Spittoon system for waste inkjet printer ink

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6834931
  • Patent Number
    6,834,931
  • Date Filed
    Friday, March 28, 2003
    21 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, December 28, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
An inkjet waste ink handling system embodiment of the present invention includes a spittoon reservoir for collecting waste ink dropped from an inkjet printhead, and a ramp within the spittoon reservoir having an upper end that receives any ink dropped in and a lower end to which gravity conveys such ink. In this way, pillars of dried ink are prevented from accumulating.
Description




BACKGROUND




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates generally to inkjet printing mechanisms, and more particularly to a spittoon system for handling waste inkjet ink that has been discharged from an inkjet printhead during a nozzle clearing, purging or “spitting” routine.




2. Background of the Invention




Inkjet printing heads eject controlled sprays of ink onto a page while printing. Each such printhead has very small nozzles through which drops of various colored ink are fired. To print a typical image, the printhead is moved back and forth across a page, while ejecting patterns of ink drops. Conventional printheads use piezo-electric and thermal printhead technology. For instance, thermal ink ejection mechanisms are shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,278,584 issued to Brian J. Keefe et al on Jan. 11, 1994 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,683,481, issued to Samuel A. Johnson on Jul. 28, 1987.




In thermal inkjet systems, barrier layers, ink channels and vaporization chambers are positioned between a nozzle orifice plate and a substrate layer. Such substrate layer typically includes linear arrays of heater elements, such as resistors, to heat ink inside the vaporization chambers. The instantaneous heating causes ink droplets to be ejected from the corresponding nozzle. By selectively energizing the resistors as the printhead moves across the page, the deposited ink can be precisely patterned to form particular text and graphic images.




A “service station” mechanism is typically included in each printer chassis for routine printhead maintenance. Such service stations usually include a capping system to seal the printhead nozzles from debris and to prevent drying of the ink inside the nozzles. Some caps are designed to help with ink priming, such as by being connected to a pumping unit that draws a vacuum on the printhead.




During operation, any clogs in the printhead can be periodically cleared by firing a number of drops of ink through each of the nozzles in a process known as “spitting.” The waste ink is collected in a “spittoon” reservoir included in the service station.




Most service stations have a rubber wiper to wipe off excess ink, paper dust and other debris from the printhead surface. The wiping action can be done by moving the printhead across the wiper, the wiper across the printhead, or by moving both the printhead and the wiper.




Recent research has focused on improving the ink itself to improve the clarity and contrast of the printed image. Quicker, more waterfast printing with darker blacks and more vivid colors, pigment-based inks have been developed. Such pigment-based inks have a higher solid content than the earlier dye-based inks, and results in a higher optical density for the new inks. Both types of ink dry quickly. Such inkjet printing mechanisms produce high quality images on plain and specialty coated papers, transparencies, fabric, etc.




Unfortunately, the combination of small nozzles and quick-drying ink makes modern printheads more susceptible to clogging, e.g., from dried ink, minute dust particles, paper fibers, and solids within the new inks themselves.




Pillars of dried ink can grow up inside conventional ink spittoons to eventually contact the printhead. Such pillars resembling stalagmites can interfere with printhead movement, reduce print quality, and promote clogging of the inkjet printhead nozzles. Such stalagmites can grow to completely bridge across the narrow openings of some spittoons, and eventually close the spittoon opening. So prior art spittoons are made wide enough to prevent such bridging. But such extra width necessitates increasing the overall printer width.




A tapered screw spittoon system is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,213,583, issued to Patrick J Therien on Apr. 10, 2001. Such describes a tapered screw rotatably mounted in a reservoir of the spittoon. Ink residues are discharged onto a part of the tapered screw. When the screw is turned, ink residues are carried towards an exit in the reservoir wall, and squeezed out. This circumvents any ink residue stalagmite built-up and allows more efficient spittoon reservoir geometries.




Such complex mechanisms to deal with spittoon clogging add unnecessarily to the design, manufacturing, and expense of an inkjet printer. Less complex ways of dealing with the stalagmite build-up problem are needed to produce more affordable and more reliable printers.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




Briefly, an inkjet waste ink handling system embodiment of the present invention includes a spittoon reservoir for collecting waste ink dropped from an inkjet printhead, and a ramp within the spittoon reservoir having an upper end that receives any ink dropped in and a lower end to which gravity conveys such ink. In this way, pillars of dried ink are prevented from accumulating.




