The present invention relates to electrostatic inkjet print technologies and, more particularly, to printheads and printers of the type such as described in WO 93/11866 and related patent specifications.
Electrostatic printers of this type eject charged solid particles dispersed in a chemically inert, insulating carrier fluid by using an applied electric field to first concentrate and then eject the solid particles. Concentration occurs because the applied electric field causes electrophoresis and the charged particles move in the electric field towards the substrate until they encounter the surface of the ink. Ejection occurs when the applied electric field creates an electrophoretic force that is large enough to overcome the surface tension. The electric field is generated by creating a potential difference between the ejection location and the substrate; this is achieved by applying voltages to electrodes at and/or surrounding the ejection location. One particular advantage of this type of print technology over that of conventional drop-on-demand (DOD) printers is the ability to eject continuously variable ink volume, something which is not possible with conventional DOD printers.
The location from which ejection occurs is determined by the printhead geometry and the position and shape of the electrodes that create the electric field. Typically, a printhead consists of one or more protrusions from the body of the printhead and these protrusions (also known as ejection upstands) have electrodes on their surface. The polarity of the bias applied to the electrodes is the same as the polarity of the charged particle so that the direction of the electrophoretic force is towards the substrate. Further, the overall geometry of the printhead structure and the position of the electrodes are designed such that concentration and ejection occurs at a highly localised region around the tip of the protrusions.
To operate reliably, the ink must flow past the ejection location continuously in order to replenish the particles that have been ejected. To enable this flow the ink must be of a low viscosity, typically a few centipoise. The material that is ejected is more viscous because of the concentration of particles; as a result, the technology can be used to print onto non-absorbing substrates because the material will not spread significantly upon impact.
Various printhead designs have been described in the prior art, such as those in WO 93/11866, WO 97/27058, WO 97/27056, WO 98/32609, WO 01/30576 and WO 03/101741, all of which relate to the so-called Tonejet® method described in WO 93/11866.
The solid arrow 11 shows the ejection direction and again points in the direction of the substrate. In
In operation, it is usual to hold the substrate at ground (0 V), and apply a voltage, VIE, between the intermediate electrode 10 and the substrate. A further potential difference of VB is applied between the intermediate electrode 10 and the electrodes 7 on the ejection upstand 2 and the cheeks 3, such that the potential of these electrodes is VIE+VB. The magnitude of VB is chosen such that an electric field is generated at the ejection location 6 that concentrates the particles, but does not eject the particles. Ejection spontaneously occurs at applied biases of VB above a certain threshold voltage, VS, corresponding to the electric field strength at which the electrophoretic force on the particles exactly balances the surface tension of the ink. It is therefore always the case that VB is selected to be less than VS. Upon application of VB, the ink meniscus moves forwards to cover more of the ejection upstand 2. To eject the concentrated particles, a further voltage pulse of amplitude VP is applied to the ejection upstand 2, such that the potential difference between the ejection upstand 2 and the intermediate electrode 10 is VB+VP. Ejection will continue for the duration of the voltage pulse. Typical values for these biases are VIE=500 volts, VB=1000 V and VP=300 volts.
The voltages actually applied in use may be derived from the bit values of the individual pixels of a bit-mapped image to be printed. The bit-mapped image is created or processed using conventional design graphics software such as Adobe Photoshop and saved to memory from where the data can be output by a number of methods (parallel port, USB port, purpose-made data transfer hardware) to the printhead drive electronics, where the voltage pulses which are applied to the ejection electrodes of the printhead are generated.
One of the advantages of electrostatic printers of this type is that greyscale printing can be achieved by modulating either the duration or the amplitude of the voltage pulse. The voltage pulses may be generated such that the amplitude of individual pulses are derived from the bitmap data, or such that the pulse duration is derived from the bitmap data, or using a combination of both techniques.
Printheads comprising any number of ejectors can be constructed by fabricating numerous cells 5 of the type shown in
However, stitch lines frequently result from the use of overlapped printheads or from overlapping on multiple passes and therefore it is known to use interleaving techniques (printing alternate single or groups of pixels from adjacent printheads or from different passes of the same or a different printhead) to distribute and hide the edge effects of the print swathes resulting from the overlapping ends of the printheads. It is generally recognised that a stitching strategy is necessary to obtain good print quality across a join between printed swathes. The known techniques rely on the use of a binary interleaving strategy i.e. a given pixel is printed by one printhead or the other. For example, alternate pixels along the x-axis are printed from adjacent overlapping printheads. Alternatively, a gradual blend from one swathe to the next can be used, by gradually decreasing the numbers of adjacent pixels printed from one printhead while increasing the numbers of adjacent pixels printed from the other printhead. This latter technique can be expanded by dithering the print in the y-axis direction. Another known technique is the use of a saw tooth or sinusoidal ‘stitch’ to disrupt any visible stitch line.
