Printing devices can include printers, copiers, fax machines, multifunction devices including additional scanning, copying, and finishing functions, all-in-one devices, or other devices such as pad printers to print images on three dimensional objects and three-dimensional printers such as additive manufacturing devices. In general, printing devices apply a print substance often in a subtractive color space or black to a medium via a device component generally referred to as print engine having a print head. A medium can include various types of print media, such as plain paper, photo paper, polymeric substrates and can include any suitable object or materials to which a print substance from a printing device is applied including materials, such as powdered build materials, for forming three-dimensional articles. Print substances, such as printing agents, marking agents, and colorants, can include toner, liquid inks, or other suitable marking material that in some examples may be mixed with fusing agents, detailing agents, or other materials and can be applied to the medium.
Printing devices may include conditioning systems, which can apply heat or pressure to a printed medium prior to output. In one example, a medium may progress through a printing device along a media path from a print engine, which can apply a print substance to the medium, to the conditioning system, which can apply heat or pressure to the printed medium, and then to an output. In some examples, the output of a printing device can be coupled to a finishing system that can include stapling systems and collation stackers. The print engine may be configured for image quality that can produce undesirable physical characteristics in the medium that may affect the final product or make difficult further processing of the output media. For instance, as a medium such as piece of paper becomes more saturated with a print substance, the paper becomes less stiff and begins to suffer from cockle, which includes wrinkling in areas of print substance, or begins to curl or bend. The undesirable physical characteristics can also lead to difficulty, unreliability, or failure of finishing devices coupled to the printing device. Accordingly, conditioning systems can be included to improve the physical characteristics and quality of the printed medium within a sufficient amount of time of output to meet user expectations.
Conditioning systems impose additional power loads on the printing device in order to create sufficient heat to improve the quality of the printed medium. Many conditioning systems include a plurality of heater systems that can be selected from different types of heater systems such as dryers, fusers, and heated pressure rollers. A selected amount of power from a printing device power source, such as an alternating current type electrical power from a printing device power supply, is allocated to the plurality of heater systems as well as to the other systems of the printing device. Printing devices can include power allocation engines as an aspect of the controller to allocate or arbitrate the available amount of power to the printing device between the conditioning system and other systems of the printing device. Further, the conditioning system may include a power allocation engine as an aspect of the controller to allocate or arbitrate the available amount of power to the conditioning system between the plurality of heater systems. Under some circumstances, the demand for power may exceed the available amount of power from the power source or the amount of power to the conditioning system in which case the power allocation engines can make compromises between the heater systems. If not properly managed, the compromises can create undesirable performance issues such as poor output quality or long job completion times that can result in poor stack quality, media transport failures, poor device reliability, and printing delays.
In one example, a printing device conditioning system includes a plurality of heater systems. Each heater system of the plurality of heater systems can include an autonomous servomechanism that operates independently of the other heater systems of the plurality of heater systems. Each heater system includes a temperature sensor and a corresponding temperature setpoint. Based on the operational error between a measured temperature and the setpoint, the heater system makes a load request for an amount of power. Each load request from the plurality of heater systems is independent of the other load requests of the plurality of heater systems. The independent load requests are provided to a power allocation engine. In general, the power allocation engine applies a power arbitration process to the plurality of independent load requests. The power allocation engine allocates the available amount of power to the conditioning system based on the power arbitration process and allocates a power grant to each of the plurality of heater systems.
The power arbitration process of a typical power allocation engine is generally simple to implement and delivers a predictable output tuned to provide a plurality of power grants to common load request profiles or scenarios. One type of power arbitration process may allocate power grants according to fixed weights assigned to the heater systems providing the load requests. Another type of power arbitration process may allocate power grants according to a fixed priority order of the heater systems providing the load requests. The power arbitration process may consider such factors as the position of the heater system along the media path or a thermal time constant of the heater system. In such power arbitration processes, higher priority heater systems or heater systems assigned greater weights in the process may receive more power per amount of load request or heat more quickly than lower priority heater systems or heater systems assigned lower weights in the process. While such power arbitration processes are suited for common load request profiles or scenarios, such power arbitration processes may experience slower response or imprecise thermal control under less common contexts. In some examples, a conditioning system may be subjected to numerous different contexts that could benefit from more specific power arbitration processes that could improve job throughput times and output quality.
