Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6280019
-
Patent Number
6,280,019
-
Date Filed
Monday, August 30, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, August 28, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Barlow; John
- Stephens; Juanita
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 347 54
- 347 56
- 347 62
- 347 63
- 347 65
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
In order to overcome inefficient power dissipation in parasitic resistances and to provide economies in the power supply, a higher resistance value heater resistor is employed in a thermal inkjet printhead. Higher current densities in a high resistance segmented heater resistor are reduced by employing a shorting bar divided by a current balancing resistor.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to inkjet printing devices, and more particularly to an inkjet printhead drop generator that utilizes a high resistance heater resistor structure with current crowding reduction.
The art of inkjet printing technology is relatively well developed. Commercial products such as computer printers, graphics plotters, copiers, and facsimile machines successfully employ inkjet technology for producing hard copy printed output. The basics of the technology has been disclosed, for example, in various articles in the Hewlett-Packard Journal, Vol. 36, No. 5 (May 1985), Vol. 39, No. 4 (August 1988), Vol. 39, No. 5 (October 1988), Vol. 43, No. 4 (August 1992), Vol. 43, No. 6 (December 1992) and Vol. 45, No. 1 (February 1994) editions. Inkjet devices have also been described by W. J. Lloyd and H. T. Taub in Output Hardcopy Devices (R. C. Durbeck and S. Sherr, ed., Academic Press, San Diego, 1988, chapter 13).
A thermal inkjet printer for inkjet printing typically includes one or more translationally reciprocating print cartridges in which small drops of ink are formed and ejected by a drop generator towards a medium upon which it is desired to place alphanumeric characters, graphics, or images. Such cartridges typically include a printhead having an orifice member or plate that has a plurality of small nozzles through which the ink drops are ejected. Beneath the nozzles are ink firing chambers, enclosures in which ink resides prior to ejection by an ink ejector through a nozzle. Ink is supplied to the ink firing chambers through ink channels that are in fluid communication with an ink supply, which may be contained in a reservoir portion of the print cartridge or in a separate ink container spaced apart from the printhead.
Ejection of an ink drop through a nozzle employed in a thermal inkjet printer is accomplished by quickly heating the volume of ink residing within the ink firing chamber with a selectively energizing electrical pulse to a heater resistor positioned in the ink firing chamber. At the commencement of the heat energy output from the heater resistor, an ink vapor bubble nucleates at sites on thesurface of the heater resistor or its protective layers.
The rapid expansion of the ink vapor bubble forces the liquid ink through the nozzle. Once the electrical pulse ends and ink is ejected, the ink firing chamber, refills with ink from the ink channel and ink supply.
The electrical energy required to eject an ink drop of a given volume is referred to as “turn-on energy”. The turn-on energy is a sufficient amount of energy to overcome thermal and mechanical inefficiencies of the ejection process and to form a vapor bubble having sufficient size to eject a predetermined amount of ink through the printhead nozzle. Following removal of electrical power from the heater resistor, the vapor bubble collapses in the firing chamber in a small but violent way. Components within the printhead in the vicinity of the vapor bubble collapse are susceptible to fluid mechanical stresses (cavitation) as the vapor bubble collapses, allowing ink to crash into the ink firing chamber components. The heater resistor is particularly susceptible to damage from cavitation. A protective layer, comprised of one or more sublayers, is typically disposed over the resistor and adjacent structures to protect the resistor from cavitation and from chemical attack by the ink. The protective sublayer in contact with the ink is a thin hard cavitation layer that provides protection from the cavitation wear of the collapsing ink. Another sublayer, a passivation layer, is typically placed between the cavitation layer and the heater resistor and associated structures to provide protection from chemical attack. Thermal inkjet ink is chemically reactive, and prolonged exposure of the heater resistor and its electrical interconnections to the ink will result in a chemical attack upon the heater resistor and electrical conductors. The protection sublayers, however, tend to increase the turn-on energy required for ejecting drops of a given size. Additional efforts to protect the heater resistor from cavitation and attack include separating the heater resistor into several parts and leaving a center zone (upon which a majority of the cavitation energy concentrates in a top firing thermal inkjet firing chamber) free of resistive material.
