1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a recording apparatus which discharges ink by time-division driving of a recording head arraying a plurality of nozzles and a method of controlling the recording apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
In recent years, with the widespread use of information-processing equipment, a recording apparatus as its peripheral equipment has also rapidly come into wide use. Among these recording apparatuses, since an ink jet recording apparatus has various advantages, it is adopted in many recording apparatuses. The ink jet recording apparatus scans a recording medium with a recording head, discharges ink droplets from the recording head in the scanning, and executes recording. The advantage of the ink jet recording apparatus is easy miniaturization, and color recording can be relatively simply performed.
Among the inkjet recording apparatuses, by a thermal ink jet method, high integration of a discharge mechanism is relatively easily performed and discharge ports for discharging ink can be arrayed at a high density. The thermal ink jet method utilizes bubbles generated by thermal energy to discharge ink. Owing to high density of the discharge ports, the recording apparatuses can be miniaturized and further, a high-quality image can be recorded at a high speed. In the recording apparatus using a recording head that arrays such many discharge ports, in order to simultaneously drive the entire array of discharge ports to discharge ink at the same timing, a large-capacity power source will be required. Thus, a time-division driving method has been adopted. The time-division driving method sequentially drives the predetermined number of discharge ports which are arranged on the recording head within a period of a driving cycle. More specifically, the time-division driving method typically divides the entire array of discharge ports of the recording head into a number of groups and bit by bit changes timing of driving for each group. Since the number of discharge ports to be simultaneously driven is reduced by executing this time-division driving, the capacity of a power source required for the recording apparatus can be reduced.
On the other hand, the ink jet recording method handles ink which is a fluid. This may cause various inconveniences due to a hydrodynamic phenomenon. For example, when ink is discharged from a certain discharge port, a pressure change generated at that time is propagated to adjacent discharge ports through an ink flow path to vibrate an ink interface of the discharge ports. This causes a significantly unstable state. Due to the vibration of the ink interface of the discharge ports, there has also been cases in which discharge ports after discharge of ink is not sufficiently filled with ink (unstableness of ink film). If ink is discharged in such an unstable state, a position to impact ink droplets on a recording medium may be shifted and the amount of ink droplets to be discharged from the discharge ports may fluctuate. The shift of the position of ink droplets or the fluctuation of the discharge amount of ink can result in an uneven density and a white streak on an image which is recorded on a recording medium. Since the color of a recording face of the recording medium is white and a white line is generated on the image, it is referred to as the white streak.
In order to solve a discharge failure due to the vibration of the ink interface, the level of a negative pressure generated in a liquid chamber can be approximated to a normal pressure by optimizing the timing and the discharge amount of time-division driving during discharge of ink (Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 05-084911). Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 05-084911 describes a technique of approximating the negative pressure generated in the liquid chamber to a normal pressure by optimum time-division driving, in which ink is discharged with a small and stable amplitude of the vibration in ink-refill, and a driving frequency is enhanced.
However, even when the time-division driving is executed so as to reduce the amplitude of the vibration in the ink-refill, there has been the case in which an impact position of an ink droplet adhering to a recording medium is shifted. In order to achieve recording with a high image quality which is required in a recent recording apparatus, there are recording heads that include a nozzle array of discharge ports arranged at a high density or an increased number of nozzle arrays. When ink is continuously and sequentially discharged from the discharge ports arranged at a high density, an air current is generated between the nozzle face of the recording head and the recording medium by discharged ink droplets. The generation of this air current places the vicinity thereof in a state of a negative pressure. Thus, a flying direction of the ink droplet discharged from nozzles can be changed. This deviates the flying direction of the ink from a desired flying direction. As a result, the impact position (dot position) of the recording medium can be shifted. As described above, due to a white streak thus generated, an image quality is degraded.
