The present application claims priority from Japanese Patent Application No. JP-2008-82999, which was filed on Mar. 27, 2008, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to liquid droplet discharging apparatuses, e.g., ink-jet printers, and liquid cartridges, e.g., ink cartridges, to be used with liquid droplet discharging apparatuses.
2. Description of Related Art
In a known ink-jet printer, ink is supplied from an ink cartridge to a discharging head and then discharged from a plurality of nozzles formed in the discharging head, such that an image is printed on a sheet of paper. When gas is dissolved in ink in the ink cartridge, the gas may form gas bubbles, and the gas bubbles may be supplied to the discharging head together with ink. As a consequence, the gas bubbles may cause a discharge failure in the nozzles, thereby lowering the printing quality. In order to prevent gas bubbles from forming, when the ink cartridge is manufactured, gas dissolved in the ink is discharged to an exterior of the ink cartridge by depressurizing an ink chamber of the ink cartridge, such that the pressure of the ink chamber is less than the atmospheric pressure. The ink cartridge is packed and shipped in this depressurized state. A similar method is described in JP-A-2007-144804, for example.
When an ink cartridge is mounted to an ink-jet printer, if the ink chamber is brought into communication with the discharging head while the ink chamber is still in a depressurized state, a reverse flow of ink from the discharging head toward the ink cartridge may occur, and air may enter the discharging head through the nozzles. As a result, menisci of ink formed in the nozzles of the discharging head are destroyed, and ink no longer may be discharged stably. To prevent this, the ink cartridge has an air communication valve, in addition to an ink supply valve. When opened, the air communication valve permits the pressure of the interior of the ink chamber to equalize with the atmospheric pressure. During a mounting operation, when the ink cartridge is mounted to the printer, the air communication valve is opened before the ink supply valve is opened, in order to equalize the pressure and prevent a reverse flow of ink from the discharging head toward the ink cartridge.
Nevertheless, when a user mounts the ink cartridge to the printer quickly, the period of time between opening the air communication valve and opening the ink supply valve may be short, and the pressure of the ink chamber may not have sufficient time to equalize with the atmospheric pressure. Hence, the ink chamber may be brought into communication with the discharging head before the pressure in the ink chamber reaches the atmospheric pressure. Accordingly, the menisci of ink formed in the nozzles of the discharging head may be destroyed, and ink no longer may be discharged stably.
Therefore, a need has arisen for liquid droplet discharging apparatuses and liquid cartridges that overcome these and other shortcomings of the related art. A technical advantage of the invention is that pressure in a liquid chamber of a liquid cartridge may reach the atmospheric pressure, or a pressure close to the atmospheric pressure, before the liquid chamber is brought into communication with a discharging head of a liquid droplet discharging apparatus, even when a user mounts the liquid cartridge to the liquid droplet discharging apparatus quickly.
According to an embodiment of the invention, a liquid cartridge has a liquid chamber configured to store liquid, and a liquid supply opening configured to supply liquid from an interior of the liquid chamber to an exterior of the liquid chamber. A first closing mechanism is configured to selectively cover and uncover the liquid supply opening. An air communication opening formed in the liquid cartridge is configured to place the interior of the liquid chamber in communication with an exterior of the chamber, in order to equalize a pressure in the liquid chamber with an atmospheric pressure. A second closing mechanism is configured to selectively cover and uncover the air communication opening. When the liquid cartridge is mounted to a cartridge mounting portion of a liquid discharging apparatus, a damper located in one of the liquid cartridge and the cartridge mounting portion is configured to oppose at least a portion of a mounting force applied to the liquid cartridge. During the mounting of the liquid cartridge to the cartridge mounting portion, the first closing mechanism and the second closing mechanism are configured, such that the air communication opening is uncovered before the liquid supply opening is uncovered.