These techniques all represent different ways in which printing can be alternated between the nozzles of two overlapping printheads and the success of them depends on the droplet placement accuracy and registration of the two printheads, and is particularly sensitive to factors like substrate wander between lines of printheads. This can be mitigated by the dispersion and deliberate movement of the stitch to break up visible lines and disperse the errors over the width of the overlapping regions of the adjacent printed swathes.
An overlapping region between two swathes of print may be concealed by printing each pixel in the overlapping region with a contribution of ink from both printheads or passes, the two contributions adding to give the desired optical density for the specified greylevel of the respective image pixel. However, the optical density that results from the overlaying of two dots may not be equal to the optical density that results from one dot equal to the combined area of the two. Typically, a greater total volume of ink will be required for two overlaid dots to produce the same optical density as one dot. This causes problems for printing technologies that can only eject a limited number of droplet sizes or which form a printed dot from a discrete number of fixed-size droplets that combine on or before reaching the substrate to form a printed dot. Such methods have insufficient resolution of ejected volume to compensate for the change of optical density for pixels that are printed dot-on-dot in the overlapping region and would need to invoke a dithering regime between nearest available drop sizes to achieve the required optical density averaged over an area of many pixels, thereby compromising image resolution in the overlap region.
The present invention provides a method of printing a two-dimensional bit-mapped image having a number of pixels per row for printing using a plurality of overlapping printheads or a printhead or printheads indexed through overlapping positions, the or each printhead having a row of ejection channels, each ejection channel having associated ejection electrodes, the method comprising: applying a voltage to the ejection channels sufficient to cause concentration of the particles in the printing fluid at the ejection channels, applying voltage pulses of respective predetermined amplitude and/or duration, as determined by respective image pixel bit values, to the electrodes of the selected ejection channels in order to cause volumes of printing fluid to be ejected from selected ejection channels of the overlapping printheads, thereby forming a pixel of a predetermined optical density and/or greylevel, adjusting, for each row of the image, the values of the voltage pulses to be applied to the overlapping printheads to form pixels printed by overlapped ejection channels in dependence on the position of the pixel within an overlapped region of the printheads and in dependence on the predetermined optical density and/or greylevel of the pixel, wherein, for at least one pixel in the overlapped region, the total volume of ink ejected by the overlapped channels is greater than that required if that pixel were formed by a single ejection channel.
This technique provides an alternative strategy to those known in the art, which creates each printed pixel in the overlap region of printheads from a contribution from both printheads in the overlap region, i.e. an ejection from one printhead plus an ejection from the overlapping printhead, which together give a pixel of the required optical density for the specified greylevel of the respective image pixel. The relative contributions from the two printheads change to create a progressive fade-out from the one printhead with an overlapping fade-in to the other printhead across the overlap region. This is less sensitive to dot placement errors and substrate wander, because such errors are less inclined to produce white space between dots.
This fading technique involves reducing the pulse lengths (or else the amplitude) of the ejection voltage pulses to vary the volume of the ink providing the pixels printed in the overlap region so that one printhead fades out as the other fades in, the sum of the print from the two heads producing the required uniformity of pixel optical densities or greylevels across the overlap.
Importantly, one or more of the pixels in the overlapped region have been found to require a total volume of ink from the two ejection channels creating that pixel that is greater than that required if that pixel had been created by a single ejection channel.
The present invention works by utilising the facility of the Tonejet method of continuously variable ejected volume to allow the combined volume of ink ejected from two overlapped printhead ejectors to be fine-tuned to achieve the required optical densities or greylevels in the overlap region. The ejected volume from each ejector in the overlap region is scaled by a numerical multiplier which is dependent on the channel's position in the overlap region and the target optical density or grey level of the pixel. The ejected volume from one printhead may therefore be faded out progressively across the overlap region as the ejected volume from the second printhead is faded in; the sum of the two ejected volumes at any position across the overlap being fine-tuned to achieve the correct optical density for each greylevel of the printed image, which entails controlling the combined ink volume to be generally greater than the volume required for that greylevel for a pixel printed by just one printhead ejector. Whilst it is believed that, for the Tonejet® method due to the viscosity and the quick drying qualities of the ink, all pixels created from two overlapped ejection channels will likely contain a greater volume of ink that if created from a single channel, there could be one or more pixels that do not have a greater volume.