The heater resistor of a conventional inkjet printhead utilizes a thin film resistive material disposed on an oxide layer of a semiconductor substrate. Electrical conductors are patterned onto the oxide layer and provide an electrical path to and from each thin film heater resistor. Since the number of electrical conductors can become large when a large number of heater resistors are employed in a high density (high DPI—dots per inch) printhead, various multiplexing techniques have been introduced to reduce the number of conductors needed to connect the heater resistors to circuitry disposed in the printer. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,541,629 “Printhead with Reduced Interconnections to a Printer” and U.S. Pat. No. 5,134,425, “Ohmic Heating Matrix”. Each electrical conductor, despite its good conductivity, imparts an undesirable amount of resistance in the path of the heater resistor. This undesirable parasitic resistance dissipates a portion of the electrical power which otherwise would be available to the heater resistor. If the heater resistance is low, the magnitude of the current drawn to nucleate the ink vapor bubble will be relatively large and the amount of energy wasted in the parasitic resistance of the electrical conductors will be significant. That is, if the ratio of resistances between that of the heater resistor and the parasitic resistance of the electrical conductors (and other components) is too small, the efficiency of the printhead suffers with the wasted energy.
The ability of a material to resist the flow of electricity is a property called resistively. Resistively is a function of the material used to make the resistor and does not depend upon the geometry of the resistor of the thickness of the resistive film used to form the resistor. Resistively is related to resistance by:
R=ρL/A
where R=resistance (Ohms); Σ=resistively (Ohm-cm); L=length of resistor; and A=cross sectional area of resistor. For thin film resistors typically used in thermal inkjet printing applications, a property commonly known as sheet resistance (R
sheet
) is commonly used in analysis and design of heater resistors. Sheet resistance is the resistively divided by the thickness of the film resistor, and resistance is related to sheet resistance by:
R=R
sheet
(L/W)
where L=length of the resistive material and W=width of the resistive material. Thus, resistance of a thin film resistor of a given material and of a fixed film thickness is a simple calculation of length and width for rectangular and square geometries.
Most of the thermal inkjet printers available today use heater resistors that are roughly of a square shape and have a resistance of 35 to 40 Ohms. If it were possible to use resistors with higher values of resistance, the energy needed to nucleate an ink vapor bubble would be transmitted to the thin film heater resistor at a higher voltage and lower current. The energy wasted in the parasitic resistances would be reduced and the power supply that provides the power to the heater resistors could be made smaller and less expensive. Realization of the higher values of resistance, however, may increase the current density despite the overall current reduction. High current density can reduce the life of electronic circuits by creating localized elevated temperatures and by generating high electric field strengths that induce electromigration in materials. Moreover, in applications where the current is switched on and off, such as in thermal inkjet heater resistors, extreme thermal cycling produces expansion and contraction, which results in fatigue failures.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A segmented heater resistor for an inkjet printer includes a first heater resistor segment and a second heater resistor segment. A coupling device provides a serial coupling between the first and second resistor segments. A current control device provides reduced current crowding in the coupling device.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1A
is an isometric illustration of an exemplary printing apparatus which may employ the present invention.
FIG. 1B
is an isometric drawing of a print cartridge apparatus which may be employed in the printing apparatus of FIG.
1
A.
FIG. 2
is a schematic representation of the functional elements of FIG.
1
A.
FIG. 3
is a magnified isometric cross section of a drop generator which may be employed in the printhead of the print cartridges of FIG.
1
B.
FIG. 4
is a cross sectional elevation view of the drop generator of FIG.
3
.
FIG. 5
is a plan view of a segmented heater employing a shorting bar.
FIGS. 6A
,
6
B, and
6
C are plan views of a segmented heater resistor employing a divided shorting bar and a current control device.
FIG. 7
is an electrical schematic diagram of the segmented heater resistor depicted in
FIGS. 6B and 6C
.
FIG. 8
is a plan view of an alternative embodiment of a segmented heater resistor, divided shorting bar, and balancing resistor.
FIG. 9
is a plan view of an alternative embodiment of a segmented heater resistor and current control device.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
There are three main techniques for obtaining a higher resistance heater resistor for use in a thermal inkjet printer application. First, a thinner resistance layer can be deposited on the substrate oxide. The downside of this approach is that as the films become thinner, they become susceptible to surface defects and, the thinner the film, the more difficult it becomes to control the film thickness. Second, a different material having a higher innate resistively than the well understood tantalum-aluminum film could be used. The extreme environmental conditions experienced by the heater resistor as well as the need for an inexpensive, low defect, thin film process reduces the short term desirability of this approach. Third, new configurations of thin film resistor geometries can result in higher resistance heater resistors. It is from this third technique that the present invention derives.
