Embodiments of the present invention relate to droplet ejection, and more specifically to using multi-pulse waveforms for variable drop size ejection and consistent arrival time on a target substrate.
Droplet ejection devices are used for a variety of purposes, most commonly for printing images on various media. They are often referred to as ink jets or ink jet printers. Drop-on-demand droplet ejection devices are used in many applications because of their flexibility and economy. Drop-on-demand devices eject one or more droplets in response to a specific signal, usually an electrical waveform that may include a single pulse or multiple pulses. Different portions of a multi-pulse waveform can be selectively activated to produce the droplets.
Droplet ejection devices typically include a fluid path from a fluid supply to a nozzle path. The nozzle path terminates in a nozzle opening from which droplets are ejected. Each ink jet has a natural frequency which is related to the inverse of the period of a sound wave propagating through the length of the ejector (or jet). The jet natural frequency can affect many aspects of jet performance. For example, the jet natural frequency typically affects the frequency response of the printhead. Typically, the jet velocity remains near a target velocity for a range of frequencies from substantially less than the natural frequency up to about 25% of the natural frequency of the jet. As the frequency increases beyond this range, the jet velocity begins to vary by increasing amounts. This variation is caused, in part, by residual pressures and flows from the previous drive pulse(s). These pressures and flows interact with the current drive pulse and can cause either constructive or destructive interference, which leads to the droplet firing either faster or slower than it would otherwise fire.
One prior ink jetting approach uses a pulse string followed by a cancelling pulse. The cancelling pulse is a shortened pulse that is timed so that the resulting pressure pulses arrive at the nozzle out of phase with the residual pressure from previous pulses. Given that jets will have a dominant resonant frequency, the cancellation features are timed in units of resonance period Tc.
a and 2b show prior waveform designs for a small droplet with a same sense cancellation pulse 210 and an opposite sense cancellation pulse 220. In both cancellation pulse styles, the small droplet pulse occurs at the end of the waveform directly in front of the cancellation pulse 210 or 220. These waveforms have the advantage that the cancellation pulse effectively controls the meniscus motion. These waveforms have the disadvantage that the small droplet formation is late compared to the formation of the other droplets that use pulses that start earlier. This small droplet arrives at the medium (e.g., paper) later because this droplet is formed late. Typically, the fire pulse amplitude is increased in order to compensate. However, since faster droplets tend not to form single droplets, but instead have a slower droplet formed out of the tail, there are practical limits to this strategy.
The present invention is illustrated by way of example, and not by way of limitation, in the figures of the accompanying drawings and in which:
a and 1b illustrate waveforms of an ink jet according to a prior approach;
a and 2b illustrate waveforms of an ink jet according to another prior approach;
Described herein is a method, apparatus, and system for driving a droplet ejection device with multi-pulse waveforms. In one embodiment, a method for driving a droplet ejection device having an actuator includes applying a first subset of a multi-pulse waveform to the actuator to cause the droplet ejection device to eject a first droplet of a fluid in response to the first subset. The method includes applying a second subset of the multi-pulse waveform to the actuator to cause the droplet ejection device to eject a second droplet of the fluid in response to the second subset. The first subset includes a drive pulse that is positioned in time near a beginning of a clock cycle of the first subset. The first droplet has a smaller volume than the second droplet.
Multi-pulse waveforms need to perform a large number of functions together to deliver value. These functions may include providing various drop masses, maintaining the overall firing frequency, maintaining acceptable drop formation by avoiding satellite droplets, maintaining straightness of ejected droplets, ensuring droplets arrive at the target medium (e.g., paper, etc.) or substrate within a designated pixel, and controlling and stabilizing the meniscus post droplet break-off. All these functions make potentially competing demands on waveforms. The waveforms of the present design enhance meniscus control, provide consistent droplet arrival time at the target medium, and improve droplet formation.
Referring to
The flow path features are defined in a module body 124. The module body 124 includes a base portion, a nozzle portion and a membrane. The base portion includes a base layer of silicon (base silicon layer 136). The base portion defines features of the supply path 112, the ascender 108, the impedance feature 114, the pumping chamber 116, and the descender 118. The nozzle portion is formed of a silicon layer 132. In one embodiment, the nozzle silicon layer 132 is fusion bonded to the silicon layer 136 of the base portion and defines tapered walls 134 that direct ink from the descender 118 to the nozzle opening 120. The membrane includes a membrane silicon layer 142 that is fusion bonded to the base silicon layer 136, opposite to the nozzle silicon layer 132.