The higher a density (Duty) of an image recorded by a single recording scan, a white streak generated on a recording medium may be more noticeable. This is because when a high-Duty image is recorded, a generated air current becomes larger, so that the amount of shifts in a flight direction of an ink droplet is increased.
An embodiment of the present invention is directed to a recording apparatus that uses a recording head arranged at a high density to record a high-quality image and its method.
According to an aspect of the present invention, a recording apparatus for discharging ink from a recording head arraying a plurality of nozzles to execute recording of an image includes a drive unit configured to form a group with a defined number of nozzles so as to include an adjacent nozzle among the plurality of nozzles in a different block and to execute time-division driving of the block of the group according to a driving order corresponding to a recording mode, a recording control unit configured to execute scan recording to a recording medium in a first recording mode or a second recording mode, wherein each pass of scan recording in the second recording mode is executed using nozzles smaller in number than a number of nozzles used to execute each pass of scan recording in the first recording mode, and a driving control unit configured to control the drive unit so as to make a drive interval of an adjacent nozzle in the same group corresponding to the first recording mode larger than a drive interval of an adjacent nozzle in the same group corresponding to the second recording mode.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a method for discharging ink from a recording head arraying a plurality of nozzles to execute recording of an image includes forming a group with a defined number of nozzles so as to include an adjacent nozzle among the plurality of nozzles in a different block to execute time-division driving of the block in the group according to a driving order corresponding to a recording mode, executing scan recording to a recording medium in a first recording mode or a second recording mode, wherein each pass of scan recording in the second recording mode is executed using nozzles smaller in number than a number of nozzles used to execute each pass of scan recording in the first recording mode, and controlling the time-division driving wherein a drive interval of an adjacent nozzle in the same group corresponding to the first recording mode is larger than a drive interval of an adjacent nozzle in the same group corresponding to the second recording mode.
Further features and aspects of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate exemplary embodiments, features, and aspects of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
Various exemplary embodiments, features, and aspects of the invention will be described in detail below with reference to the drawings.
An ink jet recording apparatus 1 includes a carriage 2 which carries out a reciprocating scan in a main scanning direction indicated by an arrow C and a recording head 3 which is mounted on the carriage 2 to discharge ink. Further, an ink jet cartridge 4 which receives ink and supplies it to the recording head 3 is detachably held on the recording head 3.
The ink jet cartridge 4 contains black ink (K), and color ink of cyan (C), light cyan (LC), magenta (M), light magenta (LM), and yellow (Y) respectively. The recording head 3 has a nozzle array for discharging black ink and five nozzle arrays used in discharging each color ink. Each nozzle array includes 1,280 discharge ports.
The carriage 2 is movably guided in a direction of an arrow C in
At the back of the casing 7, a paper feed mechanism 10 is disposed. A plurality of recording mediums P having various sizes such as an A4 size paper and a postcard size paper can be mounted on a paper feed tray 11 which is included in the paper feed mechanism 10. The paper feed mechanism 10 includes a separation roller (not shown) which is driven by a paper feed motor (not shown). The recording medium P is fed from the paper feed tray 11 by the separation roller and supplied (conveyed) to a recording position opposing a recording head on the carriage 2.
During recording, the carriage 2 is moved in a forward direction of an arrow C (for example, direction of movement from home position side to another end). While making a movement, ink droplets are discharged from each nozzle of the recording head 3 toward the recording medium P according to image data. Execution of recording while moving the carriage 2 is referred to as a recording scan. When the carriage 2 reaches another end of the recording medium P, the separation roller is rotated by a predetermined amount, thereby conveying the recording medium P in a direction of an arrow D (sub scanning direction, or conveying direction) by a predetermined amount. Then, recording is executed again while the carriage 2 is moved in a backward direction of the arrow C (for example, direction of movement from another end to home position side). In this way, the recording scan of the carriage 2 and the conveyance operation of the recording medium P are repeated to record an image on the entire recording medium P.
