This application is a U.S. National Stage Application of and claims priority to International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2013/051473, filed on Jan. 25, 2013, and entitled “PRINTER CONTROL SECTION, METHOD AND PRINTER,” which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
In some printing devices a pretreatment may be applied to a print medium prior to printing on the medium with colored inks. In some devices the pretreatment may be applied by a print head.
Examples of the invention are further described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
A printer control section 140 controls the printhead 110, and may also control other functions, such as feeding of medium 120.
The printhead 110 may be an ink jet printhead. The printhead 110 may have a plurality of nozzles for depositing pretreatment and/or color ink onto the medium 120. The nozzles may be arranged in a matrix.
The printhead 110 is arranged to apply a pretreatment to the medium, and following the pretreatment may apply one or more colored inks to the medium. The pretreatment may improve the image quality, for example by modifying an interaction between the medium and the color ink. The effect of the pretreatment may depend on various parameters, such as the medium and ink, as well as an amount of pretreatment applied, a time between application of the pretreatment and application of the color ink, and ambient conditions (temperature, humidity, etc.) Where the pretreatment parameters are poorly chosen the quality of the printed image may be reduced, for example due to bleed and/or coalescence. In some cases, a period between applying a pretreatment and applying a color ink over the pretreatment can affect wetting of the media by the pretreatment and/or the drying of the pretreatment, which can affect image quality.
The printhead 110 prints on the medium in swaths. Herein a swath refers to a portion of the medium 120 that can be printed on by the printhead 110 without moving the medium relative to the printhead 110 along the y-direction 130. As the printhead 110 is moveable across the medium 120 in the x-direction, the swath defines a strip of the medium 120 that extends across the medium 120 and has a width in the y-direction corresponding to the length of the print footprint of the printhead 110 in the y-direction. Here, the print footprint describes the area of the medium 120 that is printable by the printhead 110 without relative movement between the printhead and the medium 120. A swath is illustrated in
In operation, the control section 140 may control the printhead 110 to perform a plurality of passes over each swath of the medium to place pretreatment or ink onto the medium 120. In each pass the printhead 110 is moved relative to the medium 120 in the x-direction. Each pass may extend substantially across the width of the medium 120 in the x-direction.
When the required number of passes has been completed for a swath, the medium 120 may be fed along the y-direction 130 to expose the next swath to the printhead 110.
For each swath, the printhead 110 may perform a plurality of pretreatment passes, and may also perform one or more color passes. Pretreatment is applied in pretreatment passes, and color ink is applied in color passes. In some examples pretreatment may be applied to the whole swath, while in other examples the pretreatment may be applied to only part of the swath. In some examples the pretreatment may be applied uniformly, while in other examples the pretreatment is applied with different concentrations in different parts of the swath. The control section 140 may receive or generate pretreatment data that indicates the portions of the medium 120 that are to receive pretreatment. The pretreatment data may also identify the concentration of pretreatment that is to be applied.
For each pass in which pretreatment is applied, referred to herein as a pretreatment pass, a pretreatment mask is applied that defines the portions of the swath that may receive pretreatment in that pass. The number of pretreatment masks is equal to the number of pretreatment passes to be applied to the swath.
The medium may be considered as a plurality of pixels that may each receive pretreatment and/or ink. The pixels may be arranged in a rectangular grid, for example. Within a single pass the pretreatment is applied only to those pixels identified as printable by the pretreatment mask. In some examples, each of the pixels of the swath is identified as printable in at least one pass. In some examples, each of the pixels of the swath is identified as printable in exactly one pass. In some examples, each of the pixels of the swath is identified as printable in more than one pass, the number of passes in which each pixel is printable may be the same for all pixels.
In the example of
In some examples color passes may be performed on the swath following the pretreatment passes. In such cases, the pretreatment applied in the first pretreatment pass has more time to wet the medium or to dry than the pretreatment in subsequent pretreatment passes. Accordingly, in the example of
By using a non-proportional pretreatment mask, the curing time and/or time for an initial drying process between applying a pretreatment and applying a color ink on top of the pretreatment can be flexibly controlled. In some examples this may reduce or eliminate a need for a delay or pause in printing between pretreatment passes and color passes. In some examples this may reduce or remove the need for additional components, such as a heater or dryer to control the curing of the pretreatment. Some examples allow proper (or desired) rheological behavior of a pretreatment to be obtained with little or no increase in print time specifically to allow for drying, and/or without requiring forced drying/curing (e.g. by a heating or drying element). Thus is may be possible to rely on natural drying of the pretreatment.
