Spraying process for an electrically conducting liquid and a continuous ink jet printing device using this process

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6273559
  • Patent Number
    6,273,559
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, April 1, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 14, 2001
    22 years ago
Abstract
One or several jets (14) of an electrically conducting liquid such as ink, are emitted at a given speed Vj and are stimulated so as to form drops (22, 24) at a frequency F, at two break off points (C, L) separated by a distance ΔD less than the wavelength λ of the jet, defined by the relation λ=Vj/F. Two contiguous areas are created (20) in the vicinity of these two break off points (C, L), and the potential of these two areas is brought up to constant electrical potentials with opposite signs (V1, V2). Different quantities of electric charge are thus applied on the drops (22, 24), which are relatively constant even if the break off points should vary. A deflection device (30) then deviates the drops to be recycled (24) and the drops to be printed (22) depending on their charge, which depends on their break off point.
Description




TECHNICAL FIELD




This invention relates to a process for projecting an electrically conducting liquid in the form of at least one continuous stimulated jet.




The invention also relates to a multi-nozzle printing device embodying this process.




A printing device conform with the invention may be used in any industrial domain related to marking, coding, addressing and industrial decoration.




STATE OF THE ART




In the current state of the art, there are two main printing technologies using stimulated continuous ink jets. These processes are the deviated continuous ink jet technique and the binary continuous ink jet technique.




According to the deviated continuous ink jet technique, pressurized electrically conducting ink is discharged through a calibrated nozzle. The ink jet thus formed is broken off at regular time intervals always at the same point in space, under the action of a periodic stimulation device. This forced fragmentation of the ink jet is usually induced by periodic vibrations of a piezoelectric crystal on the inlet side of the nozzle. Starting from this break off point, the continuous jet is transformed into a stream of identical and uniformly spaced ink drops. A first group of electrodes is located close to the break off point, the function of which is to selectively transfer a variable and predetermined quantity of electric charge to each drop in the jet. All drops in the jet then pass through a second group of electrodes, in which there is a constant electric field. Each drop is then deflected proportionally to the electric charge that has already been assigned to it, and which directs it towards a specific point on a medium to be printed. Undeflected drops are recovered in a gutter and are recycled to an ink circuit.




In ink jet printers based on this technique, a specific device is usually provided to maintain constant synchronization between instants at which the jet is broken off and instants at which drop charge signals are applied.




This technology is characterized mainly by the fact that a variable quantity of electric charge is selectively transferred to each drop in the jet, such that multiple deflection levels are created. Due to this characteristic, a single nozzle can print an entire pattern (character or graphic pattern) in segments (lines of points with a given width). The changeover from one segment to the next takes place by moving the print medium in front of the printing device, continuously and perpendicular to the segments.




Several single nozzle printing devices (usually two to four) can be grouped within the same housing, for applications requiring a slightly greater print width.




Multi-nozzle printing devices have to be used when print widths become large. Document EP-A-0 512 907 describes a multi-nozzle (eight nozzles) printing device using the deviated continuous ink jet technology. Even greater print widths can be obtained by putting several multi-nozzle printing devices together.




Stimulated continuous ink jet printing devices using the binary continuous jet technique are different from printing devices making use of the deviated continuous jet technique mainly due to the fact that only a predetermined quantity of electric charge can be transferred to each drop in the jet, on request. Therefore only one value of the drop deflection is created. Consequently, multi-nozzle printing devices are necessary to print characters or patterns, in which the center-to-center distance between the nozzles usually corresponds to the spacing between impacts on the medium to be printed. In general, drops to be used for printing (“drops to be printed” in the rest of the text) are the undeflected drops. This technique is particularly suitable for high speed printing applications such as addressing, printing of high resolution color prints, etc.




In printing devices making use of a binary continuous ink jet, some components of groups of charging and deflection electrodes can be made common to these two groups of electrodes. In all cases, electrodes dedicated to charging drops in each jet must be controlled individually, at the same frequency at which the drops are formed and at voltages of up to 350 V.




