Some commercial products such as printers, graphics plotters, copiers, and facsimile machines may employ thermal ink-jet printing or piezoelectric printhead technology. Thermal ink-jet printing technology typically includes the repeated heating of resistors to fire ink through a plurality of nozzles onto a media. Piezoelectric printhead technology typically includes the repeated actuation of piezoelectric elements to fire ink through a plurality of nozzles onto a media. In some products, the firing elements, e.g., resistors or piezoelectric elements, are arranged in printheads, in which the printheads are smaller in width than the media and are to be scanned across the media. In these types of products, the firing elements are activated at appropriate times as the printheads are scanned one or more times across the media to cause a desired image to be formed on the media. Printing during multiple scans across the media enables printing fluid to be deposited at their desired locations through any of a number of nozzles. In one regard, therefore, in scanning printhead type of products, an operational firing element may be used to deposit ink at a particular location in place of a defective firing element.
In other products, such as page wide printers, the firing elements are arranged in printheads, in which the printheads are similar to or larger in width than the media. In these types of products, the firing elements are activated at appropriate times to cause printing fluid to be deposited at desired locations on the media during a single pass of either the printheads with respect to the media or the media with respect to the printheads. Typically, the printheads in page wide printers remain fixed while the media moves in a particular direction beneath the printheads.
Features of the present disclosure are illustrated by way of example and not limited in the following figure(s), in which like numerals indicate like elements, in which:
For simplicity and illustrative purposes, the present disclosure is described by referring mainly to an example thereof. In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present disclosure. It will be readily apparent however, that the present disclosure may be practiced without limitation to these specific details. In other instances, some methods and structures have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure the present disclosure. As used herein, the terms “a” and “an” are intended to denote at least one of a particular element, the term “includes” means includes but not limited to, the term “including” means including but not limited to, and the term “based on” means based at least in part on.
Disclosed herein are methods for mitigating damage to a plurality of drop generators in a printing system and apparatuses for implementing the methods. In the methods, data corresponding to an image to be printed on a media by the printing system may be accessed. The data may include data that has been processed for printing, e.g., processed through an imaging pipeline where the data is color mapped, halftoned, linearized, swath cut, etc. In addition, the plurality of drop generators may be controlled to print the image on the media while mitigating damage to the plurality of drop generators and without shifting placement of the image on the media or shifting the plurality of drop generators in a direction perpendicular to a feed direction of the media. Various manners in which damage to the plurality of drop generators may be mitigated are disclosed herein.
As discussed herein, a drop generator, such as a piezoelectric element or a resistor, may be construed as being damaged if the drop generator has stopped functioning properly. That is, a drop generator may be construed as being damaged if the drop generator is unable to fire a drop of printing fluid through a nozzle or if the drop generator is only able to fire a drop of printing fluid that is relatively smaller than a nominally sized drop, i.e., a drop size corresponding to a properly functioning drop generator. In addition, a drop generator, such as a resistor, may be construed as being damaged if the drop generator has been burned-in. As used herein, “burn-in” of a drop generator may be defined as an uneven wearing of the drop generator as compared with other drop generators in the printing system, as may occur when the drop generator is used a significantly larger number of times as compared to the other drop generators to print portions of images. That is, a drop generator may experience “burn-in” or uneven wearing when that drop generator is activated much more often than neighboring drop generators. One result of burn-in may be that the burnt-in drop generator(s) may be unable to eject a nominal or normal amount of printing fluid. This inability to cause a nominal amount of printing fluid to be ejected may cause the drop generator(s) to drop printing fluid that is sized differently than the printing fluids dropped by its neighboring drop generators. For instance, a burnt-in drop generator may drop a smaller sized drop of printing fluid or a larger sized drop of printing fluid than its neighboring drop generators. In addition, in printing systems in which the same drop generators are responsible for printing along the same line in a feed direction of the media, such as printing systems in which the drop generators are not a lighter or darker band may be printed by the damaged, e.g., burnt-in, drop generators as compared with their neighboring drop generators that are operating nominally. Thus, for instance, the sections of an image printed by the damaged drop generators may appear as a lighter or darker band within the sections of the image printed by neighboring drop generators that have experienced a lesser degree of damage or are less worn.
By way of example, a set of drop generators may experience damage, e.g., burn-in, if the set of drop generators are employed to print relatively long lines in a feed direction of a media. This may occur in engineering drawings which often include long borders that extend from nearly one edge to an opposite edge of a media.
