1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a liquid container having a piezo-electric device for detecting the consumption condition of a liquid in the liquid container by detecting changes in the acoustic impedance in the medium and particularly detecting changes in the resonance frequency, and a method for charging the liquid container with a liquid. Typically, the liquid container is an ink cartridge used for an ink jet recording apparatus which pressurizes ink in a pressure generation chamber in accordance with print data by a pressure generation means and injects ink drops from a nozzle opening for printing.
2. Description of the Related Art
As an example of a conventional liquid container, an ink cartridge mounted to an ink jet recording apparatus will be explained. An ink jet recording apparatus generally has a pressure generation means for pressurizing a pressure generation chamber, a carriage with an ink jet recording head having a nozzle opening for injecting pressurized ink from the ink nozzle opening as ink drops, and an ink tank for containing ink to be fed to the recording head via a flow path and is structured so as to permit continuous printing. The ink tank is generally structured as a cartridge removable from the recording apparatus so as to be simply exchanged by a user when ink is exhausted.
Further, to control ink consumption of the ink cartridge, there is a method for calculating the count of ink drops injected by the recording head and the ink amount sucked at the maintenance step of the recording head by the software and controlling ink consumption by calculation. Moreover, there is a method for attaching two electrodes for direct liquid level detection to the ink cartridge, thereby detecting the point of time when ink is actually consumed by a predetermined amount, and controlling ink consumption.
However, in the method for calculating the injection count of ink drops and the ink amount sucked by the software and controlling the ink consumption by calculation, an innegligible error is caused between the ink consumption amount by calculation and the actual consumption amount. Further, when the cartridge is removed once and then mounted again, the calculated count is reset once, so that the actual residual volume of ink cannot be found at all.
Further, in the method for controlling the point of time of ink consumption by the electrodes, the liquid-tight structure between the electrodes and the ink cartridge is complicated. Further, as a material of the electrodes, a noble metal which is highly conductive and corrosion-resistant is generally used, so that the manufacturing cost of an ink cartridge is increased. Further, the two electrodes must be mounted at separate positions respectively, so that the manufacturing steps are increased.
On the other hand, a method for detecting changes in the acoustic impedance using a piezo-electric device, thereby detecting the consumption condition of a liquid in a liquid container is proposed. By this method, the aforementioned problems are eliminated.
According to this method, the ink cartridge is mounted so that the piezo-electric device for detecting the residual quantity of ink in the cartridge comes in contact with ink in the ink cartridge.
Meanwhile, when air remains in the ink cartridge when ink is charged in the ink cartridge, a problem of defective injection of the recording head arises. However, it is not easy due to a complicated structure of the piezo-electric device to charge ink in every part in the ink cartridge free of residual air. Further, to precisely detect the consumption condition of ink in the ink cartridge by the piezo-electric device, before the ink cartridge is used first or before it is reused, it is necessary to charge the ink cartridge with ink so that ink comes in contact with the piezo-electric device. For example, in the state that the ink cartridge is charged with ink fully, when ink does not come in contact with the face of the piezo-electric device which is to come in contact with a liquid for the reason of that air bubbles remain on the face of the piezo-electric device which is to come in contact with a liquid, although the ink cartridge is fully charged with ink, the piezo-electric device detects by mistake that the ink cartridge is not charged with ink fully.
Further, recharging the used ink cartridge with ink is more difficult than charging a new ink cartridge with ink. In the used ink cartridge, ink is adhered to the part in the neighborhood of the ink feed port where fine slits and holes exist while in use and air may be shut in the slits and holes. When the ink in the ink cartridge is exhausted in this state and the ink cartridge is withdrawn, at the time of recharging the ink cartridge with ink, it is difficult to charge the slits and holes, where ink is adhered and air is shut in, with ink.
Further, in the method for detecting changes in the acoustic impedance by the piezo-electric device, thereby detecting the consumption condition of the liquid in the liquid container, the piezo-electric device is structured so as to be in contact with ink in order to detect the ink level. Therefore, if ink is consumed and the ink level is lowered below the mounting position of the piezo-electric device, when ink is adhered to the piezo-electric device by mistake due to vibration and/or swing, although there is no ink under normal state, there is a risk that the piezo-electric device may detect by mistake that there is ink. Even when ink drops are adhered to the inner wall of the ink cartridge, and the ink drops fall, and ink is adhered to the piezo-electric device, there is a possibility that the same maldetection may be caused.
Further, in a conventional ink cartridge, ink is adhered to the inner wall of the ink cartridge and the flow path, thereby ink remains, and the ink in the ink cartridge may not be used fully. The ink remaining in the ink cartridge is in contact with air for a long period of time, thus it is reduced in quality and solidified with foreign substances. When such an ink cartridge is recharged with new ink, there is the possibility that ink of poor quality and foreign substances coexist and the ink quality is reduced.
Furthermore, when a conventional ink cartridge is to be recycled, it should be fully cleaned internally. Particularly when an ink cartridge having an inner flow path in a complicated shape is to be recycled, a problem arises that the cleaning requires a lot of time and the cost is increased.
Recently, the environmental problem is a great social problem and it is very desired to provide an ink cartridge which can be easily recycled.
The present invention was developed with the foregoing in view and is intended to provide a method for charging a liquid container, typically an ink cartridge, with a liquid without leaving air bubbles in the liquid container that is able to precisely detect the consumption condition of a liquid by in the liquid container using a piezo-electric device and requires no complicated seal structure. The present invention is also intended to provide a liquid container in which a liquid is charged by the above mentioned liquid charging method and a method for manufacturing the same.
According to the first aspect of the present invention, a liquid charging method for charging a liquid container with a liquid, said liquid container being provided with a piezo-electric device for detecting a consumption condition of said liquid, said piezo-electric device being provided with cavity connecting to an inside of said liquid container, comprises the steps of: reducing a pressure in said liquid container to a pressure lower than atmospheric pressure; and charging said liquid container with said liquid.
Preferably, said pressure reducing step and said liquid charging step are executed in a pressure reducing container.
Preferably, said pressure reducing step includes sucking and removing an air in said liquid container via an opening formed in said liquid container so as to reduce said pressure in said liquid container, and said liquid charging step includes charging said liquid container with said liquid via said opening.