According to a second embodiment of the present invention, a method for handling excess ink dropped from in inkjet printhead is provided. Firstly, excess ink is dropped from an inkjet printhead onto a top end of a ramp. Subsequently, the method uses gravity to flow said excess ink down to a bottom end of said ramp. In this way, pillars of dried ink are prevented from accumulating.




According to another embodiment of the present invention, an ink-jet printer includes an inkjet printhead that can discharge waste ink needing disposal, a spittoon reservoir located at a point under those that can be visited by the inkjet printhead and providing for collection of any waste ink dropped from the inkjet printhead, and a ramp within the spittoon reservoir having an upper end to receive any ink dropped in and a lower end to which gravity conveys such ink. The printer also includes a sponge disposed within the spittoon reservoir and adjacent to said lower end of the ramp and providing for collection of any ink that travels down the ramp. The sponge contacts the bottom end of the ramp and wicks in any ink traveling down toward it. The printer further includes an area disposed under the ramp for collecting and drying any ink not absorbed by the sponge and a capillary system disposed in the ramp and providing motivation for any ink on the ramp to move to the sponge. In such a printer, pillars of dried ink are prevented from accumulating.




Other aspects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, which description illustrates by way of example the principles of the invention.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a perspective diagram of an inkjet printing mechanism embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 2A

is an exploded assembly diagram of a spittoon system useful in the printing mechanism of

FIG. 1

; and





FIG. 2B

is a diagram of an alternative perspective of the spittoon system of FIG.


2


A.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION





FIG. 1

illustrates an inkjet printer embodiment of the present invention, and is referred to herein by the general reference numeral


100


. The printer


100


is representative of the many kinds of devices that use inkjets and spittoon reservoirs that can benefit from the present invention. For example, some inkjet-based fax and copier machines are included in alternative embodiments of the present invention.




The typical inkjet printer


100


includes a chassis


102


surrounded by a housing or casing enclosure


104


. Sheets of paper are typically fed through a print zone


106


for printing as they pass by an inkjet and carriage assembly. Printer


100


includes an inkjet cartridge


108


, a thermal printhead


110


, a service station


112


, a servicing region


114


, a sliding carriage guide rod


116


, a scanning axis


118


, and a printer controller


120


that receives print-job instructions from a host computer. The sliding carriage guide rod


116


mounted with chassis


102


allows an inkjet carriage


122


to slide back and forth across the print zone


106


. The scanning axis


118


is defined by the guide rod


116


. Carriage positional feedback information can be provided to printer controller


120


by an optical encoder reader (not shown) mounted to carriage


122


. Such typically reads an encoder strip that extends along the path of carriage travel.




The carriage


122


can be moved across guide rod


116


to a servicing region


114


inside casing


104


. A service station


112


within servicing region


114


is used to keep the inkjet cartridge clean and disposes of excess ink that is wiped off. It caps the inkjet cartridge to prevent drying of the ink inside and to block contamination by loose debris.




When inside print zone


106


, each paper sheet receives ink from ink-jet cartridge


108


. The cartridge


108


is sometimes called a “pen” by artisans. The inkjet cartridge


108


includes an ink reservoir (not shown) for storing a supply of ink. The inkjet cartridge


108


has a printhead


110


, with an orifice plate and a plurality of nozzles. The printhead


110


illustrated in

FIG. 1

represents a thermal inkjet printhead, although other types of printheads may be used, such as piezoelectric printheads.




The outer surface of the orifice plate of the printhead


110


preferably lies in a common printhead plane. In the exemplary embodiment, such printhead plane extends substantially horizontally.




Here, only some of the pen servicing functions are discussed, e.g., spitting of the printhead


110


. A spittoon system like that illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 6,132,026, issued to Bret K. Taylor et al on Oct. 17, 2000, can be incorporated in the service station


112


.





FIGS. 2A and 2B

show a printhead


110


and a spittoon system


200


which can be separated from the service station and mounted independently on the printer chassis.