Through implementation of the methods and apparatuses disclosed herein, damage to a plurality of drop generators may be mitigated through prevention or delay of the onset of the damage. In addition, or alternatively, the effects of the damage to the drop generators may be mitigated through drop generator control operations that may substantially avoid use of the damaged drop generators, for instance, to print filled in sections of images. Moreover, the mitigation may be provided as an image processing pipeline solution in that the methods and the apparatuses disclosed herein may be implemented without shifting the placement of the image on the media or shifting a position of the drop generators in a direction that is perpendicular to the feed direction of the media. Instead, the mitigation may occur in the image processing pipeline of the printing system.
With reference first to
As shown in
Each of the print bars 106-112 is depicted as including a plurality of drop generators 114 arranged along two parallel columns. The drop generators 114 are depicted as being arranged along a first drop generator column 115a and a second drop generator column 115b. A relatively small number of drop generators 114 are shown for convenience, but it should be clearly understood that each of the print bars 106-112 may include much larger numbers of drop generators 114, for instance, to be able to print at 600 dpi or more across the width of a media 130. Each of the drop generators 114 may be a resistor (or equivalently, a heating element) or a piezoelectric element that may be individually activated or fired to cause drops of printing fluid to be ejected out of respective nozzles (an example is shown in
As discussed in greater detail herein below, the controller 102 also includes a damage mitigating apparatus 104 that is to mitigate damage to the drop generators 114. Particularly, the damage mitigating apparatus 104 is to mitigate damage to the drop generators in printing an image on the media 130 while a file containing the image to be printed is in an image processing pipeline of the printing system 100. In other words, the damage mitigating apparatus 104 is to mitigate damage to the drop generators in printing the image without moving the drop generators 114 with respect to the media 130 in a direction perpendicular to the media 130 feed direction 132 or shifting placement of the image on the media 130. Various manners in which the damage mitigating apparatus 104 may mitigate damage to the drop generators 114 are discussed in detail below.
As also shown in
Turning now to
As shown in
In any regard, the controller 102 may selectively activate the drop generators 114 according to a proper sequence as the media 130 is fed in the feed direction 132 to cause printing fluid 116 to be dropped at the appropriate locations on the media 130 to form a desired image on the media 130. The desired image may include any of text, pictures, lines, drawings, filled-in drawings, etc. As discussed in greater detail herein, the controller 102, and particularly, the damage mitigating apparatus 104, may operate the drop generators 114 in any of a variety of manners to mitigate damage to the drop generators 114.
Turning now to
As shown in
The processor 202, which may be a microprocessor, a micro-controller, an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), or the like, is to perform various processing functions in the controller 102. The processing functions may include invoking or implementing the damage mitigating apparatus 104 and particularly, the modules 210-214 of the damage mitigating apparatus 104, as discussed in greater detail herein below. According to an example, the damage mitigating apparatus 104 is a hardware device on which is stored various sets of machine readable instructions. The damage mitigating apparatus 104 may be, for instance, a volatile or non-volatile memory, such as dynamic random access memory (DRAM), electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM), magnetoresistive random access memory (MRAM), memristor, flash memory, floppy disk, a compact disc read only memory (CD-ROM), a digital video disc read only memory (DVD-ROM), or other optical or magnetic media, and the like, on which software may be stored. In this example, the modules 210-214 may be software modules, e.g., sets of machine readable instructions, stored in the damage mitigating apparatus 104.
In another example, the damage mitigating apparatus 104 may be a hardware component, such as a chip, and the modules 210-214 may be hardware modules on the hardware component. In a further example, the modules 210-214 may include a combination of software and hardware modules. In a yet further example, the processor 202 may be an ASIC that is to perform the functions of the modules 210-214. In this example, the processor 202 and the damage mitigating apparatus 104 may be a single processing apparatus.
The processor 202 may store data in the data store 206 and may use the data in implementing the modules 210-214. For instance, the processor 202 may store data pertaining to an image that is to be printed onto a medium 130. In any regard, the data store 206 may be volatile and/or non-volatile memory, such as DRAM, EEPROM, MRAM, phase change RAM (PCRAM), memristor, flash memory, and the like. In addition, or alternatively, the data store 206 may be a device that may read from and write to a removable media, such as, a floppy disk, a CD-ROM, a DVD-ROM, or other optical or magnetic media.