Major cost and design problems arise with the manufacturing of nozzles and electrodes for a multi-nozzle printing device operating according to the binary continuous ink jet technique, and with their positioning when a very fine pitch is necessary.




Cost problems are due to the large number of charging electrodes and the large number of high voltage electronic circuits connected to these electrodes, which result in large and complex connections.




Design problems are related to the very dense high voltage connections close to the jets, which cause undesirable crosstalk. The only way to reduce the effect of this crosstalk on the print quality is to reduce the drop usage ratio, and consequently the print speed.




In the article entitled “Binary Continuous Thermal Ink Jet Break off Length Modulation” by Donald J. DRAKE, published in the Xerox Disclosure Journal, Volume 14, No. 3, May-June 1989, a multi-nozzle binary continuous jet printing device is suggested in which the design has been modified to overcome the disadvantages mentioned above.




In accordance with the conventional binary continuous jet technology, this article proposes to use two electrode groups, each of which is formed by a flat electrode. However in this case, each electrode is common to all jets and a constant electric voltage is applied to it. The drops to be printed and the drops to be recycled are selected by individual control of the stimulation of each ink jet on the print head. Consequently, an individual stimulation device is provided for each jet.




With this layout, the connections associated with the stimulation devices are located on the inlet side of the nozzles and therefore are not close to the jets. Furthermore, the voltages carried on the connections are less than voltages required for charging the drops. Therefore the effects of crosstalk are reduced.




According to the article by Donald J. DRAKE, a low level or high level stimulation signal is applied to each of the jets on request. The point at which the jet breaks when a low level stimulation signal is applied is further from the nozzle than when a high level stimulation signal is applied to the jet.




In the first case, the jet break off point is located facing the first electrode, or the charging electrode, which is at a constant voltage V


c


. The drop that detaches at this instant then carries a charge Q


1


and is subjected to a deflection equal to an angle δ


1


within the field created by the second electrode, or deflection electrode, which is kept at a constant voltage V


d


. This drop is recovered by the gutter and is recycled to the printing device ink circuit.




When the break distance is shorter because a high level stimulation signal is applied on the jet, the jet breaks at a point slightly before the charged electrode. The charge Q


2


carried by the drop is then smaller than in the previous case. The deflection δ


2


induced by the deflection plane is also smaller. The drop then avoids the gutter and reaches the medium to be printed.




In this article, the difference between two jet stimulation levels is such that the distance d between jet break off points for each of the two levels is equal to the wavelength λ of the stimulated jet, i.e. the stream of drops. The value λ is provided by the ratio of the speed V


j


of the jet to the frequency F of the stimulation signal, λ=V


j


/F.




However, there are three serious disadvantages to the operating method and design suggested in this article, which limit the extent to which this process can be applied to continuous ink jet printers.




The first disadvantage is due to the fact that the distance d between the two jet break off points is equal to the wavelength λ of the stream of drops. This makes it very difficult to use the jet when long break-short break transitions occur. It is found that when a drop to be printed is followed by a drop to be recycled, the condition d=λ theoretically results in simultaneous detachment of the two drops. The kinetics of charge transfers is then different from the kinetics associated with a short break-long break transition, which can induce different trajectories. Furthermore, any fluctuation in either of the break distances, which is inevitable in a real embodiment of the process, will cause a change to the jet operating conditions. For example, if d becomes slightly greater than λ, two drops will temporarily be combined during long break-short break transitions. A redistribution of the induced charges, which is apparently difficult to determine in advance, will take place and the trajectory of the drop to be printed will be changed.




The second disadvantage of the process described in the article by Donald J. DRAKE is a result of the proposed layout of electrodes, which imposes a short distance between the surface of the jet and the charging electrode (of the order of the jet diameter) in order to achieve satisfactory selection of print drops. There are several difficulties in the manufacture and use of this type of geometry within a multi-nozzle continuous jet printing device.




Firstly, a transient phase is necessary when starting this type of printing device for ink jets passing through the nozzles, during which aerodynamic braking is predominant. In particular, an ink volume is formed at the end of each jet, which is larger than the size of drops formed during steady state conditions and the jet trajectory is momentarily modified.




