The present invention relates to inkjet printers, and more particularly, to methods of making inkjet print heads.
Modern ink jet printers may produce photographic-quality images. An inkjet printer includes a number of orifices or nozzles spatially positioned in a printer cartridge. Ink is heated when an electrical pulse energizes a resistive element forming a thermal resistor. The ink resting above the thermal resistor is ejected through the orifice towards a printing medium, such as an underlying sheet of paper as a result of the applied electrical pulse.
The thermal resistor is typically formed as a thin film resistive material on a semiconductor substrate as part of a semiconductor chip, for example. Several thin film layers may be formed on the semiconductor chip, including a dielectric layer carried by the substrate, a resistive layer forming the thermal resistor, and an electrode layer that defines electrodes coupled to the resistive layer to which the pulse is applied to heat the thermal resistor and vaporize the ink.
An orifice plate is typically placed onto the print head die stack or the layers described above, for example, by a pick-and-place technique. The orifice plate is typically a metallic or a polymeric material. These materials may be particularly costly, and may have special equipment requirements and limitations with respect to thickness, and thus to inkjet chamber and inkjet orifice dimensions. By using a metallic or polymeric orifice plate, increased consideration may be given to the effects of different of thermal expansion (CTEs) since the substrate and the orifice plate are different materials.
A method of making a plurality of inkjet print heads may include forming a plurality of recesses in a first surface of a first wafer to define a plurality of inkjet chambers. The method may also include forming a plurality of openings extending from a second surface of the first wafer through to respective ones of the inkjet chambers to define a plurality of inkjet orifices. The method may further include forming a second wafer including a plurality of ink heaters, and joining the first and second wafers together so that the plurality of ink heaters are aligned within respective inkjet chambers to thereby define the plurality of inkjet print heads. Accordingly, the inkjet print heads may be made more efficiently and may be more robust. Greater accuracy may be obtained with respect to the inkjet orifices and inkjet chambers.
Forming the second wafer may include forming control circuitry coupled to the plurality of ink heaters, for example. The method may further include dividing the joined-together first and second wafers into a plurality of individual inkjet print heads.
The first wafer may include monocrystalline silicon, for example. The monocrystalline silicon may have a <100> crystalline orientation. The method may further include reducing a thickness of the first wafer from the second side thereof.
Joining may include joining the first and second wafers together with an adhesion layer therebetween, for example. Joining the first and second wafers together may be performed prior to forming the plurality of openings. Forming the plurality of recesses may include forming the plurality of recesses by at least one of wet etching and reactive ion etching.
A device aspect is directed to an inkjet print head that may include a first substrate comprising monocrystalline material having a plurality of recesses in a first surface thereof to define a plurality of inkjet chambers. The first substrate may also have a plurality of openings extending from a second surface thereof through to respective ones of the inkjet chambers to define a plurality of inkjet orifices. The inkjet print head may also include a second substrate joined to the first substrate. The second substrate may include a plurality of ink heaters and control circuitry coupled thereto with the plurality of ink heaters being aligned within respective inkjet chambers.
The embodiments will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments are shown. The embodiments may, however, be in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout and prime and multiple prime notation is used to describe like elements in different embodiments.
Referring initially to
The orifices 24 are typically located at an inkjet print head 27 of the print head cartridge 20. In an example, the print head cartridge 20 may include 300 or more orifices 24, each orifice 24 having an associated inkjet chamber 30, as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art. During manufacture, many print heads 27 may be formed on a single silicon wafer and separated. Such methods of making inkjet print heads are described in further detail below.
