color of ink are arrayed in line at a predetermined interval, wherein the first nozzle array and the second nozzle array are staggered from each other by a half of the predetermined interval in a direction in which the plurality of nozzles are arrayed; a dividing unit configured to divide image data for the same print area that are to be printed by the first nozzle array and the second nozzle array into a plurality of pieces of image data corresponding to the plurality of relative movements by using a first mask pattern for the first nozzle array and a second mask pattern for the second nozzle array; and a printing control unit configured to cause the first nozzle array and the second nozzle array to print an image in each of the plurality of movements according to the image data divided by the dividing unit; wherein the first mask pattern and the second mask pattern each have a first region with a relatively low printing ratio and a second region with a relatively high printing ratio alternated in a direction corresponding to the direction in which the nozzles are arrayed; wherein the first region of the first mask pattern and the second region of the second mask pattern are at the same position in the direction corresponding to the nozzle-arrayed direction; and wherein the second region of the first mask pattern and the first region of the second mask pattern are at the same position in the direction corresponding to the nozzle-arrayed direction.
This invention also provides an inkjet printing method comprising: a printing step to print an image on a print medium by ejecting ink from nozzles of a print head as the print head is moved a plurality of times relative to the same print area of the print medium, wherein the print head has a first nozzle array and a second nozzle array in each of which a plurality of nozzles to eject the same color of ink are arrayed in line at a predetermined interval, wherein the first nozzle array and the second nozzle array are staggered from each other by a half of the predetermined interval in a direction in which the plurality of nozzles are arrayed; a dividing step to divide image data for the same print area that are to be printed by the first nozzle array and the second nozzle array into a plurality of pieces of image data corresponding to the plurality of relative movements by using a first mask pattern for the first nozzle array and a second mask pattern for the second nozzle array; a printing control step to cause the first nozzle array and the second nozzle array to print an image in each of the plurality of movements according to the image data divided by the dividing step; a step to provide each of the first mask pattern and the second mask pattern with a first region with a relatively low printing ratio and a second region with a relatively high printing ratio, the first region and the second region being alternated in a direction corresponding to the direction in which the nozzles are arrayed; and a step to provide the first region of the first mask pattern and the second region of the second mask pattern at the same position in the direction corresponding to the nozzle-arrayed direction and to provide the second region of the first mask pattern and the first region of the second mask pattern at the same position in the direction corresponding to the nozzle-arrayed direction.
According to this invention, the inkjet printing apparatus has a means to move the print head a plurality of times relative to the same print area of the print medium. The inkjet printing apparatus also has a means to thin binary image data for the same print area by using different mask patterns that correspond to the plurality of movements over the same print area.
Further, the inkjet printing apparatus has a printing control means that completes an image on the same print area by printing thinned images on the same print area in each of the plurality of movements according to the binary image data thinned by the thinning means. The first nozzle array has alternated a plurality of nozzles that print with a relatively high printing ratio and a plurality of nozzles that print with a relatively low printing ratio. Further, spaces between those adjoining nozzles in the first nozzle array that print with a relatively high printing ratio are covered by the nozzles in the second nozzle array that print with a relatively low printing ratio. Further, spaces between those adjoining nozzles in the first nozzle array that print with a relatively low printing ratio are covered by the nozzles in the second nozzle array that print with a relatively high printing ratio.
With the above arrangement, an inkjet printing apparatus and an inkjet printing method have been realized which can minimize air current disturbances that occur between the print head and the print medium, thereby preventing density unevenness that would otherwise be caused by the mask patterns.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments (with reference to the attached drawings).
Now, the first embodiment of this invention will be described by referring to the accompanying drawings.
The serial type inkjet printing apparatus has a medium conveying mechanism to convey a print medium P, such as plain paper, high-quality dedicated paper, OHP sheets, glossy paper, glossy films and postcards. The medium conveying mechanism has conveying rollers not shown, discharge rollers 25 and a conveying motor 26. As the conveying motor 26 is operated, the medium conveying mechanism intermittently moves the print medium in a subscan direction (arrow Y direction). The print head 21 and the medium conveying mechanism are supplied an ejection signal and a control signal from a controller unit described later through a flexible cable 23. The print head 21 and the medium conveying mechanism operate according to the ejection signal and control signal.
The heating elements in the print head 21 are energized based on a position signal of the carriage 32 output from the linear encoder 28 and on the ejection signal to generate a thermal energy to eject ink droplets from the nozzles onto the print medium. The medium conveying mechanism, according to the control signal, moves the print medium P a predetermined distance in the subscan direction during each subscan operation performed between the main scan operations of the print head 21. By repetitively moving the print head 21 and the print medium relative to each other through the printing operation by the print head 21 and the conveying operation by the medium conveying mechanism, the print medium P is progressively formed with an image over its entire surface. At a home position of the carriage 32 set outside the printing region is installed a recovery unit 34 with a cap 35 that hermetically encloses and opens ejection openings formed in the print head 21.