An exemplary inkjet printing apparatus, a printer
101
, that may employ the present invention is shown in outline form in the isometric drawing of FIG.
1
A. Printing devices such as graphics plotters, copiers, and facsimile machines may also profitably employ the present invention. A printer housing
103
contains a printing platen to which an input print medium
105
, such as paper, is transported by mechanisms that are known in the art. A carriage within the printer
101
holds one or a set of individual print cartridges capable of ejecting ink drops of black or color ink. Alternative embodiments can include a semipermanent printhead mechanism that is sporadically replenished from one or more fluidically-coupled, off-axis, ink reservoirs, or a single print cartridge having two or more colors of ink available within the print cartridge and ink ejecting nozzles designated for each color, or a single color print cartridge or print mechanism; the present invention is applicable to a printhead employed by at least these alternatives. A carriage
109
, which may be employed in the present invention and mounts two print cartridges
110
and
111
, is illustrated in FIG.
1
B. The carriage
109
is typically mounted on a slide bar or similar mechanism within the printer and physically propelled along the slide bar to allow the carriage
109
to be translationally reciprocated or scanned back and forth across the print medium
105
. The scan axis, X, is indicated by an arrow in FIG.
1
A. As the carriage
109
scans, ink drops are selectively ejected from the printheads of the set of print cartridges
110
and
111
onto the medium
105
in predetermined print swath patterns, forming images or alphanumeric characters using dot matrix manipulation. Generally, the dot matrix manipulation is determined by a user's computer (not shown) and instructions are transmitted to a microprocessor-based, electronic controller (not shown) within the printer
101
. Other techniques employ a rasterization of the data in a user's computer prior to the rasterized data being sent, along with printer control commands, to the printer. This operation is under control of printer driver software resident in the user's computer. The printer interprets the commands and rasterized data to determine which drop generators to fire. The ink drop trajectory axis, Z, is indicated by the arrow. When a swath of print has been completed, the medium
105
is moved an appropriate distance along the print media axis, Y, indicated by the arrow in preparation for the printing of the next swath. This invention is also applicable to inkjet printers employing alternative means of imparting relative motion between printhead and media, such as those that have fixed printheads (such as page wide arrays) and move the media in one or more directions, those that have fixed media and move the printhead in one or more directions (such as flatbed plotters). In addition, this invention is applicable to a variety of printing systems, including large format devices, copiers, fax machines, photo printers, and the like.
The inkjet carriage
109
and print cartridges
110
,
111
are shown from the -Z direction within the printer
101
in FIG.
1
B. The printheads
113
,
115
of each cartridge may be observed when the carriage and print cartridges are viewed from this direction. In a preferred embodiment, ink is stored in the body portion of each printhead
110
,
115
and routed through internal passageways to the respective printhead. In an embodiment of the present invention which is adapted for multi-color printing, three groupings of orifices, one for each color (cyan, magenta, and yellow), is arranged on the foraminous orifice plate surface of the printhead
115
. Ink is selectively expelled for each color under control of commands from the printer that are communicated to the printhead
115
through electrical connections and associated conductive traces (not shown) on a flexible polymer tape
117
. In the preferred embodiment, the tape
117
is typically bent around an edge of the print cartridge as shown and secured. In a similar manner, a single color ink, black, is stored in the ink-containing portion of cartridge
110
and routed to a single grouping of orifices in printhead
113
. Control signals are coupled to the printhead from the printer on conductive traces disposed on a polymer tape
119
.
