This application claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-124143 filed on May 31, 2012, the disclosure of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a liquid container for containing a liquid, the liquid container being mounted onto a liquid ejection apparatus for ejecting a liquid.
A liquid ejection apparatus, such as a print apparatus, is loaded with a liquid container containing a liquid in the interior, as a supply source of the liquid. The liquid container is loaded into the liquid ejection apparatus so as to be detachable therefrom, and when there is no longer any liquid in the interior, the liquid container can be replaced with a new liquid container.
Techniques for determining whether or not there is liquid inside a container by using a detection element have been proposed, with the purpose of informing a user of the timing for replacing the liquid container. In, for example, a technique disclosed in Japanese Laid-open Patent Application No. 2003-260804, a prism serving as a detection element is installed at a bottom surface of a detection chamber within a liquid container; light is incident on the prism from a light-emitting element, and the reflected light is detected with a light-receiving element. In a state where the surface of the prism is not exposed from the liquid (a state where liquid still remains within the liquid container), the light does not return, and thus light is not detected at the light-receiving element, but when the prism is exposed from the liquid, then the light reflected by the prism is detected at the light-reflecting element. For this reason, depending on whether or not light is detected at the light-receiving element, it is possible to determine whether or not there is liquid inside the liquid container.
However, in the conventional liquid container described above, in some instances liquid has remained in the interior of the detection chamber, and as a consequence thereof, a problem has emerged in that in some cases it is no longer possible to exhaust the liquid inside the liquid container. Such a problem has the potential to arise not only with a liquid container where an optical detection element, such as a prism, is used, but also similarly in a liquid container where an electrical detection element, such as a piezoelectric element, is used, or where a physical detection element, such as a float, is used.
The present invention has been contrived in order to resolve the above-described problems of the prior art, and an objective thereof is to provide a technique for making it possible to curb the lingering of ink within a detection chamber in a liquid container provided with a detection element that is utilized in order to detect whether or not there is liquid in the interior.
In order to solve the problems described above, at least in part, a liquid container according to one aspect adopts the following configuration. Namely, a liquid container provided with a liquid drain port for supplying a liquid to a liquid ejection apparatus is characterized in being provided with: the liquid drain port, which supplies the liquid to the liquid ejection apparatus; a detection chamber having a bottom surface as well as a first side wall surface erected from the bottom surface, the detection chamber being provided within the liquid container; a detection element that is utilized in order to detect whether or not there is liquid in the interior, the detection element being provided to the detection chamber; and a suction port provided to the first side wall surface of the detection chamber; the liquid inside the detection chamber being fed to the liquid drain port via the suction port, and a projecting part that surrounds at least a part of the suction port being provided on the first side wall surface.
In the liquid container according to this aspect, the liquid level inside the detection chamber falls in association with the suction of the liquid inside the detection chamber by the liquid ejection apparatus, but at the portion where the suction port is, the liquid attaches to the projecting part provided so as to surround a part thereof, and therefore a state where the suction port is covered with the liquid is maintained. As such, the liquid can be suctioned until the liquid level reaches the bottom surface of the detection chamber. As a result, it becomes possible to curb lingering of the liquid inside the detection chamber.
In the liquid container of the aspect described above, preferably, the suction port is provided in the vicinity of a corner that is constituted of the bottom surface and the first side wall surface of the detection chamber. Particularly preferably, the detection chamber has a second side wall surface that is erected from the bottom surface and is adjacent to the first side wall surface, and the suction port is provided to the vicinity of a corner that is constituted of the bottom surface, the first side wall surface, and the second side wall surface of the detection chamber.
The corner constituted of the side wall surface(s) and the bottom surface is more prone to gather the liquid. The corner constituted of the two side wall surfaces and the bottom wall surface is particularly prone to gather the liquid. For this reason, in having the suction port be provided to such a location/such locations, the suction port is more readily maintained in a state of being covered with the liquid. As a result, due to the fact that the liquid is suctioned from the suction port, it becomes possible to reliably suppress lingering of the liquid inside the detection chamber.
In the liquid container of the aspect described above, the projecting part may be provided in a state where one side is in contact with the second side wall surface.