Preferably, said pressure reducing step includes, under a state that a first opening formed in said liquid container is closed, sucking and removing an air in said liquid container via a second opening formed in said liquid container, and said liquid charging step includes closing said second opening and opening said first opening, and charging said liquid container with said liquid via said first opening.
Preferably, the liquid charging method further comprises a step of, at the time of ending of liquid charging into said liquid container, sucking and ejecting a predetermined amount of said liquid from said liquid container.
Preferably, said pressure reducing step and said liquid charging step are executed almost at the same time.
Preferably, a flow rate of an air to be sucked from said liquid container is larger than a flow rate of said liquid to be charged in said liquid container.
Preferably, said liquid charging step is executed while keeping said liquid container warm.
Preferably, said liquid container has a first liquid containing chamber connecting to an atmospheric air and a second liquid containing chamber connecting to said first liquid containing chamber and provided with said piezo-electric device, said first and second liquid containing chambers being formed by dividing said inside of said liquid container with at least one partition formed in said inside of said liquid container, and said first and second liquid containing chambers are charged with said liquid respectively by said pressure reducing step and said liquid charging step.
Preferably, in said liquid charging step, said liquid is charged via an opening formed at a predetermined position in said second liquid containing chamber and then said first liquid containing chamber is charged with said liquid.
Preferably, in said liquid charging step, said first liquid containing chamber is charged with said liquid and then said second liquid containing chamber is charged with said liquid.
Preferably, said liquid container is a used liquid container.
Preferably, said liquid container has a lyophobic part therein which is lyophobic to said liquid in said liquid container.
According to the second aspect of the present invention, a liquid container comprises: a container body; and a piezo-electric device for detecting a consumption condition of a liquid in said container body, said piezo-electric device being provided with a cavity connecting to said container body. Said container body is charged with a liquid by a liquid charging method including a step of reducing a pressure in said container body to a pressure lower than atmospheric pressure and a step of charging said container body with said liquid.
Preferably, said liquid is ink for an ink jet recording apparatus, and said liquid container can be mounted to said ink jet recording apparatus in a removable state.
Preferably, said liquid container has a lyophobic part therein which is lyophobic to said liquid in said liquid container.
Preferably, said piezo-electric device has a vibration area which is in contact with said liquid in said container body, said vibration area being lyophobic to said liquid.
Preferably, said lyophobic part includes an inner side of said cavity.
The piezo-electric device may have a substrate for mounting a piezo-electric material to the container body. In this case, the lyophobic part preferably includes the part of the substrate in contact with a liquid in the container body. The lyophobic part may include amounting structure for mounting the piezo-electric device to the container body. The lyophobic part may be the whole part of the liquid container in contact with a liquid in the container body. The contact angle between the lyophobic part and the liquid in the container body is preferably about 70 degrees or more.
In the liquid container of the present invention, at least the periphery of the lyophobic part may be lyophilic to a liquid in the container body. The contact angle between the lyophobic part and the liquid in the container body is preferably about 70 degrees or more and the contact angle between the lyophilic part and the liquid in the container body is preferably about 30 degrees or less.
The lyophobic part is preferably formed by covering it with a material lyophobic to a liquid in the container body. The lyophobic part may be covered with fluoride as a material lyophobic to a liquid. The lyophobic part may be formed from a material lyophobic to a liquid in the container body. The lyophobic part may be formed from polytetrafluoroethylene resin as a material lyophobic to a liquid. The lyophobic part may be formed by performing a roughening process for a predetermined material.
The piezo-electric device attached to the liquid container of the present invention preferably detects at least acoustic impedance of a medium in the container body and detects the consumption condition of the liquid on the basis of changes in the acoustic impedance. The piezoelectric device preferably has a vibration part and detects the consumption condition of the liquid on the basis of counter electromotive force generated by the residual vibration remaining in the vibration part.
According to the third aspect of the present invention, a method for manufacturing a liquid container comprises the steps of: preparing a liquid container having a container body for containing a liquid and a liquid feed port for feeding said liquid in said container body to an outside, and a piezo-electric device for detecting a consumption condition of said liquid in said container body, said piezo-electric device being provided with a cavity connecting to an inside of said container body; forming a lyophobic part in said piezo-electric device, said lyophobic part being lyophobic to said liquid in said container body; attaching said piezo-electric device to said liquid container; and charging said container body with said liquid using a liquid charging method, said liquid charging method comprising a step of reducing a pressure in said container body to a pressure lower than atmospheric pressure and a step of charging said container body with said liquid.
Preferably, said attaching step is executed after said forming step is executed.
Preferably, said forming step is executed after said attaching step is executed.
Preferably, said preparation step prepares an attaching structure for attaching said piezo-electric device to said liquid container together with said liquid container and said piezo-electric device. Said manufacturing method further comprises a step of mounting said piezo-electric device to said attaching structure. Said piezo-electric device is attached to said liquid container when said attaching structure is attached to said liquid container in said attaching step after said mounting step.
Preferably, said forming step is executed after said mounting step is executed.
Preferably, said forming step is executed after said mounting step and said attaching step are executed.
Preferably, said mounting step is executed after said forming step is executed.
The forming step preferably covers the lyophobic part with a material lyophobic to the liquid in the container body. For example, the lyophobic part may be immersed in a material lyophobic to the liquid in the container body beforehand so as to cover the lyophobic part with it. Further, the lyophobic part may be coated with a material lyophobic to the liquid in the container body so as to cover the lyophobic part with it. Further, the lyophobic part may be attached with a coating layer lyophobic to the liquid in the container body so as to cover the lyophobic part with it. Further, the lyophobic part may be deposited with a material lyophobic to the liquid in the container body so as to cover the lyophobic part with it. Further, the lyophobic part may be plated with a material lyophobic to the liquid in the container body so as to cover the lyophobic part with the material lyophobic to the liquid in the container body.
Further, the forming step may form a lyophobic part by irradiating ultraviolet rays on a predetermined material. Furthermore, the forming step may form a lyophobic part by performing a roughening process for a predetermined material.
In the drawings,
The present invention will be explained in detail hereunder using the embodiments thereof.