As can be appreciated from
FIG. 2
, a single medium sheet is advanced from an input tray into a printer print area beneath the printheads by a medium advancing mechanism including a roller
207
, a platen motor
209
, and traction devices (not shown). In a preferred embodiment, the inkjet print cartridges
110
,
111
are incrementally drawn across the medium
105
on the platen by a carriage motor
211
in the ±X direction, perpendicular to the Y direction of entry of the medium. The platen motor
209
and the carriage motor
211
are typically under the control of a media and cartridge position controller
213
. An example of such positioning and control apparatus may be found described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,070,410 “Apparatus and Method Using a Combined Read/Write Head for Processing and Storing Read Signals and for Providing Firing Signals to Thermally Actuated Ink Ejection Elements”. Thus, the medium
105
is positioned in a location so that the print cartridges
110
and
111
may eject drops of ink to place dots on the medium as required by the data that is input to a drop firing controller
215
and power supply
217
of the printer. These dots of ink are formed from the ink drops expelled from selected orifices in the printhead in a band parallel to the scan direction as the print cartridges
110
and
111
are translated across the medium by the carriage motor
211
. When the print cartridges
110
and
111
reach the end of their travel at an end of a print swath on the medium
105
, the medium is conventionally incrementally advanced by the position controller
213
and the platen motor
209
. Once the print cartridges have reached the end of their traverse in the X direction on the slide bar, they are either returned back along the support mechanism while continuing to print or returned without printing. The medium may be advanced by an incremental amount equivalent to the width of the ink ejecting portion of the printhead or some fraction thereof related to the spacing between the nozzles. Control of the medium, positioning of the print cartridge, and selection of the correct ink ejectors for creation of an ink image or character is determined by the position controller
213
. The controller may be implemented in a conventional electronic hardware configuration and provided operating instructions from conventional memory
216
. Once printing of the medium is complete, the medium is ejected into an output tray of the printer for user removal.
A single example of an ink drop generator found within a printhead is illustrated in the magnified isometric cross section of FIG.
3
. As depicted, the drop generator comprises a nozzle, a firing chamber, and an ink ejector. Alternative embodiments of a drop generator employ more than one coordinated nozzle, firing chamber, and/or ink ejectors. The drop generator is fluidically coupled to a source of ink.
In
FIG. 3
, the preferred embodiment of an ink firing chamber
301
is shown in correspondence with a nozzle
303
and a segmented heater resistor
309
. Many independent nozzles are typically arranged in a predetermined pattern on the orifice plate so that the ink which is expelled from selected nozzles creates a defined character or image of print on the medium. Generally, the medium is maintained in a position which is parallel to the external surface of the orifice plate. The heater resistors are selected for activation by the microprocessor and associated circuitry in the printer in a pattern related to the data presented to the printer by the computer so that ink which is expelled from selected nozzles creates a defined character or image of print on the medium. Ink is supplied to the firing chamber
301
via opening
307
to replenish ink that has been expelled from orifice
303
when ink has been vaporized by heat energy released by the segmented heater resistor
309
. The ink firing chamber is bounded by walls created by an orifice plate
305
, a layered semiconductor substrate
313
, and firing chamber wall
315
. In a preferred embodiment, fluid ink stored in a reservoir of the cartridge housing
212
flows by capillary force to fill the firing chamber
301
.
Once the ink is in the firing chamber
301
it remains there until it is rapidly vaporized by the heat energy created by the electrically energized segmented heater resistor
309
disposed on the oxidized surface of substrate
313
. The substrate is typically a semiconductor such as silicon. The silicon is treated using either thermal oxidation or vapor deposition techniques to form a thin layer of silicon dioxide thereon. The segmented heater resistor
309
is then created by depositing a patterned film of resistive material on the silicon dioxide. Preferably, the film is tantalum aluminum, TaAl, which is a well known resistive heater material in the art of thermal inkjet printhead construction. Next, a thin layer of aluminum is deposited to provide the electrical conductors.
