This Nonprovisional application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(a) on Patent Application No(s). 1026486 filed in The Netherlands on Jun. 23, 2004, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to an inkjet system including a printhead comprising an ink-fillable chamber operatively connected to a piezoelectric actuator and provided with a nozzle for the ejection of ink drops in response to the energization of the actuator, said actuator being connected to a measuring circuit for measuring an electric signal generated by the actuator in response to the deformation thereof. The present invention also relates to a method of making such a system and use of said system in forming an image on a receiving material.
A system of this kind is known from European Application EP 1 013 453. This system forms part of an inkjet printer with which receiving materials can be printed. The known system is of the piezo type and has a printhead with an ink chamber (also termed an “ink duct” or, briefly, a “duct”) operatively connected to a piezoelectric actuator. In one embodiment the ink chamber has a flexible wall which is deformable by energization of the actuator connected to said wall. Deformation of the wall results in an acoustic pressure wave in the chamber which, given adequate strength, will result in ejection of an ink drop from the nozzle of that chamber. The pressure wave in turn, however, results in a deformation of the wall, and this can be fed to the piezoelectric actuator. This will generate an electrical signal under the influence of its deformation.
From this application it is recognized that an analysis of this signal can provide information as to the state of the ink chamber corresponding to the particular actuator. Thus it is possible to derive from the signal whether there is an air bubble or some other disturbance in the chamber, whether the nozzle is clean, whether there are mechanical defects in the ink chamber, and so on. In principle, any disturbance of influence on the pressure wave can be traced by analysing the signal.
A disadvantage of the known method is that the signal generated by the piezoelectric actuator in response to its deformation by the pressure wave in the duct is often very complex, apart from the possible presence of random disturbances (noise). It has been found that the pressure wave in the duct is not a simple sine curve or some other simple wave configuration. This would, in fact, result in a comparably simple electrical signal. Apparently the pressure wave is not solely determined by the deformation of the actuator directly preceding the drop ejection, but there are also a number of other events which influence the pressure wave. Another consequence of this complex pressure wave is that the signal generated by the actuator as a result of this pressure wave is also very complex. Analysis of such a complex signal requires a complex, preferably digital, measuring circuit and/or relatively long processing times. This is particularly disadvantageous, especially for printers with many ink chambers in which each ink chamber of the printer is checked for disturbances after each energization. Making each chamber measurable by such a complex circuit after each energization is economically unattractive, and in addition it will often be difficult to round off an analysis within the time available until the next ink drop should be ejected from this chamber (typically 10−4 seconds). It should be clear that, particularly for applications in which high print quality is required, for example the printing of color photographs and making publicity posters, it is desirable to check each ink chamber after each energization.
The object of the present invention is to provide a method and system whereby the above-described disadvantages are obviated. To this end, a method has been invented wherein the system is so configured that a natural frequency of the system substantially corresponds to a natural frequency of a disturbance in the system. The advantage of this system is that the disturbance is expressed relatively strongly in the electrical signal generated by the piezoelectric actuator as a result of its deformation by the pressure wave. Resonance of the disturbance takes place namely at a frequency which is just provided by the system. This means that the analysis of the signal can remain restricted to a small area around the natural frequency of the system and also it is possible to use simple electronics, precisely because the contribution in the electric signal as a result of the disturbance is amplified by the system. For the application of the present invention it is incidentally not essential that the natural frequency of the system should be exactly equal to the natural frequency of the disturbance. Since there is a region around the natural frequency of the system, or a “window”, where there is already amplification in the signal, it is sufficient for the window to enclose the natural frequency of the disturbance. In this way the natural frequencies sufficiently correspond to one another.
The present invention is based on a number of considerations. For example, the applicants have recognised that an inkjet system of the piezo type has one or more natural frequencies. If, for example, an acoustic pressure wave is generated in the ink chamber in which each frequency is represented equally strongly (known as “white noise”), then the electrical signal received by the measuring circuit will have a number of frequencies at which said signal is relatively strong (first, second and other harmonic frequencies). These frequencies are termed natural frequencies. Investigation has shown that the position of these natural frequencies should be controlled because this appears to be dependent on the configuration of the system. For example, the position can be influenced by adapting the geometry of the ink chamber, the geometry of the nozzle, the type of ink, the type of actuator, and so on. The applicant has also recognised that a specific type of disturbance, for example an air bubble, also has an natural frequency at which it resonates. By so configuring the system such that a natural frequency of the system is close to a natural frequency of the disturbance, it can be noticed very easily in the signal. A configuration with which a natural frequency of the system coincides with a natural frequency of a disturbance can be found by experimentation, for example by adapting the geometry of the duct, and/or the geometry of an inflow opening of the duct, and/or the geometry of the nozzle, and/or the geometry and/or the construction of the piezo actuator, and/or the type of ink (in brief anything that influences the natural frequencies of the system), and determining the natural frequency or frequencies in each case. It can also be determined by calculation by the use of a suitable acoustic model of the system. The natural frequency of a disturbance can also be determined experimentally or by calculation.