The signal line interface 204 may include hardware and/or software to enable the processor 202 to respectively send electrical signals to the drop generators 114 over signal lines 126. Although not shown, the signal line interface 204 may be connected to a power source from which the electrical signals may be transmitted to the respective drop generators 114. In addition, the processor 202 may be connected to an input/output interface (not shown) that may enable the processor 202 to access a network, such as an internal network, the Internet, etc., over which the processor 202 may receive files containing images to be printed. The input/output interface may include a network interface card and/or may also include hardware and/or software to enable the processor 202 to communicate with various input and/or output devices, such as a keyboard, a mouse, a display, another computing device, etc., through which a user may input instructions into the printing system 100.
Various manners in which the processor 202 in general, and the modules 210-214 in particular, may be implemented are discussed in greater detail with respect to the methods 300-900 respectively depicted in
The descriptions of the methods 300-900 are made with reference to the printing system 100 illustrated in
With reference first to the method 300 depicted in
At block 304, the drop generators 114 may be controlled to print the image on the media while mitigating damage to the plurality of drop generators 114 and without shifting placement of the printed image on the media 130 or shifting the plurality of drop generators in a direction perpendicular to a feed direction of the media 130. For instance, the damage mitigating module 212 may determine how the drop generators 114 are to be operated to mitigate damage to the drop generators 114. In other words, the damage mitigating module 212 may determine which of the drop generators 114 are to be activated at which times for an image printing operation to cause the drop generators 114 to wear substantially evenly with respect to each other, without shifting placement of the printed image on the media 130 or shifting the drop generators 114 in a direction that is perpendicular to the feed of direction 132 of the media 130. That is, the damage mitigating module 212 may determine the timing at which selected drop generators 114 or groups of drop generators 114 are to be activated to print the image on the media 130 such that the margins between the edges of the media 130 and the printed image are sized as originally intended. In other words, therefore, the drop generator control while mitigating damage at block 304 may be achieved without printing the image with an entirely shifted set of drop generators 114.
In addition, in accordance with the determination as to how the drop generators 114 are to be operated, the drop generator controlling module 214 may control the drop generators 114 individually or in respective groups to drop printing fluid onto the media 130 at appropriate times while the media 130 is fed past the drop generators 114 to thus cause the image to be printed onto the media 130. Various examples in which the damage mitigating module 212 may make this determination and the drop generator controlling module 214 may control the drop generators 114 according to the determination are discussed in greater detail below with respect to the methods 400-900.
According to an example, the damage mitigating module 212 may determine that certain ones of the drop generators 114 are to be activated instead of other ones of the drop generators 114 in printing the image to thus cause the drop generators 114 to wear substantially evenly with respect to each other. In addition, the damage mitigating module 212 may make this determination such that the drop generators 114 wear substantially evenly with respect to each other over the course of printing a relatively large number of images, e.g., over more than 100 images. Thus, for instance, although a set of the drop generators 114 may be activated a substantially larger number of times than another set of the drop generators 114 to print a particular image, the damage mitigating apparatus 104 may implement a drop generator utilization technique, as disclosed herein, that substantially prevents a group of the drop generators 114 from being activated much more often than other groups of the drop generators 114 to thereby mitigate damage to the drop generators 114.
According to an example, an initial determination of which of the drop generators 114 are to be activated at which times to print the image may be made prior to the determination by the damage mitigating module 212. The initial determination may therefore be the order and timing (e.g., sequence) at which the drop generators 114 are to be activated under a nominal printing operation. In other words, the initial determination may identify a printing operation that would be performed if the damage mitigating operation disclosed herein were not implemented. As such, in one regard, the control of the drop generators at block 304 represents use of sets of drop generators 114 that differs from their use in a nominal printing operation.
In addition, because the printing system 100 may be a fixed printing system and thus, the print bars 106-112 on which the drop generators 114 are positioned may not move in a direction perpendicular to the feed direction 132 during a printing operation, control of the drop generators 114 to mitigate damage at block 304 may be achieved without moving either the print bars 106-112 or the media 130 in a direction perpendicular to the feed direction 132, and thus the drop generators 114, with respect to the media 130. Moreover, block 304 may be applied to the drop generators 114 in a single one of the print bars 106 or may be applied to the drop generators 114 respectively in multiple ones of the print bars 106-112.