In so doing, not only will the liquid broaden running along the lower surface of the projecting part from the first side wall surface, but also the liquid will broaden running along the lower surface of the projecting part from the second side wall surface, and thus the suction port is more readily maintained in a state of being covered with the liquid. As a result, due to the fact that the liquid is suctioned from the suction port, it becomes possible to reliably suppress lingering of the liquid inside the detection chamber.
In the liquid container of the aspect described above, a gap may be formed between a distal end of the projecting part, which is provided projecting from the first side wall surface, and a third side wall surface, which is provided so as to face the first side wall surface within the detection chamber. In so doing, the liquid can also be oriented toward the suction port from above the projecting part, via the gap, and thus it becomes possible for the liquid to be more readily suctioned from the suction port.
In the liquid container of the aspect described above, the suction port may be formed in a circular shape, and the projecting part may be formed in a circular tubular shape of the same inner diameter as that of the suction port, this shape being open on a side surface of a side not in contact with the second side wall surface. In so doing, the suction port and the projecting part can be integrally formed, and thus it is easier to form the suction port and the projecting part.
In the liquid container of the aspect described above, an opening portion of the projecting part may be formed so that the height from the bottom surface of the detection chamber becomes increasingly lower approaching the suction port.
In so doing, the opening portion of the side surface of the projecting part can be narrowed going toward the suction port. As a result, the liquid can be moved toward the narrower side (the direction of the suction port) by capillary force acting on the opening portion of the side surface of the projecting part, and thus it becomes possible to curb lingering of the liquid inside the detection chamber.
In the liquid container of the aspect described above, the detection element may be a prism provided to the bottom surface of the detection chamber, and the opening portion of the side surface of the projecting part may be set so that the height, from the bottom surface, of the opening portion at a position closest to the suction port is made to be smaller than the height from the bottom surface at a position corresponding to a position where the prism reflects light. In so doing, the suction port can be placed in a state of being covered with the liquid while the liquid is being detected by the prism. For this reason, with the prism, an event where the liquid can no longer be suctioned can be avoided, regardless of whether the liquid is being detected or not.
In the liquid container of the aspect described above, the detection element may be a prism provided to the bottom surface of the detection chamber, and the opening portion of the side surface of the projecting part may be set so that the height, from the bottom surface of the detection chamber, of the opening portion at a position farthest from the suction port is made to be greater than the height from the bottom surface of the detection chamber at a position corresponding to a position where the prism reflects light.
The projecting part provided above the suction port has a function for maintaining a state where below the suction port is covered with the liquid, by causing the liquid to attach. In some instances, a part of the suction port is exposed from the liquid level even in a case where a comparatively greater amount of liquid remains, because the liquid container, having been mounted onto the liquid ejection apparatus, is often used while also moving reciprocatingly, and the liquid level inside the liquid container shakes. Even in such cases, the liquid can still be reliably suctioned from the suction port, because the liquid can be retained at the projecting part from a stage where the liquid level is higher than the position where the light is reflected by the prism, and the suction port can be maintained in a state of being covered with the liquid.
The following describes an example, in the sequence as follows, in order to clarify the features of the present invention described above: A. Apparatus configuration; B. Structure of the ink cartridge; and C. Reasons why it is possible to curb the lingering of ink within the detection chamber.
In the inkjet printer 10 that is depicted, a color image can be printed by using four types of ink, i.e., cyan-colored, magenta-colored, yellow-colored, and black-colored ink; in correspondence thereto, nozzles are provided to the ejecting head 24 for each of the types of ink. The inks are supplied to each of the nozzles from the corresponding ink cartridge 100 via a passage (not shown).
The drive mechanism 30 for reciprocatingly driving the carriage 20 is constituted of a timing belt 32 on the inside of which a plurality of tooth marks are formed, a drive motor 34 for driving the timing belt 32, and the like. A part of the timing belt 32 is fixed to the carriage case 22, and when the timing belt 32 is driven, the carriage 20 can be reciprocatingly driven in the main scanning direction while also being guided by a guide rail provided extending in the main scanning direction.