The spittoon system


200


is supported by the chassis


102


in the service region


114


within the printer casing


104


. The spittoon system


200


has a reservoir


202


for storing waste ink residues collected from the printhead


110


during servicing. The reservoir


202


has an opening


204


through which the ink residues from printhead


110


can drop inside. The reservoir


202


has vertical walls and a bottom


206


that parallels the plane in which the printhead


110


moves.




An inclined ramp


208


in the reservoir


202


extends down to an absorption foam


2100


. A plurality of capillary drains


212


are included in the surface of the ramp


208


to promote drainage to the absorption foam


210


. The ramp


208


has a first end


214


adjacent to a first side wall


216


of the reservoir


202


as well as the entranceway opening


204


, and a second end


218


(

FIG. 2B

) adjacent to the absorption foam


210


as well as the bottom wall


206


. The ramp


208


has a discharged region


220


close to the first end


214


for receiving ink residues (not shown) entering into the reservoir


202


from the printhead


110


. A space


222


is provided between the underside of ramp


208


and the bottom of reservoir


202


.




During spitting, the ink residues drop into the reservoir


202


and land on the ramp


208


. Gravity flows the ink residues down the ramp


208


toward the absorption foam


210


. The capillary drains


212


create a capillary action, which assists the flow of the ink residues to the absorption foam


210


. The ramp


208


preferably has a smooth surface, to promote ink drainage. The absorption foam


210


can be Polyester absorbent felt. The absorption of the inks that have reached the absorption foam


210


helps draw even more ink down the ramp


208


.




Eventually the absorption foam


210


will saturate. When this happens, ink flowing down the ramp


208


will spill over the bottom edges of the ramp and is collect underneath. Such ink will dry and make for more room underneath the ramp. So it helps if the ramp


208


is made of very thin sheet material. In alternative embodiments of the present invention, the ramp


208


can be flat bottomed or round channeled.




Embodiments of the present invention, in general, run excess ink down a ramp in a spittoon reservoir to a sponge. When the sponge fills, further excess ink is allowed to run down and collect under to ramp to dry. Such prevents the growth of dried ink pillars that can interfere with inkjet operation and clear, clean printing.



Claims
  • 1. An inkjet waste ink handling system, comprising:a spittoon reservoir for collecting waste ink dropped from an ink-jet printhead; a ramp within the spittoon reservoir having an upper end that receives any ink dropped in and a lower end to which gravity conveys such ink; a sponge disposed within the spittoon reservoir and adjacent to said lower end of the ramp and providing for collection of any ink that travels down the ramp; and an area disposed under the ramp for collecting and drying any ink not absorbed by the sponge, wherein, pillars of dried ink are prevented from accumulating.
  • 2. The system of claim 1, wherein:the sponge contacts said bottom end of the ramp and wicks in any ink traveling down toward it.
  • 3. The system of claim 1, further comprising:a capillary system disposed in the ramp and providing motivation for any ink on the ramp to move to the lower end.
  • 4. A method for handling excess ink dropped from an inkjet printhead, the method comprising:dropping excess ink from an inkjet printhead onto a top end of a ramp; using gravity to flow said excess ink down to a bottom end of said ramp; wicking in said excess ink with a sponge in contact with said ramp; and collecting any ink not absorbed by said sponge under said ramp for eventual drying, wherein, pillars of dried ink are prevented from accumulating.
  • 5. An inkjet printer, comprising:an inkjet printhead that can discharge waste ink needing disposal; a spittoon reservoir located at a point that can be visited by the inkjet printhead and providing for collection of any waste ink dropped from the inkjet printhead; a ramp within the spittoon reservoir having an upper end to receive any ink dropped in and a lower end to which gravity conveys such ink; a sponge disposed within the spittoon reservoir and adjacent to said lower end of the ramp and providing for collection of any ink that travels down the ramp, wherein the sponge contacts said bottom end of the ramp and wicks in any ink traveling down toward it; an area disposed under the ramp for collecting and drying any ink not absorbed by the sponge; and a capillary system disposed in the ramp and providing motivation for any ink on the ramp to move to the sponge; wherein, pillars of dried ink are prevented from accumulating.
US Referenced Citations (4)
Number Name Date Kind
4683481 Johnson Jul 1987 A
5278584 Keefe Jan 1994 A
6132026 Taylor Oct 2000 A
6213583 Therien Apr 2001 B1
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
04-060384 Oct 1993 JP