With reference now to the method 400 depicted in
At block 404, a characteristic type of the image to be printed may be determined. For instance, the data accessing module 210 may determine a characteristic type of the image to be printed, in which the characteristic type may be, for instance, whether the image includes a section that is intended to be printed primarily by a particular set of drop generators 114 in a highly repetitive manner, e.g., a relatively long straight line, whether the image is intended to be printed by a relatively large set of drop generators 114 without causing any subset of the drop generators 114 to be activated substantially more often than any other subset of the drop generators 114, e.g., a filled in or solid section, etc. By way of particular example, a characteristic type of the image to be printed may be that the image is an engineering drawing, which may include relatively long lines that extend near the edges of the media 130 to form borders around drawings contained within the borders and thus may require highly repetitive use of a set of drop generators 114 with respect to other drop generators 114. As another example, a characteristic type of the image to be printed may be that the image contains relatively large solid sections.
According to an example, and as shown in
As indicated at block 406, in response to a determination being made at block 404 that the image to be printed has a first characteristic type, control of the drop generators 114 may include controlling the drop generators 114 to print the image exclusively with a first subset of the drop generators 114. Alternatively, as indicated at block 408, in response to a determination being made at block 404 that the image to be printed has a second characteristic type, control of the drop generators 114 may include controlling the drop generators 114 to print the image exclusively with a second subset of the drop generators 114. The first subset of drop generators 114 may be non-overlapping with the second subset of the plurality of drop generators 114. In addition, blocks 406 and 408 may be applied to the drop generators 114 in a single one of the print bars 106 or may be applied to the drop generators 114 respectively in multiple ones of the print bars 106-112.
According to an example, the first subset of drop generators 114 are the drop generators 114 located along one column 115a of a print bar 106 and the second subset of drop generators 114 are the drop generators 114 located along the other column 115b of the print bar 106, for instance, as shown in
According to an example, a bad drop generator 114 located along the first column 115a of a print bar 106 may be replaced with a drop generator 114 located across from the bad drop generator 114 in the second column 115b of the print bar 106 during printing operations. A bad drop generator may be a drop generator that has failed or is otherwise operating improperly.
Although the method 400 is described with respect to two characteristic types, it should be understood that the method 400 may be implemented through consideration of any reasonably suitable number of characteristic types. That is, at block 404, for instance, a determination may be made as to whether the image to be printed is of any number of different characteristic types. In addition, blocks 406 and 408 may be implemented responsive to the image to be printed being any of the number of different characteristic types. Alternatively, the method 400 may include drop generator 114 control options in addition to blocks 406 and 408 depending upon the characteristic type of the image to be printed. The additional control options may include, for instance, control of other subsets of the drop generators 114.
In other examples in which the image to be printed does not contain any of the characteristic types considered at block 404, the drop generators 114 may be controlled to be activated in a manner other than through implementation of blocks 406 or 408. In other words, the drop generators 114 may be operated in a default manner in which the drop generators 114 are operated according to a nominal printing operation to print the image.
Turning now to the method 500 depicted in
At block 504, a first characteristic type of a first section and a second characteristic type of a second section of the image to printed may be determined. For instance, the image to be printed may include multiple sections in which at least two of the sections include different characteristic types from each other. In addition, the data accessing module 210 may determine the different characteristic types of the sections of the image to be printed. The characteristic types may include any of the characteristic types discussed above with respect to the method 400.
At block 506, a first subset of the drop generators 114 may be controlled to exclusively print the first section of the image and a second subset of the drop generators 114 may be controlled to exclusively print the second section of the image. Particularly, for instance, the drop generator controlling module 214 may control the drop generators 114 in this manner. The first subset of drop generators 114 may be those drop generators 114 located along a first column 115a of a print bar 106 and the second subset of drop generators 114 may be those drop generators 114 located along a second column 115b of the print bar 106. In addition, the first subset of drop generators 114 may include a non-overlapping set of drop generators 114 as compared with the second subset of the plurality of drop generators 114. Moreover, block 506 may be applied to the drop generators 114 in a single one of the print bars 106 or may be applied to the drop generators 114 respectively in multiple ones of the print bars 106-112.