The heater board nd and the top plate ne are bound together so that the ink paths nc match the heaters nb. While in
As described above, each of the nozzles n has a nozzle opening na, a heater nb and an ink path nc. The inkjet printing system applicable to this invention is not limited to the one using the heating elements shown in
Further, a RAM 75 temporarily stores data being processed by the CPU 73 and input data. An image data processing unit 76 performs predetermined image processing, including color conversion and binarization, on the image data received. An image printing unit 77 executes an image output by using the print head and the medium conveying mechanism. A busline 78 transmits address signals, data and control signals throughout the printing apparatus. The external device 80 may include, for example, image input devices such as scanners and digital cameras, and personal computers.
Multivalued image data output from the scanner and digital camera (e.g., 8-bit RGB data) and multivalued image data stored in a hard disk drive of a personal computer are entered into the data input unit 71. The operation unit 72 is provided with a variety of keys for setting parameters and for instructing the start of print operation. The CPU 73 controls the inkjet printing apparatus as a whole according to various programs stored in the storage medium. The programs stored in the storage medium 74 include a control program and an error processing program, according to which the entire operations of the inkjet printing apparatus of this embodiment are executed.
As the storage medium 74 to store these programs, a ROM, FD, CD-ROM, HD, memory card and magnetooptical disc may be used. The RAM 75 is used as a work area in which to execute various programs stored in the storage medium 74, as an area in which data is temporarily saved during error processing, and as a work area during image processing. Various tables in the storage medium 74 may be copied into the RAM 75, in which they may be modified and the image processing may be done referring to the modified tables. The image data processing unit 76 performs a color separation operation to convert input multivalued image data (e.g., 8-bit RGB data) into multivalued data (e.g., 8-bit CMYBk data) of each ink color for each pixel. Further, it quantizes the multivalued data of each color into K-value (e.g., 17-value) data for each pixel and sets a dot pattern for the quantized grayscale level “K” (grayscale level 0 to 16) of each pixel.
While this embodiment uses the multivalued error diffusion method for the K-value quantization operation, any other halftoning method may be used, such as an average density storing method and a dither matrix method. After the K-value quantization operation, a dot patterning operation is performed which assigns a unique dot pattern to each grayscale level for each unit area. Then, binary print data generated by the dot patterning operation is subjected to a thinning operation that distributes the print data among a plurality of printing scans of the print head by a thinning mask pattern.
The plurality of printing scans by the print head includes single printing scans by the print head having two or more nozzle arrays. By repeating the aforementioned processing, binary print data is generated which instructs each of the nozzles of the print head 21 to eject or not to eject ink. Then the image printing unit 77, based on the binary print data generated by the image data processing unit 76, forms a dot image on the print medium P.
The print head 21 of this embodiment has six blocks of ink ejecting nozzle arrays for a plurality of colors (four colors in this example) arranged in the main scan direction. A block C1 and a block C2 represent nozzle arrays of the same cyan inks; a block M1 and a block M2 represent nozzle arrays of the same magenta inks; a block Y represents yellow ink nozzle arrays; and a block Bk represents black ink nozzle arrays. In each nozzle array, 256 nozzles are arranged in line in the subscan direction at the same pitch of 1/600 inch for all colors. So, each nozzle array can print an image measuring about 10.8 mm in print width in the subscan direction.
Each of the block Bk and the block Y has two arrays of 600-dpi-pitch nozzles, with nozzle openings of the two nozzle arrays staggered a half of the pitch between adjoining nozzles in the subscan direction. The pair of nozzle arrays in the block Bk and the pair of nozzle arrays in the block Y eject ink droplets of about 5.5 pl. Each of blocks C1, C2 and blocks M1, M2 has a nozzle array to eject ink droplets of about 5.5 pl, a nozzle array to eject ink droplets of about 2.5 pl and a nozzle array to eject ink droplets of about 1.5 pl. Two nozzle arrays, one in block C1 and one in block C2, that eject the same volume of ink droplet form a pair of nozzle arrays between the different blocks, with the nozzle openings of one of the paired arrays staggered from those of the other by a half of the pitch between adjoining nozzles in the subscan direction. This same arrangement also applies to the blocks M1 and M2.
This arrangement allows a space between the adjoining nozzles of the block C1 is covered by the nozzles of the block C2. The paired nozzle arrays in the blocks C1 and C2 and those in the blocks M1 and M2 are referred to as first nozzle arrays and second nozzle arrays. In
Next, an example of a divide-by-thinning printing, a characteristic aspect of this invention, will be explained. In this embodiment, the print data is thinned by a mask pattern, which has low printing ratio regions (high thinning ratio regions) of a predetermined width and high printing ratio regions (low thinning ratio regions) of a predetermined width, to distribute the print data to individual nozzles of the print head. This is one of characteristic constructions of this embodiment.
