Reference is made to commonly assigned, co-pending U.S. patent applications Ser. No. 11/382,773 entitled CHARGE PLATE AND ORIFICE PLATE FOR CONTINUOUS INK JET PRINTERS to Richard W. Sexton et al., Ser. No.11/382,787 entitled SELF-ALIGNED PRINT HEAD AND ITS FABRICATION to Richard W. Sexton et al. and Ser. No. 11/382,759 entitled INTEGRATED CHARGE AND ORIFICE PLATES FOR CONTINUOUS INK JET PRINTERS to Shan Guan et al. filed Concurrently herewith.
The present invention relates to continuous ink jet printers, and more specifically to the fabrication of MEMS-bases integrated orifice plate and charge plate for such.
Continuous-type ink jet printing systems create printed matter by selective charging, deflecting, and catching drops produced by one or more rows of continuously flowing ink jets. The jets themselves are produced by forcing ink under pressure through an array of orifices in an orifice plate. The jets are stimulated to break up into a stream of uniformly sized and regularly spaced droplets.
The approach for printing with these droplet streams is to use a charge plate to selectively charge certain drops, and then to deflect the charged drops from their normal trajectories. The charge plate has a series of charging electrodes located equidistantly along one or more straight lines. Electrical leads are connected to each such charge electrode, and the electrical leads in turn are activated selectively by an appropriate data processing system.
Conventional and well-known processes for making the orifice plate and charge plate separately consist of photolithography and nickel electroforming. Orifice plate fabrication methods are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,374,707; 4,678,680; and 4,184,925. Orifice plate fabrication generally involves the deposition of a nonconductive thin disk on a metal substrate followed electroplating nickel on the metal substrate to a thickness sufficient to partial coverage the nonconductive thin disk to form an orifice. After formation of the orifice, the metal substrate is selectively etched away leaving the orifice plate electroform as a single component. Charge plate electroforming is described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,560,991 and 5,512,117. These charge plates are made by depositing nonconductive traces onto a metal substrate followed by deposition of nickel in a similar fashion to orifice plate fabrication, except that parallel lines of metal are formed instead of orifices. Nickel, which is a ferromagnetic material, is unsuitable for use with magnetic inks. Nor can low pH ink (pH less than, say, 6) be used with nickel, which is etched by low pH ink. U.S. Pat. No. 4,347,522 discloses the use electroforming or electroplating techniques to make a metal charge plate.
An ink jet printhead having an orifice plate and a charge plate requires precise alignment of these components to function properly. For high resolution ink jet printheads this alignment process is a difficult labor intensive operation that also requires significant tooling to achieve. It is desirable to develop a printhead that would simplify the alignment of the charging electrodes and the orifices from which ink is jetted.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a fabrication process of the orifice plate and charge plate that permits the use of both low pH and magnetic inks. It is another object of the present invention to provide such an orifice plate and charge plate as one, self-aligned component with high yield and robust connection.
According to a feature of the present invention, an integrated orifice array plate and a charge plate is fabricated for a continuous ink jet print head by providing an electrically non-conductive orifice plate substrate having first and second opposed sides and an array of predetermined spaced-apart orifice positions. A plating seed layer is applied to the first of the opposed sides of the substrate, and an array of orifices is formed through the orifice plate substrate at the predetermined orifice positions. The orifices extend between the opposed sides. The plating seed layer is etched, leaving a portion of the plating seed layer adjacent to each of the predetermined orifice positions. A charge electrode is plated onto each of the portions of the plating seed layer.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the opposed sides of the orifice plate substrate are initially coated with a silicon nitride layer and the orifices are formed by etching into the orifice plate substrate through openings in the silicon nitride layer on one of the first and second opposed sides. An ink channel is formed on the second of the opposed sides of the substrate by coating the second opposed side of the substrate with a silicon nitride layer and etching into the orifice plate substrate through an opening in the silicon nitride layer on the second side of the orifice plate substrate. The integrated orifice array plate and a charge plate may be fabricated by forming the ink channel by deep reactive ion etching; the charge plate is formed by electroforming. The step of applying a plating seed layer to the opposed sides of the substrate may be effected by sputtering. The charge electrodes may be placed alternatively on the two sides of the nozzle array.
It will be understood that the integral orifice array plate and charge plate of the present invention is intended to cooperate with otherwise conventional components of ink jet printers that function to produce desired streams of uniformly sized and spaced drops in a highly synchronous condition. Other continuous ink jet printer components, e.g. drop ejection devices, deflection electrodes, drop catcher, media feed system, and data input and machine control electronics (not shown) cooperate to effect continuous ink jet printing. Such devices may be constructed to provide synchronous drop streams in a long array printer, and comprise in general a resonator/manifold body to which the orifice plate is attached, a plurality of piezoelectric transducer strips, and transducer energizing circuitry.
Referring to
Next, a titanium or chromium adhesive layer is applied to silicon nitride layer 14 and a plating seed layer 19 onto the adhesive layer. The plating seed layer can be either copper or, preferably, gold. Next, a positive tone photoresist 20 is spun onto the plating seed layer 19 and is patterned by, say, photolithography. The pattern produced in this photolithography step corresponds to the conductive lead pattern of the charge plate. In the completed charge plate, these conductive leads connect the drop charging electrodes to the charge driver electronics, which may be fabricated on the silicon substrate, attached to the silicon substrate, or connected to the silicon substrate by means of a flexible circuit.
The exposed portion of plating seed layer 19 and silicon nitride layer 14 is chemically etched away. Etching may be carried out such as by reactive ion etching. The result is shown in
The photoresist layer 20 is removed and new positive photoresist layer 21 is applied. This photoresist layer 21 is patterned as illustrated in
The positive photoresist layer 21 is repatterned to expose additional portions of silicon nitride layer 12 as illustrated in
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.
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