[0001] The present invention relates to an ink jet printing head comprising a tube for ejecting
ink, the ink ejecting tube being provided with a transducer selectively operable for
expelling a drop of ink through a corresponding nozzle, the ink ejecting tube being
secured to a supporting structure and connected by an ink conducting tube to an ink
reservoir carried by the structure, the ink conducting tube being made of a flexible
material. This application is a divisional application divided from European Patent
Application No. 82 303776.7, Publication No. 0 072 110.
[0002] An ink jet printing head, as mentioned above is known from the U.S. Patent No. 3,832,579,
in which the ejecting tube is connected to an ink reservoir through a flexible tube
of predetermined length, to eliminate reflection phenomena in the ejecting tube. The
suggested length of the flexible tube is 10 cm, and so the tube occupies considerable
space. This problem would be worse in a head having a plurality of ink ejecting tubes
and a corresponding plurality of ink conducting tubes.
[0003] The object of the invention is to provide an ink jet printing head which reduces
the problem of excessive space being occupied by the flexible tube connecting the
ejecting tube to the ink tank. The printing head according to the present invention
is characterized in the manner set forth in claim 1.
[0004] One embodiment of the invention will now be described in more detail, by way of example,
with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which.
Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic perspective view of an ink jet dot printer according to the
invention;
Fig. 2 is a plan view, partly in section, of a head used on the printer of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 is a side view, partly in section of the head of Fig. 2;
Fig. 4 is a front view, partly in section, of the head of Fig. 2;
Fig. 5 is a block diagram of a driving logic circuit of the printer of Fig. 1;
Fig. 6 is a diagrammatic representation of the printing process obtained with the
circuit of Fig. 5;
Fig. 7 is a partial section of a modified form of the head of Fig. 2.
[0005] Referring to Fig. 1, the printer S comprises a head 1 mounted on a carriage 10 moved
along guides 12 by an electric motor 13 by means of a cable 14. The head 1 is formed
by a rigid structure 2 (Figs. 2 and 3) consisting of a front plate 3 and a rear plate
5 which are parallel to one another and kept spaced apart by two side members 7,9.
[0006] The head 1 can print in both directions along a printing line L (Fig. 1) on a carrier
15 passed around a platen 16. A synchronizing device 17 of known type, constituted,
for example, by a strobe disc 18, keyed on the shaft of the motor 13, and a photoelectric
transducer 20, is used to generate strobe signals for synchronizing the printing with
the movement of the head.
[0007] More particularly, as is known, the timing device 17 generates the clock signals
as a function of the position of the head along the printing line L and, therefore,
the clock signals are independent of the speed of the head itself. By way of example,
it is assumed that the synchronizing device 17 generates forty-two clock pulses while
the head 1 shifts by a distance equal to the pitch p (Fig. 4) between two adjacent
nozzles.
[0008] In each of the plates 3 and 5 there is formed a row of holes 22, for example twenty
holes, which is inclined with respect to the direction of the movement of the carriage
10, each hole in the plate 3 being aligned with the corresponding hole in the plate
5. The holes 22 are equidistant by the pitch "p", measured in the direction of the
movement of the carriage 10. Into each pair of corresponding holes 22 there are introduced
cylindrical tubes 24 adapted to contain ink which is to be expelled in the form of
drops by a known technique, as will be described hereinafter. All the tubes 24 lie
in a plane having the course F'-F' indicated by a chain-dotted line in Fig. 4 and
the inclination of which is such that the distance between the first and the last
hole of the row, measured perpendicularly to the direction of the movement of the
carriage 10, is equal to the maximum height of the characters printed on the paper
15. The tubes 24 are firmly fixed in the holes 22 of the plates 3 and 5 by cementing
with a resin, for example an epoxy resin, in such manner that the front end 26 thereof
is positioned level with the outer surface 27 of the plate 3.
[0009] The tubes 24 project from the rear plate 5 by a certain length to permit their connection
by means of the tubes 30 to an auxiliary ink reservoir 31 connected in turn by means
of a flexible tube 32 to a main reservoir not illustrated in the drawings. The auxiliary
reservoir 31 is fixed at the rear of the carriage 10 on a wall 33 of a parallelepipedal
container 34 for protecting the tubes 30.
[0010] Inside the container 34, the tubes 30, which are of flexible material, are supported
by a cylindrical drum 130 fixed to the side walls 132 of the container 34 by means
of a shaft 133 coaxial with the drum 130. Each flexible tube 30 is wound around the
outer surface of the drum 130 for one and a half turns, inasmuch as it begins and
ends, respectively, in two diametrically opposite positions with respect to the drum
30.
