The development of charge images of images to be printed that are applied on a charge image carrier (for example a photoconductor drum or a photoconductor belt) by a character generator (for example an LED character generator) in an electrophotographic printing or copying device is known, for example according to the toner jump principle (see for example U.S. Pat. No. 4,868,600). In this principle, in the development region a toner cloud of toner particles is generated in the intervening space between developer roller (jump roller) and charge image carrier via application of an alternating voltage and/or a direct voltage (bias voltage), from which toner cloud toner particles cross over onto the charge image carrier, corresponding to the charge images, and ink the charge image carrier.
The charge images on the charge image carrier can be generated by an LED character generator. This can recharge individual output pixels or PELs (printed elements) via exposure, which individual output pixels or PELs are in a print raster made up of addressable output pixels on the charge image carrier depending on the character to be printed. These PELs are then developed into printed dots via the developer station. A printed dot is thus the dot that is physically printed at the location of the PEL; it is normally larger in area than the corresponding PEL. The printed pattern can be divided up into raster cells; one raster cell is thereby a two-dimensional matrix of PELs.
In operation it is necessary to establish the character width of a character. What is thereby to be understood by character width is how wide or how fat a printing device outputs a predetermined character. The appearance of the print image and the toner consumption can be affected by varying the character width.
The character width can be measured with the aid of an optical reflex sensor that measures the (infrared) light cast back by the surface of the charge image carriers. Integration thereby takes place over a surface of a few square millimeters in size (a few thousand printed dots). In principle the character width can be determined by measuring a print raster on the charge image carrier. It applies that: strong reflection=small printed dots=narrow characters, weak reflection=large points=wide characters. Since the reflection is different for different toner colors, the character width can only be measured depending on the toner color via direct measurement of a print raster with a reflection sensor. Given different colors this is difficult, in particular given mixed colors. The contamination of the sensor and the contamination or discoloration of the charge image carrier can additionally adulterate the measurement.
The measurement can also take place in that a toner mark is generated on the charge image carrier, the toner quantity of which toner mark is determined via capacitive toner quantity measurement. The toner quantity changes depending on the printed dot diameter or the line width of the toner mark.
Manipulated variables for the printed dot and line variation in characters that are to be printed are, for example, the bias voltage at the jump roller, the charging/dischargind potential of the charge image carrier, and properties of the developer mixture.
The measurement of a toner mark with an optical reflex sensor is known from U.S. Pat. No. 7,016,620 B2, for example; the measurement of a toner mark with a capacitive toner quantity sensor is known from U.S. Pat. No. 7,260,334 B2.
It is an object to specify a method with which the character width of characters printed with a printing or copying device can be determined with the aid of a sensor, independent of the print color and the contamination of the sensor.
In a method to determine a character width of characters from printed dots in a printing or copying device the printed dots are generated at a location of individual printed elements of a print raster made up of printed elements. In a first raster cell of the print raster a first test pattern is generated that does not cover an entire area from multiple printed dots, and the first raster cell is measured for areal coverage. In a second raster cell of the print raster a second test pattern is generated that does not cover an entire area in which the printed dots are arranged at least in part at different printed element locations in comparison to the first test pattern, and the second test pattern is measured for areal coverage. A ratio of the areal coverages is calculated and the printed dot size is calculated with aid of the ratio. Alternatively instead of measuring areal coverage with respect to the first and second test patterns, toner quantity is measured.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the invention, reference will now be made to the preferred embodiments/best mode illustrated in the drawings and specific language will be used to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of the invention is thereby intended, and such alterations and further modifications in the illustrated method and such further applications of the principles of the invention as illustrated as would normally occur to one skilled in the art to which the invention relates are included.
The method according to the preferred embodiments can be used both in electrophotographic printing and in inkjet printing. In the following the preferred embodiments are explained in connection with electrophotographic printing without the preferred embodiments being thereby limited to this application case.
The method according to the preferred embodiments assumes that the characters are constructed from printed dots and that individual PELs of a print raster made up of PELs are developed into printed dots to generate characters.
In a first solution method the problem posed above is then solved with the following steps:
For example, the calculation of the printed dot size can take place via a stored table or a formula in which is contained the dependency of the printed dot size on the ratios of the areal coverages or of the toner quantities. If the printed dot size is then known, the character width can be concluded from this.
In the first solution method, the following steps can be executed to generate the table:
In the print operation the printed dot size can then be determined from the table after measurement of the areal coverages of both test patterns.
In the second solution method the table can be generated with the following steps:
In the print operation the printed dot size can then be determined from the table after measurement of the toner quantities of both test patterns.
For example, a checkerboard pattern can be selected as a first test pattern. The second test pattern can then be realized as a line pattern, for example. However, test patterns with a different arrangement of the printed dots are also possible, but the requirement is that the first and second test patterns differ in the arrangement of the printed dots.
If the table has been saved in a memory of a printer controller, with the aid of the table the printed dot size can be read from the test patterns after measurement of the areal coverages of the test patterns and calculation of their ratio or after measurement of the toner quantities of the test patterns and calculation of their ratio, and the character width of the printed characters can be determined from this. The test patterns can thereby be arranged as toner marks on the charge image carrier.
In the first solution method the first test pattern and the second test pattern are applied on a photoconductor belt (for example) as a charge image carrier; the areal coverages of the two test patterns are measured with an optical reflex sensor; the ratio of the areal coverages is then determined; and the printed dot size is determined with the aid of the ratio from the table and the character width is determined with the aid of the printed dot size.
In the second solution method the first test pattern and the second test pattern are applied on a photoconductor belt (for example) as a charge image carrier; the toner quantities of the two test patterns are measured with a capacitive toner quantity sensor; the ratio of the toner quantities is determined; and with the aid of the ratio from the table the printed dot size is determined, and from the printed dot size the character width is determined.
Two columns SP1, SP2 of raster cells RZ1, RZ2 from a print raster are shown in
Viewed from top to bottom in the column direction, the areal coverages are indicated in % as an example, beginning with a printed dot size of 1.2 PEL through a printed dot size of 1.6 PEL. For example, the test pattern TM1 has an areal coverage of 57% given a dot size of 1.2 PEL. In contrast to this, the test pattern TM2 has an areal coverage of 53% given a dot size of 1.2 PEL. Or, the test pattern TM1 has an areal coverage of 96% given a dot size of 1.6 PEL; in contrast to this, the test pattern TM2 has an areal coverage of 75%.
The difference in the areal coverages given both test patterns TM1 and TM2 is apparent in
The result from
If the ratio VE of the areal coverages FL of the test patterns TM1 and TM2 is respectively calculated corresponding to the curve according to
If the curve according to
Instead of the areal coverage, the method can also be implemented via measurement of the toner quantity of the test pattern. The procedure corresponds to that which was explained above with regard to
As indicated above, the method can also be used in an inkjet printer, with the assumption that the generation of the characters takes place in printed dots. As described, the size of the printed dots can then be determined from the areal coverages of test patterns.
Although preferred exemplary embodiments are shown and described in detail in the drawings and in the preceding specification, they should be viewed as purely exemplary and not as limiting the invention. It is noted that only preferred exemplary embodiments are shown and described, and all variations and modifications that presently or in the future lie within the protective scope of the invention should be protected.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2008 030 972.9 | Jun 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2009/058185 | 6/30/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/15/2011 |