The present invention relates to multicolor printers and methods of printing images.
Multicolor printers generate images which are composed of a plurality of different single-color images. The quality of the final multicolor image depends on the registration accuracy of the single-color images. With the increasing resolution of modern printers the registration accuracy has become an issue of interest.
Different multicolor printer types are known. Ink-jet printers have at least one print head from which droplets of ink are directed towards a recording medium. Within the print head the ink is contained in a plurality of channels. Pulses cause the droplets of ink to be expelled as required from orifices or nozzles at the end of the channels. These pulses are generated e.g. by thermal components in thermal ink-jet print heads or by piezo-electric elements in drop-on-demand print heads. Ink-jet printers of the carriage type have a print head for each color. The print heads are mounted on a reciprocating carriage. Full width or page width ink-jet printers have, for each color, an array of nozzles extending across the full width of the print medium which is moved past the nozzle arrays. Each nozzle array is part of a print station which produces one single-color image or a part of it. Each print station provides its own color image or pattern on the recording medium as it moves past the print stations. Each pattern is formed of a plurality of closely spaced ink dots, wherein single-color ink dot patterns are superimposed to form a multicolor pattern which represents the multicolor image. The print medium may be paper or any other suitable substrate to which the ink adheres.
In known color xerographic systems, instead of the nozzle arrays, a plurality of LED print bars are provided adjacent to a photoreceptive surface. The print bars are selectively energized to create successive charge patterns, one for each color. Each LED print bar is associated with a development system, which develops a latent image of the last charge pattern or exposure without disturbing previously developed images. The fully developed color image is then transferred to an output sheet, e.g. paper or the like.
To register single-color image patterns for forming a multicolor image, encoder arrangements are utilized which determine the advance of the recording medium during the print process. Optical encoder systems are known in which an optical sensor is responsive to encoder marks.
In page-width printers the recording medium is, for example, moved by a conveying belt which is driven by rollers or pulleys. The movement of the belt with the recording medium may be detected by a single rotary encoder which is mounted on one of the rollers or pulleys. The advance of the belt is controlled by advance information represented by the rotary encoder signals. It is also known to place the encoder marks on the belt.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,155,669 discloses an ink-jet printer with several print stations and a conveying belt with encoding marks. Each print station has its own optical reader responsive to the encoding marks to generate its own position signal.
A first aspect of the invention is directed to a multicolor-printer. According to the first aspect, it comprises a plurality of print stations arranged to generate an image on a recording medium during the movement of the recording medium; a recording medium conveyor; a plurality of similar encoding marks arranged along the conveyor, sensor arrangements associated with the print stations, responsive to the encoding marks and arranged to generate signals providing information about the movement of the conveyor with respect to the corresponding print station; and at least one index marking indicative of a reference position of the conveyor. The sensor arrangements are arranged to generate a signal responsive to the index marking. They thereby provide information about the position of the conveyor with respect to the corresponding print station. The printer is arranged to register images of different print stations with each other based on the movement and reference-position information.
According to another aspect, a method is provided of printing images onto each other on a recording medium using a printer having a plurality of print stations and a recording medium conveyor equipped with a plurality of similar encoding marks and at least one index marking indicative of a reference position of the conveyor. The method comprises moving the conveyor in an advance direction, thereby detecting the index marking and the encoding marks and counting the encoding marks starting with the detection of the index marking at each print station; starting to print an image, by the first print station, and recording a corresponding encoding-mark count of the first print station; starting to print an image, by a subsequent print station in response to equality of the subsequent print station's encoding-mark count and the recorded first print station's encoding-mark count.
According to another aspect, a method is provided of printing images onto each other on a recording medium using a printer having a plurality of print stations and a recording medium conveyor equipped with a plurality of similar encoding marks and at least one index marking indicative of a reference position of the conveyor. The method comprises calibrating the distance between the print stations with reference to the encoding marks by moving the conveyor and detecting the index marking, when moved past the print stations, while detecting the corresponding encoding marks; moving the conveyor to print images on the recording medium while detecting the encoding marks at each print station, so as to obtain printing-station-related movement information; and registering the images being printed by the different print stations with each other based on the movement information and using the distance calibration.
