The present invention relates to emissive pixels used in printheads and displays, and specifically to monitoring and calibrating the emissive pixels.
Emissive pixels are used in printers and displays. In the displays, the emissive pixels are arranged in two-dimensional arrays. There can be several million emissive pixels in a television or a computer display depending on the size of the display. The resolution of a display is defined in terms of the number of pixels per square inch of the display. The higher the resolution, the better the picture shown on the display. An emissive pixel is typically turned on and off by using a voltage source. In addition to turning the pixel on and off, the voltage source is typically also used to control the gray scale of the pixel.
A gray scale is a scale of achromatic colors having several equal gradations ranging from white to black. At a given gray scale, the emissive pixel is designed to illuminate at a certain predetermined brightness level depending on the design criteria that was used to design the particular display. As the display ages, there is often a decline in an emissive pixel's luminescent strength such that it becomes progressive dim. Non-uniformities in the fabrication of the emissive pixels during manufacturing also adversely affect the luminescent qualities of the emissive pixels. This problem is amplified in the displays that use the new organic light emitting diodes (OLED) to illuminate the emissive pixels, and that is inhibiting the commercialization of the OLED technology.
The aging problem associated with the display pixels is also applicable to the printhead pixels. Presently, the printer technology only uses linear arrays of emissive pixels. Applicants are not aware of any prior art in the area of printer technology that discloses a two-dimensional array of emissive pixels. The published Japanese Patent Application No. 2000-349576 (P2000-349576) to Hiromasa Sugano (“Sugano Publication”) seems to disclose a printhead having a two dimensional array of emissive pixels in
That arrangement is unworkable because the capacitors Cs for all the picture elements 100 of a column discharge in the same line 131 and the detector circuit 130 cannot separate the discharges from the various capacitors Cs. Also, the discharging of the capacitor Cs is problematic because the line 131 is not connected to the ground. Furthermore, the Sugano Publication does not disclose if the paper must be momentarily stopped so that the two dimensional array of pixels can be flashed and the image data emitted by the emissive pixels for forming the image on the paper. If the Sugano Publication intends to flash the two-dimensional array of emissive pixels while the paper is moving, the details of how that would be accomplished are not disclosed.
There is a need in the art to stabilize the light emissions of the emissive pixels throughout the life span of the printers and the displays.
In one aspect of the present invention a device, such as a display or a printhead of a printer, is disclosed having a substrate having a transparent portion including one or more transparent surfaces. One or more arrays of emissive pixels are embedded in the substrate for emitting light. An optical sensor is externally coupled to a transparent surface of the substrate. The transparent portion of the substrate provides a path for a light emitted by an emissive pixel of the one or more arrays of emissive pixels to exit through the transparent surface. The optical sensor is optically coupled to the emissive pixel by means of the path. The optical sensor is configured to detect the light emitted by the emissive pixel that exists the transparent surface. The optical sensor can be embedded in a wall of a receptacle module designed for holding the substrate.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method for a printhead of a printer having one or more arrays of emissive pixels is disclosed. Initially, a page is printed. Following, a plurality of emissive pixels of the one or more arrays is stopped from emitting light. Following, an emissive pixel of the plurality of emissive pixels is caused to emit light. Following, the light emitted by the emissive pixel s detected. Following, a measurable parameter for the detected light is calculated. Following, the measurable parameter for the detected light is compared with a threshold value. Finally, a result of the comparison is stored in a memory location.
In yet another aspect of the present invention, a substrate for a display or a printhead of a printer is disclosed including a linear array of emissive pixels and an optical sensor strip that runs the length of the linear array of emissive pixels and overlaps with a plurality of the emissive pixels of the linear array. The optical sensor strip is optically coupled to the emissive pixels of the linear array of emissive pixels. The shortest distance between any emissive pixel of the plurality of pixels of the linear array and the optical sensor strip is the same for all the emissive pixels of the plurality of pixels of the linear array.
The above and other objects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
a and
a,
a and
a and
a and
According to one aspect of the present invention, the present invention uses luminance feedback from emissive pixels to stabilize and make uniform a linear array or a two dimensional array of emissive pixels deposed on a transparent substrate of a printhead or a display. A printhead is a device used to write an image to light sensitive materials including photographic media and photosensitive drums designed to pick up toner inks for transfer to non-optically sensitive materials such as paper stock, transparencies and others.