In
FIG. 4
, a cross section of the firing chamber
301
and the associated structures are shown. The substrate
313
comprises, in the preferred embodiment, a silicon base
401
, treated using either thermal oxidation or vapor deposition techniques to form a thin layer
403
of silicon dioxide and a thin layer
405
of phospho-silicate glass (PSG) thereon. The silicon dioxide and PSG forms an electrically insulating layer approximately 17000 Angstroms thick upon which a subsequent discontinuous layer
407
of tantalum-aluminum (TaAl) of resistive material is deposited. The tantalum aluminum layer is deposited to a thickness of approximately 900 Angstroms to yield a resistively of approximately 30 Ohms per square. In a preferred embodiment, the resistive layer is conventionally deposited using a magnetron sputtering technique and then masked and etched to create discontinuous and electrically independent areas of resistive material such as areas
409
and
411
. Next, a layer of aluminum-silicon-copper (AlSiCu) alloy conductor is conventionally magnetron sputter deposited to a thickness of approximately 5000 Angstroms atop the tantalum aluminum layer areas
409
,
411
and etched to provide discontinuous and independent electrical conductors (such as conductors
415
and
417
) and interconnect areas. To provide protection for the heater resistors, a composite layer of material is deposited over the upper surface of the conductor layer and resistor layer. A dual layer of passivating materials includes a first layer
419
of silicon nitride approximately 2500 Angstroms thick which is covered by a second layer
421
of inert silicon carbide approximately 1250 Angstroms thick. This passivation layer (
419
,
421
) provides both good adherence to the underlying materials and good protection against ink corrosion. It also provides electrical insulation. An area over the heater resistor
309
and its associated electrical connection to electrical conductors is subsequently masked and a cavitation layer
423
of tantalum 3000 Angstroms thick is conventionally sputter deposited. A gold layer
425
may be selectively added to the cavitation layer in areas where electrical interconnection to an interconnection material is desired. An example of semiconductor processing for thermal inkjet applications may be found in U.S. Pat. No. 4,862,197, “Process for Manufacturing Thermal Inkjet Printhead and Integrated Circuit (IC) Structures Produced Thereby.” An alternative thermal inkjet semiconductor process may be found in U.S. Pat. No. 5,883,650, Thin-Film Printhead Device for an InkJet Printer.”
In a preferred embodiment, the sides of the firing chamber
301
and the ink feed channel are defined by a polymer barrier layer
315
. This barrier layer is preferably made of an organic polymer plastic that is substantially inert to the corrosive action of ink and is conventionally deposited upon substrate
313
and its various protective layers. To realize the desired structure, the barrier layer is subsequently photolithographically defined into desired shapes and then etched. Typically the barrier layer
315
has a thickness of about 15 micrometers after the printhead is assembled with the orifice plate
305
.
The orifice plate
305
is secured to the substrate
313
by the barrier layer
315
. In some print cartridges the orifice plate
305
is constructed of nickel with plating of gold to resist the corrosive effects of the ink. In other print cartridges, the orifice plate is formed of a polyamide material that can be made into a common electrical interconnect structure. In an alternative embodiment, the orifice plate and barrier layer is integrally formed on the substrate.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a heater resistor having a higher value of resistance is employed to overcome the problems stated above, in particular the problems of undesired energy dissipation in the parasitic resistance and of the necessity of having a high current capacity in the power supply. Here, the implementation of a higher value resistance resistor is that of revising the geometry of the heater resistor, specifically that of providing two segments having a greater length than width. Since it is preferred to have the heater resistor located in one compact spot for optimum vapor bubble nucleation in a top-shooting (ink drop ejection perpendicular to the plane of the heater resistor) printhead, the resistor segments are disposed long side to long side as shown in FIG.
5
. As shown, heater resistor segment
501
is disposed with one of its long sides essentially parallel to the long side of heater resistor segment
503
. Electrical current I
in
is input via conductor
505
to an input port
507
of the resistor segment
501
disposed at one of the short sides (width) edges of resistor segment
501
. The electrical current, in the preferred embodiment, is coupled to the input port
509
of the resistor segment
503
disposed at one of the short side (width) edges of resistor segment
503
by coupling device that has been termed a “shorting bar”
511
. The shorting bar is a portion of conductor film disposed between the output port
513
of heater resistor segment
501
and the input port
509
of heater resistor segment
503
. The electrical current I
out
is returned to the power supply via conductor
515
connected to the output port
517
of heater resistor segment
503
. As shown, with no additional electrical current sources or sinks, I
in
=I
out
. The output ports
513
and
517
of heater resistor segments
501
and
503
, respectively, are disposed at the opposite short side (width) edges of the heater resistor segments from the input ports.
By placing the two resistor segments in a compact area, it is necessary for the electric current to change direction by way of the coupling device or shorting bar portion
511
. Because the path of the electrons comprising the electric current is shorter between the two proximate comers of the heater resistor segments (causing the parasitic resistance of the shorter path to be less than the longer path), more of the electric current flows in this shorter path, illustrated by arrow
521
in
FIG. 5
, than any other path, illustrated by arrow
523
. This concentration of current has been termed “current crowding”. High current density produced by such current crowding will reduce the life of electronic circuits because it creates locally elevated temperatures and creates high electric field strengths that induce electromigration. In applications where the electric current is cycled on and off, such as in a thermal inkjet printhead, the rapid thermal variation causes expansion and contraction of the printhead substrate and the thin film layers disposed thereon. In areas having differential thermal expansion and contraction amounts because of the differences in thermal expansion rates of different materials, such as at the junction of a heater resistor segment and the conductor shorting bar, material fatigue stresses will cause an early failure.