At 520 P non-proportional masks are generated by combining one or more of the N proportional masks to produce each of the P non-proportional masks. Each of the N proportional masks are assigned to, or associated with, exactly one non-proportional mask. The printable pixels in each non-proportional mask correspond to all of the printable pixels in the proportional masks from which it is generated. For example, if the set of printable pixels in the ith proportional mask is Ni, the set of printable pixels in the non-proportional mask generated from the first and second proportional masks is N1∪N2.
The ith non-proportional mask has a weight of siK/N, where si is the number of proportional masks assigned to the ith non-proportional mask. To produce the non-proportional masks, not all of the weights of the non-proportional masks are equal. Thus, at least one pair of non-proportional masks are generated from different numbers of proportional masks.
As an example, where there are to be 4 passes (P=4), it is possible to generate 10 proportional masks (N=10). The proportional masks may be combined as in the following table to generate the 4 non-proportional masks.
The method 500 terminates at 530.
In some examples, each mask may be defined for the whole swath. In other examples, each mask may be defined for a part of the swath and repeated, mirrored, or alternated with one or more other partial masks to generate the mask for the whole swath. In some examples, the mask is defined for the pixels within the print footprint of the printhead, and repeated across the swath.
In some examples, after the pretreatment passes, color ink is applied to the swath over the pretreatment in one or more color passes. Where multiple color passes are performed, color masks may be applied to the color passes, in an analogous manager to the pretreatment masks described above.
According to some examples, the color masks may be proportional masks. According to some examples, the color masks may be non-proportional masks. This can further increase flexibility, and allow further tuning of the pretreatment parameters.
According to some examples, the non-proportional color masks have an increasing weight with sequence number. Accordingly, an average time interval between applying a pretreatment to a pixel and applying a color ink to the pixel may be further increased.
In some cases it is desirable for the pretreatment masks to have decreasing weight with sequence number. However, there may also be cases in which improved results can be achieved with increasing weights or non-monotonic weights with pretreatment mask sequence number.
In some examples it may be possible to apply different amounts of pretreatment and/or color ink to each pixel. For example, it may be possible to apply ink drops of different sizes. This does not change the operation of the pretreatment masks and color masks described above.
According to the examples described above, all passes are completed over one swath and then the medium is fed such that the next swath is below the printhead 110, and the next swath is printed by a plurality of passes. However, in some examples the medium is fed only a fraction of the swath width (in the y-direction). For example, the medium may be fed by ½ or ⅓ the width of the swath. In this case, the masks may be modified to take into account the overlap of the swaths.
In some examples, the printing process may be an inkjet printing process, such as a thermal or piezoelectric printing process. Some examples the printing process may be a print-on-demand process. Some examples may make use of a latex ink system.
In some examples the pretreatment may be a water based vehicle with a cationic polymer that increases its viscosity when in contact with the different color pigments. In some examples the pretreatment may include other components, such as surfactants, dispersants, etc.
In some examples the color inks are include water as a solvent. Other solvents could be used. In some examples the color inks include latex polymer particles and pigment particles.
In some examples the above masking arrangement may be applied to a post-treatment instead of, or as well as, a pretreatment. In some examples the weight of post-treatment masks may increase with sequence number, which may increase the average time period between applying a color ink to a pixel and applying a post-treatment to the pixel. Post-treatments may enhance image print quality, and may include a varnish and/or a fixer, for example. Herein, the term “treatment” is used to mean pretreatment and/or post-treatment.
The control section 140 may be implemented using any combination of hardware and/or software, and may include one or more of a processor, volatile memory, non-volatile memory, etc.
Throughout the description and claims of this specification, the words “comprise” and “contain” and variations of them mean “including but not limited to”, and they are not intended to (and do not) exclude other moieties, additives, components, integers or steps. Throughout the description and claims of this specification, the singular encompasses the plural unless the context otherwise requires. In particular, where the indefinite article is used, the specification is to be understood as contemplating plurality as well as singularity, unless the context requires otherwise.
Features, integers, characteristics or compounds described in conjunction with a particular aspect or example are to be understood to be applicable to any other aspect or example described herein unless incompatible therewith. All of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the steps of any method or process so disclosed, may be combined in any combination, except combinations where at least some of such features and/or steps are mutually exclusive. The invention is not restricted to the details of any foregoing examples. The invention extends to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), or to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the steps of any method or process so disclosed.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/051473 | 1/25/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/114347 | 7/31/2014 | WO | A |
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