Therefore the charging electrode placed in the immediate vicinity of the jet center line tends to become dirty when the jets are being started. This effect is made inevitable by the angular dispersion of each jet, itself caused by the values of the precision and repeatability achieved when the nozzles are manufactured. It strongly disturbs operation of the printing device and limits its reliability. The charging electrode then has to be cleaned.




Furthermore, under steady state conditions, any fluctuation in the trajectory of jets around their center line (for example due to the temporary presence of an impurity in the jet ejection pipe) can also deviate the jet slightly and cause dirt to collect on the charging electrode located immediately adjacent to the jets, which usually causes short circuits between the jet and the electrode.




Finally, the geometry of the charging electrode described in the previous article, which induces the application of quantities of electric charge on printed drops and on unprinted drops, is a third disadvantage. These charge quantities, and consequently drop deflection levels, vary in a strictly monotonous manner with the positions of the break off points within the electric field created by the charging electrode. This means that the print quality of a multi-nozzle printing device incorporating this type of charging electrode depends directly on the precision with which the short break off point is positioned and regulated for all jets in the printing device. Each break off point different from this short break off point will result in a different impact point on the print medium. Management and control of this type of constraint is technically extremely difficult, and also would significantly increase the cost of a printing device operating in this manner.




Document US-A-4 638 328 proposes to replace piezoelectric stimulation elements by thermo-resistive elements generating temperature disturbances.




Furthermore, document US-A-4 220 958 describes an ink jet stimulation process in which the jet disturbance is performed by electro-hydrodynamic (EHD) excitation. The EHD stimulation device proposed in this document is composed of one or a set of several electrodes placed close to the jet on the outlet side of the jet, the length of each electrode being approximately equal to λ/2.




DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION




The main purpose of the invention is a process for projecting electrically conducting liquid using the binary continuous jet technique described in the article by Donald J. DRAKE mentioned above, without the disadvantages related to this technique.




More precisely, the invention relates to a process for projecting liquid by a continuous jet in which the process for charging drops output from the jets is controlled regardless of the sequence of drops emitted, and the trajectory of printable drops is not a strictly monotonous function of the position of the break off point within the charging device.




According to the most general definition of the invention, this result is obtained by means of a process for projecting an electrically conducting liquid in which:




at least one continuous liquid jet is emitted at a constant speed V


j


;




the jet is stimulated on request, so as to break it at two predetermined distinct break off points to form liquid drops at a given emission frequency F;




different electric charge quantities are applied to the drops, depending on their break off points; and then




the same electric field is applied on all drops, so as to only deviate drops formed at a relatively distant first break off point;




characterized by the fact that the jet is stimulated such that the two break off points are separated by a distance ΔD less than the wavelength λ of the jet, defined by the relation λ=V


j


/F, and approximately the same quantity of charge is applied to all drops formed within an area centered on the second break off point and with a length equal to approximately λ/4.




According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the said different quantities of electric charge are applied to the drops by creating two contiguous areas located close to the two break off points, and by applying constant electrical potentials with opposite signs to these two areas.




This can be done by passing the jet in sequence between two pairs of electrodes oriented parallel to the jet and sized such that the break off points are located between the said electrodes, and applying constant electric voltages with opposite signs to the two pairs of electrodes.




In this case, in order to avoid disadvantages related to the immediate proximity between the jet surface and the charge plane, it is advantageous to place each electrode at a distance from the center line of the jet equal to at least twice its diameter.




Preferably, several continuous liquid jets are emitted simultaneously and parallel to each other, each jet is stimulated separately, the said different quantities of electric charge are applied to the drops in all jets simultaneously, and the same electric field is applied simultaneously to all these drops.