To address the current crowding problem, a feature of the present invention causes the current flow to spread more uniformly through the shorting bar. This is accomplished by enhancing the shorting bar with a current control device
600
. This current control device comprises a modified and/or missing portion of the conductive film that serially connects resistor segments
501
and
503
. Preferably, the control device
600
is a portion of coupling device
511
having varying degrees of sheet resistance to reduce problems with current concentrations or current crowding in coupling device
511
. Preferably, the current control device
600
includes a higher sheet resistance region of coupling device
511
positioned in the shorter current path
521
region of coupling device
511
. In a theoretical limit, removing a portion of the conductive sheet in the shorter current path
521
region is equivalent to an infinite sheet resistance in that region. In a preferred embodiment, the current control device
600
is realized as a current balancing element created in association with the shorting bar. As shown in
FIG. 6B
, a balancing resistor
601
separates the shorting bar portion into two shorting bar segments, segment
511
a
and segment
511
b
. In a preferred embodiment where the resistive material is deposited first on the oxide layer of the semiconductor substrate then overlain with an electrical conductor film, balancing resistor
601
is preferably created by etching shorting bar portion conductive film in the balancing resistor
601
area, thereby exposing the resistive material layer and creating a resistor (unshorted by the conductive layer disposed atop the resistive material layer). Alternatively the conductive film may be selectively deposited in masking and deposition steps. Although the balancing element is preferably a resistor, other elements, such as a parallel arrangement of diodes, or similar current restrictive devices may be employed in the present invention.
Balancing resistor
601
, in the preferred embodiment, is created with a trapezoidal or triangular-shaped tapered geometry in which the widest (base) end is positioned in the area of the shorting bar which previously experienced current crowding. The balancing resistor is further created with its narrowest (apex) end furthest from the area furthest from the area of current crowding. This tapered geometry, arranged as shown in
FIG. 6B
, produces a resistor that has its highest incremental resistance at its base and its lowest incremental resistance at its apex. Incremental resistance, as used herein, is a magnitude of resistance which would be measured on an essentially linear path from a point on the edge of an input port
603
of balancing resistor
601
to a point on the edge of an output port
605
of balancing resistor
601
without any parallel resistance effects from any other path across balancing resistor
601
. When the path lengths for current flowing through the shorting bar segment
511
a
, the balancing resistor
601
, and the shorting bar segment
511
b
are taken into consideration, the resistance encountered by an electric current flowing from the output port
513
of heater resistor segment
501
to the input port
509
of heater resistor segment
503
is essentially the same.
Stated another way and with reference to
FIG. 7
, a resistor model can be configured to help explain the operation of this facet of the present invention. Current flows into heater resistor segment
501
′ (having a resistance value of R
H
) via conductor
505
′. At the output of heater resistor segment
501
′, the current divides into a multiplicity of paths—two of which are deemed to be path
701
and path
703
. In path
701
, a component of the current flows
30
through a physically short path
705
(having a parasitic resistance value of r
1
) of shorting bar segment
511
a
, through a physically long path
707
(having a resistance value of R
A
) of balancing resistor
601
, and through another physically short path
709
(having a parasitic resistance value of r
1
) of shorting bar segment
511
b
. In path
711
, another component of the current flows through a physically long path (having a parasitic resistance value of r
2
) of shorting bar segment
511
a
, through a physically short path
713
(having a resistance value of R
B
) of balancing resistor
601
, and through another physically long path (having a parasitic resistance value of r
1
) of shorting bar segment
511
b
. The current recombines at the input to heater resistor segment
503
′ (having a resistance value of R
H
) and is returned via conductor
515
′. In order that the current be balanced and current crowding be avoided, the balancing resistor
601
and the shorting bar segments
511
a
, and
511
b
are designed so that:
r
1
<r
2
,
R
H
>R
A
>R
B
, and
R
A
+2r
1
=R
B
+2r
2
.
The component of the current flowing through path
701
is therefore made essentially equal to the component of current flowing through path
703
and current crowding is avoided.