The technique is not usable by other greyscale inkjet technologies whose ejection is limited to a fixed set of droplet sizes as it requires a high level of variable ejection volume control. The Tonejet® method as referred to above, by contrast, has the feature that the ejection volume is continuously, addressably, variable through the mechanism of pulse length control. In the Tonejet® method, for a given pixel greylevel, a continuous-tone pulse value can be assigned to produce the desired dot optical density. Such calibrations are not possible for a conventional drop-on-demand (DOD) printhead whose drop volumes are quantised by chamber volume, nozzle size, etc.
The Tonejet® method allows for continuously variable control of the ejected volume. In practical terms given that the method is implemented digitally, there are a number of discrete levels rather than an infinite number. However, it is preferable that the system operates with at least 64 different levels of ejected volume, more preferably 128 and more preferably still 256. 256 levels means that the ejected volume can be defined by 8-bit data. A typical digital display screen is capable of displaying 256 different levels of each primary colour and, to the naked eye, such resolution appears to be continuously variable.
Similar issues arise and the same solution can be used whether the printheads carry out printing in a single pass, printing the required pixels from multiple (interleaved) printheads closely spaced one behind another, or if the pixels are printed from multiple passes of the same or different printheads. The printhead(s) may be indexed multiple times.
In order to provide the required ‘fade’, a fading function for each printhead or swathe of print is used to define the profile of the fade across the overlap region. It is usual to restrict the number of greylevels used to specify each pixel in printing with the Tonejet® method to a number of predetermined levels to simplify computations. In the method of the invention it is advantageous to provide a different fading function for each of these predetermined levels. This arises from the fact that the additive print density of pixels printed by two droplets follows a function which is non-linear with droplet volume. The effect of the fading function in the overlap region on a pixel of a said predetermined level is to reduce the volume of ink ejected from each ejector for that pixel by an amount that controlled with the full resolution of the variable ink volume control. Therefore the individual ejected volumes of ink comprising the pixels in the overlap region are not limited to the said predetermined levels that are typically used for the remainder of the printed image. Rather, the two ejected volumes combine to form a pixel whose level corresponds to one of the said predetermined levels.
The invention also includes apparatus for printing a two-dimensional bit-mapped image having a number of pixels per row, said apparatus having a plurality of overlapping printheads or a printhead or printheads indexed through overlapping positions, the or each printhead having a row of ejection channels, each ejection channel having associated ejection electrodes to which a voltage is applied in use sufficient to cause concentration of particles in the printing fluid at the ejection channels, and wherein, in order to cause volumes of printing fluid to be ejected from selected ejection channels of the overlapping printheads thereby forming a pixel of a predetermined optical density and/or greylevel, voltage pulses of respective predetermined amplitude and/or duration, as determined by respective image pixel bit values, are applied to the electrodes of the selected ejection channels, characterised in that
The present invention may consider the optical density, the greylevel or a combination of both when adjusting the image pixel bit value.
The plurality of overlapping printheads may be fixed in position relative to one another in use.
The plurality of overlapping printheads may comprise a first printhead printing on a first pass over the print substrate and the same or another printhead printing on a later pass over the print substrate and overlapping in position with the position of the first printhead. The first printhead can be indexed between passes over the substrate by a distance equal to the width of the row of channels of the printhead less the desired overlap.
The printhead may be one of a number of identical printheads disposed in a module parallel to one another and offset by a proportion of the distance between adjacent ejection channels whereby the printed image has a resolution greater than the distance between adjacent ejection channels. A plurality of said modules can be overlapped one with another to enable a print width greater than the width of an individual module. Alternatively, the module can be indexed between passes over the substrate by a distance equal to the width of the row of channels of a printhead less the desired overlap.
In the case of a single printhead, the printhead may be indexed by a proportion of the distance between adjacent ejection channels whereby the printed image has a resolution greater than the distance between adjacent ejection channels.
Preferably, the values of the voltage pulses to be applied to individual channels in the overlapping printheads may be determined from one of a set of predetermined fading functions dependent on the level of the predetermined greylevel of the pixel to be printed by the respective channel in the overlapped region of the printheads.
The pixel bit values may be adjusted in dependence on the position of the pixel within an overlapped region of the printheads and in dependence on the predetermined greylevel of the pixel, prior to conversion of the pixel values into voltage pulses of respective predetermined amplitude and/or duration to cause printing.