With respect to detection of the liquid condition in the liquid container using a concrete vibration phenomenon, several methods may be considered. For example, there is a method for generating an elastic wave inside the liquid container by an elastic wave generation means, receiving a reflected wave reflected by the liquid surface or the opposite wall, thereby detecting a medium and condition changes thereof in the liquid container. Separately from it, there is another method for detecting changes in the acoustic impedance from the vibration characteristics of a vibrating object. As a method using changes in the acoustic impedance, there are a method for vibrating the vibration part of an actuator which is a piezoelectric device having a piezo-electric element, thereafter, measuring counter electromotive force generated by the residual vibration remaining in the vibration part, thereby detecting the resonance frequency or the amplitude of counter electromotive force waveform and detecting changes in the acoustic impedance. Moreover, there is a method for measuring the impedance characteristics or admittance characteristics of a liquid by a measuring instrument, for example, an impedance analyzer of the transmission circuit and measuring changes in the current and voltage or changes in the current and voltage by the frequency when vibration is given to the liquid.
The present invention provides a method for charging a liquid container having a mounted piezo-electric device (actuator) used for a method for at least detecting changes in the acoustic impedance and detecting the consumption condition of a liquid in the liquid container with a liquid and the liquid container charged with the liquid by this method.
The ink jet recording apparatus has the ink inlets 182, a holder 184, and the recording head 186. Ink is jetted from the recording head 186 and the recording operation is executed. The ink inlets 182 have air feed ports 181 and ink introduction ports not shown in the drawing. The air feed ports 181 feed air to the ink cartridges 180. The ink inlets introduce ink from the ink cartridges 180 into the recording head 186. The ink cartridges 180 have air inlets 185 and ink feed ports 187. The air inlets 185 introduce air from the air feed ports 181 of the ink inlets 182. The ink feed ports 187 feed ink to the ink introduction ports of the ink inlets 182. When the ink cartridges 180 introduce air from the air inlets 185, the ink cartridges 180 prompt feed of ink to the ink jet recording apparatus. The holders 184 connect ink fed from the ink cartridges 180 via the ink inlets 182 to the head plates 186.
The actuator 106 has a substrate 178 having a circular opening 161 at approximate center of it, an oscillation plate 176 arranged on one of the faces (hereinafter, referred to as “surface”) of the substrate 178 so as to cover the opening 161, a piezoelectric layer arranged on the side of the surface of the oscillation plate 176, an upper portion electrode 164 and a lower portion electrode 166 sandwiching the piezoelectric layer 160 from the both sides, an upper portion electrode terminal 168 for electrically coupling to the upper portion electrode 164, a lower portion electrode terminal 170 for electrically coupling to the lower portion electrode 166, and an auxiliary electrode 172 provided and arranged between the upper portion electrode 164 and the upper portion electrode terminal 168 and electrically coupling both of these. The piezoelectric layer 160, the upper portion electrode 164 and the lower portion electrode 166 have a circular portion as a major portion, respectively. The respective circular portions of the piezoelectric layer 160, the upper portion electrode 164 and the lower portion electrode 166 forms the piezoelectric elements.
The oscillation plate 176 is formed so as to cover the opening 161 on the surface of the substrate 178. The cavity 162 is formed by the portion facing the opening 161 of the oscillation plate 176 and the opening 161 of the surface of the substrate 178. The face of the contrary side (hereinafter, referred to as “reverse face”) of a piezoelectric element of the substrate 178 faces the liquid container side, the cavity 162 is configured so that the cavity 162 contacts with a liquid. The oscillation plate 176 is mounted with respect to the substrate 178 in a fluid-tight manner so that even if a liquid enters within the cavity 162, the liquid does not leak to the surface side of the substrate 178.
The lower portion electrode 166 is located on the surface of the oscillation plate 176, that is to say, on the face of the contrary side of the liquid container, and it is mounted so that the center of the circular portion which is the major portion of the lower portion electrode 166 and the center of the opening 161 are approximately consistent with each other. It should be noted it is set so that an area of the circular portion of the lower portion electrode 166 is smaller than that of the opening 161. On the other hand, on the surface side of the lower portion electrode 166, the piezoelectric layer 160 is formed so that the center of its circular portion and the center of the opening 161 are approximately consistent with each other. It is set so that an area of the circular portion of the piezoelectric layer 160 is smaller than that of the opening 161 and larger than that of the circular portion of the lower portion electrode 166. On the other hand, on the surface side of the piezoelectric layer 160, the upper portion electrode 164 is formed so that the center of the circular portion which is the major portion of it and the center of the opening 161 are approximately consistent with each other. It is set so that an area of the circular portion of the upper portion electrode 164 is smaller than those of the circular portion of the opening 161 and the piezoelectric layer 160 and larger than that of the circular portion of the lower portion electrode 166.
Therefore, the major portion of the piezoelectric layer 160 has a structure so that the major portion of it is sandwiched from the front face side and back face side by the major portion of the upper portion electrode 164 and the major portion of the lower portion electrode 166, respectively, and the piezoelectric layer 160 can be effectively deformed and driven. The circular portions which are the major portions of the piezoelectric layer 160, the upper portion electrode 164 and the lower portion electrode 166, respectively, form piezoelectric elements in the actuator 106. As described above, the piezoelectric element contacts with the oscillation plate 176. Moreover, the largest area is the area of the opening 161 among the circular portion of the upper portion electrode 164, the circular portion of the piezoelectric layer 160, the circular portion of the lower portion electrode 166 and the opening 161. Owing to this structure, the actually oscillating region out of the oscillation plate 176 is determined by the opening 161. Moreover, since the circular portion of the upper portion electrode 164, the piezoelectric layer 160 and the circular portion of the lower portion electrode 166 are smaller than that of the opening 161, the oscillation plate 176 is more easily oscillating. Moreover, when comparing the circular portion of the upper portion electrode 164 and the circular portion of the lower portion electrode 166 both connecting with the piezoelectric layer 160, the circular portion of the lower portion electrode 166 is smaller. Therefore, the circular portion of the lower portion electrode 166 determines the portion of the piezoelectric layer 160 where the piezoelectric effect is generated. The upper portion electrode terminal 168 is formed on the front face of the oscillation plate 176 so that it electrically connects with the upper portion electrode 164 via the auxiliary electrode 72. On the other hand, the lower portion electrode terminal 170 is formed on the front face side of the oscillation plate 176 so that it electrically connects with the lower portion electrode 166.