Another purpose of the invention is a printing device by continuous ink jets, comprising:




a pressurized reservoir equipped with several nozzles capable of simultaneously emitting several continuous ink jets parallel to each other at a given speed V


j


;




an individual binary stimulation means for each jet capable of fragmenting the jet on request at two distinct predetermined break off points, to form ink drops at a given emission frequency F;




a charging means common to several ink jets, to apply different quantities of electric charge to the ink drops, depending on their break off points;




a deflection means common to all ink jets, to apply the same electric field to the drops, so as to deviate only drops formed at one of the first break off points relatively remote from the nozzles; and




a recycling gutter returning deviated drops towards the pressurized reservoir;




characterized by the fact that the individual means of binary stimulation of each of the jets is controlled by predetermined voltage levels such that the two break off points are separated by a distance strictly less than the jet wavelength λ defined by the relation λ=V


j


/F, the charging means being capable of applying approximately the same charge quantity onto all drops formed in an area centered on the second break off point and with a length equal to approximately λ/4.




According to a first embodiment of the invention, the individual binary stimulation means of each of the jets comprises a piezoelectric or thermo-resistive element placed in the pressurized reservoir and controlled individually by an external electronic circuit.




According to a second embodiment of the invention, the individual binary stimulation means of each of the jets comprises two thermo-resistive elements placed in the pressurized reservoir, one external electric circuit continuously supplying a periodic electric power supply signal to the first of the thermo-resistive elements corresponding to the first break off point, and on request, a complementary electric power supply signal to the second thermo-resistive element corresponding to the second break off point.




Finally, according to a third embodiment of the invention, the individual binary stimulation means for each jet comprises an individual transducer placed in the pressurized reservoir and at least one common hydrodynamic excitation electrode placed close to the jets on the outlet side of the nozzle, an external electric circuit continuously outputting a periodic electric signal for the power supply of the electro-hydrodynamic excitation electrode corresponding to the first break off point, and on request, a complementary electric power supply signal to the individual transducer corresponding to the second break off point.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




We will now describe different embodiments of the invention as non-restrictive examples, with reference to the attached drawings in which:





FIG. 1

is a perspective view that diagrammatically shows a continuous ink jet print device according to the invention;





FIGS. 2A and 2B

are side views that very diagrammatically illustrate the charging and deflection processes in the device in

FIG. 1

, for drops intended to be recycled and for drops to be printed respectively;





FIG. 3

is a sectional view comparable to

FIGS. 2A and 2B

illustrating a second embodiment of the invention, in which each individual binary stimulation means comprises two thermo-resistive elements; and





FIG. 4

is a schematic sectional view comparable to

FIGS. 2A

,


2


B and


3


, illustrating a third embodiment of the invention in which each individual binary stimulation means comprises a thermo-resistive element and a common EHD stimulation device.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF SEVERAL PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS





FIG. 1

diagrammatically shows a continuous ink jet printing device making use of the process for projecting an electrically conducting liquid conform with the invention.




The device comprises a pressurized reservoir


10


equipped with several calibrated nozzles


12


(three in the figure) from which ink jets


14


parallel to each other escape at a given speed V


j


, and at a constant spacing between them.




An individual binary stimulation means


16


is associated with each ink jet


14


, placed in reservoir


10


and individually controlled by an external electronic circuit


18


. On request, each binary stimulation means


16


fixes the location at which each jet


14


breaks at a short break off point C relatively close to nozzle


12


, or at a long break off point L further away from this nozzle. The drops formed at points C and L are denoted references


22


and


24


respectively, drops


22


and


24


are all emitted at a given emission frequency F.




A charging means


20


which will be described in more detail later is placed close to break off points C and L. This charging means


20


is common to all ink jets


14


. It applies different charge quantities to drops


22


and


24


, depending on their break off points.




On the output side of the charging means


20


, the printing device comprises a sensor


26


designed to measure the speed of ink jets


14


. This sensor


26


is connected to an electronic circuit


28


that processes data collected by the sensor. The circuit


28


is connected to a regulation loop (not shown) regulating the speed of jets


14


, using an arrangement well known to an expert in the subject. To simplify the figure, the sensor


26


and its associated circuit are not shown in

FIGS. 2A

to


4


.




