The present disclosure relates generally to methods and devices useful for ink jet printing.
Embodiments discussed in the disclosure are directed to methods and devices used in ink jet printing.
Some embodiments involve a subassembly for an inkjet printer. The subassembly has an ink flow path that includes at least one temperature dependent element configured to change shape responsive to a change in ink temperature. The change in shape causes a volumetric change in a portion of the ink flow channel.
According to various aspects, the temperature dependent element comprises a bimetallic membrane. The temperature dependent element may include a shape memory alloy or shape memory polymer. According to various implementations, the temperature dependent element is configured to change shape during a time that the ink transitions between liquid phase and solid phase. In some embodiments, the temperature dependent element is configured to apply pressure to the ink during a time that the ink transitions between liquid and solid phase.
In some cases, the subassembly includes an ink flow path that includes at least one deformable surface disposed in a portion of the ink flow path, the deformable surface comprising a shape memory material configured to change shape responsive to a change in ink temperature.
According to various aspects, the deformable surface is configured to deform from a predetermined initial configuration to a second configuration during transition of the ink from liquid phase to solid phase. The deformation decreases a volume of the portion of the ink flow path. The deformable surface is configured to maintain the second configuration until reaching a transformation temperature of the shape memory material at which the deformable surface resumes the initial configuration.
In some cases, the deformable surface is configured to flexibly deform to follow ink shrinkage during the transition of the ink in the portion of the ink flow channel from liquid phase to solid phase. The second configuration substantially conforms to a shape of the ink in solid phase. The deformable surface may exert pressure on the ink while the ink is in transition from solid phase to liquid phase when the deformable surface deforms to the second configuration. According to various aspects, the transformation temperature is about equal to a mushy zone temperature of the ink. In some cases, the second configuration is a predetermined shape and the deformable surface is programmed to transition to the second configuration from the initial configuration at a second transformation temperature of the memory shape material.
According to various embodiments, the shape memory material comprises a metallic alloy. In some cases, the shape memory material comprises a polymer. the deformable surface may be configured to transition to the second configuration gradually during a transition of the ink from the liquid phase to the solid phase and the deformable surface applies pressure on the ink as the ink shrinks during transition of the ink from liquid phase to solid phase.
Some embodiments involve a method that includes flowing a phase change ink through a portion of an ink flow path. A volume of a portion of the ink flow path is decreased in response to a transition of the ink from liquid phase to solid phase using a shape memory material.
According to various aspects, decreasing the volume includes deforming a deformable surface comprising the shape memory material. The deformable surface is disposed in the portion of the ink flow path. The deformable surface configured to deform from an initial predetermined configuration to a second configuration during transition of the ink from liquid phase to solid phase.
According to various embodiments, a decreased volume of the portion of the ink flow path is maintained while temperature of the shape memory material is less than a transformation temperature. The volume of the portion of the ink flow path may be increased in response to a transition of the ink from solid phase to liquid phase. The increase in volume is caused by the deformable surface returning to the initial configuration in response to the shape memory material reaching a transformation temperature. In some cases, maintaining the decreased volume further comprises applying pressure to the ink during a transition from solid phase to liquid phase. The pressure is applied to the ink by the deformable surface which maintains the second configuration prior to the shape memory material reaching the transformation temperature.
According to various aspects, the deformable surface is deformed by flexibly conforming to a shape of the ink to achieve the second configuration during the transition of the ink from solid phase to liquid phase without applying substantial pressure to the ink during the transition from solid phase to liquid phase. In some cases, decreasing the volume comprises applying pressure to the ink during the transition from liquid phase to solid phase, the pressure applied to the ink by the deformation surface transitioning to a predetermined second configuration in response to the shape memory material reaching a second transformation temperature.
The above summary is not intended to describe each embodiment or every implementation. A more complete understanding will become apparent and appreciated by referring to the following detailed description and claims in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Ink jet printers operate by ejecting small droplets of liquid ink onto print media according to a predetermined pattern. Some printers use phase-change ink which is solid at room temperature and is melted before being jetted onto the print media surface. Phase-change inks that are solid at room temperature advantageously allow the ink to be transported and loaded into the ink jet printer in solid form, without the packaging or cartridges typically used for liquid inks. In some implementations, the solid ink is melted in a page-width print head which jets the molten ink in a page-width pattern onto an intermediate drum. The pattern on the intermediate drum is transferred onto paper through a pressure nip.
In the liquid state, ink may contain bubbles that can obstruct the passages of the ink jet pathways. Air bubbles can form in solid ink printers due to the freeze-melt cycles of the ink that occur as the ink freezes when the printer is powered down and melts when the printer is powered up for use. As the ink freezes to a solid, it contracts, forming voids in the ink that can be subsequently filled by air. When the solid ink melts prior to ink jetting, the air in the voids can become bubbles in the liquid ink.
Embodiments described in this disclosure involve the use of structures that change shape as a function of temperature to reduce voids and the subsequent bubbles that are generated in phase-change ink, referred to herein as temperature dependent shape elements. The temperature dependent shape elements change shape to cause a volumetric change in a portion of an ink flow passage as the ink transitions between the liquid phase. The volumetric change inhibits the formation of bubbles in the ink during the phase transition. In some implementations discussed below, the temperature dependent memory elements comprise shape memory alloys or shape memory polymers. In some embodiments, the temperature dependent shape memory elements comprise dual material elements such as bimetallic membranes.