The recording head 3 includes an electrothermal transducer (hereinafter, described as heater) for converting electric energy into thermal energy. Ink is film-boiled by thermal energy generated by the heater. The ink is discharged utilizing a pressure change generated by the growth and the contraction of bubbles due to the film-boiling. The heater is provided on respective discharge ports (also referred to as nozzle) that configure each nozzle array. A drive pulse voltage is applied to each heater in order to discharge ink.
The ink jet recording apparatus in the present exemplary embodiment is connected to a host computer (personal computer (PC) or the like). The ink jet recording apparatus records image data containing image information and recording information generated using applications or the like of the host computer. A central processing unit (CPU) 200 controls the ink jet recording apparatus. The CPU 200 includes a read only memory (ROM) 201 and a random access memory (RAM) 202. Then, the CPU 200 transmits a drive command to each drive unit via a main bus line 205, thereby controlling a recording apparatus. The main bus line 205 is connected with an image input unit 203 and an image signal processing unit 204. The image information (image data) from the host computer is input to the image input unit 203 once and converted into an image signal (recording data) suitable for recording by the image signal processing unit 204. Further, the main bus line 205 is connected with an operation unit 206 through which an operator performs various settings concerning recording and a recovery system control circuit 207 linked to a recovery device for the recording head 3. Furthermore, the main bus line 205 is connected with a head drive control circuit 215, a carriage drive control circuit 216, and a paper feed (conveyance) control circuit 217 which are drive units respectively. Further, a program for driving each drive unit beforehand is stored in the RAM 202. The RAM 202 starts the program of each drive circuit in response to a drive command from the CPU 200.
The recording apparatus is connected to the host computer via an interface which is connected to the main bus line 205. In the above description, the host computer and the recoding apparatus are connected. However, in addition to the host computer, a digital camera and a flash memory can also be connected. In that case, the recording apparatus records an image shot by the digital camera and an image stored in the flash memory.
The recovery system control circuit 207 serves as a circuit which controls the recovery device to keep a good discharge condition of ink droplets discharged from the recording head 3. The recovery system control circuit 207 controls the driving of a recovery system motor 208, a blade 209, a cap 210, and a suction pump 211. The recovery device includes the blade 209 for wiping off ink droplets and dust adhering to the face of discharge ports, and the cap 210 which covers the face of the discharge ports when recording is not executed, so as to prevent evaporation of ink from the discharge ports. Further, the recovery device includes the suction pump 211. The suction pump 211 makes negative pressure inside the cap 210, thereby sucking ink in the recording head 3 to forcibly let out viscous ink inside nozzles.
The head drive control circuit 215 drives the electrothermal transducer of the recording head 3 according to recording data. The head drive control circuit 215 normally causes the recording head 3 to discharge ink for preliminary discharge and for recording of images, and further control temperature of ink and the recording head. The carriage drive control circuit 216 and the paper feed control circuit 217 also drive the carriage motor M1 and a conveyance motor according to a driving program respectively. The carriage drive control circuit 216 controls the driving of the carriage 2. The paper feed control circuit 217 controls a paper feed mechanism to feed and convey the recording medium P.
In
Next, a block configuration of the recording head 3 and a driving signal to be applied in the present exemplary embodiment will be described using
As illustrated in
In
Conventionally, when ink is sequentially discharged from an adjacent nozzle, the ink interface of the adjacent nozzle is vibrated by the discharge. When the ink interface is vibrated, it has been known that the discharge of ink from nozzles become unstable (this is represented as crosstalk). However, the inventors of the present invention have found that if the large vibration of the ink interface is avoided, stable ink discharge can be achieved even in a mode of sequentially discharging ink from the adjacent nozzle depending on the condition of the viscosity of ink, the shape of a liquid chamber, the driving frequency of a nozzle, or the like. That is, it has been found that when ink is sequentially discharged from the adjacent nozzle, if drive timing which sequentially drives blocks is fast, a high-quality image can be recorded.