On the output side of sensor


26


, the printing device comprises a deflection means


30


that applies the same constant electric field to ink drops


22


and


24


, previously electrically charged in the charging means


20


. This deflection means


30


comprises two flat electrodes


32


and


34


common to all ink jets


14


. These electrodes


32


and


34


are laid out on each side of the streams of ink drops


22


and


24


, and a constant voltage is applied between them by a power supply circuit


36


. The deflection means


30


directs the charged drops


24


towards a gutter


38


that recycles them to the device main ink circuit


40


. The trajectory of the other drops


22


, at approximately zero charge, is unaffected by the deflection means


30


such that these uncharged drops come into contact with medium


42


to be printed.




The charging means


20


comprises two groups of flat electrodes


42


,


44


and


46


,


48


respectively, the electrodes in each group being placed on each side of jets


14


. The two groups of electrodes are separated from each other by a distance D (

FIG. 2A

) parallel to the jet center lines. The total length of the two groups of electrodes parallel to the jet axes is denoted S. As diagrammatically shown in

FIG. 1

, the supply circuits


50


and


52


apply the same constant voltage V


1


to the two electrodes


42


and


44


in the first group of electrodes, and power supply circuits


54


and


56


apply the same constant voltage V


2


with an opposite sign to V


1


to the two electrodes


46


and


48


in the second group of electrodes. Two contiguous areas are thus created adjacent to the break off points C and L respectively, held at constant electrical potentials with opposite signs.




As illustrated more precisely in

FIGS. 2A and 2B

, electrodes


42


and


44


in the first group of electrodes are laid out symmetrically on each side of jets


14


and each are placed at a distance E from the jet center lines. Preferably, this distance E is equal to or greater than twice the diameter d


j


of the jets


14


. This characteristic prevents the electrodes from getting dirty when the jets are being started, and also under steady state conditions in the presence of an impurity in the ejection pipe. The reliability of the printing device is thus improved.




Electrodes


46


and


48


in the second group of electrodes are also laid out symmetrically on each side of the jets


14


and at the same distance E from their center lines.




When the printing device is working, a drop


24


which is not to be printed on the medium


42


to be printed is selected by controlling the individual binary stimulation means


16


of the corresponding jet


14


by an electric signal, the level V


1


of which is determined in order to force the jet to break at the predetermined long break off point L, within charging means


20


.




A drop


22


to be printed on the medium


42


is selected by controlling the individual binary stimulation means


16


of the corresponding jet by an electric signal at a level V


c


that will force the jet to break at the predetermined short break off point C also within charging means


20


.




The distance ΔD between the two break off points C and L according to the invention is less than the wavelength λ of the stimulated jets. The value of the wavelength λ is provided by the relation λ=V


j


/F. Any risk of temporarily combining two drops during long break-short break transitions is thus avoided. Consequently, any modifications to the trajectory of the drop to be printed are eliminated.




An arbitrary sequence of drops


24


not intended for printing or drops


22


intended for printing is created by generating a signal including the corresponding level sequence V


c


or V


1


, on the individual stimulation means


16


for each jet and at the selected drop emission frequency F.




If the charging means


20


is placed at a distance H (

FIG. 2A

) from nozzles


12


, for which the break off points C and L are between H and H+S (in other words within the drop charging means


20


), the values of H, S, D, E, V


1


and V


2


are fixed such that:




the charge induced on the drops to be recycled


24


detached from the jet at the long break off point L, is such that the constant electric field generated by the deflection means


30


bends the trajectory of these drops towards the gutter


38


(FIG.


2


A);




the charge induced on the drops to be printed


22


detached from the jet at the short break off point C, and in the area centered around this pound and with a length equal to approximately λ/4, is such that the constant electric field produced by the deflection means


30


does not modify the trajectory of these drops, which can then reach the print medium


42


(FIG.


2


B).




Therefore, the trajectory of the drops to be printed


22


is not a strictly monotonous function of the position of the break off point within the charging device. On the contrary, the same impact point is guaranteed on the print medium despite any fluctuations in the short break off point C. The print quality is thus guaranteed without any particular technical difficulty or increase in cost.