Alternatively, the pixel bit values of the image may be provided to printhead drive electronics which converts the values into voltage pulses, and the voltage pulse values are therein determined in dependence on the position of the pixel within an overlapped region of the printheads and in dependence on the predetermined greylevel of the pixel, prior to being applied to the ejection electrodes of the printhead.
The values of the voltage pulses to be applied to individual channels in the overlapping printheads may be determined from one of a set of predetermined fading functions dependent on the level of the predetermined optical density of the pixel to be printed by the respective channel in the overlapped region of the printheads.
The pixel bit values may adjusted in dependence on the position of the pixel within an overlapped region of the printheads and in dependence on the predetermined optical density of the pixel, prior to conversion of the pixel values into voltage pulses of respective predetermined amplitude and/or duration to cause printing.
The pixel bit values of the image may be provided to printhead drive electronics which converts the values into voltage pulses, and the voltage pulse values are therein determined in dependence on the position of the pixel within an overlapped region of the printheads and in dependence on the predetermined optical density of the pixel, prior to being applied to the ejection electrodes of the printhead.
The percentage increase in volume of the combined ejected volume relative to a single ejection channel volume may be greatest at the mid point of the overlapped region.
In a particular method, fading functions of the following form can be used to define the profile of the fade across the overlap region of two printheads/swathes of print A and B:
ƒA(x)=ƒmin+(1−ƒmin)(1−x)α
ƒB(x)=ƒmin+(1−ƒmin)·xα
Where ƒA is the fading function of printhead/swathe A
In colour printers the printheads of each colour may be provided with different fading functions. The overlap position between printheads of the different colours may also be different.
The fading function may additionally be adjusted, either randomly or according to a suitable waveform function, so as to move the centre point of the fade around within the area of overlap to ‘dither’, effectively, the stitching between the print swathes to still further reduce the observable artifacts.
The fading functions may be applied at one of a number of stages in the processing of the image for printing, for example:
The fading functions may be applied to the pixel value data in the form of a mathematical function in software, or in the form of a look-up table stored in the memory of the controlling computer, the data feed electronics or the pulse generation electronics.
Examples of methods and apparatus according to the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The examples illustrated with reference to
In a variation (not shown) a single one of the modules as per
A further example of printhead (not shown) may utilise a single printhead indexed by substantially a quarter of the printhead width between passes to (a) provide (say) 600 dpi printing from a 150 dpi printhead, and (b) an overall print width much greater than the printhead width (the number of indexing motions and hence passes being determined by the desired overall print width. In this case, swathes of 150 dpi print from each pass are interleaved to create 600 dpi print. The overlap between 150 dpi swathes occurs between the first, fifth, ninth, etc. passes/indexations and stitching of the swathes correspondingly occurs between opposite ends of the (single) printhead on the first, fifth, ninth, etc. passes/indexations; similarly, overlap and stitching of 150 dpi swathes occurs between the second, sixth, tenth, etc. passes, between the third, seventh, eleventh, etc. passes and between the fourth, eighth, twelfth, etc. passes.
In all examples, a substrate position synchronisation signal (originating from, for example, a shaft encoder 216 (see
Before describing an example of the method according to the invention, it may be useful to describe the two methods generally usable to control the volume of fluid printed (or ejected) using the Tonejet® method.
The value of Pn of the bitmap pixel to be printed corresponds to a duty cycle (of the ejection pulse) between 0% and 100%. Typically, when printing at a resolution of 600 dpi and with relative motion between the print substrate and the printhead being at a speed of 1 ms−1, this equates to a pulse length of between 0 and 42 μm on a 42 μm pulse repetition period.
Of these alternative techniques, in practice it is simpler to modulate the duration of the pulse, but either technique may be appropriate in given circumstances and both may be used together.
In operation, in one example according to the invention, as shown in
Given the known number of strips or swathes of print which are required to be laid down, greyscale data for each primary colour is then stripped 213 into data sets—in this case two data sets 302A, 302B for one pair of overlapped print swathes or printheads 300A/300B to represent pixel values for each column of the individual printhead widths (number of pixels across the print substrate provided by a single printhead). These data sets provide bitmaps which correspond to the ejection channels 301 of the individual printheads 300A, 300B used to print the final image.
