The present disclosure relates to an inspection apparatus for a printing head which ejects droplets from ejection ports to land the droplets on a print medium, a printing apparatus of the printing head, and a method for inspecting the printing head.
In these years, line heads in which printing elements for ejecting a liquid are mounted in conformity to a print medium width have been utilized in liquid ejection apparatuses used for professional applications such as businesses, commerce, and industries. As an example of supply of a liquid to printing element boards of a line head, the liquid can be supplied to all the printing element boards from an end portion of printing elements on one side. In addition, the liquid which has not been ejected is discharged from an outlet port disposed on the opposite end portion. Besides, there is one in which a liquid is supplied from a supply unit located in a center portion toward outlet portions located in both end portions. Although the configuration is not particularly limited, there is also one in which a liquid is supplied to a plurality of printing element boards from a smaller number of liquid supply units than the number of the printing element boards.
Then, the supply and discharge of a liquid is conducted with a configuration in which the liquid is caused to circulate inside a printing head by means of a pump located outside the printing head, a sub tank for generating negative pressure inside the printing head, or the like. In such a line head, each printing element board is equipped with a temperature sensor which can check the temperature of the printing element board itself.
As a method for controlling a temperature inside a printing head, for example, Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2011-83928 (hereinafter referred to as document 1) discloses unit for controlling a temperature of ink by unit of a temperature adjustment mechanism located on a circulation path by measuring temperatures of the ink flowing in and the ink flowing out.
However, the above-described invention can control the temperature of ink by increasing the temperature of the ink but cannot control the temperatures of the printing element boards. In addition, although it is surmised that temperature sensors are included in printing element boards in order to measure the temperatures of the printing element boards, there is a possibility that variations occur in output values of the temperature sensors, and there is thus a possibility that the temperatures of the printing element boards cannot be properly detected.
An inspection apparatus of the present disclosure has: a printing head, the printing head including a plurality of printing element boards, each of the printing element boards including a temperature sensor which outputs a temperature as a voltage value and a plurality of ejection ports through which to eject a liquid, the plurality of printing element boards being in fluid communication with each other through a liquid chamber, the printing head including an inlet port through which to introduce ink into the printing head and an outlet port through which to discharge the ink to an outside, the printing head being arranged such that the ink circulates inside the printing element boards and the liquid chamber; an ink tank; an ink circulatory system which causes the ink to circulate between the printing head and the ink tank; an inlet temperature sensor which measures a temperature of the ink from the ink tank to the inlet port; and an outlet temperature sensor which measures a temperature of the ink discharged from the outlet port, wherein the inspection apparatus estimates a temperature distribution of the printing head from measured values of the inlet temperature sensor and the outlet temperature sensor.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Hereinafter, examples of embodiments of the present disclosure will be described by using the drawings. However, the following description is not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure. As an example, the present embodiments employ a thermal method which ejects a liquid by generating bubbles by using a heating element, but the present disclosure can be applied to liquid ejection heads which employ a piezoelectric method and various other liquid ejection methods.
The present embodiment is an inspection apparatus for a printing head in the form of circulating a liquid such as ink between an ink tank and the printing head, but the printing head may be in another form, and only has to be one in which a liquid flows from an inlet side to an outlet side in the printing head. In addition, the present embodiment describes the movement of a liquid from an inlet port in an end portion of the printing head to an outlet portion in the opposite end portion, but a form which has an inlet port in a center portion of a printing head and a liquid flows from the inlet port to outlet portions in both end portions may be employed.
In addition, the present embodiment is a so-called line-type head which has a length corresponding to the width of a print medium, but the present disclosure can be applied to a so-called serial-type liquid ejection head which conducts printing on a print medium while conducting scanning. As a serial-type liquid ejection head, for example, there is a configuration equipped with one printing element board for black ink and one printing element board for color ink. In addition, the liquid ejection head is not only this but may be a line head in the form of having several printing element boards arranged in an ejection port array direction such that ejection ports overlap each other and having a short length shorter than the width of a print medium, where the line head is caused to scan on a print medium. In this case, the present disclosure can be applied to a case where a liquid from the same inlet port is supplied to a plurality of printing element boards.
A configuration of a printing head 3 according to a first embodiment will be described.
In addition, in the present embodiment, the printing head 3 has a mechanism for causing ink to circulate in the head.