The disclosure describes a printing device having a conditioning system with a power allocation engine including a context power adjustment system. The context power adjustment system allows the power allocation engine to adapt to many of the less common power request profiles or to more precisely tune the conditioning system to different printing contexts, including common printing contexts. In one example, heater systems can apply servomechanism processes to request power from the power allocation engine in the form of independent load requests. The power allocation engine can include a general power arbitration system to generate a corresponding power grant in response to the load request based on an available amount of power from a power source. The power grants are provided to the context power adjustment system to adjust, such as modify, the power grant based on a contextual printing condition. The power allocation engine can provide an adjusted power grant to each of the heater systems. In one example, the contextual printing context adjusts the power grants based on how the heater systems respond to various printing conditions. In some examples, the context power adjustment system may be configured to implement a number of different contextual printing conditions and provide increased response times or enhanced print quality for each context. As new load request profiles or contextual printing conditions are discovered or implemented and addressed with the context power adjustment system, existing configurations of contextual printing conditions can remain unaffected.
A plurality of independent load requests from each of a plurality of printing device heater systems is received at 102. The independent load requests can be received at the power allocation engine. Each heater system of the plurality of printing device heater systems provides a corresponding independent load request to the power allocation engine. In one example of negative feedback heater systems, each of the load requests can be based on an autonomous determination of the corresponding heater system of an amount of power appropriate for the corresponding heater system to address the operational error between a setpoint and the measured process variable such as temperature from a temperature sensor. In some examples, a sum total of the plurality of independent load requests may exceed the power output from a power source, such as an amount of power allocated to the conditioning system.
Based on a general power arbitration of the power output from the power source, a plurality of power grants are allocated in response to the plurality of independent load requests at 104. The power allocation engine can allocate a power grant to each heater system based on the load request of the heater system. In one example, the general power arbitration ensures that a sum total of the plurality of power grants does not exceed the power output from the power source such as the amount of power allocated to the conditioning system. In one example, the general power arbitration may allocate the plurality of the power grants according to fixed weights assigned to the heater systems based on the received plurality of independent load requests. In this example, the weights may be assigned to the plurality of heater systems in such a manner as to give a load request from a heater system of the plurality of heater systems preference over a load request from another heater system of the plurality of heater systems, or the weights may be assigned to plurality of heater systems in such a manner as to not give preference to the load request of a heater system over the load request of another heater system. In another example, the general power arbitration may allocate the plurality of the power grants according to a fixed priority order of heater systems. In this example, the general power arbitration provides a power grant to a load request from a heater system having a higher assigned priority before it will provide a power grant to a load request from a heater system having a lower assigned priority.
A power grant of the plurality of power grants is adjusted based on contextual printing condition to provide an adjusted grant to a printing device heater system of the plurality of printing device heater systems at 106. According to the contextual printing condition, the power grant corresponding with a load request from a heater system is adjusted to create an adjusted grant, and the adjusted grant is provided to the heater system. The adjusted grant is based on a power grant limit corresponding with the contextual printing condition at 106. For example, the adjusted grant is selected from one of the power grant and a power grant limit if the power grant exceeds the power grant limit. In one example, each of the plurality of the power grants are adjusted to provide a plurality of adjusted grants based on the contextual printing condition, and the plurality of adjusted grants are provided to the heater systems. In this example, each adjusted grant of the plurality of adjusted grants is selected from one of the corresponding power grant and a corresponding power grant limit if the power grant exceeds the power grant limit for the corresponding heater system. In one example, the amount of power that can be provided to each of the heater systems is capped regardless of the determination of the general power arbitration. The sum total of the plurality of adjusted grants and any (unadjusted) power grants does not exceed the power output from the power source such as the amount of power allocated to the conditioning system. In one example, the sum total of the power grant limits for each heating system does not exceed the power output of the power source.
Power allocation engine can receive load requests, allocate power grants, and provide adjusted grants in quantities that can be expressed with respect to the terms of power output from the power source. In one example, the quantities can be expressed as a percentage of power output. In another example, the quantities can be expressed as units of the power source. For instance, the load requests, power grants, adjusted grants, and power output can be received, allocated, or provided as a pulse width modulation signal, or PWM signal. The power allocation engine can receive load requests, allocate power grants, and provide adjusted grants of power in terms of PWM. In general, a conditioning system may receive a power output S from a power source and include n heater systems in the plurality of heater systems such as heater systems H1, . . . , Hn. A heater system of the plurality of heating systems may be represented as heater system Hi in which i is an integer from 1 to n. The power allocation engine can receive a load request Li from heater system Hi, and load request Li corresponds with heater system Hi. Based on a general power arbitration of the power output from the power source, a power grant Pi of the plurality of power grants is allocated in response to the load request Li of the plurality of independent load requests, and power grant Pi corresponds with load request Li. The power grant Pi of the plurality of power grants is adjusted based on contextual printing condition to provide an adjusted grant Ai to a printing device heater system Hi of the plurality of printing device heater systems, and heater system Hi corresponds with adjusted grant Ai, which corresponds with power grant Pi.
