The present disclosure is directed to a printing system using vibration-driven particle applicator. In one embodiment, an apparatus includes a jet that applies a liquid binder to an application surface and a particle applicator. The particle applicator includes a particle reservoir with at least one movable surface, an electrically controlled actuator that causes vibrations of the movable surface, and a dispersal port though which particles can exit the particle reservoir. A controller is coupled to cause the vibrations via the actuator. The vibrations result in movement of the particles through the dispersal port towards the liquid binder on the application surface.
In another embodiment, a method involves depositing a liquid binder from a print head to an application surface. An actuator is electrically controlled to cause vibrations of a movable surface of a particle reservoir of the print head. The vibrations result in movement of particles through a dispersal port of the particle reservoir towards the liquid binder on the application surface. Relative motion is caused between the application surface and the print head. The relative motion results in the liquid binder and the particles forming a pattern on the application surface.
These and other features and aspects of various embodiments may be understood in view of the following detailed discussion and accompanying drawings.
The discussion below makes reference to the following figures, wherein the same reference number may be used to identify the similar/same component in multiple figures.
and
Powder jet is a technology which allows the printing of high particle-concentration-loaded, high-resolution patterns by combining an inkjet to deposit a high spatial-resolution binder pattern which is then loaded with particles using a particle jet. The particles may be configured to change at least one property of the liquid, such as the color, surface texture, opacity, luminescence, and/or other properties of the liquid. For example, saturated colors such as white may be more easily achieved by using a high proportion of solid materials to liquid.
Previous particle dispersal jets entrained particles into a continuous stream of air. While this technique is effective at producing high density particle streams, it has a few challenges. First, the technique utilizes a continuous stream of air and needs a way of introducing particles to this stream. Generating this air stream requires substantial external systems such as fans, auxiliary power supplies. Second, the air must be vented somewhere, which causes further cost and complexity. Third, the particle must be removed from the air stream which is difficult and prevents easy low-cost vented solutions. Fourth, the ability to start/stop the particle stream is reduced because starting/stopping the continuous airstream is slow and costly. The result is particles are dispersed in a larger area than necessary. In embodiments described herein, a powder jet printing system includes features that address these issues.
In
Note that the applicators 102, 104 are schematically illustrated as being directed the same point location 110 such that they would deposit the respective liquid materials 106 and solid materials 108 in approximately the same location 110 at the same time. In other embodiments, the applicators 102, 104 could be physically separated such that there is a delay between deposition onto a particular location 110. Also note that although one applicator of each type is shown, multiple such applicators may be used. For example, there may be two or more liquid and/or two or more particle applicators that each output a different color, thickness, viscosity, particle size, etc.
This disclosure describes embodiments of the solid/particle applicator component of the powder jet system. In
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The movable surfaces 203, 303 may have physical characteristics (e.g., resonance frequency, damping factor) that enable significant displacement of the particles 205 at certain frequencies, e.g., a resonance frequency if the applicators 200, 300. In some embodiments, more than one vibration actuator (e.g., an array of actuators) may be used with a single or multiple movable surfaces which, by virtual of the relative phasing, results in spatial patterns of vibration which can be used to steer the particles by steering the air vibration via beam steering. Generally, the controller 206 may attempt to achieve these resonances and spatial patterns by applying control signals to the actuator(s) 204, e.g., a combination of pure tones at predetermined frequencies. The geometry particle applicators 200, 300 and the characteristics of the control signals may also be selected based on characteristics of the particles 205. For example, such as print system may be used with particles in a non-limiting range from 0.02 mm up to 100's of microns. For this wide a range of sizes, the size and shape of the particle applicators 200, 300 as well as controller drive signals can vary significantly.
In
The particle reservoir 402 includes a relatively large dispersal port 412, e.g., much larger than a minimum feature size of the deposited liquid 408. In this way, the particles 406 are relatively unfocused, hitting large areas of deposited liquid 408. At this stage, the liquid 408 has not dried or hardened, and therefore the particles 406 will stick to the liquid depositions 408 but not (significantly) to the regions of the application surface 410 that are not covered in liquid 408. The particle applicator 402 includes a relatively large dispersal port 412, e.g., much larger than a minimum feature size of the deposited liquid 408. In this way, the particles 406 are relatively unfocused, hitting large portions of deposited liquid 408 and the surrounding area. This enables rapid and uniform application of particles over a wide area.