According to another aspect, a multicolor-printer is provided which comprises a plurality of print stations arranged to generate an image on a recording medium; a conveyor arranged to move the recording medium in an advance direction; a plurality of similar first encoding marks arrange along the conveyor, sensor arrangements associated with the print stations, responsive to the first encoding marks and arranged to generate first signals providing information about the advance movement of the conveyor with respect to the corresponding print station; and second encoding marks associated with the conveyor and inclined to the first encoding marks. The sensor arrangements are arranged to also generate second signals from the second encoding marks, wherein the first and second signals are related and their relation bears information about a relative lateral conveyor displacement with respect to the corresponding print station. The printer is arranged to register images of different print stations with each other based on the movement and lateral-displacement information.
According to another aspect, a method is provided of printing images onto each other on a recording medium by means of a plurality of print stations. A recording medium conveyor equipped with a plurality of first and second encoding marks is used, wherein the second encoding marks are inclined to the first encoding marks. The conveyor is moved to print images on the recording medium while detecting the first and second encoding marks at each print station, wherein detection signals of the first and second encoding marks are related and their relation bears information about a relative lateral conveyor displacement with respect to the corresponding print station, so as to obtain printing-station-related movement and lateral-displacement information. The images being printed by the different print stations are registered with each other based on the movement and lateral-displacement information.
Other features are inherent in the products and methods disclosed or will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of embodiments and its accompanying drawings.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Multicolor printers can utilize different methods of transferring an image to a print medium such as paper. In ink-jet printers the colors are directly transferred by liquid inks to the print medium. In color xerographic systems the complete image is generated on a photoreceptive surface which is subsequently transferred to the print medium e.g. the paper. In both cases the multicolor image is composed of a plurality of single-color images or “patterns” which are generated by different print stations. These single-color patterns are subsequently produced by the print stations across the print medium when it is moved past the print stations by a recording medium conveyor in an advance direction.
The conveyor can, for example, be a belt which carries the print medium on its surface, or a cylindrical drum which moves the print medium along the circumferential surface in a section where the image is applied. In embodiments in which a belt conveyor is utilized, the belt extends between rollers or pulleys which drive and guide the belt. In the area where the images are applied the print-medium-carrying surface of the belt defines a plane which is disposed opposite the print stations so that a print medium may be disposed between the belt and the print stations. The belt defines a movement path in the advance direction along which the print medium is conveyed during the printing process.
In the embodiments the print stations extend across the whole printing width of the belt and perpendicular to its advance direction. They are arranged subsequently in the printing direction. Each print station produces a single-color pattern e.g. in the colors black, cyan, yellow, and magenta. To increase the variety of printable colors, the ink saturation and/or the resolution, some embodiments are provided with two or more print stations of the same color.
The single-color patterns which form the desired multicolor image are applied by the print stations subsequently, registered onto each other. To achieve precise registration (i.e. alignment) of the single-color patterns onto each other, the belt is provided with a plurality of encoding marks (also called “fiducial marks”). The encoding marks are similar to one another, and they are arranged with equal distances to their respective neighboring encoding marks along the conveyor. The number of encoding marks passing a detector upon movement of the conveyor may be counted, thereby providing information about relative movements of the conveyor. The encoding marks may be provided on an edge of the belt in a section which is not to be printed on or covered by the print medium. The encoding section extends in a loop along the complete circumference of the belt. The marks may, for example, be printed or etched onto the surface of the belt or they are attached as a strip to the belt's edge, so that the marks are moved together with the belt.
A sensor arrangement responsive to the encoding marks is associated with each print station. The signals generated by the sensor arrangements with respect to each print station enable the advance of the belt to be individually determined with respect to each print station. The use of print-station-individual decoding information enables the print position error to be reduced and the registration accuracy to be increased, compared with printers having a common encoder for several print stations. This is now illustrated by
If, in contrast to a common encoder, individual encoders for each print station are used, the accumulated paper advance “seen” by the individual encoders is the same for all encoders. Assuming that the systematic encoding error is similar for all encoders (which is a reasonable assumption in many cases), each of the encoders therefore generates approximately the same accumulated error, so that each print station prints approximately at the same print position which deviates, for example, 120 μm from the theoretical print position. This is illustrated by
In some of the embodiments, the belt is also provided with at least one index marking. The index marking is indicative of a certain reference position of the conveyor. Measurement of the reference position provides absolute-position information of the conveyor in the advance direction. The index marking may, for example, be arranged beside the encoding marks. As the encoding marks, the index marking may, for example, be printed or etched onto the surface of the belt or may be attached as a strip to the belt's edge, and it is moved together with the belt. In the embodiments with an index marking, the sensor arrangements associated with each print station are also responsive to the index marking and detect it when it passes.