It should be noted that the piezoelectric element and the oscillating region directly facing the piezoelectric element out of the oscillating plate 176 are the oscillating section for actually oscillating in the actuator 106. Moreover, it is preferable that members contained in the actuator 106 is integrally formed by burning each other. The treatment of the actuator 106 becomes easier by integrally forming the actuator 106. Furthermore, the oscillating property is enhanced by enhancing the strength of the substrate 178. Specifically, by enhancing the strength of the substrate 178, only the oscillating section of the actuator 106 vibrates and portions except for the oscillating section do not vibrate. Moreover, the purpose for making the portions except for the oscillating section of the actuator 106 not vibrate can be achieved by making the piezoelectric element of the actuator 106 thinner and smaller and the oscillation plate 176 thinner in the contrast to by enhancing the strength of the substrate 178.
The upper portion electrode 164 is formed on the front face side of the piezoelectric layer 160, on the way of connecting with the upper portion electrode terminal 168. It is necessary to have a step difference equivalent to the sum of the thickness of the piezoelectric layer 160 and the thickness of the lower portion electrode 166. It is difficult to form this step difference only by the upper portion electrode 164, if it is possible, the connection state between the upper portion electrode 164 and the upper portion electrode terminal 168 becomes fragile, there may be a risk to be cut. Therefore, the upper portion electrode 164 and the upper portion electrode terminal 168 are connected by employing the auxiliary electrode 172 as an auxiliary member. By dealing with it in such a manner, it becomes a structure that the piezoelectric layer 160 as well as the upper portion electrode 164 is supported by the auxiliary electrode 172, the desired mechanical strength can be obtained, and the connection between the upper portion electrode 164 and the upper portion electrode terminal 168 is capable of being secured.
As a material for the piezoelectric layer 160, it is preferable to employ lead zirconate titanate (PZT), lead lanthanum zirconate titanate (PLZT) or lead less piezoelectric film in which lead is not used, and as a material for the substrate 178, it is preferable to employ zirconia or alumina. Moreover, for the oscillation plate 176, it is preferable to employ the same material with the substrate 178. For the upper portion electrode 164, the lower portion electrode 166, the upper portion electrode terminal 168 and the lower portion electrode terminal 170, a material having electrical conductivity, for example, a metal such as gold, silver, copper, platinum, aluminum, nickel and the like can be employed.
The actuator 106 constituted as described above can be applied to a container for containing a liquid. For example, the actuator can be mounted on an ink cartridge and an ink tank, or a container containing a washing solvent for solving a recording head and the like.
The actuator 106 shown in
When the liquid container is the ink cartridge 180 and the actuator 106 shown in
To precisely detect the consumption condition of ink in the ink cartridge 180 by the actuator 106, in the state before the ink cartridge 180 is used first or before it is reused, it is necessary to charge the ink cartridge 180 with ink so that ink is charged in the cavity 162 of the actuator 106. The reason for that the cavity 162 is not charged with ink will be explained below.
On the other hand, when the diameter of the cavity 162 is small, capillary force is acted on the narrow gap formed by the cavity 162. As a result, the air pressure remaining in the cavity 162 is balanced with the capillary force and a phenomenon that the cavity 162 is not full of ink appears. When it is intended to apply pressure to ink K and press ink K into the cavity 162 when the air pressure remaining in the cavity 162 is balanced with the capillary force, as shown in
In this embodiment, at the time of removing residual air bubbles from the cavity 162 and charging the cavity 162 with ink, air is sucked and removed from the ink cartridge 180 and the ink cartridge 180 is decompressed. When the ink cartridge 180 is decompressed, air bubbles can be removed easily from the cavity 162 and the cavity 162 can be charged with ink as shown in
When the end of the module body 100 is inserted into the container body 1, ink in the container body 1 is in contact with the actuator 106 via a through hole 112 of a plate 110. The resonance frequency of the residual vibration of the actuator 106 varies with whether the circumference of the vibration part of the actuator 106 is a liquid or air, so that the consumption condition of ink can be detected using the module body 100.
As shown in
To charge the ink cartridge 180 with ink, the ink cartridge 180 is installed in the vacuum container 14 first. Next, the air inlet 185 of the ink cartridge 180 is closed and air is sucked and removed from the vacuum container 14 by the vacuum pump 10 so as to decompress it. Then, air in the ink cartridge 180 is sucked and removed from the ink feed port 187 into the vacuum container 14, so that the ink cartridge 180 is decompressed. At that time, air in the cavity 162 of the actuator 106 mounted to the ink cartridge 180 are removed. Next, the ink feed port 187 of the ink cartridge 180 is closed, and the ink feed tube 24 connected to the ink tank 12 is connected to the air inlet 185 of the ink cartridge 180, and ink K is fed from the ink tank 12 to the ink cartridge 180. When connecting the ink feed tube 24 to the ink cartridge 180, a hollow needle may be installed at the end of the ink feed tube 24 and pierced into the air inlet 185. Since the ink cartridge 180 is decompressed, no air bubbles remain in the cavity 162. Therefore, when the ink cartridge 180 is charged with ink, the cavity 162 can be easily charged with ink K. When the charging of the ink cartridge 180 with ink is finished, the air inlet 185 of the ink cartridge 180 is closed, and the ink cartridge 180 is removed from the vacuum container 14, and the charging of ink is finished. Inversely to the method aforementioned, it is possible to close the ink feed port 187 first, suck and remove air from the air inlet 185 so as to decompress, and charge the ink cartridge 180 with ink via the ink feed port 187. Furthermore, both suction and removal of air and charging of ink can be executed by either of the air inlet 185 and the ink feed port 187.
At the time of ending of ink charging into the ink cartridge 180, a predetermined amount of ink may be sucked and ejected via the ink feed port 187 of the ink cartridge 180. When a predetermined amount of ink is sucked at the time of ending of ink charging, air bubbles dissolved in ink at the time of ink charging can be sucked and removed together with ink. Moreover, air bubbles which may remain in the ink feed port 187 can be sucked out at a stroke. By removing air bubbles dissolved in ink, deterioration of the print quality due to entry of air bubbles dissolved in ink into the recording head and malfunctions due to adhering of air bubbles to the actuator 106 can be prevented. The time of ending of ink charging may be the point of time just before the actual ending of ink charging, or the point of time simultaneously with the actual ending of ink charging, or the point of time immediately after the actual ending of ink charging.