The physical implementation of a preferred embodiment of the present invention uses a heater resistor having a total (R
H
+R
H
) resistance value of approximately 140 ohms. As diagrammed in a preferred embodiment illustrated in
FIG. 6B
, the balancing resistor has a total measurable resistance value of 4 ohms with physical dimensions of b≅2.3 μm at the base, a≅1.8 μm at the truncated apex, and a truncated triangle height of h≅25 μm, which is related to the lengths of the triangle sides. The heater resistor segments
501
and
503
each have a width of w≅9 μm and a length l≅20 μm. The tantalum-aluminum thin film of the heater resistor segments and the balancing resistor has a thickness of approximately 900 Angstroms. It should be noted that as the height, h, becomes larger (that is, as the shorting bar becomes wider) the current distribution becomes greater (more individual electron paths are available) and the total measurable resistance value increases.
In an alternative embodiment where the heater resistor need not be concentrated in a confined area (such as in a distributed or multiple coordinated nozzle configuration) but in which a turn or corner is necessary in the shorting bar portion, an application of the present invention may be employed to minimize the effects of current crowding in the shorting bar. A ninety degree turn is necessary in the shorting bar for the heater resistor configuration of FIG.
8
. The heater resistor consists of two resistor segments
801
,
803
joined by a shorting bar conductor separated into two portions
805
a
and
805
b
by balancing resistor
807
.
Other ways of balancing the current in a coupling device using a current control device can be considered, as illustrated in FIG.
9
. For example, the current control device
600
can be a missing or higher resistance portion
901
of coupling device
511
that is positioned in the region of current crowding. Portion
901
is depicted to be of any or geometry that reduces current crowding in coupling device
511
to an acceptable level. Alternatively, coupling device
511
may have a graded or varying resistance level that increases with distance from resistor segments
501
and
503
to minimize the maximum current density in coupling device
511
. Stated another way, coupling device
511
can comprise a sheet
511
of varying sheet resistance wherein the sheet resistance has a higher value where coupling device contacts resistor segments
501
and
501
. In that event, this variation of sheet resistance can be referred to as a current control device aspect of coupling device
511
.
Thus, a thermal ink drop generator has been described which enables a higher value of resistance to be realized by improving the heater resistor geometry of segmented resistors. Current crowding is reduced by employing a balancing resistor as part of the shorting bar conductor.
Claims
- 1. A segmented heater resistor for an inkjet printhead, comprising:a first heater resistor segment and a second heater resistor segment; a coupling device that electrically serially couples said first heater resistor segment to said second heater resistor segment, said coupling device being disposed between said first heater resistor segment and said second heater resistor segment such that an electric current flowing in said first heater resistor segment is altered in direction by at least 90 degrees to flow in said second heater resistor segment; and a current control device, disposed in said coupling device, that reduces current crowding in said coupling device.
- 2. The segmented heater resistor in accordance with claim 1, wherein said coupling device further substantially reverses said direction of said electric current flowing in said first heater resistor segment to flow in said second heater resistor segment.
- 3. The segmented heater resistor in accordance with claim 1, wherein said current control device further comprises a portion having an area of increased resistivity.
- 4. The segmented heater resistor in accordance with claim 3, wherein said area of increased resistivity further comprises a tapered geometry including a narrow end portion and a wide end portion, said wide end portion being positioned in said coupling device to reduce electric current flow in said coupling device proximate said wide end.
- 5. The segmented heater resistor in accordance with claim 1, wherein said first heater resistor segment and said second heater resistor segment further comprise respective end portion, said current control device further comprises discontinuous region of conductive material, and said coupling device further comprises a region of conductive material connecting said respective end portions of said first heater resistor segment and said second heater resistor segment, said region of conductive material being interrupted by said current control device adjacent to said respective end portions to reduce current crowding when current flows from the end portion of said first heater resistor segment, through said coupling device, and to said end portion of said second heater resistor segment.
- 6. The segmented heater resistor in accordance with claim 5, wherein said current control device further comprises a region of higher resistance material disposed in said discontinuous region of conductive material and having a higher sheet resistance magnitude than the magnitude of sheet resistance of said conductive material.
- 7. The segmented heater resistor in accordance with claim 6, wherein said region of higher resistance divides said coupling device into two regions of conductive material.