As shown in
An image on the print medium is completed by the combination of operations of the first nozzle arrays and the second nozzle arrays. As shown in
The printing method of this embodiment completes an image by printing each print area with two scans complementing each other. In a first scan, the printing operation is done by using the mask pattern 110 of
Here, the reason (mechanism) that the above-described dot landing position deviations are reduced by the mask pattern that has a high thinning ratio region and a low thinning ratio region alternated, will be explained. In the serial type and the full line type inkjet printing apparatus, to complete an image in a short period of time requires performing high-speed relative scans at high printing ratios. During this printing operation it has already been described that air current disturbances occur between the print head and the print medium. The amount of air currents formed and the degree to which the air currents are disturbed greatly depend on the scan speed and the printing ratio. They also depend greatly on a thinning ratio distribution in the mask pattern.
If a mask pattern is used that has its thinning ratios distributed in the nozzle array direction in an alternate high-low thinning ratio pattern, gaps are formed in a highly dense ejected ink wall. More precisely, at portions in the ejected ink wall corresponding to the high thinning ratio regions in the mask pattern, there are formed gaps, which are alternated by the low thinning ratio region or ink wall in the nozzle array direction. Through these gaps air currents pass, reducing the volume of wrapping air currents, with the result that the dot landing position deviations that would otherwise be caused by the wrapping air currents can also be restrained.
For the air currents to pass through the ejected ink wall extending in the nozzle array direction, sufficiently large gaps need to be formed. In the conventional method, therefore, the high thinning ratio regions are required to have a substantially large width, which may sometimes become large enough that a high-low density pattern in one scan is visible. This can be explained as follows. Since each print area is completed by a plurality of scans that complement each other, if there is any element that causes the printed density to differ from one scan to another, density unevenness tracing the mask pattern shows in the printed image.
Here, how density unevenness in the printed image occurs will be explained. An ink droplet, after being ejected from a nozzle opening in the form of an elongate column of ink, splits while flying, with a front portion of the ink column forming into a main droplet and a trailing portion forming into satellites, both landing on a print medium. The positional relation on the print medium between the main droplet and the satellites varies depending on the flying speeds of the droplets, a gap between the print head and the print medium and an angle at which the ink droplet is ejected from the nozzle opening.
In this embodiment, therefore, an image area printed by both the first nozzle array and the second nozzle array is printed using the mask pattern whose thinning ratio changes every pixel in the nozzle array direction (direction of arrow α), as shown in
As described above, in a 2-pass printing, this embodiment performs the printing operation such that the high printing ratio region and the low printing ratio region are alternated every pixel in the nozzle array direction and that adjoining groups of high printing ratio regions are separated from one another by a group of low printing ratio regions that forms a passage wide enough for air currents to pass through. With this arrangement, an inkjet printing apparatus and an inkjet printing method have been realized which can prevent air currents between the print head and the print medium from being disturbed, which in turn helps prevent density unevenness that may be caused by the mask pattern.
In the above explanation, the mask patterns applied to the nozzle arrays C1 and C2 have a group of high printing ratio regions and a group of low printing ratio regions alternated at equal intervals of four nozzles. The alternating cycle between the high printing ratio regions and the low printing ratio regions may be random. For example, in the first nozzle column C1, the upper four nozzles may be used as high printing ratio regions, the next two nozzles immediately below the first four as low printing ratio regions and the next three nozzles as high printing ratio regions, with the alternating interval between the high printing ratio regions and the low printing ratio regions randomly changing. In that case, the mask for the second nozzle array C2 is in an inverted relationship with the mask for the first nozzle array C1, with the top four nozzles used as the low printing ratio regions, the next two nozzles as the high printing ratio regions and the next three nozzles as the low printing ratio regions.
The present invention is not just applicable to 2-pass printing but also to other printing methods using a greater number of passes. Whatever the number of passes, this invention can achieve its object of alleviating density unevenness that is caused by the fact that the combinations of high printing ratio regions and low printing ratio regions in the direction of scan differs from one print area to another. It is noted, however, that the density unevenness is likely to occur in the printing methods with a small number of passes, like a 2-pass printing. This invention is particularly useful for such printing methods with a small number of passes.
Further, the printing ratios of the high printing ratio regions and of the low printing ratio regions may be changed between the first nozzle array and the second nozzle array. For example, the first nozzle array may be given a printing ratio of 65% for the high printing ratio regions and a printing ratio of 35% for the low printing ratio regions, and the second nozzle array may be given 70% for the high printing ratio regions and 30% for the low printing ratio regions.
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 No. 2009-150075, filed Jun. 24, 2009, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-150075 | Jun 2009 | JP | national |
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7695088 | Yamane et al. | Apr 2010 | B2 |
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Number | Date | Country |
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2006-192892 | Jul 2006 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100328384 A1 | Dec 2010 | US |