The signals generated by the sensor arrangement in response to the index marking enable the reference position of the belt to be determined with respect to each print station. In embodiments without index marking the distances between the print stations (in terms of encoding marks) are accurately known and it is assumed that these distances remain constant, in order to register the images of the different print stations. However, small variations of the distances between the different print stations or between the encoding marks on the belt may occur due to thermal, mechanical or other influences. Typically, these variations take place fairly gradually, i.e. during one print-out the distances can be considered as constant. In the embodiments with index marking the actual distances between the print stations are taken into account and used to further improve the longitudinal registration accuracy of the images printed by the different print stations.
In some of the embodiments, the detection of the index marking at the different print stations is used to define the position at which the respective print station starts to print to achieve longitudinal image registration. When the conveyor is moved in the advance direction, and the passage of the index marking is detected at the individual print stations, the number of encoding marks passing the respective print stations are individually counted for each print station. The process of counting starts with the detection of the index marking at each print station (for example, the print-station-individual counters are reset when the index-marking passes the respective print station). When the first print station starts to print an image (which it can do at any belt position relative to the index marking), the first print station's corresponding encoding-mark count is recorded. In some of the embodiments the encoding-mark count recorded corresponds to an image reference position which lies a certain distance ahead of the first image dot (a “dot” is a printable dot which may or may not be printed rather than only an actually printed dot). In other embodiments, the position of the first image dot itself is used as the reference position the encoding-mark count recorded. When the same count as the recorded count is reached at a subsequent print station's encoding-mark counter, the subsequent print station starts to print its image in an analogous way. More precisely, the conveyor position at which the same encoding mark count is reached is considered as the image reference position for the respective subsequent print station. For example, if the image reference position lies a certain distance ahead of the first image dot, the subsequent print station starts to print its image the same distance after the reference position as the first print station. If the reference position corresponds to the first image dot, it accordingly starts to print its image on the reference position. In this way, the individual images will be aligned with high accuracy, without assuming fixed predetermined distances between the print stations.
Typically, the printing resolution is much higher (i.e. the grid of points which can be printed is much finer) than the distance between the encoding marks. The grid of printable dots in the advance direction may, for example, be defined by a clock synchronized with the advance mechanism of the belt which subdivides the distance between two encoding marks into a large number of printable dots. In order to define the image reference position at the individual print stations with the higher printing resolution, not only the encoding marks are counted during the conveyor movement, but also the number of clock counts for those encoding mark intervals which only partly pass the sensor arrangement. Therefore, if the image reference position lies somewhere between two encoding marks at the first station, the corresponding clock counts are also recorded, and are used to define the image reference point at the respective subsequent print station, in addition to the recorded encoding mark count, whereby a registration with sub-encoding resolution is achieved.
In other embodiments, the actual distances between the print stations in terms of encoding marks are measured (or “calibrated”) by means of the index marking. In these embodiments, during the calibration process the belt is moved past the sensor arrangements so that both the index marking and the encoding marks are detected by the sensor arrangements of each print station. By counting the signals generated by the encoding marks moving past one of the sensor arrangements in the period in which the index marking generates a first signal at the sensor arrangement of a first print station and a second signal at the sensor arrangement of a subsequent second print station (and by counting the clock counts for subintervals of encoding marks), the distance between the first and the second print station in terms of encoding marks (and clock counts for subintervals of encoding marks) is determined. In a subsequent printing process the information obtained during the calibration process is used to control the print stations to print the single-color patterns onto each other with a higher registration accuracy than the accuracy achieved with the assumption of fixed known distances between print bars. The use of the calibration information in the printing process can be illustrated by a simple example in which the first print station prints a dot in the first color, and the second print station ought to print onto the dot with the second color. Triggered by the printing of the dot at the first print station, the encoding marks (and the clock counts for subintervals of encoding marks) are counted at the sensor arrangement of the second print station during the movement of the belt. When the number of encoding marks and clock counts is reached which corresponds to the number obtained during the calibration process, the second print station is triggered to print its dot.