Furthermore, at the time of decompression of the ink cartridge 180, it is preferable to decompress the ink cartridge 180 while keeping it warm. When the ink cartridge 180 is kept warm at the time of decompression like this, the viscosity of ink to be charged at the time of ink charging is lowered and the ink cartridge 180 is easily charged with ink. Further, at the time of charging the ink cartridge 180 with ink, the ink cartridge 180 may be kept warm or the ink to be charged may be kept warm.
To charge the ink cartridge 180 with ink, the air inlet 185 is closed first and an air suction tube 28 connected to the vacuum pump 16 is connected to the ink feed port 187 of the ink cartridge 180. A hollow needle is installed at the end of the air suction tube 28 and pierced into the ink feed port 187, thus the air suction tube 28 may be connected to the ink cartridge 180.
Next, the vacuum pump 16 is driven and air is sucked and removed from the ink cartridge 180 so as to decompress it. Then, air existing in the cavity 162 of the actuator 106 mounted to the ink cartridge 180 is also removed.
Next, the ink feed port 187 is closed, and an ink feed tube 26 connected to the ink tank 18 is connected to the air inlet 185 of the ink cartridge 180, and ink is fed to the ink cartridge 180 from the ink tank 18. A hollow needle is installed at the end of the ink feed tube 26 and pierced into the air inlet 185, thus the ink feed tube 26 may be connected to the ink cartridge 180. Since the ink cartridge 180 is decompressed, no air remains in the cavity 162. Therefore, when the ink cartridge 180 is charged with ink, the cavity 162 can be easily charged with ink.
When the charging of the ink cartridge 180 with ink is finished, the air inlet 185 and the ink feed port 187 are closed and the charging of ink is finished. Inversely to the method aforementioned, it is possible to suck and remove air from the air inlet 185 so as to decompress and charge the ink cartridge 180 with ink via the ink feed port 187. Furthermore, both suction and removal of air and charging of ink can be executed by either of the air inlet 185 and the ink feed port 187.
At the time of ending of ink charging into the ink cartridge 180, a predetermined amount of ink may be sucked and ejected from the ink feed port 187 of the ink cartridge 180. When a predetermined amount of ink is sucked at the time of ending of ink charging, air bubbles dissolved in ink at the time of ink charging can be sucked and removed together with ink. Moreover, air bubbles which may remain in the ink feed port 187 can be sucked out at a stroke. By removing air bubbles dissolved in ink, deterioration of the print quality due to entry of air bubbles dissolved in ink into the recording head and malfunctions due to adhering of air bubbles to the actuator 106 can be prevented. The time of ending of ink charging may be the point of time just before the actual ending of ink charging, or the point of time simultaneously with the actual ending of ink charging, or the point of time immediately after the actual ending of ink charging.
Further, when air is sucked and removed from the ink cartridge 180 so as to decompress it, the ink cartridge 180 may be charged with ink at the same time. In this case, it is desirable to connect the ink feed tube 26 connected to the ink tank 18 to the air inlet 185 before hand before decompressing the ink cartridge 180 and feed ink to the ink cartridge from the ink tank 18 simultaneously with decompressing the ink cartridge 180. By this method, the time required to charge the ink cartridge 180 with ink is shortened.
In this case, it is preferable that the flow rate of air sucked from the ink cartridge 180 is larger than the flow rate of ink charged in the ink cartridge 180. Further, at the time of decompressing the ink cartridge 180, it is preferable to decompress the ink cartridge 180 while keeping it warm. When the ink cartridge 180 is kept warm like this at the time of decompression, the viscosity of ink to be charged at the time of ink charging is lowered and the ink cartridge 180 can be easily charged with ink. Further, at the time of charging the ink cartridge 180 with ink, the ink cartridge 180 may be kept warm or the ink to be charged may be kept warm.
The procedure of feeding ink via the air inlet 185 and decompressing via the ink feed port 187 is explained above. However, it is possible to feed ink via the ink feed port 187 and decompress via the air inlet 185. Further, to decompress the ink cartridge 180, an exclusive decompression opening may be formed in the ink cartridge 180.
The ink charging device and ink charging method aforementioned may be used for a used ink cartridge 180. Recharging the used ink cartridge with ink is more difficult than charging a new ink cartridge with ink. In the used ink cartridge, ink is adhered to the part in the neighborhood of the ink feed port 187 or in the cavity 162 of the actuator 106 where fine slits and holes exist while in use and air may be shut in the slits and holes. When the ink in the ink cartridge is exhausted in this state and the ink cartridge is withdrawn, at the time of recharging the ink cartridge with ink, it is difficult to charge the slits and holes, where ink is adhered and air is shut in by the ordinary charging method, with ink. Here, when the ink charging device and the ink charging method shown in FIGS. 5 to 8 are used, by decompressing the ink cartridge 180, ink shutting air in the slits and holes and air shut in the slits and holes by ink are sucked and removed and the slits and holes can be easily charged with ink.
Since the ink is drained from the ink feed port 187 and the air enters from the air inlet 185, the ink is consumed from the containing chamber 213 on the side of the ink feed port 187 to the containing chamber 213 located backward of the ink cartridge 180G. For example, the ink of the containing chamber 213 nearest from the ink feed port 187 is consumed, and during the ink liquid level of the containing chamber 213 nearest from the ink feed port 187 is lowered, the ink is filled within the other containing chambers 213. When the ink of the containing chamber 213 nearest from the ink feed port 187 is completely consumed, the air invades into the containing chamber 213 secondly numbered from the ink feed port 187, the ink within the second containing chamber 213 begins to be consumed, and the ink liquid level of the second containing chamber 213 begins to be lowered. At this point in time, in the containing chambers after the containing chamber 213 thirdly numbered from the ink feed port 187, the ink is filled. In this way, the ink is consumed in turn from the containing chamber 213 nearest from the ink feed port 187 to the containing chamber 213 which is far from the ink feed port 187.
In this way, since the actuators 106 are arranged on the upper surface 194c of the ink container 194 at the intervals per each containing chamber 213, the actuators 106 can detect the reduction of the ink volume step by step. Furthermore, the volume of the containing chamber 213 is gradually smaller from the volume of the containing chamber on the side of the ink feed port 187 to the volume of the backward of the containing chamber 213, a time interval from the point in time at which the actuator 106 detects the reduction of the ink volume to the next point in time at which the actuator 106 detects the reduction of the ink volume is gradually small, and the more it is close to the ink end, the more frequently it can detect.