The adjusted grant Ai at 106 is selected from one of the power grant Pi and a power grant limit Capi if the power grant Pi exceeds the power grant limit Capi. For instance, Ai=min(Pi, Capi) in which min(Pi, Capi) returns the lesser value of Pi and Capi. In one example, (Cap1+, . . . , Capn) does not exceed S, or (Cap1+, . . . , +Capn)=S.
The contextual printing condition can be based on various conditioning characteristics or characteristics of the printing device that may affect printing under general power arbitration. In one example, the contextual printing condition can include system startup or awakening from system sleep or standby mode in which the heater systems may be at ambient temperature and may each provide relatively high load requests. Method 100 can be implemented to distribute power to the heater systems in a balanced manner rather than permit a heater system to starve another heater system of power under general power arbitration.
The example method 100 can be implemented to include hardware devices, programs, or hardware devices and programs for controlling a system having a processor and memory, that can distribute a power output from a power source to a plurality of printing device heater systems. For example, method 100 can be implemented as a set of executable instructions stored in a computer memory device for controlling the processor.
A controller 214, which can include a combination of hardware and programming, such as firmware stored on a memory device executed with a processing device, is operably coupled to the print engine 202 and the plurality of heater systems 208 to perform methods that affect the print process and route the medium along the media path 212. The controller 214 can be implemented in a variety of hardware configurations including a single processing node, a processing device having multiple processing nodes such as processing cores, and a set of interconnected processing devices having distributed processing nodes throughout the printing device 200. The controller 214 can receive a signal representative of a digital image or model to be translated into a form suitable for the print engine 202 to apply the print substance 206 via the print head to a selected medium. In another example, the controller 214 is operably coupled to process sensors or process inputs to receive a signal representative of a process characteristic. Examples of process sensors can include ambient temperature sensors, humidity sensors, and atmospheric pressure sensors, and examples of process characteristic inputs can include speed of the printing process, the presence of finishing or conditioning equipment, simplex or duplex printing, and amount of sheets of media to be stapled. Also, the controller 214 can be operably coupled to the plurality of heater systems 208 to selectively operate and control the heater systems 208 as part of the print process. Still further, the printing device 200 can include a power source 216, such as a power supply, to provide power to components of the printing device 200 such as the print engine 202, the plurality of heater systems 208, and the controller 214, and the controller 214 can be used to selectively distribute power from the power source 216 based on a power allocation scheme such as method 100.
The plurality of heater systems 208 can include dryers, blowers, fusers, heated pressure rollers, lamps, and other types of heating devices or elements that may be used to dry the print substance on the medium or otherwise condition the printed medium. The heater systems 208 can be arranged along the media path 212 to sequentially condition the printed medium, concurrently condition the printed medium such as two or more of the plurality of heater system 208 applied to the printed medium at the same time or at the same point in the media path 212, or a combination of sequentially and concurrently arranged heater systems 208 along the media path 212. In the example printing device 200, the heater systems 208 include a dryer system 222, a first heated pressure roller system 224, and a second heated pressure roller system 226 for illustration. In the example, the dryer system 222 conditions the printed media along the media path 212 prior to the first and second heated pressure roller systems 224, 226. Also in the example, the first and second heated pressure roller systems 224, 226 concurrently condition the printed medium along the media path 212. The first heated pressure roller system 224 can include an inner heated pressure roller that may be configured to condition an inner section of a width of the media path 212, and the second heated pressure roller system 226 can include an outer heated pressure roller that may be configured to condition an outer section, or outer sections of the width of the media path 212. The first heated pressure roller system 224 can include a heating element such as a halogen lamp to heat the inner roller. The second heated pressure roller system 226 can also include a heating element such as a halogen lamp to heat the outer roller.
Heater systems 208 can be characterized by a thermal time constant that may be affected by factors such as thermal mass or the amount of power used to generate a selected temperature increase. For example, a heater system with a relatively high thermal time constant may include a relatively higher thermal mass, a relatively lower power applied to it to generate a selected temperature increase, or both compared to a heater system with a relatively low thermal time constant. In the example printing device 200, the dryer system 222 includes a relatively higher thermal time constant than the time constants of the first and second heated roller systems 224, 226. The dryer system 222 can command a higher load request and an additional time to heat to a selected temperature than, for example, the first and second heated pressure roller systems 224, 226.
