1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to an inkjet printing head for performing the ejection of ink on a print medium as drops, and a method of manufacturing an inkjet printing head. The invention may be applied to a general printing device, and in addition the invention may be applied to a copier, a fax machine having a communications system, a word processing device, etc., having a print section, and an industrial use printing apparatus in which various processing devices are combined together.
2. Description of the Related Art
In inkjet printers of recent years, high speed printing has become possible due to an increase in refill frequency in the liquid ejection heads, due to technological advances. In carrying out printing, time-division driving is routinely performed as it is necessary to restrain voltage drop due to the increase of current momentarily flowing to heaters and electrodes, and to provide a high duty image at a high quality. When high speed printing and time-division driving are combined, however, when printing ruled lines, etc., a negative effect often occurs wherein it is not possible to form straight lines, etc.
It is necessary to implement an ejection scheme in order to bring these techniques together. With respect to such problems, Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2001-347663 proposes a means of correcting landing position by way of shifting the positional relationship between the heating elements and ejection ports. More specifically, it describes preserving image linearity even in the case of performing time-division driving by way of arranging either of the heating elements or the ejection ports in an approximately straight line and relatively shifting the positions of the heating elements and the ejection ports.
It is also described therein that if with respect to all nozzles the heating elements and the space at the bifurcated position from the ink supply port to the ink flow paths are made as close as possible to within manufacturing tolerances it is possible to raise refill frequency to its maximum and improve printer throughput.
With the method of resolution set forth in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2001-347663, however, the shape of the heating elements is changed, and in the case of a higher aspect ratio or a lower ejection amount, bending of liquid drops decreases and it becomes difficult to achieve the expected landing position correction. In short, the design range of the shape of the heating elements or the ejection amounts, etc., in which the effect is exhibited, is limited, and there was a possibility that the degree of design freedom was narrowed.
Thus, taking into account the above described issues, it is an object of the invention to provide, without reliance on design changes, a liquid ejection head and a method of production thereof in which, when time-division driving, liquid drop landing deviance in the printing direction is capable of being corrected.
The invention is characterized by a method of producing a liquid ejection head that is to be mounted in a printing apparatus and that is for ejecting liquid while scanning, comprising: a step for forming in a photosensitive resin an ejection port array comprising a plurality of ejection ports for ejecting liquid, by exposing the photosensitive resin; and a step for forming, before performing the exposure, on a surface of a portion forming the ejection ports of the photosensitive resin, cavities that are shifted more in a scanning direction as the order in which an ejection port ejects in the ejection port array is earlier.
According to the invention, a method of manufacturing a liquid ejection head has a step for forming, before performing exposure, on a surface of a portion forming ejection ports of photosensitive resin, cavities that are shifted more in a scanning direction as the order in which an ejection port ejects in the ejection port array is earlier. Accordingly, without being dependent on design changes, it is possible to achieve a liquid ejection head and a method of production thereof in which when time-division driving liquid drop landing deviance in the printing direction is capable of correction.
Further features of the invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments (with reference to the attached drawings).
(Basic Configuration)
The basic configuration of a first embodiment of the invention will be described below while referring to the drawings. Note that in the explanation below there are cases where a structure having the same function as another is marked with the same reference, and the corresponding explanation omitted. As for the explanation below, the construction of a liquid ejection head mounted on an inkjet printing apparatus was raised as an example, but in addition it is also capable of being applied in the case of forming chips and circuits by the same means, with a semiconductor exposure apparatus.
On chip 9 an ink supply port, which supplies ink, is open to the space between the rows of heat generation elements 8. On the chip 9 ejection ports 6 that are open to the upper regions of each of the heat generation elements 8, and separate ink flow paths that communicate from the ink supply port to each of the ejection ports 6, are formed in a photosensitive resin film 2, which is the member that forms the ejection ports 6.
The liquid ejection head 15 is arranged such that the surface on which the ejection ports 6 are formed faces the printing surface of the print medium. The liquid ejection head 15 causes liquid to be ejected from the ejection ports 6 by applying pressure, generated by the heat generation elements 8, to the liquid filled in flow paths via the ink supply port.
Next, the method of manufacturing the liquid ejection head 15 of this embodiment will be explained below.
To be more precise, on the silicon wafer 1 on which the heat generation elements 8 and flow path portions, or flow path molds, are formed, a negative-type photosensitive resin film 2 is formed. The negative type photosensitive resin film that is preferably used here is explained below. The means for forming this negative-type photosensitive resin film on the silicon wafer 1 is capable of using spin coat methods, roll coat methods, and slit coat methods, etc. Note that with respect to this explanation, while a configuration is not explained wherein a pattern is provided that becomes a flow path mold, methods that use a pattern that becomes a mold, and methods that do not use molds are both included in the invention. An example of the invention that was considered this time is shown below, and the invention is explained in further detail.