According to another embodiment of the invention, a liquid cartridge has a liquid chamber configured to store liquid, and a liquid supply opening configured to supply liquid from an interior of the liquid chamber to an exterior of the liquid chamber. A first closing mechanism is configured to selectively cover and uncover the liquid supply opening. An air communication opening formed in the liquid cartridge is configured to place the interior of the liquid chamber in communication with an exterior of the chamber, in order to equalize a pressure in the liquid chamber with an atmospheric pressure. A second closing mechanism is configured to selectively cover and uncover the air communication opening. The liquid cartridge comprises a damper configured to oppose at least a portion of a force applied to the liquid cartridge during a mounting operation by creating a resistance.
Other objects, features, and advantages of embodiments of the invention will be apparent to persons of ordinary skill in the art from the following description of embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings.
For a more complete understanding of the invention, the needs satisfied thereby, and the objects, features, and advantages thereof, reference now is made to the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Embodiments of the invention and their features and technical advantages may be understood by referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Image printing unit 13 may comprise a carriage 17, which may serve as a casing, and buffer tanks 18 may be mounted to carriage 17. Cartridge mounting portion 19 may be positioned in front of the right end of guide rail 12. Four ink cartridges 20A to 20D, having ink in four colors (black, cyan, magenta, and yellow) respectively stored therein, may be removably mounted to cartridge mounting portion 19. Ink cartridges 20A to 20D mounted to cartridge mounting portion 19 may be connected to respective buffer tanks 18 via ink supply tubes 21.
Referring to
Image printing unit 13 may be positioned in printing area 26. A platen 27 may be positioned below image printing unit 13, and the size of platen 27 may be greater than the size of the sheet of paper 23. A transporting roller 28 and a pinch roller 29 may be positioned at an upstream side of image printing unit 13 with respect to paper feed path 24. Transporting roller 28 and pinch roller 29 may pinch the sheet of paper 23 fed along paper feed path 24 and transport the sheet of paper 23 to above platen 27. A paper discharge roller 30 and a pinch roller 31 may be positioned at a downstream side of image printing unit 13 with respect to paper feed path 24. Paper discharge roller 30 and pinch roller 31 may pinch the sheet of paper 23 passing above platen 27 and transport the sheet of paper 23 to paper discharge tray 7.
Image printing unit 13 may comprise an ink-jet head 35 configured to discharge ink from a plurality of nozzles formed therein toward platen 27, buffer tanks 18 configured to temporarily store ink to be supplied to ink-jet head 35, a head control board 34 configured to control driving of ink-jet head 35, and a carriage 17 on which ink-jet head 35, buffer tanks 18, and head control board 34 may be mounted. Ink-jet head 35 may comprise a flow channel unit 32 configured to guide ink supplied from buffer tanks 18 to the nozzles, and a piezoelectric actuator 33 positioned above flow channel unit 32, and configured to selectively provides ink in flow channel unit 32 with discharge pressure directed to nozzles.
Ink cartridges 20A to 20D may be connected to respective buffer tanks 18 via the cartridge mounting portion 19 and ink supply tubes 36.
Cartridge mounting portion 19 may comprise four sensors 37 for optically detecting the remaining amounts of ink stored in mounted ink cartridges 20A to 20D, respectively. A control device 40 maybe electrically connected to sensors 37, display device 9, and head control board 34. Control device 40 may determine the remaining amounts of ink in ink cartridges 20A to 20D from data output from sensors 37 and head control board 34, and may cause display device 9 to display the remaining amounts of ink.
Ink cartridge 20A is described in reference to
Referring to
Valve storage chamber 53 may extend from air communication opening 52 toward ink chamber 51. Air communication closing mechanism 70 may comprise an air communication valve element 55 stored in valve storage chamber 53, a rod member 55a extending through air communication opening 52 to the exterior of case 50, and a flange portion 55b which may extend radially outward from an end portion of rod member 55a in valve storage chamber 53. Air communication valve element 55 may comprise a spring 56, and air communication valve element 55 may be urged by spring 56, such that flange portion 55b contacts sealing member 54 to cover air communication opening 52. Valve storage chamber 53 may have a communication opening 53a which communicates with an air layer formed in an upper portion of ink chamber 51.