In an ink cartridge 180G shown in
In this case, when the ink charging device and the ink charging method shown in FIGS. 5 to 8 are used, the containing chamber 213 and the cavity 162 of the actuator 106 mounted to the containing chamber 213 can be easily charged with ink. Since the containing chamber 213 farthest away from the ink feed port 187 is to be charged with ink, it is possible to form an opening in the upper part of the containing chamber 213 farthest away from the ink feed port 187, charge ink from the opening, and then charge ink in the containing chamber 213 neighboring to the ink feed port 187. Further, it is possible to charge the containing chamber 213 neighboring to the ink feed port first and then the containing chamber 213 farther away from the ink feed port with ink.
An ink cartridge 180H of
The actuator 106 is mounted on the upper surface 194c of the containing chamber 213b. Furthermore, in the containing chamber 213b, a buffer 214 which is a channel for catching bubbles entering at the time of manufacturing the ink cartridge 180H is formed. In
In an ink cartridge 180H shown in
In
Moreover, the ink can be consumed to the last by providing the actuator 106 on the upper surface 194c of the containing chamber 213b and by correcting an ink volume from the point in time when the ink near end is detected to the point in time when it is in a complete ink end state. Furthermore, a consumable ink volume after the ink near end is detected can be changed by adjusting the volume of the containing chamber 213b by changing the lengths and intervals of the partition walls 212 and the like.
In an ink cartridge 180I shown in
Since the capillary attraction of the porous member 216B whose pore size is small is larger than that of the porous member 216A whose pore size is large, the ink within the containing chamber 213b congregates to the porous member 216B of the lower side, and held. Therefore, once the air arrives at the actuator 106 and the absence of the ink is detected, there is no chance that the ink arrives at the actuator again and the presence of the ink is detected. Furthermore, since the ink is absorbed by the porous member 216B of the far side from the actuator 106, the ink nearby the actuator 106 is drained well, and a changing value of the acoustic impedance when the presence or absence of the ink is detected. Moreover, the ink can be consumed to the last by providing the actuator 106 on the upper surface of the containing chamber 213b and by correcting an ink volume from the point in time when the ink near end is detected to the point in time when the ink is in a complete ink end state. Furthermore, a consumable ink volume after the ink near end is detected can be changed by adjusting the volume of the containing chamber 213b by changing the lengths and intervals of the partition walls 212 and the like.
In an ink cartridge 180J shown in
Since the pore size of the lower portion of the porous member 216 is compressed and be small, the ink is congregated to the lower portion of the porous member 216 and held. Since the ink is absorbed by the porous member 216B of the far side from the actuator 106, the ink nearby the actuator 106 is drained well, and a changing value of the acoustic impedance when the presence or absence of the ink is detected. Therefore, it can be prevented that the ink runs over the actuator 106 mounted on the upper surface of the ink cartridge 180K by the ink swinging and the actuator 106 falsely detects the presence of the ink although there is no ink under normal state.
On the other hand, in an ink cartridge 180L of
Since the pore size of the porous member of the lower portion is compressed and be small, the ink is congregated to the lower portion of the porous member 216 and held. Since the ink is absorbed by the porous member 216B of the far side from the actuator 106, the ink nearby the actuator 106 is drained well, and a changing value of the acoustic impedance when the presence or absence of the ink is detected. Therefore, it can be prevented that the ink runs over the actuator 106 mounted on the upper surface of the ink cartridge 180K by the ink swinging and the actuator 106 falsely detects the presence of the ink although there is no ink under normal state.
In ink cartridges 180K and 180L shown in
A first containing chamber 225a is formed on the back side of the first partition wall 222, when it is seen from the ink feed port 230, by the first partition wall 222. On the other hand, a second containing chamber 225b is formed on the front side of the second partition wall 224, when it is seen from the ink feed port 230, by the second partition wall 224. The volume of the first containing chamber 225a is larger than the volume of the second containing chamber 225b. The capillary pass 227 is formed by spacing the first partition wall 222 and the second partition wall 224 with each other so that the capillary phenomenon occurs between them. Therefore, the ink of the first containing chamber 225a is congregated to the capillary pass 227 by capillary attraction of the capillary pass 227. Therefore, the entrapment of gas and a bubble in the second containing chamber 225b can be prevented. Moreover, the ink liquid level within the second containing chamber 225b can be gradually and stably lowered. Since the first containing chamber 225a is formed on the back side of the second containing chamber 225b when it is seen from the ink feed port 230, after the ink of the first containing chamber 225a is consumed, the ink of the second containing chamber 225b is consumed.
The actuator 106 is mounted on the side wall of the ink feed port 230 side of the ink cartridge 220A, that is to say, on the side wall of the ink feed port 230 side of the second containing chamber 225b. The actuator 106 detects an ink consuming state within the second containing chamber 225b. An ink remaining volume at the point in time nearer to the ink end can be stably detected by mounting the actuator 106 on the side wall of the second containing chamber 225b. Furthermore, an ink remaining volume at which point in time is made as the ink end can be freely set by changing the height at which the actuator 106 is mounted on the side wall of the second containing chamber 225b. Since the actuator 106 is not influenced by the ink laterally swinging of the ink cartridge 220A by supplying the ink from the first containing chamber 225a to the second containing chamber 225b through the capillary pass 227, the actuator 106 can securely measure the ink remaining volume. Furthermore, since the capillary pass 227 holds the ink, it is prevented that the ink is refluxed from the second containing chamber 225b to the first containing chamber 225a.
A check valve 228 is provided on the upper surface of the ink cartridge 220A. When the ink cartridge 220A is laterally swung, it can be prevented that the ink leaks to the external of the ink cartridge 220A by the check valve 228. Furthermore, the evaporation of the ink from the ink cartridge 220A can be prevented by setting the check valve 228 on the upper surface of the ink cartridge 220A. When the ink within the ink cartridge 220A is consumed and negative pressure within the ink cartridge 220A exceeds over the pressure of the check valve 228, the check valve 228 is opened, absorbs the air into the ink cartridge 220A, and subsequently it is closed and maintains the pressure within the ink cartridge 220A at a certain level.