As a non-restrictive example, the length S of the charging means


20


may be less than 2.5 mm, the tension V


1


applied to electrodes


42


and


44


is equal to 300 V, and the voltage V


2


applied to electrodes


46


and


48


is equal to −300 V. Each of the jets


14


may have a diameter of 35


82


m, for example, a speed of 24 m/s and a stimulation frequency equal to 125 kHz.




In the first embodiment of the invention illustrated diagrammatically in

FIGS. 1

,


2


A and


2


B, each of the individual binary stimulation means


16


is composed of a piezoelectric element placed in the reservoir


10


and individually controlled by the external electronic circuit


18


. The number of piezoelectric elements is equal to the number of nozzles


12


on the print head.




As a variant, each of the piezoelectric elements forming part of the individual binary stimulation means


16


may be replaced by a thermo-resistive element that generates thermal disturbances. Document US-A-4 638 328 contains more details about this type of thermo-resistive elements, and about their operation and of manufacture.




When each individual binary stimulation means


16


is composed of a single thermo-resistive element associated with each nozzle


12


in the print head, this element is powered by an electric signal composed of a sequence of voltages V


c


and V


1


, corresponding to the pattern that is to be printed.




According to a second embodiment of the invention illustrated diagrammatically in

FIG. 3

, each of the individual binary stimulation means


16


comprises two thermo-resistive elements


16




a


and


16




b


associated with each nozzle


12


on the print head.




The first element


16




a


is powered continuously by a periodic electric signal with an amplitude V


1


. Therefore when this is the only element to be powered, the jet is broken off at the point L furthest away from the nozzle.




The second element


16




b


, located upstream or downstream from the first element depending on the case, is only activated when a drop


22


is to be printed. It then receives an electric signal, preferably a voltage pulse, for which the amplitude and phase shift with respect to the periodic signal applied to the first element


16




a


force the jet break off point to be moved to point C closest to the nozzle.




A third embodiment of individual binary stimulation means for each of the jets


14


is shown diagrammatically in FIG.


4


.




In this case, each individual binary stimulation means


16


comprises an electrode


58


placed immediately on the outlet side of nozzles


12


and common to all jets. This electrode


58


forms a stimulation device by electrodynamic excitation (EHD). Document US-A-4 220 958 describes a device of this type and its operation. This electrode


58


, the length of which is equal to approximately λ/2, fixes the jet break off point at the furthest point from the nozzles L, when no other stimulation is applied on the jets.




Each individual binary stimulation means


16


also comprises an individual transducer


60


, preferably of the thermo-resistive type, associated with each jet inside the reservoir


10


. Transducers


60


are only active to move break off points at point C closest to the nozzle when a drop


22


is to be printed. The embodiment shown in

FIG. 4

extends the life of the thermo-resistive transducers compared with previously described embodiments, by reducing their use.




Note that the process implemented by the described printing device may be applied to selective projection of any electrically conducting liquid.




Compared with the continuous jet liquid projection process according to prior art, this process can give better control over the charging process of drops produced by jets regardless of the sequence of drops emitted. Furthermore, electrodes in the drop charging device are not located in the immediate vicinity of the jets. Furthermore, the trajectory of the drops to be printed is not a strictly monotonous function of the position of the break off point within the charging device.




As has already been mentioned, a multi-nozzle ink jet printer made according to the invention can be used in all applications related to industrial marking and coding. Addressing, which requires high speed and print width, is also another application in which the invention may be used. Furthermore, the lack of individual electrodes facing the jet makes it possible to increase the number of nozzles per unit length along the printing device reservoir. This means that the invention can be applied to industrial decoration which requires high resolution in addition to high printing speed.