In one embodiment, the actuator 122 includes a piezoelectric layer 140 that has a thickness of about 21 microns. The piezoelectric layer 140 can be designed with other thicknesses as well. A metal layer on the piezoelectric layer 140 forms a ground electrode 152. An upper metal layer on the piezoelectric layer 140 forms a drive electrode 156. A wrap-around connection 150 connects the ground electrode 152 to a ground contact 154 on an exposed surface of the piezoelectric layer 140. An electrode break 160 electrically isolates the ground electrode 152 from the drive electrode 156. The metallized piezoelectric layer 140 is bonded to the silicon membrane 142 by an adhesive layer 146. In one embodiment, the adhesive is polymerized benzocyclobutene (BCB) but may be various other types of adhesives as well.
The metallized piezoelectric layer 140 is sectioned to define active piezoelectric regions over the pumping chambers 116. In particular, the metallized piezoelectric layer 140 is sectioned to provide an isolation area 148. In the isolation area 148, piezoelectric material is removed from the region over the descender. This isolation area 148 separates arrays of actuators on either side of a nozzle array.
A PZT member or element (e.g., actuator) is configured to vary the pressure of fluid in the pumping chambers in response to the drive pulses applied from the drive electronics. For one embodiment, the actuator ejects droplets of a fluid from a nozzle via the pumping chambers. The drive electronics are coupled to the PZT member. During operation of the printhead module, the actuators eject a droplet of a fluid from a nozzle. In one embodiment, the drive electronics are coupled to the actuator with the drive electronics driving the actuator with a first subset of a multi-pulse waveform having predetermined positions in time and a second subset of the multi-pulse waveform to cause the actuator to eject a first droplet of a fluid in response to the first subset and to eject a second droplet of the fluid in response to the second subset. The first subset includes a drive pulse that is positioned in time near a beginning of a clock cycle of the first subset (e.g., drive pulse in a first or second predetermined position of the clock cycle). The first droplet has a smaller volume than the second droplet. The first droplet arrives on a first pixel and the second droplet arrives on a second pixel that is adjacent to the first pixel of a substrate because of the positioning of the drive pulse towards the beginning of the clock cycle of the first subset.
The drive pulse of the first subset may be followed by a cancellation pulse or cancel edge that reduces pressure response wave(s) associated with the drive pulse. The second subset of the multi-pulse waveform may have at least two drive pulses and at least two cancel edges. The cancel edges of the second subset may build a mass of fluid for a subsequent drive pulse. A first cancel edge may be applied subsequent to a first drive pulse of the second subset of the multi-pulse waveform. A second or third cancel edge is applied subsequent to a second drive pulse of the second subset of the multi-pulse waveform. The second subset of the multi-pulse waveform may include four drive pulses and three cancel edges. The drive electronics can apply a third subset of the multi-pulse waveform having at least two drive pulses and at least two cancel edges to the actuator to cause the actuator to eject a third droplet of the fluid. The third droplet may have a volume that is less than the volume of the first droplet.
In another embodiment, a printhead includes an ink jet module that includes actuators to eject droplets of a fluid from corresponding pumping chambers and drive electronics that is coupled to the of actuators. During operation the drive electronics drive a first actuator with a first subset of a multi-pulse waveform during a clock cycle to eject a first droplet of a fluid and drive a second actuator with a second subset of the multi-pulse waveform during the clock cycle to eject a second droplet of the fluid. The first subset includes a drive pulse that is positioned in time near a beginning of the clock cycle. The first droplet has a smaller volume than the second droplet. The drive electronics may apply a third subset of the multi-pulse waveform during the clock cycle with the third subset having at least two drive pulses and at least two cancel edges to a third actuator to cause the third actuator to eject a third droplet of the fluid. A first cancel edge is applied subsequent to a first drive pulse of the second subset of the multi-pulse waveform. A second or third cancel edge is applied subsequent to a second drive pulse of the second subset of the multi-pulse waveform. The second subset of the multi-pulse waveform may include four drive pulses and at least two cancel edges. The first droplet of the first subset may have a smaller volume than the third droplet of the third subset
The process may further include applying a third subset of a multi-pulse waveform having at least two drive pulses and at least two cancel edges to the actuator at processing block 710. The process then includes causing the droplet ejection device to eject a third droplet of the fluid at processing block 712.
In one embodiment, the first cancel edge of the third subset is fired subsequent to a first drive pulse of the third subset. A second or third cancel edge is fired subsequent to a fifth drive pulse of the third subset. The third subset of the multi-pulse waveform may include five drive pulses and two or three cancel edges. The droplet ejection device in the method 700 ejects droplets based on the first subset, the second subset, and the third subset of the waveform. The method 700 may also be performed with waveform being applied to each droplet ejection device of a print head. In another embodiment, each subset may be applied to a different droplet ejection device during the same clock cycle.