In an ink cartridge 220B of
In an ink cartridge 220A, when ink is fed from a check valve 228, a second containing chamber 225b with an actuator 106 mounted may not be charged with ink fully due to a capillary path 227. Further, even if ink is charged from an ink feed port 230, it is difficult to charge a first containing chamber 225a with ink fully due to the capillary force of the capillary path 227. Further, it is more difficult to charge the cavity 162 of the actuator 106 mounted to the containing chamber 225b with ink without leaving air bubbles there. In this case, when the ink charging device and the ink charging method shown in FIGS. 5 to 8 are used, the containing chambers 225a and 225b and the cavity 162 of the actuator 106 mounted to the containing chamber 225b can be easily charged with ink. For example, when the ink charging device shown in
In an ink cartridge 220B, when ink is fed from an opening 250 formed in the upper part of the ink feed chamber 225a, the second containing chamber 225b with the actuator 106 mounted may not be charged with ink fully due to a porous member 242 and the capillary path 227. Further, even if ink is charged from the ink feed port 230, it is difficult to charge the first containing chamber 225a with ink fully due to the porous member 242 and the capillary force of the capillary path 227. Further, it is more difficult to charge the cavity 162 of the actuator 106 mounted to the containing chamber 225b with ink without leaving air bubbles. In this case, when the ink charging device and the ink charging method shown in FIGS. 5 to 8 are used, the containing chambers 225a and 225b and the cavity 162 of the actuator 106 mounted to the containing chamber 225b can be easily charged with ink. For example, when the ink charging device shown in
The module body 100 of the present embodiment has a liquid container mounting portion 101 for mounting the actuator 106 on the container body 1. The liquid container mounting portion 101 is configured such that a circular cylinder portion 116 containing the actuator 106 for oscillating by a drive signal is mounted on the base 102 whose plane is approximately rectangular. Since it is configured so that the actuator 106 of the module body 100 cannot be contacted from the external when the module body 100 is equipped on the ink cartridge, the actuator 106 can be protected from contacting it from the external. It should be noted that an edge of tip side of the circular cylinder portion 116 is formed in a round shape, and it is easily interfitted when it is equipped in the hole formed on the ink cartridge.
In the container body 1 for containing ink, the ink feed port 2 joined with the ink feed needle of the recording apparatus is provided. Outside the bottom 1a of the container body 1, the actuator 106 is attached so as to come in contact with the internal ink via the through hole 1c. In order that the medium in contact with the actuator 106 may change from ink to gas in the stage that ink K is almost consumed, that is, at the point of time of near end of ink, the actuator 106 is installed in a position slightly above the ink feed port 2. A means for generating vibration may be installed independently and the actuator 106 may be used just as a detection means.
A carriage 30 moving back and forth in the width direction of a recording paper has a sub-tank unit 33 and the recording head 31 is installed on the bottom of the sub-tank unit 33. The ink feed needle 32 is installed on the ink cartridge loading side of the sub-tank unit 33.
The aforementioned ink cartridge of this embodiment has a lyophobic part which is lyophobic to a liquid in the container body. This respect will be explained hereunder.
On the other hand, in
With respect to the lyophobic part, the material itself may be lyophobic. Even if the material itself is not lyophobic, the part may be made lyophobic by covering it with a lyophobic material. A highly lyophobic material may be said to be a material having high surface tension of liquid in the relationship with liquid.
Since there is no lyophobic part in the comparison example shown in
On the other hand, in this embodiment shown in
The circumference of the vibration area 176a may be included in the lyophobic part. For example, an inner side 161a of the cavity 162 may be included in the lyophobic part. Furthermore, a substrate back 178a of a substrate 178 directed inward the container body 1 may be included in the lyophobic part as inkphobic. Further, not only the actuator 106 but also the through hole 1c of the container body 1 and the inner wall surface 1d of the container body 1 are made inkphobic, thus the actuator 106 and the container body 1 may be included in the lyophobic part. When the circumference of the vibration area 176a is made lyophobic like this, ink adhered by mistake will not stay in the cavity 162 and the through hole 1c. Thereby, the actuator 106 will not detect by mistake that there is ink though there is no ink.
Furthermore, in addition to the actuator 106, the container body 1, and the ink feed port 2, all the parts in contact with ink in the ink cartridge may be made inkphobic. In such a case, all the parts in contact with ink in the ink cartridge are a lyophobic part.
When the whole part in the ink cartridge is set as a lyophobic part, ink will not stay in the container body 1 and the actuator 106. Therefore, all the ink in the ink cartridge can be used effectively.
When an ink cartridge having a lyophobic part like this is used, at the time of recharging of ink, no ink remains in the ink cartridge, so that new ink can be recharged without mixing old ink that the quality is reduced due contact with air.
Furthermore, since no ink remains in the ink cartridge, at the time of recycling of the ink cartridge, there is no need to internally clean the container body 1 or very simple cleaning is sufficient. For example, when an empty ink cartridge is to be cleaned, it may be lightly cleaned by a cleaning liquid having higher affinity with the inner wall of the ink cartridge and the actuator 106 than that of ink contained in the container body 1. More in detail, when the ink cartridge uses aqueous ink, it may be lightly cleaned by an oily cleaning liquid having higher affinity with the inside of the ink cartridge. Therefore, the cleaning time at the time of recycling of the ink cartridge can be shortened. Therefore, the cost of recycling of the ink cartridge is reduced.
There is no special restriction on the selection of a cleaning liquid as long as the cleaning liquid is more lyophilic than ink. A cleaning liquid which is more lyophobic than ink can be more accustomed to the inner wall of the ink cartridge and the actuator 106. Therefore, impurities remaining in the ink cartridge can be washed away simply.
To leave no ink in the cavity 162, it is possible to make the cavity 162 internally inkphobic and make the substrate back 178a around the cavity 162 lyophilic (inkphilic).
The lyophilic nature means the affinity with an optional liquid and includes hydrophilic nature, oilphilic nature, ultra-hydrophilic nature, and ultra-oilphilic nature. The contact angle of a liquid to the lyophilic part is about 30 degrees or less and it is preferable that the contact angle is closer to 0 degrees.