In one example, each heater system of the plurality of heater systems 208 can include mechanisms that can operate autonomously and independently of the other heater systems of the plurality of heater systems 208. In one example, each heater system 208 can include a heating element, a temperature sensor, and a servomechanism or regulator that can operate via negative feedback. For example, the temperature sensor can detect a temperature of the heating element, and the servomechanism can compare the temperature to a selected setpoint or target temperature provided via the controller 214 to estimate an operational error. A servo process of the servomechanism can receive the operational error and determine a request for an amount of power from the controller 214 that can selectively heat the heating element in such a manner as to reduce the operational error. The heater system 208 can provide the requested amount of power as a load request to the controller 214. The controller 214 can grant an amount of power based on the load request applied to a general power arbitration process as a power grant, and adjust the power grant to be an adjusted grant provided to the heater system 208. In one example, pulse width modulation, or PWM, can be used to deliver power to the heating element, and the heater system 208 can provide the load request to the controller 214 and receive the adjusted grant from the controller 214 in terms of PWM. Additionally, the power output from the power source 216 can be provided to heater systems 208 and allocated in terms of PWM. While PWM is provided as an illustration in this disclosure, other power request and delivery techniques, including other signal modulation techniques, can be applied.
The general power arbitration system 302 provides a general power arbitration of the power output S from the power source 216. In one example, the general power arbitration system 302 ensures that a sum total of the plurality of power grants P1, P2, . . . , Pn does not exceed the power output S from the power source 216. The general power arbitration system 302 can determine a normalizing factor N from the plurality of load requests L1, L2, . . . , Ln. In order to generate the normalizing factor N, the plurality of load requests L1, L2, . . . , Ln are added together and the resulting sum LTOT is divided by the power output S to determine a quotient Q, i.e., Q=LTOT/S. The normalizing factor N is the larger of the quotient Q or 1, i.e., N=max(Q, 1), in which max(Q, 1) returns the larger value of Q and 1. In one simple example of a general power arbitration system 302, each load request Li is divided by the normalizing factor N to obtain a corresponding power grant P1, i.e. Pi=Li/N.
The general power arbitration system 302 may allocate the plurality of the power grants P1, P2, . . . , Pn according to fixed weights w1, w2, . . . , wn assigned to the heater systems H1, H2, . . . , Hn 208 based on the received plurality of independent load requests L1, L2, . . . , Ln. For example, the general power arbitration system 302 may determine each power grant Pi from the corresponding load request Li according to Pi=(wiLi)/N. In one example of a determining a normalizing factor N using fixed weights to allocate power arbitration, a weighted normalizing factor Nw can be calculated so that the sum of the power grants (P1+ . . . +Pn) does not exceed the power output S. In this example, a weight quotient Qw is determined as Qw=(w1L1+ . . . +wnLn)/S, and the weighted normalizing factor Nw is provided from Nw=max(Qw, 1). Each power grant Pi can be determined via Pi=(wiLi)/Nw.
In this example, the weights w1, w2, . . . , wn may be assigned to the plurality of heater systems H1, H2, . . . , Hn 208 in such a manner as to give a load request from a heater system of the plurality of heater systems preference over a load request from another heater system of the plurality of heater systems H1, H2, . . . , Hn 208, such as if a weight wi was larger than another weight. A relatively larger weight wi would give relatively more priority to the corresponding load request Li, and a relatively smaller weight wi would give relatively less priority to the corresponding load request Li. Also, the weights w1, w2, . . . , wn may be assigned to plurality of heater systems in such a manner as to not give preference to the load request of a heater system over the load request of another heater system, such as if the weights w1, w2, . . . , wn were equal to each other, including all of the weights set to 1. In some example, the weights can be stored as data in a non-transitory storage medium, selectively modified on occasion, and applied to the general power arbitration system 302 to determine the power grants P1, P2, . . . , Pn.
In another example, the general power arbitration system 302 may allocate the plurality of the power grants P1, P2, . . . , Pn according to a fixed priority order assigned to the heater systems H1, H2, . . . , Hn 208 based on the received plurality of independent load requests L1, L2, . . . , Ln. In this example, the general power arbitration system 302 provides a power grant Pi to a load request Li from a heater system H1 having a higher assigned priority before it will provide a power grant to a load request from a heater system having a lower assigned priority. In one example, the heater system having the highest priority will receive a power grant based on a corresponding load request. If any power output from the power source 216 remains to be allocated, the heater system having the next highest priority will receive a power grant based on a corresponding load request, and so on, until all heater systems have received a power grant or the power output S has been completely allocated.