In an embodiment, a jetting architecture has different waveforms sent to each amplifier in each firing clock cycle. In this example, all start at the beginning of a clock cycle. However, if all waveforms start at the beginning of a fire period of the clock cycle, then small and large size droplets will have consistent arrival times while the middle size droplet will arrive early. The delay of the firing of the middle droplet towards a closing of the firing period will produce a more consistent arrival time for the middle size droplet.
In one embodiment, the droplet ejection device ejects additional droplets of the fluid in response to the pulses of the multi-pulse waveform or in response to pulses of additional multi-pulse waveforms. A waveform may include a series of sections that are concatenated together. Each section may include a certain number of samples that include a fixed time period (e.g., 1 to 3 microseconds) and associated amount of data. The time period of a sample is long enough for control logic of the drive electronics to enable or disable each jet nozzle for the next waveform section. In one embodiment, the waveform data is stored in a table as a series of address, voltage, and flag bit samples and can be accessed with software. A waveform provides the data necessary to produce a single sized droplet and various different sized droplets. For example, a waveform can operate at a frequency of 20 kiloHertz (kHz) and produce three different sized droplets by selectively activating different pulses of the waveform. These droplets are ejected at approximately the same target velocity.
The following table shows a comparison of arrival times for small and large droplets produced with the waveforms of
Note that the drop velocities of both small droplets and both large droplets are the same as indicated in the TrueVel1000 (m/s) column. The Arrival Times in microseconds (usec) are given for three different distances (e.g., 900 um, 1000 um, 1100 um) from a nozzle plate to a target medium (e.g., paper). The ArrivalTime Differences column indicates an arrival time difference at a distance of 1000 um for a small droplet and a large droplet generated with the waveforms of
In a specific embodiment, a pixel for the above table is 21 um in length and 21 um in width. Hence, if the substrate or medium (i.e., paper) is moving at 1 m/s, a droplet arriving 27 usec late will land in the next pixel. This arrival time difference can possibly be compensated for with additional design parameters. However, the new waveforms of
It is very common for the large and small droplets to have different velocities because small droplets slow down more due to air resistance. The droplet can be designed to go faster, but above a limit (e.g., around 12 m/s dependent on the exact printhead design) the drop formation gets stringy and poor. The large droplet is designed to have a large mass. If the large droplet is designed at a slower velocity, then the mass is reduced. Hence, it is common that the big droplets go faster. The multi-pulse pulses are designed at-near resonance and hence do not need as much voltage to go faster. By their nature, large droplets tend to have large tails unless they go extremely slow (e.g., less than 7 m/s). Hence, making the large droplets go a bit faster to get more mass does not really make the large droplets particularly worse than the large droplets would be if the large droplets went a bit slower.
Waveforms according to embodiments of the present disclosure have advantages in comparison to prior approaches. A small droplet produced with a fire pulse that is applied towards the beginning of a clock cycle arrives at a substrate in a timely manner at approximately the same time as other droplets (e.g., medium droplet, large droplet) arrive at the substrate. The small droplets land within appropriate intended pixels. The positioning of a cancellation pulse in the interior or middle of the waveform allows the large meniscus motion resulting from the strong first pulse to be removed or at least reduced, which allows the following pulses to deliver more mass. As can be seen in
In contrast with prior approaches, embodiments of the present invention permit the first cancellation pulse to stop the meniscus after the first firing pulse. The meniscus motion is relatively less for the large droplet for waveforms as described herein. Hence, the amplitudes can be bigger and fewer pulses are needed. In embodiments disclosed and illustrated herein, the number of pulses needed is sufficiently low to allow each to have approximately the same amplitude and contribute approximately the same amount of mass as the single droplet. For waveforms according to the present design, the additional mass per pulse can be very close to a multiple of a mass of a native droplet. As an example, using the waveforms shown in
The waveforms of the present disclosure can be used for a wide range of operating frequencies to advantageously provide different droplets sizes that arrive at approximately the same time on a substrate. This permits improved drop formation for each drop size, enables improved control over the drop velocities and droplet arrival times (i.e., improved placement control), reduces and/or eliminates a meniscus bounce, and enables ink jet operation over a wide range of frequencies.
It is to be understood that the above description is intended to be illustrative, and not restrictive. Many other embodiments will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reading and understanding the above description. The scope of the invention should, therefore, be determined with reference to the appended claims, along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled.
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20140267481 A1 | Sep 2014 | US |