Furthermore, to leave no ink in the through hole 1c, it is possible to make the inside of the cavity 162, the substrate back 178a, and the inner wall of the through hole 1c inkphobic and make the inner side 1d of the circumference of the through hole 1c inkphilic. Thereby, ink in the cavity 162 and the through hole 1c hardly remains in the cavity 162 and the through hole 1c and easily flows under the container body 1 by passing the substrate back 178a and the inner side 1d. Even if ink is adhered to the actuator 106 and its circumference, ink flows down without staying.
When a liquid in the liquid container does not remain in the cavity 162, as compared with a case that ink in the cavity 162 or the through hole 1c remains, at least changes in the acoustic impedance which are detected by the actuator 106 are remarkable. Therefore, the actuator 106 can detect the existence of ink in the ink cartridge more remarkably and precisely.
Meanwhile, when the cavity 162 or the through hole 1c is internally made inkphobic, thus the ink cartridge is to be charged with ink, it is difficult to charge the cavity 162 or the through hole 1c with ink.
However, according to this embodiment, as mentioned above, when the container body 1 is to be charged with ink at the time of manufacturing of an ink cartridge or when the ink cartridge is to be reused, the ink cartridge is set to negative pressure by evacuation and the ink cartridge is charged or recharged with ink using the negative pressure. As a result, although the cavity 162 and the through hole 1c are inkphobic, they are able to be filled with ink.
Next, a lyophobic material will be explained. A lyophobic material for forming a lyophobic part is not limited particularly. Therefore, an optional lyophobic material can be used. As a strongly lyophobic material, a material including fluorine resin (fluoroalkyl compound) and silicone resin are general. For example, fluoroolefin and fluorine resin having the perfluoro group are stable thermally and chemically and superior in water resistance, chemical resistance, solvent resistance, releasability, abrasion resistance, and water repellency. Silicone resin is superior in water repellency and oil repellency. However, the composition of paint is often structured by combination with another resin such as acrylic resin, epoxy resin, or urethane resin or modification so as to keep the hardness.
More in detail, the materials to be used are a lacquer type fluorine resin material, a fluorine ultraviolet-curing material, a thermoset fluorine resin material, a fluorine silane coupling agent, an epoxy resin composition with fluorine resin particles dispersed, a fluorine epoxy resin composition, fluorine diol, and polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
The materials to be used are also a silane coupling agent, a silicone surface-active agent, silicone rubber, petrolatum, hydroxyl group silicon, chemicals using two-component system of silicon and acrylic resin, ethyl silicate, N-butyl silicate, N-propyl silicate, chlorosilane, alkoxysilane, and silazine.
Furthermore, the materials to be used may be chemicals using epoxy resin, cationic polymerization catalyst, digrime, PP, PE, PA, PET, PBT, PSF, PES, PEEK, PEI, OPP, PVC, maleic petroleum resin alkali salt, paraffin wax, and photocatalyst.
A method for covering the surface of a predetermined material with a lyophobic material is not particularly limited. Therefore, an optional method for covering a lyophobic material can be used. As a method for covering a lyophobic material, for example, there are plating, coating, film adhesion, and deposition available. A lyophobic material may be coated using any other known optional arts. For example, in the method by coating, a lyophobic material may be coated by spin coat of dropping a lyophobic liquid before or during rotation of a lyophobic part and coating by rotating the lyophobic part, or dip coat of immersing and coating the lyophobic part in a lyophobic liquid, or roll coat of coating a lyophobic liquid on a lyophilic part by rolling. Further, a lyophilic liquid may be coated on a lyophobic part just by a brush. Further, a lyophobic part may be formed by adhering a coating layer composed of a lyophobic material at a predetermined part. Further, as a method by deposition, there are Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD), plasma CVD, sputtering, and vacuum vapor deposition available.
The degree of roughness of the surface of a material may affect the water repellency. For example, when a material having a contact angle of 90 degrees or more is subjected to the roughening process, the lyophobic property is improved.
Further, for example, when the material is a lyophobic material having a fractal structure, if the degree of roughness of the surface is increased, the surface becomes super water repellent or super oil repellent. Therefore, a lyophobic part may be formed by performing the roughening process for the surface of a lyophobic material having a fractal structure. However, if a material becomes lyophobic by the roughening process, it is not limited to a material having a fractal structure.
As a manufacturing method for an ink cartridge having a lyophobic part in this embodiment, the following methods may be cited.
The first method installs the actuator 106 shown in
By this method, a lyophobic part can be formed only on the actuator 106. Further, since the lyophobic part is formed before the actuator 106 is attached to the module body 100, only the actuator 106 should be handled so as to form a lyophobic part. Therefore, the manufacturing equipment for ink cartridges can be made comparatively small. By doing this, the cost for manufacturing the same ink cartridges can be reduced.
The second method mounts the actuator 106 shown in
By this method, the part of the module body 100 around the actuator 106 is subjected to the process of making the same lyophobic simultaneously with the inside of the cavity 162, thus the inside of the cavity 162 and the module body 100 around it can be made lyophobic.
The third method mounts the actuator 106 shown in
By this method, the actuator 106, the module body 100, and the inside of the ink cartridge are subjected to the process of making them lyophobic at the same time, thus the inside of the cavity 162, the module body 100 around it, and moreover the inside of the ink cartridge can be made lyophobic.
With respect to the module body 100, the part in contact with ink may be made lyophobic.
The present invention is explained above using the embodiments. However, the technical scope of the present invention is not limited to the scope described in the embodiments aforementioned. Various changes and improvements can be added to the embodiments aforementioned. The text described in the claims of the patent shows that such changes and improvements are included in the scope of the present invention.
According to the present invention, a liquid container can be charged with a liquid without leaving air bubbles inside the liquid container having a piezo-electric device by which the consumption condition of liquid can be detected precisely and no complicated seal structure is needed.
Further, even when a used liquid container is to be reused, a liquid can be recharged without leaving air bubbles inside the used liquid container.
Furthermore, even when a liquid container internally having a lyophobic part is to be used, a liquid can be charged without leaving air bubbles inside the liquid container.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2000-179906 | Jun 2000 | JP | national |
2000-229434 | Jul 2000 | JP | national |
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/881,662 filed Jun. 15, 2001. The entire disclosure of the prior application, application Ser. No. 09/881,662 is considered part of the disclosure of the accompanying continuation application and is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09881662 | Jun 2001 | US |
Child | 11590834 | Nov 2006 | US |