In one example, the general power arbitration system 302 applies priority, whether by assigning weights w1, w2, . . . , wn or by assigning a priority order, via thermal time constant of the corresponding heater system 208. For example, the heater system having the largest thermal time constant is ascribed the highest priority, the heater system with the next largest thermal time constant is ascribed the next highest priority, and so on until the heater system with the smallest thermal time constant is ascribed the lowest priority. In the example of the heater systems 208, the evaporative dryer 222 generally includes a larger, or longer, thermal time constant than the first and second heated pressure roller systems 224, 226, and thus can be ascribed a higher priority in the general power arbitration system 302.
If the power allocation engine 300 does not receive a contextual printing condition 306, the power allocation engine can simply provide the power grants P1, P2, . . . , Pn to the corresponding heater systems H1, H2, . . . , Hn 208. The context power adjustment system 304 can be bypassed or not invoked. The power output S is allocated to the heater systems heater systems H1, H2, . . . , Hn 208 according to the power grants P1, P2, . . . , Pn. If, however, the power allocation engine 300 receives a contextual printing condition 306, the context power adjustment system 304 is invoked.
The context power adjustment system 304 adjusts each power grant Pi from general power arbitration system 302 based on the contextual printing condition 306 received at the power allocation engine 300. The contextual printing condition 306 can be based on various conditioning characteristics or characteristics of the printing device 200 that may affect printing under general power arbitration system 302. For example, the contextual printing condition 306 can include data related to the medium to be printed such as the type of medium and the orientation of the medium during printing, data related to the print substance 206 such as the type and the amount of print substance to be applied to the medium, data related to ambient settings, and data related to the printing device 200 such as whether the printing device 200 is in sleep mode or at startup, whether a heater system 208 is working inefficiently based on system diagnostics, and other characteristics. The context power adjustment system 304 receives the contextual printing condition 306 and applies a set of rules that can be included in a plurality of sets of rules, to adjust the power grants Pi from the general power arbitration system 302 to address the contextual printing condition 306. According to the contextual printing condition 306, the power grant Pi is adjusted with the context adjustment system 304 to generate an adjusted grant Ai and the adjusted grant Ai is provided to the corresponding heater system Hi.
In one example, the context power adjustment system 304 is configured to implement method 100 including the adjusted grant Ai is selected from one of the power grant Pi and a power grant limit Capi if the power grant Pi exceeds the power grant limit Capi. The contextual printing condition 306 can include circumstances in which the heater systems 208 may be at ambient temperature and may each provide relatively high load requests Li to the power allocation engine 300. The contextual printing condition 306 can be invoked in circumstances such as printing device startup and awakening from a sleep or standby mode. Temperature sensors in the heater systems 208 as well as load requests L and the status of the printing device 200 can be used to determine the contextual printing condition 306. Method 100 implemented with the power allocation engine 300 can distribute power to the heater systems 208 and can maintain priority of the general arbitration system 302 but not permit a heater system to starve another heater system of power under general power arbitration.
In the example of the printing device 200, the context power adjustment system 304 can receive the power grants Pi and provide an adjusted grant according to
A1=min(P1, Cap1), in which H1 is the dryer system 222;
A2=min(P2, Cap2), in which H2 is the first heated pressure roller system 224;
A3=min(P3, Cap3), in which H3 is the second heated pressure roller system 226; and
the sum of Cap1+Cap2+Cap3 does not exceed S.
The power grant limit Capi for each heater system 222, 224, 226 can be determined based on a factors such as relative load requests from each heater system 222, 224, 226 or based on providing the fastest warm-up time of the heater systems 208. In one example, the sum of Cap1+Cap2+Cap3 is equal to S. The context power adjustment system 304 implementing method 100 can provide for faster or more efficient warm-up times of the heater systems 208 than with general power arbitration.
System 400 is configured to receive a plurality of load requests L1, L2, . . . , Ln as signal data from heater systems 208. In one example, each of the load requests is received as a PWM signal that may be converted to digital data for use with program 406. System 400 may also receive a contextual printing condition 306 as a set of data stored in on a computer storage medium or provided via signals received from components of a printing device 200 and a power output S from a power source 216 to be allocated to the heater systems 208. System 400 applies contextual printing condition 306 to generate power grants P1, P2, . . . , Pn or adjusted grants A1, A2, . . . , An corresponding with the load requests provided to the heater systems 208 via signals such as PWM signals.
Although specific examples have been illustrated and described herein, a variety of alternate and/or equivalent implementations may be substituted for the specific examples shown and described without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the specific examples discussed herein. Therefore, it is intended that this disclosure be limited only by the claims and the equivalents thereof.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2018/048987 | 8/31/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2020/046353 | 3/5/2020 | WO | A |
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