The pulse data 304A, 304B is then transferred in step 305A/305B, according to the relative position of the print substrate and the printheads (as determined by the shaft encoder 216), to the driver cards (pulse generator electronics) 306A, 306B in which the data is utilised to determine the length of the drive pulses applied to the individual printhead ejection channels 301 as required and in which voltage pulses of predetermined duration and/or amplitude are generated according to the pulse data for each pixel. The data is transferred in time-dependency on the substrate position and offset of the ejection channels 301 of one printhead 300A from those of the adjacent overlapping printhead 300B.
A process of generating and applying the fading functions will now be described in an example which uses four passes of two 150 channel per inch printheads overlapped to print a cylindrical substrate with the two overlapped heads spanning the width of the substrate, and the substrate being spun four times to achieve full coverage at 600 dpi. The fading technique described is directly applicable to the overlapped portions of multiple or single printheads making one or more passes over the substrate.
An overlap of 10 printhead channels (40 pixels) is used in the specific example described. However, the width of the overlap region will affect the visibility of the join: generally, the larger the overlap, the more the errors can be dispersed and the less visible the join. This has to be balanced with the desire for the smallest overlap to maximise the print width.
In order to prepare the required fading functions a series of test images were prepared using single printheads and printed with a selection of fading functions to experimentally determine the most effective. The image used was a benchmark test image that contains a full range of print greylevels. The image was screened using a standard 4-level error diffusion method, rendering the image in individual pixel greylevels of 0%, 50%, 75% and 100%. Initial function parameters were estimated and then iterated twice until the print quality looked acceptable. The parameters were then determined to be as follows:
For information, the pulse length curves corresponding to the last iteration of the parameters are shown plotted in
As mentioned above, in this example, for each pixel greylevel, fading functions of the following form are used to define the profile of the fade across the overlap region of two printheads/swathes 300A, 300B of print A and B:
ƒA(x)=ƒmin+(1−ƒmin)(1−x)α Equation 1
ƒB(x)=ƒmin+(1−ƒmin)·xα Equation 2
Where fA is the fading function of printhead/swathe A
Examples of the fading functions are shown plotted in
The fading functions are applied to the image data by multiplying with the image pixel values. This is applied to the image data after screening, i.e. after the pixel values have otherwise been calculated, and may be applied in Raster Image Processing on a controlling computer or in the printhead drive electronics. As the fading function is dependent on the pixel greylevel, the function to apply for a given pixel is chosen according the screened value of that pixel. For example, a 50% level pixel will be multiplied by the fading function for the 50% level, etc. A family of fading functions therefore exists that contains as many curves as there are non-zero pixel greylevels in the screened image (e.g. 3 for a 4-level image; 7 for an 8-level image).
The pixel values that result from multiplying an image pixel of level PL by the fading function for that level are derived from the following:
Taking the generic fading function for one side (B):
ƒ(x)=ƒmin+(1−ƒmin)·xα Equation 3
For each pixel level L in the screened image there is a fading function fL(x):
ƒL(x)=ƒmin
A pixel of level L in position x across the image is faded by multiplying its value PL by the fading function for its level:
P(x)=PL·ƒL(x) Equation 5
P(x)=PL{ƒmin
P(x)=Pmin
where
Pmin
Pmin
Hence, the pixel values that result from multiplying an image pixel of level PL by the fading function for that level are:
PA(x)=Pmin
PB(x)=Pmin
Where PA is the modified value of the pixel of head/swathe A
When considering the desired or predetermined optical density of a given pixel, if a volume of ink comprising a pixel is deposited in one event, the liquid ink will spread on the substrate, absorb into it, etc., in a way dependent on the viscosity, surface energy, absorbency etc., forming a characteristic size (area) dot for a given ejected volume. If that volume is deposited instead as two drops separated in time, the first will have started to spread and dry before the second drop impacts. In most cases this will result in a reduced area for the 2-stage printed dot than the single stage dot. The greater area of unprinted substrate around the smaller, two-stage dot has a greater effect on the overall optical density than the higher concentration of pigment in the smaller area dot, so the effect is a reduction in optical density for the 2-stage dot.
The optical density can be modelled as follows.
The optical density that results from patterns of single-colour printed dots may be predicted by the Yule-Nielsen equation:
where:
D(λ) is the reflectance density spectrum of the printed area
Dsub(λ) is the reflectance density of the substrate
λ in the wavelength of light
a is the fraction of area covered by ink whose solid reflectance density is Dink(λ)
n is an empirical correction factor called the Yule-Nielsen factor.