Feedback systems are sorted into three broad classes: closed loop, open loop, and interrupted loop. The closed loop is a system in which a change is detected in the output of a system and directly fed back to the input, which causes another output, which is again fed back to the input. An oscillator is an example of a closed loop system. If there is enough damping in an oscillating system the system will eventually settle to a constant output value. The exact value and the time it takes to settle are dependent on the loop parameters. The open loop system does not feed back output values directly to the system input. Rather an output value is measured, evaluated and the result of the evaluation is used to make a decision on changing the input at a point in the future. The interrupted loop starts with a varying input and as the output varies, it is measured and compared to a reference. When the output matches the reference, the input is interrupted and input value held. Thus, the output is fixed at a desired value determined by the reference. This is a fast and highly accurate method to achieve a desired output.
In one aspect of the present invention, luminescence feedback is implemented using the open loop technique. The open loop technique for a printhead is now described with reference to
The digital gray level value enters block GL Correction 106 and may or may not be changed depending on the information inputted from block Correction Storage 108. The gray level value (changed or unchanged) exits the GL Correction block 106 and enters the Line Buffer (LB1) block 110, which collects pixel values until one line of pixels is collected, at which point the total line of pixel values is down loaded to the Printhead Linear Array block 112.
The values of the down loaded pixels determine the luminance levels of the light emitters in the printhead. The value of the luminance over the time the printhead is on is collected and read to the Sensor Data (SB1) buffer block 114. The sensor data is sent to the Comparator block 116, which compares the sensor data to calibration (reference) data sent to the Comparator block 116 from the Calibration LUT (look-up table) block 118. The two pieces of data are subtracted and the resulting value is sent to the Correction Storage block 108. The values stored in the Correction Storage Block 108 are gray levels or portions of gray levels that will be added or subtracted from the initial gray level determined from the incoming image data and converted to a gray level in the GL block 104.
The advantage of the open loop feedback system of
The open loop method illustrated in
For example, if 30 10-inch pages are to be printed per minute the rate of page travel is 300 in/min or 5 in/sec. If the distance from the last printed line on the first page to the first printed line on the next page is 1 inch, then the time to position the next page is 200 ms or 200,000 microseconds. According to blocks 16 and 18, step 3 includes printing the next page and step 4 includes repeating steps 1, 2 and 3 until the printing job is completed. Step 2 is the critical step in the emissive feedback operation. Step 2 is subdivided into steps 2a-2f as illustrated in blocks 20-30.
According to block 20, in step 2a, all light emitting elements are set to no emission (dark). According to block 22, in step 2b, a first light-emitting element in a printhead array is turned on to the highest design luminance (this is an example and any luminance level can be used). According to block 24, in step 2c, the luminance of the first light-emitting element is detected and converted into a measurable parameter such as a voltage reading. A read circuitry can be used to perform step 2c, for example, the read circuitry disclosed in the provisional application No. 60/660,725.
According to block 26, in step 2d, the measurable parameter value, for example, the voltage reading, measured in step 2c is compared with e reference value. The reference value can be stored in a table is a memory and correspond to the desired luminance of the light emitting element for a given set of circumstances, for example, for certain environmental conditions. According to block 28, in step 2e, a result of the comparison made in step 2d is stored in a memory location. According to block 30, in step 2f, steps 2a-2e are repeated for more light emitting elements of the one or more arrays of light emitting elements of the printhead. The number of the light emitting elements that can be tested for calibration according to step 2f depends on the time required to position the next page in block 14.
In order to produce the circuitry or the present invention, for example, the substrate, various techniques well known in the semiconductor industry are used including: material deposition processes including but not limited to evaporation, sputtering and plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition; etching processes including but not limited to wet chemical etching, reactive ion etching and sputter etching; and photolithographic processes.
A printhead or a display substrate may be transparent in the case of a down-emitter OLED (organic light emitting diode) or made of an opaque material in the case of an up-emitter OLED. Terms “down-emitter” and “up-emitter” are familiar terms used in the OLED industry signifying whether or not the light emitted by the OLED materials passes down through the substrate or up and away from the substrate. Both systems are in common use in the industry.
It is understood that the light emitting elements 46, 48, 50 may be formed from a number of light emitting materials including but not limited to organic light emitting diode materials such as Kodak's small molecule material, the polymer OLED materials, and phosphorescent OLED materials introduced by the Universal Display Corporation. Other light emitting materials including electroluminescent materials and inorganic materials such as the indium phosphides used in the well known red LEDs may also be used.