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In this embodiment, the particle applicator 804 includes an air jet that influences the particles 808 exiting the dispersal port 804d. In this example, the air jet includes an airflow path 804b having an exit proximate to the dispersal port 804d. The airflow path 804b may generally have a shape that corresponds to that of the dispersal port 804d. For example, if the dispersal port 804d is circular (see, e.g.,
A compressible chamber is 804f is coupled to the airflow path 804b and is configured to force air 805 from the exit of the airflow path 804b while the particles 808 are caused to move through the dispersal port 804d. The air 805 may increase a velocity of the particles 808 exiting the dispersal port 804d and/or affect a flow shape of the particles 808 exiting the dispersal port 804d.
In this example the movable surface 804c covers both the dispersal port 804a and the compressible chamber 804f such that inputs from the actuator 804e drive both the particles 808 and air 805. One or more flexible surfaces 804g (e.g., bellows) prevent air leakage from at least the compressible chamber 804f. In other embodiments, separate moving surfaces and/or separate actuators may separately drive the air 805 and particles 808. For example, a single actuator may be mechanically coupled to two separate surfaces that are driven by the actuator but possibly at different stroke distances. In another example, two or more actuators may drive a single surface (e.g., a flexible membrane that spans the chamber 804f and reservoir 804a) or more than one surface. In this example, the two or more actuators may drive at any combinations of different frequencies and strokes/amplitudes.
In
In
The controller section 1002 is coupled to the print head 1020 using a first signal 1032 to cause the jets 1022 to disperse the liquid binder to the surface 1030 in coordination with the particle applicators 1024. The inputs results in movement of the particles from the particle applicators 1024 through their dispersal ports towards the liquid binder on the application surface 1030. The type of signals 1032, 1034 (e.g., pure tones, random noise, combinations thereof, etc.) as well as other aspects of the signals 1032, 1034 such as phase, timing, amplitude, wave shape, etc., can be controlled via software 1010, as indicated by material dispersal module 1012.
One or both of the print head 1020 and application surface 1030 may be driven by linear actuators 1026, 1028 (e.g., motors driving a rack and pinion, belt, etc.) that cause relative motion therebetween in a longitudinal direction 1033. For example, in a conventional printing application, the linear actuator 1026 may control y-displacement of the application surface 1030 and the linear actuator 1028 may control x-displacement of the print head 1020. Each linear actuator 1026, 1028 may include multiple motors or mechanical coupling that allows the print head 1020 and/or application surface 1030 to move in more than one direction. For example, for a 3-D printer application, the linear actuator 1026 may control x- and y-displacement of the application surface 1030 and the linear actuator 1028 may control z-displacement of the print head 1020.
A pattern control module 1014 is a software component that may control this motion, e.g., by receiving a two-dimensional or three-dimensional geometry file and translating the geometry into motor input signals 1036. One or both of the actuators 1026, 1028 may also affect a separation distance 1034 between the print head 1020 and the application surface 1030. This distance 1034 may be set once per print (e.g., printing to a print medium) or dynamically during the print (e.g., 3-D printing, where the distance of the print head 1020 to the build surface is changed for each pass).
The controller section 1002 may include one or more circuit board with special-purpose or general-purpose components. An example of the components includes a central processing unit 1004, memory 1006 (which may include any combination of volatile and non-volatile memory), and input/output circuits 1008. The controller section 1002 and print head 1020 may be integrated into a common chassis as a standalone printer apparatus. In other embodiments, the controller section 1002 and print head 1020 may be physically separated, e.g., in a factory environment where a controller section 1002 may control multiple print heads 1020, application surfaces 1030, and associated control elements.
The system shown in
The various embodiments described above may be implemented using circuitry, firmware, and/or software modules that interact to provide particular results. One of skill in the arts can readily implement such described functionality, either at a modular level or as a whole, using knowledge generally known in the art. For example, the flowcharts and control diagrams illustrated herein may be used to create computer-readable instructions/code for execution by a processor. Such instructions may be stored on a non-transitory computer-readable medium and transferred to the processor for execution as is known in the art. The structures and procedures shown above are only a representative example of embodiments that can be used to provide the functions described hereinabove.
Unless otherwise indicated, all numbers expressing feature sizes, amounts, and physical properties used in the specification and claims are to be understood as being modified in all instances by the term “about.” Accordingly, unless indicated to the contrary, the numerical parameters set forth in the foregoing specification and attached claims are approximations that can vary depending upon the desired properties sought to be obtained by those skilled in the art utilizing the teachings disclosed herein. The use of numerical ranges by endpoints includes all numbers within that range (e.g. 1 to 5 includes 1, 1.5, 2, 2.75, 3, 3.80, 4, and 5) and any range within that range.
The foregoing description of the example embodiments has been presented for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the embodiments to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. Any or all features of the disclosed embodiments can be applied individually or in any combination are not meant to be limiting, but purely illustrative. It is intended that the scope of the invention be limited not with this detailed description, but rather determined by the claims appended hereto.