In the embodiments using calibration, the calibration and printing processes may be asynchronously or synchronously carried out. In some of the asynchronous embodiments, a “calibration run” may be performed without a printing task, for example when the printer is switched on or, regularly, when it is in a standby-mode. The belt may then be moved for the calibration only, without a recording medium on it. In other asynchronous embodiments, the belt movement during printing is also used for the calibration. Depending on the position of the index marking, the calibration information may only be available when the printing is already progressing, so that it will not be used any more in the present print-out, but only in the next one (which is the reason for also calling these embodiments “asynchronous”). In synchronous embodiments a calibration is carried out shortly before a print process, and the calibration information is immediately used in this print process. The print medium is fed onto the conveying belt such that the index marking is detected by a print station prior to or at the beginning of the print process at this print station. The provision of more than one index marking may be advantageous, in particular in synchronous embodiments, because they enable the recording medium to be put on the belt at different positions. Sufficient distance between two consecutive index markings is chosen to enable their signals from two consecutive print stations to be resolved (which, for example, is the case if it is larger than the distance between two consecutive print stations). Both types of asynchronous calibration methods as well as asynchronous and synchronous calibration methods may be combined.
In other embodiments an active lateral registration can be performed, i.e. a compensation of displacements of the belt in a direction normal to the printing direction (i.e. in a lateral direction) in the printing plane. For this purpose, first and second encoder marks associated with the conveyor are provided. They may be disposed in stripes in an edge area of the belt, as mentioned above. The first encoder marks are, for example, arranged perpendicular to the printing direction, whereas the second encoder marks are inclined to the first encoder marks. The first and second encoder marks have the same pitch; they are arranged in fixed relative positions and thereby form pairs; for example, each inclined encoder mark is, at one of its ends, coincident with one of the ends of a non-inclined encoder mark. In other embodiments, both marks are inclined with respect to each other and with respect to the lateral direction.
During the printing operation the first and second encoder marks are moved past the sensor arrangements of the different print stations and generate consecutive first and second encoder signals. The signals from a pair of encoding marks are correlated. The offset between them is a measure of the lateral position of the belt. If the lateral belt position changes, the offset between the two signals of a pair changes, because the inclination of the second encoder marks changes the timing of the second encoder signal with respect to the first encoder signal. Depending on the direction of the lateral displacement, the offset between the signals of a pair increases or decreases. Thus, an offset change of the signal pairs between two print stations represents the amount and the direction of the lateral displacement of the belt between the two print stations.
In some embodiments this information is used to control the print operation of the print stations following the first print station to laterally counter-shift the pattern printed by the following print stations so as to correct for a detected lateral displacement between print stations. The lateral displacement measurement and correction may be individually performed for each print station following the first one. Thereby, the lateral registration of the different images printed onto each is improved.
Such a lateral correction is also advantageous without using the index-marking information described above, because it improves the lateral registration accuracy. Therefore, some embodiments with a lateral displacement correction and print-station-individual advance encoding do not have an index marking, but rather use an assumption of the print station distances. Other embodiments combine the use of print-station-individual advance encoding including considering the actual print station positions by using the index marking, as described above, with the described lateral displacement correction, so as to obtain an improved longitudinal and lateral registration.
In some of the embodiments, the second encoder marks are inclined at an angle of about 45° to the laterally-oriented first encoder marks. The observed offset change then relates the lateral displacement in a simple manner to the longitudinal advance of the belt (the lateral displacement equals the advance the belt makes during an interval which corresponds to the offset change).
Some embodiments use a conveying drum instead of a conveying belt. The print stations are not disposed in a plane which is parallel to the surface plane of the belt, but in a peripheral surface which extends in a predetermined distance from the circumferential surface of the drum.
The sensor arrangements are, for example, arranged to detect transparent marks or opaque marks, i.e. the detecting sensor and a corresponding light source may be arranged on opposite sides of the encoding section or on the same side.