Case 50 may have a protrusion 58 extending outward from the front face of case 50. When ink cartridge 20A is mounted to cartridge mounting portion 19, protrusion 58 may be positioned adjacent to sensor 37. Protrusion 58 may comprise side walls extending vertically, and each of the side walls of protrusion 58 may comprise a translucent portion made of a transparent or semi-transparent material. Ink cartridge 20A may comprise a sensor arm 59 positioned in ink chamber 51, and case 50 may comprise a supporting member 60 supporting sensor arm 59 pivotably. Sensor arm 59 may comprise a support potion 59c supported by a shaft of supporting member 60, a float portion 59b extending from support portion 59c in one direction, e.g., to the left in
An ink supply opening 64 may be formed through the front wall of case 50 adjacent to a bottom wall of case 50. The bottom wall of case 50 may be positioned at the bottom of case 50 during the mounting of ink cartridge 20A to cartridge mounting portion 19. Ink cartridge 20A may comprise ink supply closing mechanism 71 positioned at ink supply opening 64, and ink supply closing mechanism 71 may be configured to cover ink supply opening 64. Ink supply closing mechanism 71 may comprise a valve storage chamber 66 which is continuous with ink supply opening 64. Valve storage chamber 66 may be bounded by a bounding wall 65, having a L-shape in cross-section. A gap may be formed between the bottom wall of case 50 and an end of bounding wall 65, and valve storage chamber 66 may communicate with ink chamber 51 through the gap.
Ink supply closing mechanism 71 may comprise an ink supply valve element 68 and an annular sealing member 67 stored in valve storage chamber 66. Annular sealing member 67 may be positioned adjacent to ink supply opening 64, such that a center opening 67a is aligned with ink supply opening 64. Ink supply closing mechanism 71 may comprise a spring 69 stored in valve storage chamber 66. Ink supply valve element 68 may be urged toward annular sealing member 60 by spring 69, such that ink supply valve element 68 contacts an annular seal lip 67b of annular sealing member 67 and covers ink supply opening 64.
Case 50 may comprise a recess 62 formed in the front wall of case 50 between protrusion 58 and ink supply opening 64. Referring to
Referring to
End wall 19a may comprise a recess 19d recessed in an opposite direction from the direction in which lower wall 19b and upper wall 19c extend. Recess 19d may be recessed away from ink cartridge 20A, when ink cartridge 20A is mounted to cartridge mounting portion 19. Sensor 37 (e.g., a transmissive photo interrupter) may be provided in recess 19d. Sensor 37 may be configured to detect the movement of sensor arm 59, and control device 40 may determine whether the amount of ink 100 in ink chamber 51 reaches a predetermined amount.
A tube 42 may extend from end wall 19a in the same direction as lower wall 19b and upper wall 19c extend. Tube 42 may have an ink flow path 42a formed therein. Ink entry openings 42b may be formed through tube 42 extending from ink flow path 42a to the outer peripheral surface of tube 42 at a portion adjacent to the distal end of tube 42. Ink supply tube 21 may be connected to tube 42 outside cartridge mounting portion 19. A protrusion 43 may extend from end wall 19a in the same direction as lower wall 19b and upper wall 19c extend, and may be positioned between recess 19d and tube 42.