For example, referring to
As a result, good recording having a less shift of an impact position and a less fluctuation of the discharge amount of ink droplets can be achieved. Further, ink is discharged with a stable ink interface, which reduces generation of a mist or a satellite, and occurrence of a discharge failure caused by a stain of a recording medium or a recording apparatus or by adherence of the mist or satellite to the face of a discharge port.
However, as described above, when ink is sequentially discharged from an adjacent nozzle, in an ink droplet discharged later among continuously discharged ink droplets, the accuracy of a recording position worsens under influence of an air current generated by an ink droplet discharged before. This is referred to as end touch. Referring to
This white streak is almost obvious when the Duty of image data is high or the number of nozzles used in recording at one time-division driving is high. In addition, when an air current is generated due to discharge of ink droplets which is executed in a short period of time or the amount of which is large, the white streak is generated. In other words, this white streak is generated if the Duty of image data recorded by one recording scan is high and the number of nozzles used in recording in one recording scan is high. Accordingly, when time-division driving of a recording head is executed, distributed driving is performed. By performing this distributed driving, an influence of the above-described air current can be suppressed.
For example, a recording apparatus includes a plurality of recording modes for forming an image. To realize a high image quality, the recording apparatus includes a recording mode in which the predetermined number of scan recording is performed on the same area of a recording medium to complete the image.
As described later, a control unit (for example, CPU 200) provided on the recording apparatus can execute a speed priority mode (“fast” mode), a standard mode (“standard” mode), and an image quality priority mode (“fine” mode). The speed priority mode performs two scan recordings on the same area of a recording medium to complete an image. The standard mode performs four scan recordings on the same area of a recording medium to complete an image. The image quality priority mode performs eight scan recordings on the same area of a recording medium to complete an image.
Further, in addition to continuous block driving which sequentially and continuously discharges ink from an adjacent nozzle, there is also a driving method in which ink is sequentially discharged not from an adjacent nozzle but from a separate nozzle. One example of such time-division driving is illustrated in
Conventionally, it has been known that ink is discharged in a stable state when drive timing is distributed and ink is discharged from nozzles which are not adjacent. In such a case, it has been considered that the ink discharge is in a stable state because when ink is discharged from nozzles, an ink interface of an adjacent nozzle is vibrated and an ink interface of nozzles apart from a nozzle discharging ink is not vibrated. Accordingly, it has been considered that ink from nozzles which are not adjacent is stably discharged. Alternatively, it has been considered that ink is stably discharged when ink is discharged after the vibration of an ink interface due to discharge of ink of an adjacent nozzle is settled.
However, the inventors of the present invention have found that even when ink is sequentially discharged from nozzles which are not adjacent by distributed driving similar to a conventional manner, unstable ink discharge can be caused by the vibration of an ink interface depending on the timing of block driving according to the condition of the viscosity of ink, the shape of a liquid chamber, the driving frequency of a nozzle, or the like. That is, even if the distributed driving is performed, ink can be discharged in an unstable state and the discharge amount of ink fluctuates.
As a result, smaller droplets having a less volume (referred to as mist or satellite) tend to be generated as compared with the case in which ink is discharged in a stable state. Since this mist adheres to the face of the discharge port of a recording head, the shift of the impact position of ink may occur or ink may not be discharged. Further, the mist tends to float in a recording apparatus, and adhere to various sensors and a recording apparatus main body. This causes the sensors to make false recognition and stains a recording medium.
Thus, it has been found that when the time-division driving is executed, execution of continuous driving is desirable. Further, it has been found that when the Duty of image data to be recorded in one recording scan is high and the number of nozzles used in recording in one recording scan is high, distributed driving is desirable.
That is, in a recording mode (speed priority mode) in which a relatively large number of nozzles is used in recording in one recording scan, driving nozzles of a recording head is performed by distributed driving. Further, in a recording mode (image quality priority mode) in which a relatively small number of nozzles is used in recording in one recording scan, driving nozzles of a recording head is performed by continuous driving.