By way of particular example, the first characteristic type is a line drawing section, e.g., an engineering drawing, and the second characteristic type is a filled area section of the image. In this example, printing of the image using the first subset of the drop generators 114 to exclusively print the first section and using the second subset of the drop generators to exclusively print the second section may mitigate effects of drop generator damage, such as burn-in, for at least the reasons discussed above with respect to the method 400.
Turning now to the method 600 depicted in
At block 604, a first characteristic type of a first section and a second characteristic type of a second section of the image to printed may be determined. For instance, the image to be printed may include multiple sections in which at least two of the sections include different characteristic types from each other. In addition, the data accessing module 210 may determine the different characteristic types of the sections of the image to be printed. The characteristic types may include any of the characteristic types discussed above with respect to the method 400.
At block 606, a first subset of the drop generators 114 may be controlled to exclusively print both the first section of the image and the second section of the image. Particularly, for instance, the drop generator controlling module 214 may control the drop generators 114 in this manner. The first subset of drop generators 114 may be those drop generators 114 located along a first column 115a of a print bar 106 and the second subset of drop generators 114 may be those drop generators 114 located along a second column 115b of the print bar 106. In addition, the first subset of drop generators 114 may include a non-overlapping set of drop generators 114 as compared with the second subset of the plurality of drop generators 114. Moreover, block 606 may be applied to the drop generators 114 in a single one of the print bars 106 or may be applied to the drop generators 114 respectively in multiple ones of the print bars 106-112.
By way of particular example, the first characteristic type is a line drawing section, e.g., an engineering drawing, and the second characteristic type is a filled area section of the image. In this example, printing of the image using the first subset of the drop generators 114 to exclusively print the first section and the second section may mitigate effects of drop generator damage, such as burn-in, for at least the reasons discussed above with respect to the method 400.
With reference now to the method 700 in
At block 704, a determination may be made that a section of the image is to be printed in a black color. The section of the image may include a portion of the image or the entire image. In addition, for instance, the data accessing module 210 may make this determination based upon an analysis of the data corresponding to the image. This determination may also include a determination of the location in the image of the section of the image that is to be printed in the black color.
At block 706, the drop generators 114 appropriately located in each of the first print bar 106, the second print bar 108, the third print bar 110, and the fourth print bar 112 may be controlled to print the determined section. That is, instead of exclusively activating the drop generators 114 in the print bar 106 that is supplied with black colored printing fluid to be deposited, the drop generators 114 in the print bars 108-112 that are supplied with other colored printing fluids, e.g., yellow, cyan, and magenta, may be activated with the print bar 106 to print the determined section to have the black color. That is, the appropriately located drop generators 114, for instance, the drop generators 114 located along a common line extending in the direction in which the media 130 is fed, may each drop printing fluid such that the combination of the printing fluids along common locations on the media 130 may have a black color.
With reference now to the method 800 in
At block 804, a determination may be made of a tone of a section of the image. The section of the image may include a portion of the image or the entire image. In addition, for instance, the data accessing module 210 may make this determination based upon an analysis of the data corresponding to the image. This determination may also include a determination of the location in the image of the section of the image having the determined tone.
At block 806, appropriately located drop generators 114 in each of the second print bar 108, the third print bar 110, and the fourth print bar 112 may be controlled to print the determined section in response to the section being determined to be a midtone. A midtone may be defined as a tone between and not including approximately complete black and approximately complete white. In addition, as discussed above, the first print bar 106 may be supplied with a black colored printing fluid, the second print bar 108 may be supplied with a cyan colored printing fluid, the third print bar 110 may be supplied with a magenta colored printing fluid, and the fourth print bar 112 may be supplied with a yellow colored printing fluid. As noted at block 806, the appropriately located drop generators 114 in each of the print bars 108-112 other than the first print bar 106 may be implemented to print the section of the image containing a midtone. In other words, the section, when it contains a midtone, may be printed using printing fluids having colors other than black. In one regard, therefore, the drop generators 114 in the first print bar 106, which may be supplied with black colored printing fluid, may be exclusively used to print nearly complete black colors and nearly complete white colors. An example of the utilization of the different colored printing fluids for different tones is provided below in Table 1.
As shown in Table 1, the tone may increase from white to black and depending upon the tone, various amounts of the different colored printing fluids may be used in printing that tone of the color black.