Referring to
Subsequently, the distal end of rod member 55a of air communication valve element 55 of ink cartridge 20A may contact end wall 19a of cartridge mounting portion 19 and be pushed away from annular sealing member 54, such that ink chamber 51 of ink cartridge 20A may be brought into communication with the atmosphere (i.e., air communication opening 52 may be uncovered). When this occurs, referring to
When protrusion 43 enters recess 62 quickly, it may be difficult for air A to escape via the gap between protrusion 43 and recess 62. As a result, air A may be compressed and pressurized between the distal end of protrusion 43 and the bottom recess 62, and pressurized air A may cause an increasing resistance. Consequently, a mounting force applied to ink cartridge 20A by the user when the user mounts ink cartridge 20A to cartridge mounting portion 19 may be opposed by damper 75, which comprises recess 62, protrusion 43, and pressurized air A. In addition, the greater the mounting speed of ink cartridge 20A to cartridge mounting portion 19 is, the more difficult it becomes for air to escape through the gap, and the greater the mounting resistance by the pressurized air A may become. Therefore, the amount of the reduction of the mounting speed of ink cartridge 20A may increase in proportion with an increase of the mounting speed.
When protrusion 43 enters recess 62 slowly, however, air A may leak smoothly via the gap between protrusion 43 and recess 62. As a result, air A between the distal end of protrusion 43 and the bottom of recess 62 may not be very compressed, and the mounting resistance may be small. The mounting resistance of damper 75 may not depend on the position of ink cartridge 20A with respect to cartridge mounting portion 19, but may depend only on the mounting speed. Therefore, when the user inserts ink cartridge 20A into cartridge mounting portion 19 slowly, the user may feel little resistance.
Subsequently, referring to
Referring to
Ink cartridge 120A may comprise case 150, which is similar to case 50 of ink cartridge 20A. An ink supply opening 80 may be formed through a front wall of case 150. The front wall of case 150 may be positioned at the front of case 150 during the mounting of ink cartridge 120A to cartridge mounting portion 119. Ink supply opening 80 may be positioned adjacent to a bottom wall of case 150. The bottom wall of case 150 may be positioned at the bottom of case 150 during the mounting of ink cartridge 120A to cartridge mounting portion 119. Ink supply opening 80, which is similar to ink supply opening 64 of ink cartridge 20A, may be tapered at the front end. A recess 81 may encircle ink supply opening 80 and center opening 67a. Recess 81 may comprise a cylindrical-shaped inner surface of annular sealing member 67, and a bottom defined by an external surface of ink supply valve element 68.
A tube 142 may extend from an end wall 119a of cartridge mounting portion 119 in a manner similar to tube 42. Tube 142 may have an ink flow path 142a formed therein. Ink entry openings 142b may be formed through tube 142 extending from ink flow path 142a to the outer peripheral surface of tube 142 at a portion adjacent to the distal end of tube 142. The distal end of tube 142 may be closed by a distal end wall 142c of tube 42. Ink supply tube 21 may be connected to tube 142 outside cartridge mounting portion 119 (not shown in
Referring to
When tube 142 enters ink supply opening 80 slowly, however, air B may leak smoothly via the gap between tube 142 and ink supply opening 80. As a result, air B between distal end wall 142c of tube 142 and the bottom of recess 81 only may be slightly compressed, such that the mounting resistance may be small. Therefore, when the user insert ink cartridge 120A into cartridge mounting portion 119 slowly, the user may feel little resistance.
Subsequently, referring to
Referring to
Referring to
When pressing portion 96 presses piston rod 91a slowly, however, liquid 93 may flow smoothly via the gap between the inner peripheral surface of cylinder 90 and outer peripheral surface of piston 91. As a result, liquid 93 between piston 91 and cylinder 90 may be compressed only slightly, and the mounting resistance may be small. Therefore, when the user inserts ink cartridge 220A into cartridge mounting portion 219 slowly, the user may feel little resistance.
Subsequently, referring to
Referring to
Ink cartridge 320A may comprise a case 350. Case 350 may comprise an opening 301 formed through a front wall of case 350. The front wall of case 350 maybe positioned at the front of case 350 during the mounting of ink cartridge 320A to cartridge mounting portion 319. Ink cartridge 320A may comprise an ink supply closing mechanism 371 positioned in opening 301 of case 350. Ink supply closing mechanism 371 may comprise a tubular sealing member 302 fitted in opening 301 of case 350. Tubular sealing member 302 may have an ink supply opening 303 formed therethrough. Tubular sealing member 302 may comprise a cylindrical portion 302a, and a seal lip 302b projecting radially inwardly from cylindrical portion 302a at a front end of cylindrical portion 302a. Ink supply closing mechanism 371 may comprise a piston valve 304, having an H shape when viewed in cross-section. Piston valve 304 may comprise an ink valve element portion 304a fitted in tubular sealing member 302, a piston portion 304c stored in a cylinder 305, and a connecting rod portion 304b, which connects ink valve element portion 304a and piston portion 304c.