Subsequently, an apparatus for inspecting this printing head 3 will be described. To inspect this printing head 3, it is necessary to input electric signals and power to the electric board 40 from the signal input terminal 91 and the power supply terminal 92. Then, a control board is necessary in order to conduct desired inspection by controlling drive signals and voltage. The inspection mentioned herein is to determine drive voltage, ejection amount, conditions on ejection from nozzles, and the like.
In addition, this inspection apparatus is provided with unit for introducing ink from the inlet port 60 of ink with pressurization and unit for sucking ink from the outlet port 61 with reduced pressure for circulating ink inside the printing head 3.
Subsequently, contents of inspection will be described. The contents of inspection include obtaining conditions such as thresholds regarding ejection such as how much degree of voltage value the ejection is conducted with and how much degree of pulse width the ejection is conducted with. However, in these years, using ink while keeping the ink warm is increasing because an increase in viscosity of ink makes ejection difficult, or in order to suppress a change in ejection amount during ejection. It is also the premise to keep this printing head warm for use. Any unit may be used for keeping warm, like installing a sub heater in the printing element boards 10, providing, outside the printing head, unit for heating ink to be introduced itself up and introducing the ink, or the like. Each printing element board 10 has a temperature sensor to measure the temperature in the case of keeping warm. However, there are many cases where temperature sensors each composed of a diode and the like have various properties in the respective printing element boards. For example, there is a tendency that temperature sensors are different, having individual properties such as voltage values to output at the same temperature and gradients of increases in voltage due to changes in temperature. In addition, since power supply for an amplifier circuit attached to the electric board 40 is received from the control board 76, there is a possibility that an accurate voltage is not inputted due to influence of another signal line and the like. In this amplifier circuit, an offset value varies if the power supply is shifted even by 0.1 V, a value to be outputted largely varies. However, it is difficult to measure the voltage inputted to the circuit every time. In addition, it is also difficult to output the same output voltage at the entrance of a printing head, including an inspection apparatus. In the case where command transfer is conducted so as to increase the temperatures of the printing element boards 10 including ink to 40° C. in such a state, even though the output values of the diodes are in conformity with one another, there is a case where the actual temperatures of the printing element boards 10 are not precisely in conformity with one another. In addition, since the temperature sensors in the printing element boards 10 are configured to be able to obtain values by amplifying voltage values obtained by causing current to flow through the circuit by unit of amplifier circuits or the like on the electric board, a perfect countermeasure is difficult.
In view of this, in the embodiments of the present disclosure, liquid thermometers 71 are inserted near the inlet port 60 of the inlet passage 64 and near the outlet port 61 of the outlet passage 65, respectively. This makes it possible to measure the temperature of ink introduced and the temperature of ink discharged in real time to find the output value of the temperature sensor of each printing element board 10. Since this liquid thermometer 71 uses only the power supply of the main body as the power supply of the thermometer unlike the temperature sensors of the printing element boards 10, the liquid thermometer 71 can precisely measure the temperature of ink with almost no fluctuations of the power supply due to influence of the signal lines. This configuration is particularly important in the case of a printing head in which a plurality of printing element boards 10 are arranged side by side. However, although output values can be found, in the case where data is input in order to obtain temperatures by actually turning on power supply, the temperatures of the printing element boards 10 themselves as well as flowing ink and peripheral members are also increased by heat generation of the circuit inside the printing element boards 10 and the like.
There is a tendency that in the case where the temperature of ink is lower than room temperature, the temperature on the outlet side increases relative to the temperature on the inlet side. There is a tendency that in the case where the temperature of ink is higher than room temperature or an increase in temperature for energy consumed by the circuit, the temperature is lowered by heat dissipation.
Although the basic configuration is the same as the first embodiment, in the second embodiment, an ink temperature adjustment mechanism is provided in the inspection apparatus, so that the temperature of ink to be introduced can be changed before ink passes from the ink tank 74 through the supply pressure pump 73 into the printing head. In a schematic diagram of
It is possible to determine the voltage value of each temperature sensor at the time of reaching the target temperature by referring to values in the data holding unit or the storage device in which information of the above-mentioned results and the calibration values obtained from the results is written.
A third embodiment is a printing apparatus that conducts printing by using a printing head that is capable of conducting the same control in the same configuration as that of the inspection apparatus of the second embodiment. Since it is possible to precisely control the temperature of the printing head in the same manner as the inspection apparatus and to thus conduct the target temperature control corresponding to the rank of each individual temperature sensor, the stability in printing is secured.
While the present disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the disclosure 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. 2023-042095, filed Mar. 16, 2023, which is hereby incorporated by reference wherein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2023-042095 | Mar 2023 | JP | national |