- 8. A segmented thin film heater resistor for an inkjet printer comprising:a first resistor segment; a second resistor segment; a conductive shorting bar electrically coupling said first resistor segment to said second resistor segment and comprised of a first shorting bar segment and a second shorting bar segment, said first shorting bar segment coupled to said first resistor segment and having a connection edge disposed with one end of said connection edge proximate said first resistor segment and the other end of said connection edge distal said first resistor segment, and said second shorting bar segment coupled to said second resistor segment and having a connection edge disposed with one end of said connection edge proximate said second resistor segment and the other end of said connection edge distal said second resistor segment; and a balancing element disposed between said first shorting bar segment connection edge and said second shorting bar segment connection edge and resistively coupling said first shorting bar segment to said second shorting bar segment with a resistance having a magnitude between said proximate first shorting bar segment connection edge and said proximate second shorting bar segment connection edge that is greater than that between said distal first shorting bar segment connection edge and said distal second shorting bar segment connection edge.
- 9. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 8 wherein said first heater resistor segment is disposed adjacent said second heater resistor segment.
- 10. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 9 wherein said first resistor segment further comprises an input port and an output port and wherein said second resistor segment further comprises an input port and an output port.
- 11. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 10 wherein said input port of said first heater resistor segment is disposed adjacent said output port of said second heater resistor segment and wherein said output port of said first heater resistor segment is disposed adjacent said input port of said second heater resistor segment.
- 12. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 11 wherein said first heater resistor segment further comprises an essentially straight edge as an input port and an essentially straight edge as an output port and wherein said second heater resistor segment further comprises an essentially straight edge as an input port and an essentially straight edge as an output port and wherein said first heater resistor segment input port edge is essentially collinear with said second heater resistor segment output port edge and said first heater resistor segment output port edge is essentially collinear with said second heater resistor segment input port edge.
- 13. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 8 wherein said balancing element further comprises a balancing resistor.
- 14. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 13 wherein said balancing resistor further comprises a truncated triangle geometric shape and wherein a base of said truncated triangle geometric shape is disposed proximate said first heater resistor segment and an apex of said truncated triangle geometric shape is disposed distal said first heater resistor segment.
- 15. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 14 wherein a first side of said truncated triangle geometric shaped balancing resistor is in contact with said first shorting bar segment connection edge and wherein a second side of said truncated triangle geometric shaped balancing resistor is in contact with said second shorting bar segment connection edge.
- 16. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 8 wherein said balancing element further comprises a truncated triangle geometric shape and wherein a base of said truncated triangle geometric shape is disposed proximate said second heater resistor segment and an apex of said truncated triangle geometric shape is disposed distal said second heater resistor segment.
- 17. The segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 16 wherein a first side of said truncated triangle geometric shaped balancing element is in contact with said first shorting bar segment connection edge and wherein a second side of said truncated triangle geometric shaped balancing element is in contact with said second shorting bar segment connection edge.
- 18. An inkjet printer print cartridge further comprising the segmented thin film heater resistor in accordance with claim 8.
- 19. A method of current crowding reduction in an inkjet printer print cartridge, comprising the steps of:applying an electrical current from a current source to an input port of a first segment of a segmented heater resistor to eject an ink drop from the print cartridge; coupling said applied electrical current from an output of said heater resistor first segment to a shorting bar providing a plurality of paths for said applied electrical current to follow, a first path of said plurality of paths having a first parasitic resistance magnitude and a second path of said plurality of paths having a second parasitic resistance magnitude, said first parasitic resistance magnitude being greater than said second parasitic resistance magnitude; applying an electrical current following said first path to a balancing element portion having a first resistance magnitude and applying an electrical current following said second path to a balancing element portion having a second resistance magnitude, said first resistance magnitude being less than said second resistance magnitude, whereby said electrical current following said first path is balanced with said electrical current following said second path resulting in a balanced electrical current through said shorting bar; and coupling said balanced electrical current from said shorting bar to an input port of a second segment of said segmented heater resistor.
- 20. A method in accordance with the method of claim 19 further comprising the step of essentially equating said electrical current following said first path with said electrical current following said second path.
US Referenced Citations (11)
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0124312 |
Apr 1984 |
EP |
0638424A2 |
Feb 1995 |
EP |
58211470 |
Dec 1983 |
JP |
61100467 |
May 1986 |
JP |