Composition of the Negative-Type Photosensitive Resin
A negative-type photosensitive resin containing such materials was prepared. This negative-type photosensitive resin was applied at a film thickness of 1 μm to a quartz glass substrate, and the absorbance measured at 365 nm was 0.024.
The liquid ejection head 15 was made using a negative-type photosensitive resin such as that described above. First, an electro-thermal conversion element 8 (a heater formed from HfB2 material), serving as an ink ejection heat generation element, and a silicon wafer 1 having a SiN+Ta lamination film (not shown) at the region where the flow path is formed, were prepared. Next, on a substrate containing energy generation elements 8, polymethyl isopropenyl ketone (ODUR, manufactured by Tokyo Ohka Kogyo) was spun coated as positive-type photosensitive resin, and baking was performed for 3 min. at a temperature of 150° C.
Next, patterning of the positive-type photosensitive resin was performed. Deep-UV Exposure Apparatus UX-3000, manufactured by Ushio Electric, was used as the exposure apparatus, and patterning exposure was performed at an exposure amount of 23000 mJ/cm2. Next, development was performed with methyl isobutyl ketone, rinse processing was performed with isopropyl alcohol, and a flow path pattern was formed. Next, on the silicon wafer that has passed through the above steps, the earlier prepared negative-type photosensitive resin is spun coated, and the negative-type photosensitive resin film 2 is formed. Note that because the formation of an ink repellant layer would not make sense in the invention its explanation has been omitted.
(Characteristic Features)
Characteristic features of the invention will be explained below.
Next, as shown at
After that baking was performed in succession on a hot plate at 90° C. for 4 minutes, development was performed with methyl isobutyl ketone, and after performing rinse processing with isopropyl alcohol, heat processing was performed for 60 seconds at 100° C., and the ejection port 6 was formed. At
At
On the other hand, as for the light 13 that passes at the vicinity of the lowest point 7 of the cavity 3, when it is directly incident the light advances approximately straight. Making use of this, it is possible to form the ejection port opening 6, which is inclined in the printing direction, with the patterning light 11 that is exposed at the high curvature portion and with the patterning light 13 that is exposed at the low curvature portion. After exposure, it is possible to form, by way of development, the ejection port 6, in which the direction of ejection is inclined in the direction opposite the direction in which the cavity 3 is staggered.
As for
Because ejection from the ejection port 6 of
Usually in the case of 16 times division driving, etc., in order to avoid harmful effects on ejection such as crosstalk, adjacent nozzles are driven at times that are furthest apart as possible. Because of this the lowest points 7 of the cavities and the staggered directions of the centers of the ejection ports 6 are formed as if to alternate. Furthermore, according to the structure of the invention, there is also a merit wherein, because the position and shape of the open portion of the ejection port 6 do not change, deviation of the area of the ejection port 6, which would otherwise occur when performing multiple exposures when forming the ejection port 6 at an inclination, does not easily occur.
In addition, as with a 16 times division up to a 40 times division, because the direction of ejection can be inflected even more if the number of time divisions increases, it is possible to correct up to the portion that was not capable of being corrected by only shifting the center of the ejection port 6 and the center of the heat generation element 8. It is also possible to inflect ejected liquid drops without dependence on ejection amount of thickness of the ejection port 6 in the heightwise direction. Furthermore, it is possible to inflect ejected liquid drops without dependence on the shape of the heat generating element 8.
As described above, before performing exposure in order to form an ejection port, after forming a cavity that is shifted with respect to the location at which the ejection port is formed, exposure is performed. Accordingly, without being dependent on design changes, it was possible to achieve a liquid ejection head and a method of production thereof in which when time-division driving, liquid drop landing deviance in the printing direction is capable of correction.
A second embodiment of the invention will be described below while referring to the drawings. Note that because the basic structure of this embodiment is the same as that of the first embodiment explanation will be made only with respect to the characteristic features.
The way of making the liquid ejection head 15 is the same method as that of the first embodiment, but although in the case of one-directional printing it is acceptable for the order of the ejection ports that eject to be of a single type, when performing a bidirectional printing there is a necessity to establish two or more types such that the ejection order is exactly opposite at the outbound direction and the inbound direction. In the case of bidirectional printing, because the printing direction changes, the inclinations of the ejection ports 6 reverse. Bidirectional printing cannot be realized if the ejection order is not reversed.
Thus in this embodiment ejection ports for outbound use and ejection ports for inbound use are respectively formed, such that even in the case where ejection order is reversed the positions of the liquid drops landing on the print medium are aligned, and the liquid drops land in a state that is aligned into 1 row. By designing in this manner, even in the case of bidirectional printing, on a head on which heat generation elements 8 are aligned in a row in a predetermined direction, the locations where a block is activated first and the locations where a block is subsequently activated are aligned, and it is possible to manufacture a high print quality liquid ejection head.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2011-123398, filed Jun. 1, 2011, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2011-123398 | Jun 2011 | JP | national |
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Number | Date | Country |
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2001-347663 | Dec 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120306969 A1 | Dec 2012 | US |