[0011] Moreover, for the purpose of minimizing the space occupied by the tubes 30 in the
axial direction on the drum 130, the flexible tubes 30 are wound around it alternately
in opposite directions, whereby each half turn of the winding coil left free by one
of the tubes 30 is occupied by the first half turn of the adjacent tube.
[0012] In this way, for each pair of tubes 30 only three turns are used on the drum 130,
occupying, that is, a space in the axial direction equal to three diameters of the
tubes 30, so that a total of thirty turns are necessary in all for the twenty tubes
30.
[0013] In addition to optimizing the utilization of the space in the container 34, this
arrangement of the tubes 30 serves to prevent knocks between the tubes 30 caused by
the forces of inertia generated by the movement of the carriage 10 (Fig. 1) at the
stops and starts of the carriage.
[0014] The tubes 24 may be of chemically inert material such as, for example, glass or ceramic,
but they may also be of metal, for example stainless steel or nickel. On the tubes
24 (Fig. 3), piezoelectric transducers 36 in the form of sleeves are cemented approximately
half way along the tubes, the transducers being adapted to contract radially under
the effect of an electric voltage pulse applied to them.
[0015] To this end, the inner and outer surfaces of the sleeves 36 are covered by two electrodes
37 and 38, respectively, the electrode 37 being brought over onto the outer surface
of the sleeve to facilitate electrical connection. A printed circuit board 40 is located
between the plates 3 and 5 and is traversed by the sleeves 36. The electrodes 37 and
38 are soldered to corresponding tracks 43 and 44 lying on the faces 45 and 46, respectively,
of :the board 40 (Fig. 4). The plate 40 projects at the bottom from the head (Figs.
3, 4) to permit electrical connection by means of a connector not shown in the drawings.
[0016] Inside the structure 2 there is cast a resin polymerizable at room temperature and
of low shrinkage, for example an epoxy resin, to form a single block 48 enclosing
all the tubes 24 and the corresponding sleeves 36.
[0017] When hardening has taken place, the block of resin 48 establishes a rigid and continuous
connection between the plates 3 and 5, preventing the vibrations of each tube being
transmitted through the plates to the adjacent tubes. Moreover, the block of resin
48 constitutes a reliable protection for the extremely fragile tubes 24 against possible
knocks or shocks.
[0018] Mounted removably against the outer face 27 of the front plate 3 by means of screws
50 is a lamina 51 with a thickness less than that of the plate 3 and in which there
are formed twenty nozzles U
O ....... U
19, each of which is disposed in perfect alignment with respect to the corresponding
tube 24. The alignment of the nozzles U with the respective tubes 24 is ensured by
locating pins 52 fixed to the plate 3 and engaged in holes 53 in the lamina 51. In
this way, the lamina 51 can be separated easily from the plate 3 to permit cleaning
of the nozzles in the event of any of them becoming blocked because of drying of the
printing ink. Each nozzle U is formed by an orifice 54 of cylindrical form of a diameter
between 50 and 90 pm, and a conically flared portion. 56 connecting the orifice 54
with the inner diameter of the tubes 24, which is of the order of 0.8mm.
[0019] As already mentioned before, a drop of ink can be expelled from each nozzle U by
the effect of the compression exerted by the corresponding transducer 36 when energized
by a voltage pulse. All the transducers 36 are electrically connected through the
medium of the printed circuit board 40 and a 20-wire cable 45 indicated diagrammatically
in Fig. 1 to an energizing unit 58 of known type and not described in detail, which
is able to energize selectively in parallel any or all of the twenty transducers 36.
The energizing unit 58 receives in parallel on a bus 55 a string of twenty bits corresponding
to the dots which are to be printed simultaneously by the twenty nozzles U. The printing
bits are processed by a driving logic circuit 60 illustrated in Fig. 5, which comprises
a read/write memory 62 with 1
024 address locations.
[0020] The memory 62 is connected through a bus 64 to a latch 66 for temporary storage of
the memory addresses which arrive on a bus 68 from an address multiplexer 70 driven
directly by a microprocessor control unit 72 through a bus 74. An adder 76 executes
at each cycle a shift by a predetermined number K of places to permit the multiplexer
70 to address correctly the information stored in the memory 62, in accordance with
a procedure described later on.
[0021] The number K corresponds to the number of dots printable in the pitch "p" between
two adjacent nozzles and can assume predetermined values. A manual entering device
80, for example a switch with a plurality of sections, is connected to the adder 76
through the medium of a bus 77 and enables the predetermined number K to be forced
into the adder 76 in known manner.