Claims
  • 1. Process for projecting an electrically conducting liquid comprising the steps of:emitting at least one continuous liquid jet at a constant speed Vj; stimulating the jet on request, so as to break it at two predetermined distinct break off points to form liquid drops at a given emission frequency F; applying different electric charge quantities to the drops, depending on their break off points; and then applying a same electric field on all drops, so as to only deviate drops formed at one of the first of the said break off points which is relatively distant; and in which the jet is stimulated such that the two break off points are separated by a distance ΔD strictly less than a wavelength λ of the jet, defined by the relation λ=Vj/F, and approximately the same quantity of charge is applied to all drops formed within an area around the second of the said break off points, said area centered on the second break off point and having a length equal to approximately λ/4.
  • 2. Process according to claim 1, in which the said different quantities of electric charge are applied to the drops by creating two contiguous areas located in the vicinity of the two break off points, and by applying constant electrical potentials with opposite signs to these two areas.
  • 3. Process according to claim 2, in which the jet is passed successively between two pairs of electrodes laid out parallel to the jet and sized such that the two break off points are located between the said electrodes, and by applying constant electrical voltages with opposite signs onto the two pairs of electrodes.
  • 4. Process according to claim 3, in which each electrode is placed at a distance from the center line of the jet equal to at least twice the jet diameter.
  • 5. Process according to claim 1, in which several continuous liquid jets parallel to each other are emitted simultaneously, each jet is stimulated separately, the said different quantities of electric charge are applied simultaneously to the drops of all the jets, and then the same electric field is applied simultaneously to the drops.
  • 6. Continuous ink jet printing device comprising:a pressurized reservoir equipped with several nozzles capable of simultaneously emitting several continuous ink jets parallel to each other, at a given speed Vj; an individual means of binary stimulation of each jet, capable of fragmenting these jets on request, at two distinct predetermined break off points, to form ink drops at a given emission frequency F; a charging means common to all ink jets, to apply different quantities of electric charge to the ink drops, depending on the break off points; a deflection means common to the several ink jets, to apply a same electrical field to the drops, in order to deviate only the drops formed at the first of the break off points relatively far from the nozzle; and a recycling gutter for drops deviated towards the pressurized reservoir; in which the individual binary stimulation means for each jet is controlled by predefined voltage levels such that the two break off points are separated by a distance strictly less than a wavelength λ of the jet defined by the relation λ=Vj/F, the charging means being capable of applying approximately the same quantity of charge on all drops formed within an area around the second of the said break off points, said area centered on the second break off point and having a length equal to approximately λ/4.
  • 7. Device according to claim 6, in which the charging means comprises two pairs of electrodes oriented parallel to the jets, and sized so that the break off points are located between the said electrodes, and means of applying constant electrical voltages with opposite signs on the two pairs of electrodes.
  • 8. Device according to claim 7 in which the electrodes are flat and are placed at a distance of at least twice the jet diameter from the center line of each jet.
  • 9. Device according to any one of claims 6 to 8, in which the individual binary stimulation means for each jet comprises a piezoelectric or thermo-resistive element placed in the pressurized reservoir and controlled individually by an external electronic circuit.
  • 10. Device according to any one of claims 6 to 8, in which the individual binary stimulation means for each jet comprises two thermo-resistive elements placed in the pressurized reservoir, an external electrical circuit continuously outputting a periodic electrical power supply signal to one of the first thermo-resistive elements corresponding to the first break off point, and on request, a complementary electrical power supply signal to the second thermo-resistive element, corresponding to the second break off point.
  • 11. Device according to any one of claims 6 to 8, in which the individual binary stimulation means for each jet comprises an individual transducer placed in the pressurized reservoir and at least one common electro-hydrodynamic excitation electrode placed in the vicinity of the jets or on the outlet side of the nozzle, an external electrical circuit continuously outputting a periodic electric power supply signal for the electro-hydrodynamic excitation electrode corresponding to the first break off point, and on request, a complementary electric power supply signal for the individual transducer corresponding to the second break off point.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
98 04561 Apr 1998 FR
US Referenced Citations (6)
Number Name Date Kind
4346387 Hertz Aug 1982
4417256 Fillmore et al. Nov 1983
4542385 Jinnai et al. Sep 1985
4612553 Kohler Sep 1986
4734705 Rezanka et al. Mar 1988
5523778 Fickling Jun 1996
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
6-183003 Jul 1994 JP
Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry
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