A detection unit 300 for optically detecting whether or not there is ink inside the ink cartridges 100, or, to be more precise, inside a detection chamber provided to the interior of the ink cartridges 100 is provided to a position other than a print region of the inkjet printer 10. A more detailed description will follow, but a light-emitting unit and a light-receiving unit are provided to the interior of the detection unit 300; light is emitted from the light-emitting unit when the ink cartridges 100 pass over the detection unit 300 in association with the movement of the carriage 20; the presence or absence of ink inside the ink cartridges 100, or, to be more precise, inside the detection chamber provided to the interior of the ink cartridges is detected depending on whether or not the light is received by the light-receiving unit.
b) illustrates one part of the interior structure of the ink cartridges 100 of the present embodiment, by breaking the film 103.
The first ink chamber 110 and the second ink chamber 130 communicate with each other by communication ports 122 provided to a plurality of places (in the present embodiment, three places) of the barrier wall 120. The first ink chamber 110 also communicates with the air inlet 105 via an interconnecting passageway or an ink chamber provided upstream of an interconnecting passageway as well as via an air passageway or the like. Additionally, the detection chamber 140 communicates with the ink drain port 104 of the bottom surface of the body case 102 via a suction passageway (not shown) and a suction port 143 provided to the bottom part of the detection chamber 140. A variety of modes that are known in the art could be adopted as a flow path configuration for communicating the ink chamber 110 and the air inlet 105 to each other and as a flow path configuration for communicating the detection chamber 140 and the ink inlet 104 to each other, and therefore a more detailed depiction and description thereof is omitted herein. In the ink cartridges 100 of the structure of such description, when ink flows out to the ejecting head 24 from the ink drain port 104, first the ink inside the ink chambers is consumed, and thereafter the ink inside the detection chamber 140 is consumed. In an ink cartridge in which an ink chamber is constituted of a plurality of ink chambers, as in the ink cartridges 100 of the present embodiment, in a case where the air inlet 105 side is the upstream side and the ink drain port 104 side is the downstream side, then the ink is consumed in sequence from the ink inside the ink chamber(s) on the upstream side, and after the ink inside the ink chamber on the most downstream side is consumed, then the ink inside the detection chamber 140 is consumed. In the present embodiment, the first ink chamber 100 is provided further upstream than the second ink chamber 130, and therefore the ink is consumed from the first ink chamber, the second ink chamber, and the detection chamber 140, in the stated order.
In the ink cartridges 100 of the present embodiment, a projecting part 146 that surrounds at least a part of the suction port 143 of the detection chamber 140 is provided. In the present embodiment, the projecting part 146 is provided above the suction port 143. The projecting part 146 is provided atop a side wall surface (a first side wall surface) 144 on a back side of the detection chamber 140. The projecting part 146 is formed in a substantially circular tubular shape of the same inner diameter as that of the suction port 143. A vacant gap exists between a distal end of the projecting part 146 and a side wall surface (a surface constituted of an inner surface of the film 103; a third side wall surface) 148 of a front side of the detection chamber 140. One side of the projecting part 146 is in contact with the left-side side wall surface (second side wall surface) 145 of the detection chamber 140, and a side surface on the side where the projecting part 146 is not in contact with the second side wall surface 145 is open. Additionally, this opening portion 149 of the projecting part 146 is formed so that the height from the bottom surface 147 of the detection chamber 140 is increasingly lower approaching the suction port 143 (i.e., the height from the bottom surface 147 decreases as a distance to the suction port 143 decreases).
As illustrated in
At the stage where the ink liquid level has reached the bottom surface 147 of the detection chamber 140, there is ink lingering alongside the walls of the detection chamber 140 (see
a) illustrates the appearance of the suction port 143 and the projecting part 146 inside the detection chamber 140 as seen from the side. As illustrated in
In the ink cartridges 100 of the present embodiment, as illustrated in
Additionally, in the ink cartridges 100 of the present embodiment, the height from the bottom surface 147 of the detection chamber 140 at the opening portion 149 of the side surface of the projecting part 146 is set as follows in terms of a relationship with a light reflection position of the prism 142. Below is a supplementary explanation on this feature.
a) and 4(b) illustrate a positional relationship between the height from the bottom surface 147 of the detection chamber 140 at the opening portion 149 of the side surface of the projecting part 146 and the light reflection position of the prism 142.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
A variety of embodiments have been described above; however, the present invention is in no way limited to the foregoing embodiments, and implementation in a variety of modes is possible within a scope not departing from the spirit thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012-124143 | May 2012 | JP | national |