The optical sensor 58 is comprised of an optically sensitive material, such as amorphous silicon, poly-silicon or any other material that changes electrical properties under changing levels of illumination. In the embodiment shown in
If the linear array in the printhead has 5,000 light emitting elements, the time to read each element is 40 microseconds. When the first light-emitting element 46 is turned on, the photon emission from the light emitting element projection 52 overlapping a portion of the single optical sensor 58 couples light into the sensor 58, which sends an optical signal proportional to the level of light emission to the read circuitry (not shown). There are many types of read circuitry available to designers skilled in electrical engineering; and several such circuits were described in the provisional application No. 60/660,725.
As described above with reference to,
It is understood that the reading of all light emitting elements in 200 ms is an example and only a portion of the light emitting elements may be read during the positioning of the next page with the balance of the light emitting elements being read during following positioning of pages. For example, half the light emitting elements could be read per page change, or 1/10th of the light emitting elements could be read per page change. Any number of light emitting elements could be read per page change, which would extend the reading and updating of light emitting elements over many pages. It is conceivable that only one light-emitting element 50 may be read and that it would take 5000 pages to complete the light emitting element update. At 30 pages per minute this would only be an on time of the printhead of 166 minutes, or less than three hours. While this is a long a period between updates for the present materials, more stable materials may be developed in the future that may not need an update for at least 166 minutes.
In the above example, one thin film optical sensor 58 was used to read all the light emitting elements in the printhead linear array. Alternatively, groups of light emitting elements could be read by one thin film optical sensor per group. For example, ten thin film optical sensors could be used to read five groups of fifty light-emitting elements, allowing data to be read in parallel for ten light-emitting diodes at a time. The groups of light emitting elements could range from 2 to 2500, for example, and anywhere in between.
a and 2b show that light inserted into the transparent printhead substrate 40 by an emissive pixel 46 can exit the glass substrate 40 through the edges of the glass 42.
a shows that if an optical coupling material 62 is in contact with the top surface 42 of the printhead or the display substrate 40, light inserted into the substrate by a light-emitting element 46 can be extracted through the optical coupling material 62. The physics of manipulating the path that light follows using varying refractive index materials is well known in the industry and is made use of particularly in the fiber optics area.
Alternately, any adhesive material that serves to both extract light from the substrate 40 and can adhere the substrate 40 to the optical sensor 64 may be used. The optical sensor 64 may be selected from many types of optically active materials including but not limited to silicon diodes, germanium diodes, cesium compounds, selenium compounds, and materials used to make solar cells naming a few. Alternately, thin film optically active materials can be deposed on the surface of the transparent substrate 40.
c shows that multiple optical sensors can be coupled into the transparent substrate 40 of the printhead. Multiple sensors 64 can be used to add to the total reading of one light-emitting element 46, 48, 50 at a time. Signal to noise ratio can determine the speed at which the optical sensor 64 can be read. Therefore, multiple optical sensors 64 can be advantageously used to increase the signal to noise ratio, and thus, the maximum speed of recording the optical sensor data from one light-emitting element 46, 48, 50. The optical sensors 64 are electrically wired to the substrate 40 (wires not shown). Cables (not shown) are subsequently attached to the printhead substrate 40 using technology well known in the industry. The cables conduct the optical readings to circuits for processing the information.
a shows an optical sensor 64 attached to one edge 42 of the transparent printhead substrate 40. The material used to attach the optical sensor 64 also extracts light from the edge 42. The illuminated light emitter element 46 will generate a light component that exits the transparent substrate 40 through its six sides 42 and a judicious selection of the epoxy bonding material may increase the intensity of the light exiting to the optical sensor 64. One optical sensor 64 can be used to read the light-emitting element 46, 48, 50.
a shows a printhead substrate 40 containing the printhead drive circuitry 44 and the linear array of light emitting elements 46, 48, 50 being inserted into a module 74 containing embedded optical sensors 64.
As described above, a full range of optical sensors 64 is known in the art. The optical sensors 64 can be electrically connected into circuitry carried by the optical sensor module 74 in much the same manner as printed circuit boards are constructed. That is, the optical sensor module 74 may itself be a printed circuit board with the optical sensors 64 embedded therein. An advantage of this embodiment is that the printhead need not have any optical sensors 64 attached to it or deposed on its surface. Therefore, any printhead having a transparent substrate 64 may be made uniform and maintained to light emission specification using this embodiment. One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the substrate 40 shown in
a shows optical fibers 82 replacing the edge attached optical sensors 64. Each optical fiber 82 conducts light from the printhead substrate 40 to an optical sensor 64. Alternatively,
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/663,838, filed Mar. 14th, 2005, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60663838 | Mar 2005 | US |