In the embodiments, the sensor arrangements are fixedly attached to the print station so as to represent the actual longitudinal and lateral positions of the print stations with respect to the marks on the belt.
Returning now to
One edge of the belt 2 is provided with a marking section 9 carrying marks 10, 11, 12. A complementary sensor arrangement 13 is associated with each print station 1 and is arranged to detect the mark 10, 11, 12. Each sensor arrangement 13 is fixedly attached to its print station 1 so that the sensor arrangement's longitudinal and lateral position represent the print station's position to which it is attached, apart from a constant offset vector describing the relative position of the sensor arrangement 13 and its print station 1 in the longitudinal and lateral directions. When the print station's position changes, e.g. due to thermal expansion, the sensor arrangement's position is therefore correspondingly changed. The offset vectors are accurately known and, preferably, are equal at all print stations 1.
The sensor arrangements 13 are connected to a print controller 14 by signal lines 15 which transfer the detected sensor signals. The print controller 14 is also connected to the advance mechanism and, by control and data lines 16, to each print station 1. It translates image data representing the image to be printed and received from outside into printing commands for each print station 1. It performs the translation such that the single-color patterns printed by each of the individual print stations 1 are registered. In the registration procedure, it determines the position and the advance of the belt 2 individually for each print station 1, based on the information provided by the sensor arrangement 13 for the respective print station 1, and uses this print-station-individual position and advance determination to register the pattern to be printed by this print station 1 to the pattern already printed by a previous prints station or stations.
In embodiments carrying out a calibration of the print-station distances, the print controller 14, during calibration, deduces from the number of calibration mark signals counted between the index-marking signals from two (preferably consecutive) print stations 1 the distance between these print stations in terms of encoding marks. Clock counts coupled to the advance mechanism may be counted in addition to obtain a sub-encoding-mark resolution. During the printing process, the print controller 14 uses the number of counted calibration mark signals, clock counts and the calibration information to deduce the longitudinal position and advance of the belt, individually for the different print stations 1, and bases the registration of the different color patterns on this.
In embodiments in which the distance between the print stations is calibrated, the number of encoding signals (for example, ES2) counted in the interval between IS1 and IS2 represents the distance D1–2 between the first and second print stations 1 in terms of encoding marks.
The non-inclined and the inclined encoding-mark signals ES1, LS1, ES2, LS2 are correlated; the correlation between them enables the lateral belt between the first and second print stations to be measured. At the first print station, an offset L1 between associated non-inclined and inclined encoding signals ES1 and LS1 is observed. In the case of a lateral belt displacement, at the second print station a different offset L2 between associated signals ES2 and LS1 is observed. The difference L2−L1 of these offsets (which is, for example, determined by the print controller 14) is a measure of the lateral belt displacement between the first and second print stations. This lateral displacement information is used by the print controller 14 in the lateral registration of the patterns printed by the different second station. A corresponding lateral displacement correction is individually carried out for a further print station in the same manner, based on the lateral displacement information measured at each print station.
The flow chart of
The flow chart of
The flow chart of
Thus, the described embodiments enable individual images to be registered with improved accuracy, which enhances images quality.
All publications and existing systems mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference.
Although certain methods and products constructed in accordance with the teachings of the invention have been described herein, the scope of coverage of this patent is not limited thereto. On the contrary, this patent covers all embodiments of the teachings of the invention fairly falling within the scope of the appended claims either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4786803 | Majette et al. | Nov 1988 | A |
4789874 | Majette et al. | Dec 1988 | A |
5206645 | Urich | Apr 1993 | A |
5300961 | Corona et al. | Apr 1994 | A |
5411340 | Elgee | May 1995 | A |
5579092 | Isobe et al. | Nov 1996 | A |
5587771 | Mori et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
6089693 | Drake et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
6155669 | Donahue et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
6335748 | Furst | Jan 2002 | B1 |
20030128253 | Kitahara et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20050078015 | Ferran et al. | Apr 2005 | A1 |
20050185009 | Claramunt et al. | Aug 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0494105 | Jul 1992 | EP |
1226954 | Jul 2002 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050078137 A1 | Apr 2005 | US |