Referring now to the flowchart 60 in
Referring now to the flowchart 80 in
Beginning at Block 82, the method includes forming recesses in a first surface 42 of a first wafer 41 or substrate to define inkjet chambers 30. In particular, the first wafer 41 may include a substrate layer 43 and an oxide layer 44 carried by the substrate layer. At Block 84, the recesses may be formed by patterning the first surface 42 with an inkjet chamber mask or resist layer 45 (
The first wafer 41 may include monocrystalline silicon, for example. In some embodiments, the monocrystalline silicon has a <100> crystalline orientation. Of course, the monocrystalline silicon may have another crystalline orientation, which may, for example, be based upon desired dimensions of the inkjet chambers 30, which will be described in further detail below. At Block 86, the recesses are formed via wet etching (
At Block 88, the recesses are formed by removing the resist layer 45 and oxide layer 45 (
At Block 92, the method includes forming openings extending form the second surface 46 through to respective ones of the inkjet chambers 30 to define inkjet orifices 31 by patterning the second surface with an orifice mask layer 47 (
In some embodiments, the inkjet orifices 31 and the inkjet chambers 30 may be aligned using an infrared camera, for example. Of course, other alignment techniques may be used.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that by using a dry etching technique, for example, a dry plasma etching of the monocrystalline silicon first wafer 41 the vertical profile of the inkjet orifices 31 may be more controllable. In particular, the inkjet orifices 31 may have a vertical profile as illustrated in
By manipulating the etching conditions at Block 96, for example, other vertical profiles of the inkjet orifices 131 may be obtained having positive or negative slopes, as illustrated in
In some embodiments, for example, as illustrated in
The method also includes forming a second wafer 34 that includes ink heaters 33 at Block 98 (
The first and second wafers 31, 34 are joined together at Block 102 with an adhesion layer 36 therebetween so that the ink heaters 33 are aligned within respective inkjet chambers 30 to thereby define the inkjet print heads 27. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the adhesion layer 36 may be considered to become a permanent part of the composite structure or inkjet print head 27. The adhesion layer 36 may be a photosensitive polymer layer that may be cured for desired performance. The adhesion layer 36 has the same or similar pattern as the resist layer 45 (i.e., mask) for the inkjet chamber 30, as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art.
At Block 104, the joined-together first and second wafers are divided into individual inkjet print heads 27. The method ends at Block 106.
Referring now to
By using a first wafer 41 having a different crystalline orientation it may be possible to achieve other wet etch profiles. For example, a more vertical profile may be preferred when multiple inkjet chambers with a relatively small separation therebetween are desired.
Indeed, according to the method embodiments, the inkjet chamber 30 and the inkjet orifice 31 are formed monolithically in a single piece of silicon or wafer 41. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the wafer may be a low cost test wafer, for example. By using a single silicon wafer 41 the inkjet orifice 31 and inkjet chamber 30 may be formed in a way that the inkjet chamber and inkjet orifice dimensions may be more controllable by using semiconductor manufacturing techniques, and using conventional semiconductor equipment and inexpensive photoresists. This may thus result in a reduced manufacturing cost, with respect to prior art methods where, a fluid chamber and an orifice are formed separately using the same or different materials, for example, photo-definable polymeric materials, which tend to be expensive and may present special equipment requirements and present limitations with respect to thickness and therefore also to chamber or orifice dimensions. Moreover, an interface is typically formed between the materials used to create the chamber and orifice, which may result in an undesirable CTE mismatch.
With respect to robustness, silicon has an increased chemical resistance to many fluids over a wide range of pH such as the inks used in inkjet printers. As described above, the first wafer 41 or monolithic chamber/orifice substrate may be bonded to another wafer (i.e., the second wafer 34) or substrate. In the present embodiments the first and second wafers 41, 34 may each be a same material, for example, silicon, which advantageously provide a relatively close match with or the same CTE.
Referring now to the flowchart 80′ in
Referring now to the flowchart 80″ in
Referring now to the flowchart 80′″ in
It will be appreciated by those skilled the art, that while several embodiments that use wet etching and/or reactive ion etching, any combination of wet etching and/or reactive or dry etching may be used. Moreover, more than one opening may be formed to align with a respective inkjet orifice 31.
Many modifications and other embodiments will come to the mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications and embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13906455 | May 2013 | US |
Child | 14984672 | US |