Shape memory alloys (SMAs) can comprise copper-aluminum-nickel, and nickel-titanium (Nitinol) alloys or various other alloys such as zinc, copper, gold and iron. The temperature dependence of shape memory alloys can arise from a transformation between the austenite form to martensite form of the alloy. The temperature dependence of shape memory polymers (SMPs) arises by a different mechanism than the austenite/martensite transformation. In contrast to SMAs, the temperature dependence of SMPs can arise, for example, due to cross links and switching segments of the polymer material which are activated by temperature.
The shape memory materials (SMAs and SMPs) have the ability to remember a particular shape even after they have been deformed into another configuration. According to various embodiments, shape memory materials are thermally-actuated and can be deformed from an initial shape and will hold the deformed shape while their temperature remains below a transformation temperature. When the temperature goes above a transformation temperature, the shape memory material will revert to the remembered shape. In some cases, the shape memory material will revert to the remembered shape once the temperature drops below a transformation temperature. According to some aspects, the transformation temperature of a shape memory material is a range of temperatures such that when the temperature is within the range of temperatures, the shape memory material will be in the remembered shape. According to various aspects, shape memory material can have more than one transformation temperature. In some cases, different transformation temperatures cause the shape memory material to revert to different shapes.
Shape memory alloys such as Nitinol, are metallic alloys which undergo a transformation between crystal structures near a transformation temperature, leading to a shape memory effect with a large attainable recovery force, which is the force that the shape memory material can apply as it returns to a remembered shape. Shape memory alloys can exhibit transformation temperatures from −10° C. to 90° C. and with thermal hysteresis from 15-120° C. meaning that their properties can be tuned, for example, to match the melting and/or mushy-zone temperatures of solid ink. Shape memory polymers (SMPs), on the other hand, are distinguished by their ability to undergo large deformations and return to their original shape with small recovery forces. SMPs are available with transformation temperatures tunable between −30° C. to 260° C.
In some embodiments, multiple membranes having different coefficients of thermal expansion can be arranged to form temperature dependent shape elements. The multiple membranes these multiple membrane elements need not be SMAs or SMPs as described above. The temperature dependent change in shape arises due to differences in the coefficient of thermal expansion of the membranes. While materials other than metals can be used for these multiple membrane structures, the examples provided herein are directed to two metallic membranes—which are denoted bimetallic membranes. In some cases, bimetallic membranes gradually deflect over a temperature range. According to various embodiments, bimetallic membranes can operate linearly or gradually over a temperature range to change the pressure of a passage or chamber.
The print head assembly 500 includes one or more thermal elements 546, 547 that are configured to heat and/or cool the ink along the ink flow path. As depicted in
Optionally, the print head assembly 500 may include one or more temperature sensors 560 positioned along the ink flow path or elsewhere on the print head assembly 500. The temperature sensors 560 are capable of sensing temperature of the ink (or components that form the ink flow path) and generating electrical signals modulated by the sensed temperature. In some cases, the control unit 550 uses the sensor signals to generate feedback signals to the thermal units 546-547 to control the operation of the thermal units 545-547.
When phase change ink, which contains a mixture of components, is freezing along an ink flow path, there is typically a mushy zone that spans some temperature range between fully molten and fully solid ink in which only some of the mixture components are frozen. In some cases, the transformation temperature of the shape memory material is about equal to the mushy zone temperature of the ink. The thermal elements and controller referred to above can be operated to control the freezing and thawing of the ink in portions of the ink flow path where shape memory materials are positioned. Temperature dependent shape elements, such as shape memory materials and/or bi-metallic membranes, can be used in conjunction with controlled freezing and/or melting of the ink can reduce void formation.
Some embodiments described herein involve using shape memory materials to reduce the void formation mechanism driven by the delamination of the ink from the surface of a cavity within the print head, and/or other locations along the ink flow path of an ink jet printer. The void formation mechanism is shown in
According to various embodiments, a shape memory material is used to form a portion of a cavity wall along the ink flow path. The deformable cavity wall will accommodate the shrinkage of the ink in a manner which conforms to the ink surface as it moves, leading to a reduction in the size of air pockets in the cavity. Reducing the size of air pockets (voids) in the cavity reduces the size and number of bubbles which appear when the ink melts.
Ink exhibits good adhesion to surfaces at temperatures greater an adhesion temperature, e.g. about 50° C.
Some implementations involving shape memory materials for void prevention include shape memory composites that can remember multiple states due to the combined effect of shape memory characteristics and superelasticity of shape memory alloys. These materials can be configured to have a recovery force during cooling. The recovery force on the order of several PSI could be used to push air bubbles from the cavities after delamination has occurred, as depicted in
Turning now to
Some embodiments described herein involve the use of multiple membranes having different thermal coefficients of expansion as temperature dependent shape elements. These multiple membrane elements need not be formed of shape memory materials as described above, rather the temperature dependent change occurs due to differences in the coefficient of thermal expansion in two membranes that are fused together. The multiple membrane structures are referred to herein as bimetallic membranes, although more than two membranes may be used to form a multiple membrane element and/or the component membranes need not be metallic. The coefficient of thermal expansion of a membrane describes the fractional change in size per degree change in temperature of the membrane. When membranes having different thermal coefficients of expansion are fused or bonded together in a dual (or multiple) membrane structure, one membrane of the duel membrane structure expands more with temperature than the other membrane causing the dual membrane structure to change shape as a function of temperature.
Various modifications and additions can be made to the preferred embodiments discussed above. Systems, devices or methods disclosed herein may include one or more of the features, structures, methods, or combinations thereof described herein. For example, a device or method may be implemented to include one or more of the features and/or processes described below. It is intended that such device or method need not include all of the features and/or processes described herein, but may be implemented to include selected features and/or processes that provide useful structures and/or functionality.