With reference now to the method 900 in
At block 904, an identification may be made of a first set of drop generators that have been activated a greater number of times than a second set of drop generators in a single print bar 106. For instance, the damage mitigating module 212 may make this identification based upon a profiling of the drop generators 114 in the print bar 106. Particularly, the damage mitigating module 212 may count the number of times each of the drop generators 114 in the print bar 106 have been fired and may determine which of the drop generators 114 are likely to have a higher likelihood of damage, e.g., burn-in, as well as the severity of the damage based upon the count. Thus, for instance, the damage mitigating module 212 may identify the potentially damaged, e.g., burnt-in, drop generators 114 as those drop generators 114 that have been activated more than a predetermined number of times. As another example, the damage mitigating module 212 may identify the potentially damaged, e.g., burnt-in, drop generators 114 as those drop generators 114 that have been activated more than a predetermined number of times over the number of times that other drop generators 114 have been activated.
In addition, the damage mitigating module 212 may determine a correction factor for the potentially damaged drop generators 114. The correction factor may be an increase in the number of times that the potentially damaged drop generators 114 are to be activated in comparison to other drop generators 114 for a given printing operation.
At block 906, the first set of drop generators, which may be the drop generators that are potentially damaged, e.g., burnt-in, may be controlled to drop a different number of printing fluid drops than the second set of drop generators, which may be the drop generators that are not or are potentially less damaged, in printing features of the image having the same characteristics. That is, for instance, the drop generator controlling module 214 may activate the first set of drop generators a different number of times than the second set of drop generators to print the same color (e.g., RGB) value. By way of particular example, the drop generator controlling module 214 may create an RGB value of 128, 128, 128 by using 1 black colored drop per 600 dpi pixel with the second set of drop generators but may use 1.1 black colored drops per 600 dpi pixel with the first set of drop generators. As another example, the drop generator controlling module 214 may create an RGB value of 128, 128, 128 by using 1 black colored drop per 600 dpi pixel with the second set of drop generators but may use 0.9 black colored drops per 600 dpi pixel with the first set of drop generators. In one regard, therefore, the method 900 may substantially equalize the amount of printing fluid deposited from drop generators 114 that are damaged and those that are operating normally, thus mitigating the effects of the damage.
The first set of drop generators may not overlap with the second set of the drop generators. In addition, block 906 may be applied to the drop generators 114 in a single one of the print bars 106 or may be applied to the drop generators 114 respectively in multiple ones of the print bars 106-112.
According to a further example, a user may be notified that a set of drop generators may or may likely become damaged and may also be provided with instructions to manually delay and/or mitigate the damage. For instance, the damage mitigating apparatus 104 may output, e.g., display, a message for the user that repeated pattern printing will likely result in print bar degradation and that the user should thus rotate some of the print bars or modules of the print bars.
Some or all of the operations set forth in the methods 300-900 may be contained as utilities, programs, or subprograms, in any desired computer accessible medium. In addition, the methods 300-900 may be embodied by computer programs, which may exist in a variety of forms both active and inactive. For example, they may exist as machine readable instructions, including source code, object code, executable code or other formats. Any of the above may be embodied on a non-transitory computer readable storage medium.
Examples of non-transitory computer readable storage media include computer system RAM, ROM, EPROM, EEPROM, and magnetic or optical disks or tapes. It is therefore to be understood that any electronic device capable of executing the above-described functions may perform those functions enumerated above.
Turning now to
The computer readable medium 1010 may be any suitable medium that participates in providing instructions to the processor 1002 for execution. For example, the computer readable medium 1010 may be non-volatile media, such as an optical or a magnetic disk; volatile media, such as memory. The computer-readable medium 1010 may also store a damage mitigating machine readable instructions 1014, which may perform some or all of the methods 300-900 and may include the modules 210-214 of the damage mitigating apparatus 104 depicted in
Although described specifically throughout the entirety of the instant disclosure, representative examples of the present disclosure have utility over a wide range of applications, and the above discussion is not intended and should not be construed to be limiting, but is offered as an illustrative discussion of aspects of the disclosure.
What has been described and illustrated herein is an example of the disclosure along with some of its variations. The terms, descriptions and figures used herein are set forth by way of illustration only and are not meant as limitations. Many variations are possible within the spirit and scope of the disclosure, which is intended to be defined by the following claims—and their equivalents—in which all terms are meant in their broadest reasonable sense unless otherwise indicated.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US14/35289 | 4/24/2014 | WO | 00 |