The Yule-Nielsen factor n compensates for the effect of light scattering in the substrate which results in optical dot gain. The effect of dot gain is to increase the observed density of intermediate tones with a peak at 50%. The factor n approaches 1 for a specular surface and approaches 2 for a perfect diffuser; however, for substrates having low internal reflection, values greater than 2 are predicted and are often found in practice.
In the case where a number of inks k are used, the print resembles a mosaic of 2k colours formed from the overlapping combinations of the k inks. For example, in the case of binary CMY printing there are 8 possible colours formed: C, M, Y, CM, MY, YC, CMY and white (substrate) and these are known as the Neugebauer Primaries. The reflectance spectrum of the colour print is given by the Neugebauer equation:
R(λ)=Σi=18αiRi(λ) with Σi=18αi=1 Equation 11
where:
ai is the area fraction of the ith primary
Ri(λ) is the solid reflectance of the ith primary
Reflectance is related to Reflectance Density by the relation D(λ)=−log10 R(λ)
Generalising the number of inks to k, each of which may have m density levels, yields mk Neugebauer primaries corresponding to the mk superpositions, giving the generalised Neugebauer equation:
R(λ)=Σi=1m
The Yule-Nielson equation may be generalised for mk Neugebauer primaries yielding the n-modified Neugebauer equation:
or in terms of density:
Overlapping Dots of the Same Ink
The density of a print containing overlapping dots of the same ink can be modelled using equation 14. For simplicity we shall omit the A dependence from equation 14 since we are considering a single ink colour. Consider the case where the Neugebauer primaries are that of the unprinted substrate, a single layer of ink and a double layer of ink, having densities D0, D1 and D2 and covering area fractions a0, a1 and a2 respectively. If the densities are normalised to the substrate, D0 becomes zero and equation 14 becomes:
An estimate needs to be made of the density of a double layer of ink D2 whose single layer density is D1. To a first approximation, the density of a mixture equals the sum of the densities of the individual components and scales with layer thickness or concentration, giving D2=2D1. We use this as a starting point but also show that the overall density D is not particularly sensitive to the value of D2.
We also use an initial approximation that the dot area adot is proportional to the droplet volume vdrop; however, this will depend on the ink and substrate properties so we will examine the effect of this at the limits of adot∝vdrop and ddot∝ddrop. (dot diameter proportional to drop diameter.
Single printed dot; ink area 0.5; D1=1
a0=0.5
a1=0.5
a2=0
From Eq. 15: D=0.36
Separate dots; combined ink area 0.5; D1=1
a0=0.5
a1=0.5
a2=0
From Eq. 15: D=0.36
Overlaid dots; combined ink area 0.5: D1=1; D2=2
a0=0.7
a1=0.1
a2=0.2
From Eq. 15: D=0.25
Equation 15 predicts a significant reduction in the overall density D for the overlaid dots compared with a single ink layer. This is shown for a wider range of dot sizes in
To compensate the shortfall in optical density of a pixel that results from printing overlaid dots, the sum of the two ejected volumes at any position across the overlap can be fine-tuned to achieve the correct optical density for each greylevel of the printed image by controlling the combined ink volume to be greater than the volume required for that greylevel for a pixel printed by just one printhead.
Sensitivity to D1 and D2
Drop Volume
The dot area that results from a certain drop volume is dependent on the spreading characteristics of the ink on the given substrate and will depend on at least:
The two limits we will consider are:
Also shown in
Thus, a non-linear function of ejected volume versus position in the overlapping region is predicted, with a larger volume of ink required to print a pixel from two overlaid dots than for a single dot to meet the same value of optical density for the pixel. This results in a volume multiplier (fading) function that is substantially convex, i.e. it's value at the mid-position of the overlap region is greater than 0.5.
Continuous control of ejected volume in the overlap region is necessary to implement stitching by this method without invoking screening methods that reduce the spatial resolution of the print.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13193724 | Nov 2013 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/075031 | 11/19/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/075073 | 5/28/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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7857409 | Hayashi | Dec 2010 | B2 |
20070146433 | Kusunoki | Jun 2007 | A1 |
20120206525 | Tanase | Aug 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0771654 | May 1997 | EP |
WO 9311866 | Jun 1993 | WO |
WO 9727056 | Jul 1997 | WO |
WO 9727058 | Jul 1997 | WO |
WO 9832609 | Jul 1998 | WO |
WO 0130576 | May 2001 | WO |
WO 03101741 | Nov 2003 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report dated Jul. 29, 2015, issued in PCT Application No. PCT/EP2014/075031. |