Embodiments of the invention relate to printing apparatus, and particularly to ejector chips of the printing apparatus.
Conventional ink jet printers typically include one or more printheads in which ink is stored. Such printheads have one or more ink reservoirs in fluid communication with nozzles through which ink exits the printhead for application to a print medium. In many cases, the nozzles are formed in one or more nozzle plates coupled to a body of the printhead. Each nozzle plate can be or include an ejector chip, such as a heater chip having a set of heat transducers or heaters that function as actuators.
The heater chips also typically include logic circuitry and a plurality of power transistors coupled to the set of heaters or resistors. A hardware or software printer driver will selectively address or energize the logic circuitry via a network of power connections such that appropriate resistors are heated for printing. In some heater chip designs, memory is used to address the resistors. The memory is also used to identify the printhead to determine if the printhead is a monochrome printhead, a color printhead or a photograph quality printer printhead. A thermal ink jet printhead generally includes a network of ejection devices that are generated by joining a heater chip and a nozzle member. When energized, the heater chip heats and vaporizes the ink, thereby ejecting the ink from the nozzles.
The actuators (e.g., heaters) on an ejector chip often receive different amounts of energy or power through the network of power connections. This results from differences in the lengths and therefore resistances of the traces connecting the actuators to their respective power sources. This causes the velocity and mass of the ejected drop to vary, and this in turn directly affects the print quality. If the variation from the actuator to actuator is great enough, the addressed actuators may even fail to actuate (e.g., by failing to nucleate or to vaporize the ink droplet).
In order to reduce these differences it is desirable to balance the network delivering energy to the actuators. For example the geometry of conductive traces constituting the network can be adjusted in order to balance and equalize the power supplied to the actuators. In some cases, the network distributing the power to the actuators is divided into two sections. One section is a serial section which runs from a bondpad of the printhead to an end of the actuators. For example, in an ejector chip utilizing heaters as actuators, the serial section might have a small resistance to prevent excessive voltage differences between a single and all fire cases (e.g., less than 0.5 ohms). Meanwhile, the second section of the network is a parallel section which distributes current to a plurality of parallel groups of heaters. The resistance of each of these parallel paths is typically less than 2 ohms.
The amount of current allowed by the bondpads is generally about 1 A. The amount of current is about half of the current required per color under a maximum number of simultaneous fires in some cases. Therefore, two bondpads are generally used for a single color. For example, if the network of heaters has a total of 320 heaters, one of the bondpads can power a first half of the heaters from heater 1 to heater 160, while the other of the bondpads can power a second half of the heaters from heater 161 to heater 320. For a tri-color printhead, a total of six bondpads may be needed. That is, the bondpads can be positioned or placed such that the area of the bondpad required for power routing, and thus the resistance can be reduced or minimized. As a result, the placement or positioning of the bondpads can be considered an important aspect of the design of the printheads.
Other design considerations are that current density is generally kept below a threshold at which electro-migration can occur, and the threshold is about 10 mA/μm2. Typically, a trace is at least 100 μm wide for metal approximately 10 k Angstroms (Å) thick in order to carry 1 A of current. Also the resistance of the serial section generally needs to be as small as possible. Depending on the distance between the bondpad and where the network breaks into parallel paths, the width of the series trace will increase to maintain a reasonable resistance.
Once the serial section transitions into the parallel section, the serial section breaks into a number of parallel fingers. Each of the fingers powers a p-group consisting of another number of heaters. Typically, there are eight parallel fingers, and twenty heaters in each of the p-groups. Only one heater at a time fires within the p-group. Furthermore, the parallel fingers are typically arranged vertically a distance away from the serial section. As the distances of successive fingers increase, the p-group will require a wider trace to maintain the same amount of resistance. In some cases, the parallel section is as wide as 430 μm.
Accordingly, there is a need for an improved system and method to balance power distributed to the network of actuators. The following summary sets forth certain embodiments of such methods and systems. However, it does not set forth all such embodiments and should in no way be construed as limiting of any particular embodiment.
Generally, according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention, an ejector chip has an edge, a fluid via, and an elongated actuator, such as a resistive heating element, between the edge and the via. A conductive trace that has a length is connected to the actuator. A bondpad is central to the length of the actuator.
The following summary sets forth certain embodiments of the invention described in greater detail below. It does not set forth all such embodiments and should in no way be construed as limiting of the invention.
Other aspects of the invention will become apparent by consideration of the detailed description and accompanying drawings.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including,” “comprising,” or “having” and variations thereof herein is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. Unless specified or limited otherwise, the terms “mounted,” “connected,” “supported,” and “coupled” and variations thereof are used broadly and encompass both direct and indirect mountings, connections, supports, and couplings. Further, “connected” and “coupled” are not restricted to physical or mechanical connections or couplings.
Embodiments of the invention relate to a method and system of routing power in an ejector chip thereby reducing the size of the chip. The method reduces the width of the power bussing along the vertical edges of the chip. This allows a reduction of the overall chip width.
The heater chip 16 is hidden from view in the assembled print head 10 illustrated in
The heater chip 16 also includes an elongated actuator, such as resistive heating element 116, positioned on the heater chip 16 between the edge 102 and the ink via 108. The elongated resistive heating element 116 usually includes an array of heater resistors. In some embodiments, each of the heater resistors of the elongated resistive heating element 116 can be individually actuated, addressed, activated, or powered.
A conductive trace 120 is positioned between the resistive elements 116 and the bondpad array 104. In the embodiment shown in
The conductive trace 120 has a plurality of fingers or traces 128. Each of the fingers of the conductive trace 120 powers a specific set of heater resistors. In the example discussed earlier, a first finger 128 powers the first 20 heater resistors. In some embodiments, each of the heater resistors of the resistive elements 116 can also be powered individually. That is, the bondpad 124 can be configured to address or heat none, some or all of the heaters at a particular time.
For the resistive elements 116 that are positioned between any two adjacent ink vias 108, a second designated bondpad 130 is positioned outside the length of the ink vias 108 in a longitudinal axis. In this way, the distance between the first designated bondpad 124 and the resistive elements 116, or the length of the conductive trace 120 can be reduced or minimized. The arrangement of the conductive trace 120 also allows the width of the trace to be small for given resistance. In some embodiments, the arrangement of the conductive trace 120 also allows the width of the trace to be the smallest for a given resistance.
Attaching, positioning, or placing the first designated bondpad 124 in the middle of the array of heater resistors 116, or the second designated bondpad 130 outside the length of the ink vias 108 can reduce the width of the parallel sections of a conductive trace. By placing first designated bondpad 124 in the middle, and the second designated bondpad 130 outside the length of the ink vias 108, the distance between the bondpad array 104 or the edge 102, and the elongated resistive elements 116 is also minimized. In the embodiment shown in
Various features and advantages of the invention are set forth in the following claims.