Cylinder 305 maybe positioned in an ink chamber 351, such that a center axis of cylinder 305 is aligned with a center axis of tubular sealing member 302 and a gap 307 is formed between cylinder 305 and tubular sealing member 302. Cylinder 305 may be opened toward tubular sealing member 302 and piston portion 304c of piston valve 304 may be positioned therein. A slight gap may be formed between the outer peripheral surface of piston portion 304c and inner peripheral surface of the cylinder 305. Piston valve 304 may be urged by spring 69 to the front of case 350, and ink valve element portion 304a may be tightly fitted in cylindrical portion 302a, when ink supply opening 303 is covered. Cartridge mounting portion 319 may comprise tube 42 extending from an end wall 319a.
Referring to
More specifically, cylinder 305 has a bottomed cylindrical shape, and the cross-sectional area of a gap between the outer peripheral surface of the piston portion 304c and the inner peripheral surface of cylinder 305 may be 1/300 to 1/400 of the cross-sectional area of the interior of cylinder 305, when viewed in a direction in which piston portion 304c moves in cylinder 305. Accordingly, ink 100a in cylinder 305 may be compressed and pressurized by piston portion 304c, causing a damping effect. Therefore, a damper 375 may comprise cylinder 305, piston portion 304c, and ink 100a present therebetween. A mounting force applied to ink cartridge 320A by the user when the user mounts ink cartridge 320A to cartridge mounting portion 319 may be opposed by damper 375. Moreover, the amount of reduction of the mounting speed of ink cartridge 320A may increase in proportion with an increase of the mounting speed.
When tube 42 enters ink supply opening 303 slowly, however, ink 100a in cylinder 305 may flow out smoothly via the gap between piston portion 304c and cylinder 305, and the mounting resistance may be small. Therefore, when the user inserts ink cartridge 320A into cartridge mounting portion 319 slowly, the user may feel little resistance.
Subsequently, referring to
Although several embodiments of the invention have been described, the invention is not limited to the above-described embodiments. For example, recess 62 may be formed in end wall 19a of cartridge mounting portion 19, and protrusion 43 may be provided on case 50 of an ink cartridge. Liquid damper 94 may be provided on cartridge mounting portion 219, and pressing portion 96, which presses piston rod 91a, may be provided on casing 250 of ink cartridge 220A. In such an embodiment, ink cartridge 220A may be formed inexpensively. Also, when damper 75 or liquid 94 are provided independently from ink supply opening 64 and ink supply closing mechanism 71, ink supply closing mechanism 71 may not be configured selectively cover and uncover ink supply opening 64 by ink supply valve element 68. Instead, a film or covering, e.g., a sticker, which cannot be closed again after it is opened once by the penetration of tube 42 therethrough, may be used as ink supply closing mechanism 71. Although several embodiments described above are invention described in relation to an ink-jet printer, the invention may be applied to other devices, e.g., a liquid droplet discharging apparatus for manufacturing color filters of liquid crystal display devices by discharging liquid other than ink (for example, colored liquid), or an apparatus for forming electrical wirings by discharging conductive liquid.
While the invention has been described in connection with various exemplary structures and illustrative embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that other variations and modifications of the structures and embodiments described above may be made without departing from the scope of the invention. Other structures and embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art from a consideration of the specification or practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and the described examples are illustrative with the true scope of the invention being defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008-082999 | Mar 2008 | JP | national |