A specific example will be described with reference to
A recording apparatus applicable to the present exemplary embodiment has three types of recording modes corresponding to an image quality as illustrated in
For example, When a recording mode is the “standard” mode, 4-pass scan recording is executed to a recording medium to complete an image. When a recording mode is the “fast” mode, 2-pass scan recording is executed to a recording medium to complete an image. Further, when a recording mode is the “fine” mode, 8-pass scan recording is executed to a recording medium to complete an image.
Here, the higher the number of passes, the lower the number of nozzles used in recording per each pass. In other words, the higher the number of passes, the lower a recording duty in recording per each pass. The lower the number of passes, the higher the number of nozzles used in recording per one pass. In other words, the lower the number of passes, the higher a recording duty in recording per each pass. For example, when a nozzle array includes 1,280 nozzles, the “fast” mode uses 640 nozzles per one pass and the “fine” mode uses 160 nozzles per one pass.
In the present exemplary embodiment, when the “fast” mode is executed, the table of a distributed driving order B is used. As described above, this mode relatively increases the amount of generation of a mist. However, since the generation of a white streak can be suppressed, overall, an image quality is enhanced.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the “standard” mode and the “fine” mode use a continuous driving order A. Since both end touch and mist are hardly generated in these modes, a high-quality image can be formed.
A flow of setting a block driving order in the present exemplary embodiment will be described using
Fist, when image data is received from a host computer, in step S810, the CPU 200 acquires a recording mode of the received image data. Since the received image data also contains a parameter of the recording mode, the CPU 200 acquires mode information. Acquisition of the mode information may be executed based on information input from the operation unit 206 of a recording apparatus. Next, in step S820, the CPU 200 determines whether the acquired recording mode is the “fast” mode. If the recording mode is determined not to be the “fast” mode (NO in step S820), in step S830, the CPU 200 sets a block driving order as a driving order A. In step S820, if the recording mode is determined to be the “fast” mode (YES in step S820), in step S840, the CPU 200 sets a block driving order as a driving order B. Next, in step S850, the CPU 200 executes recording of an image according to the set driving order.
As described above, if the block driving order in time-division driving is changed according to a recording mode, an undesirable influence on a recording image due to generation of a mist and a white streak is reduced, and a recording image having a high image quality is obtained. More specifically, in a speed priority recording mode which easily generates end touch, the CPU 200 records according to the distributed driving order and in an image quality priority recording mode, the CPU 200 performs recording according to the continuous driving order.
In the above-described exemplary embodiment, the block driving order of time-division driving is selected according to a recording mode. However, the block driving order can be also selected according to the amount of an air current generated during discharge of ink which highly affects generation of a mist and a white streak when image recording is executed. More specifically, the block driving order may also be selected according to a recording condition such as the number of pass, a driving speed of a carriage, a recording Duty which is a ratio of recording in one recording scan, a nozzle array formed on a recording head. Further, the driving order may also be selected according to the type of recording mediums since depending on the type of recording mediums a different ink amount is required during recording and the type of recording mediums highly affects whether degradation of a recorded image is easily recognized.
In
As described above, the block driving order of time-division driving is set according to a recording condition and a recording parameter that relate to generation of an air current. Accordingly, undesirable influence on a recording image due to generation of a mist and a white streak can be reduced even when an image is recorded by using a recording head arranged at a high density. Thus, a higher-quality image can be obtained.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all modifications, equivalent structures, and functions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2007-146930 | Jun 2007 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/941,875 filed Nov. 8, 2010 which is a continuation of U.S. Pat. No. 7,850,270 issued Dec. 14, 2010 which claims priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2007-146930 filed Jun. 1, 2007, which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12941875 | Nov 2010 | US |
Child | 13348065 | US | |
Parent | 12121326 | May 2008 | US |
Child | 12941875 | US |