The advantage of the present invention is that analysis of the signal generated by the actuator can be effected with very simple electronics, and yet an adequate tracing of disturbances can be found. A disturbance in the context of the present invention is an irregularity in the system regarded as unacceptable. This can, for example, be the case if the irregularity can result in a print artefact visible to the human eye in the printed image, or if the irregularity can result in damage to the printer. The unacceptability of an irregularity may vary from one application to another.
In one embodiment, a natural frequency of the system substantially corresponds to a natural frequency of an air bubble of a size such that it noticeably influences the ejection of ink drops. It is generally known that one or more air bubbles may be located in an ink duct. On the one hand, they can be present in the ink itself and possibly even grow in the ink duct, on the other hand they can also form in the ink duct, particularly because of negative pressures which can be generated in the ink duct (cavitation). However, many of these air bubbles are not a disturbance in the sense of the present invention. They are often so small that they have no noticeable influence on the jetting process and disappear automatically after a specific time or after a number of energizations of the actuator. However, a critical value can be determined for an air bubble at which it just will noticeably influence the ejection of the ink drops. In this embodiment, the natural frequency of an air bubble having this critical value just falls in the window around the natural frequency of the system. In this way, air bubbles which have a size below the critical value can simply be disregarded. As soon as a bubble becomes so great that it can be regarded as a disturbance, it can simply be rendered visible in the signal generated by the actuator.
In another embodiment, the measuring circuit comprises a mixer in order to mix with the signal a frequency equal to the natural frequency of the system. The advantage of this embodiment is that the presence of an air bubble with a critical value can be noted very simply, for example using a low-pass filter. By mixing (multiplying) with the natural frequency of the system (which frequency substantially corresponds to that of the disturbance), the disturbance will be visible at a frequency substantially equal to zero. This offers the possibility of detecting the disturbance by the use of very simple electronics.
The present invention also covers a method of making an inkjet system comprising forming an ink chamber with a nozzle for the ejection of ink drops from the chamber, which ink chamber is operatively connected to a piezoelectric actuator, connecting the actuator to a measuring circuit, wherein the system is so configured that a natural frequency of the system is substantially equal to a natural frequency of a disturbance in the system. In addition, the invention also relates to application of the above-described system to the formation of an image on a receiving material.
The present invention will now be explained in detail with reference to the following drawings, wherein,
In the embodiment as shown in the drawing, each printhead 16 comprises eight ink chambers, each with its own nozzle 22, which form an imaginary line perpendicular to the axis of the roller 10. In a practical embodiment of a printing device, the number of ink chambers per printhead 16 is many times greater. Each ink chamber is provided with a piezoelectric actuator (not shown) and associated actuation and measuring circuit (not shown) as described in connection with
In
It will be seen that the position of the natural frequencies is determined by the configuration of the system. With a different nozzle size or shape, for example, the natural frequencies shift to different positions. The duct length, cross-section, shape and size of the filling opening, and also the type of ink, type of actuator, mechanical construction of the printhead, etc., also influence the position of the natural frequencies. This offers the possibility of placing the one or more natural frequencies at preselected positions.
Component 45 is a front-end unit which converts to a voltage signal, the incoming current signal as generated by the actuator. This signal is then fed to an A/D converter 46 to make the signal suitable for processing by digital unit 47. This digital signal processor processes the signal so that it can be analyzed in analysing unit 48 by the use of an adequate algorithm, particularly in order to prevent disturbances such as air bubbles. After an analysis, the control unit (not shown) is informed whether the duct is or is not free of disturbances. If not, then if this is relevant, information concerning the type of disturbance is transmitted so that adequate action can be taken to remove it. In particular the components 47 and 48 make this measuring circuit expensive and thus this application is therefore not attractive economically.
f=1/(2π*√(3γ*po/(ro*Ro2))) (1)
wherein f is the (fundamental) resonant frequency, γ is the adiabatic exponent, po is the ambient pressure, ro is the density of the liquid and Ro is the equilibrium radius of the bubble. A simple model that can be used to determine a resonant frequency of an air bubble is shown in
It will be clear to one skilled in the art that the resonant frequency of an air bubble located in a finite quantity of ink in an ink duct is not exactly equal to the resonant frequency of the same air bubble located in an infinitely large quantity of liquid. However, if the dimensions of the bubble are sufficiently small with respect to the dimensions of the duct, the difference will not be sufficiently relevant to the practical application of the invention. Since the air bubbles in an ink duct frequently grow from very small bubbles to larger bubbles, they can be detected at a time they are still small enough with respect to the dimensions of the duct.
The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1026486 | Jun 2004 | NL | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4498088 | Kanayama | Feb 1985 | A |
4518974 | Isayama | May 1985 | A |
5500657 | Yauchi et al. | Mar 1996 | A |
6375299 | Foster et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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19958889 | Jun 2000 | DE |
1013453 | Jun 2000 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050285908 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |