1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to a liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus, such as an ink jet recording apparatus, that discharges liquid from its head to spray a medium.
Liquid ejecting apparatuses are not limited to recording apparatuses, such as printers, copying machines, and facsimiles, in which an ink jet recording head is used and that discharge ink from the recording head to perform recording on a recording medium. Liquid ejecting apparatuses include apparatuses that eject, instead of ink, liquid corresponding to their uses from a liquid ejecting head corresponding to the recording head onto a medium to be sprayed corresponding to the recording medium so as to attach the liquid to the medium.
Other than the recording head, liquid ejecting heads include a color material ejecting head used for manufacturing color filters of, for example, liquid crystal displays, an electrode material (conductive paste) ejecting head used for forming electrodes of, for example, organic EL displays and field emission displays (FEDs), a bioorganic matter ejecting head used for manufacturing biochips, and a sample ejecting head used as a precision pipette.
2. Related Art
In ink jet recording apparatuses, ink is discharged from a recording head. In order to remove ink dumped outside the edges of a recording medium on a platen, a depressed portion is formed in a region of the platen facing the recording head, an ink absorber is provided therein, and ink is absorbed in the ink absorber. As shown in
Therefore, even if ink is dumped at a position adjacent to the upstream side of the downstream portion 101a of the platen, ink is not attached on the downstream portion 101a of the platen, and ink is dumped onto the ink absorber 107. A platen having such a configuration is disclosed in, for example, Patent Document 1.
However, when the entire surface of a recording medium is sprayed with ink, the front end of the recording medium bends downward due to a large amount of attached ink, and the front end of the recording medium can collide with the upstream end of the downstream platen 101a (the portion shown by reference numeral 105). In such a case, as shown in
However, in such a configuration, since the sloping guiding surface portion 109 is located in the ink dumping region 23, ink 111 remains dumped on the guiding surface portion 109 and can contaminate the underside of the recording medium.
In Patent Document 2, as shown in
JP-A-2002-86821
JP-A-7-285251
It is an object of the invention to provide a liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus such that, when liquid is dumped onto a sloping guiding surface portion located in a region where liquid such as ink is dumped, the liquid is easily guided to an ink absorber and no liquid remains on the guiding surface portion. In addition, it is another object of the invention to provide a liquid ejecting apparatus having such a liquid guiding device.
To attain the above objects, a liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus according to a first aspect of the invention includes: a platen located so as to face a liquid ejecting head; a liquid dumping region provided in a portion of the platen that faces the liquid ejecting head and that extends beyond a liquid discharge region of the liquid ejecting head, the liquid dumping region having a liquid absorber; a guiding surface portion provided on an edge of the platen defining the downstream end of the liquid dumping region, the upper surface of the guiding surface portion sloping down toward the upstream side, the guiding surface portion being protruded into the liquid discharge region; and a guiding structure portion provided in the guiding surface portion and guiding liquid attached to the guiding surface portion to the liquid absorber.
According to the first aspect of the invention, when part of liquid on the guiding surface portion reaches the guiding structure portion, the liquid is easily guided to the liquid absorber through the guiding structure portion, and the liquid on the guiding surface portion is quickly absorbed by the liquid absorber. Therefore, even in the case of a platen that has a guiding surface portion extending into the liquid discharge region of the liquid ejecting head, liquid on the upper surface of the guiding surface portion is removed through the guiding structure portion. Therefore, when a medium to be sprayed goes over the platen, liquid can be prevented from being attached to the underside of the medium to be sprayed.
A liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus according to a second aspect of the invention is as follows. In the first aspect, the guiding structure portion includes an edge portion guiding liquid by capillary action, and the edge portion extends to the liquid absorber.
According to this aspect, when part of liquid on the guiding surface portion reaches the edge portion or its vicinity, the liquid is quickly guided to the liquid absorber by capillary action in the edge portion. Once a flow from the edge portion to the liquid absorber is formed, as long as liquid is continuous, all liquid is guided to the liquid absorber through this channel of flow. Therefore, the liquid on the guiding surface portion decreases rapidly.
A liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus according to a third aspect of the invention is as follows. In the second aspect, the edge portion is located at the vertex of a V-shaped opening that opens toward the upstream end of the sloping surface of the guiding surface portion.
According to this aspect, when part of liquid on the guiding surface portion reaches the vertex of the V-shaped opening, the liquid is quickly guided to the liquid absorber by capillary action in the edge portion. Once a flow from the edge portion to the liquid absorber is formed, liquid can be quickly guided to the liquid absorber because the width of the flow can be increased in the V-shaped opening.
A liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus according to a fourth aspect of the invention is as follows. In the third aspect, the V-shaped opening extends over substantially the entire length of the sloping surface in the direction between the upstream and downstream sides.
According to this aspect, the liquid on the sloping surface can be more effectively removed because the region where liquid begins to be guided is extended.
A liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus according to a fifth aspect of the invention is as follows. In the second aspect, the edge portion is located at the lower end of an elongated groove having a V-shaped cross section and extending from the downstream side to the end on the upstream side of the sloping surface of the guiding surface portion.
According to this aspect, when part of liquid on the guiding surface portion reaches the elongated groove, the liquid flows into the edge portion. Once such a channel for liquid flow is formed, liquid is quickly guided from the upstream end of the elongated groove to the ink absorber by capillary action in the edge portion.
A liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus according to a sixth aspect of the invention is as follows. In any one of the second to fifth aspects, the radius of curvature of the corner of the edge portion is 0.05 mm or less.
According to this aspect, since the radius of curvature of the edge portion is about 0.05 mm, the capillary action in the edge portion acts effectively, and the efficiency of guiding liquid to the liquid absorber is increased.
A liquid guiding device in a liquid ejecting apparatus according to a seventh aspect of the invention is as follows. In any one of the third to fifth aspects, the vertex angle of the shape of a V is 20° to 60°.
According to this aspect, the capillary action in the edge portion acts effectively, and the efficiency of guiding liquid to the liquid absorber is increased.
A liquid ejecting apparatus according to an eighth aspect of the invention includes: a liquid ejecting head; a platen located so as to face the liquid ejecting head; and a liquid dumping region provided in a portion of the platen that faces the liquid ejecting head and that extends beyond a liquid discharge region of the liquid ejecting head, the liquid dumping region having a liquid absorber. The liquid ejecting apparatus further includes: a sloping guiding surface portion provided in at least part of the upper surface of the edge of the platen that abuts the liquid dumping region of the platen or the upper surface of the edge of a rib that abuts the liquid dumping region of the platen; and a guiding structure portion provided in the guiding surface portion and guiding liquid attached to the guiding surface portion to the liquid absorber. According to this aspect, a high-quality sprayed matter can be obtained because the underside of a medium to be sprayed can be prevented from being contaminated.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the drawings.
The ink jet recording apparatus 1 (hereinafter simply referred to as recording apparatus) shown in
A recording head 13 is an example of a liquid ejecting head that performs recording by ejecting ink onto a recording medium P. The main body 3 of the recording apparatus includes a carriage 15 for causing the recording head 13 to scan the recording medium P in the width direction thereof. The carriage 15 is loaded with a detachable ink cartridge (not shown) filled with each color of ink. The ink cartridge supplies the recording head 13 with each color of ink. The recording head 13 reciprocates, facing a platen 17, in the width direction of the recording media P. A line of nozzles are arranged in the surface of the head parallel to the transporting direction of the recording medium P. Ink is discharged from each nozzle hole of the line of nozzles onto the recording medium P being transported on the platen 17, and recording is thereby performed. A range within which the line of nozzles exists in the above transporting direction is an ink (liquid) discharge region. After completion of recording, the recording medium P is output by an output roller 19 in the sub-scanning direction.
As shown in
During recording on the leading edge of the recording medium P, waste ink sprayed on the downstream side of the leading edge of the recording medium P is dumped in a corresponding downstream portion of the liquid dumping region 23. During recording on the trailing edge of the recording medium P, waste ink sprayed on the upstream side of the trailing edge of the recording medium P is dumped in a corresponding upstream portion of the liquid dumping region 23.
As shown in
As shown in
Each edge portion 31 is located at the vertex of a V-shaped opening 35 that opens toward the upstream end 33 of the guiding surface portion 29. The radius of curvature of the corner 37 of each edge portion 31 is 0.05 mm or less. Due to such a small radius of curvature, when part of ink on the guiding surface portion 29 reaches any one of the edge portions 31 or its vicinity, the ink is quickly guided to the ink absorbers 25 and 26 by capillary action in the edge portion 31.
The vertex angle of the V-shaped openings 35 is 60° in the exemplary embodiment shown in
In this exemplary embodiment, when part of ink on the guiding surface portion 29 reaches any one of the elongated grooves 37, the ink flows into the edge portion 31. Once such a channel for ink flow is formed, the ink is continuously guided from the upstream end of the elongated groove 37 to the ink absorbers 25 and 26 by capillary action in the edge portions 31.
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
Although edge portions 31 are shown only on the upper surfaces of the guiding surfaces 29 of the downstream ribs 21b in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2006-246022 | Sep 2006 | JP | national |
2007-232388 | Sep 2007 | JP | national |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
07-285251 | Oct 1995 | JP |
10-166562 | Jun 1998 | JP |
2002-086821 | Mar 2002 | JP |
2004-249627 | Sep 2004 | JP |
2005-125800 | May 2005 | JP |
2005-280332 | Oct 2005 | JP |
2006-205697 | Aug 2006 | JP |
2006205697 | Aug 2006 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080106570 A1 | May 2008 | US |