[0022] Through a bus 73, the controller 72 addresses a character generator 82 which contains
the characters to be printed in columns of dots in accordance with a predetermined
matrix. The characters to be printed are extracted from a line memory known per se
which is connected to the controller 72 and not shown in the drawings. The generator
82 is connected via a bus 83 to the memory 62 for storing in succession the information
appertaining to the columns of dots of the characters to be printed.
[0023] The memory 62 is constituted by 1024 address locations or positions PI
O, ....... Pill ...... PI
1024 with cyclic updating (Fig. 5). In each address position PI
i there are stored the twenty bits relating to the dots of each column of the matrix
of the character, which is formed in the present case by twenty rows L
O, L
1, ····· L
19 (Fig. 6) (there being twenty nozzles) and a predetermined number of columns,.for
example forty-eight. The memory 62 is connected through a bus 85 to an output multiplexer
86 for reading the bits corresponding to the twenty nozzles of the head 1. The multiplexer
86 is driven by an up/down counter 90, according to the direction of printing, which
is adapted to count cyclically up to twenty, for successively transferring the bits
of the dots to be printed, which are read out of the memory 62, by means of a wire
93 to a bidirectional/shift register 94 having twenty locations and of the serial
input and parallel output type. The counting direction of the counter 90 and the shift
register 94 is supplied by the controller 72 on a wire 91 on the basis of the desired
direction of printing. The register 94 is connected through the bus 55 to the energizing
unit 58 (Fig. 1) for transferring all the bits corresponding to the twenty nozzles
U thereto in parallel on the basis of an enabling signal transmitted by the controller
72, in synchronism with the clock signal generated by the synchronizing device 17
(Fig. 1). Accordingly, as already mentioned, while the head 1 shifts by one pitch
"p", there will be forty-two printing energizations.
[0024] When the head 1 is located in a generic position along the printing line L (Figs.
1 and 6), the first nozzle U
O will print the dot P
0 of a generic column of dots C
i on a line L
O, the second nozzle will print the dot P
1 corresponding to a column C
i-42 shifted by forty-two printing positions with respect to the column C
i, and so on, the nozzle U
18 will print the dot P18 of the column C
i-756 and finally the nozzle U
19 will print the dot P
19 belonging to the column C
i-798' that is shifted back with respect to the direction of movement of the carriage 10
by 798 printing positions with respect to the first column C
i.
[0025] Taking it that, before beginnning printing, the memory 62 is completely erased, the
controller 72, addressing the location PI
0 of the memory 62 through the medium of the multiplexer 70 and the latch 66, writes
in that location the information appertaining to the column C
i prepared by the character generator 82. In this stage, the counter 90 enables the
output multiplexer 86 to extract the bit corresponding to the first nozzle U
O from the address position of the first column of dots C
i and to load it into the register 94. Then, assuming K = 42, that is equal to the
number of printing positions contained in a pitch "p", the controller 72 causes the
latch 66 to change over via the address multiplexer 70 to a memory location PI-42
set back by 42 positions with respect to the preceding one to address therein the
information appertaining to the column C
i-42 corresponding to the second nozzle U
1 and previously stored in the memory 62 in a stage similar to that hereinbefore described.
The shifting by K-42 positions is executed by the adder 72, which adds the number
K, entered on the switch 80, to the serial number of the preceding address.
[0026] The counter 90 is incremented or decremented by one so that the multiplexer 86 extracts
the bit corresponding to the second nozzle U
1. This procedure will be repeated by degrees for all the twenty nozzles U. More particularly,
the bit corresponding to the twentieth nozzle will be extracted from the last address
location PI
798, corresponding to the column C
i-798.
[0027] In the end, in the register 94 there will be arranged serially in columns the twenty
printing bits read in the memory 62, which represent the complete information which
will be sent in parallel to the energizing unit 58 (Fig. 1) for printing.
[0028] After the head 1 has shifted to the right by forty-two printing positions, for example,
the second nozzle U
1 has been brought onto the column C
i, which belonged before to the first nozzle U
0, the third nozzle U
2 has been brought onto the column C
i-42, and so on, and the last nozzle U
19 has been brought into vertical alignment on the penultimate column C
i-756.
[0029] Finally, after the head has shifted by 798 printing positions, the nozzle U
19 will be in vertical alignment on the column C
i, which will be printed completely with the twenty dots belonging to it. Proceeding
in a similar manner, all the columns of dots will be printed in this way and will
form a complete row of vertically printed characters.
[0030] The driving circuit of Fig. 5 enables the slope of the printed characters to be varied
in one direction or the other with respect to the vertical by a simple operation.
To vary the slope of the printed characters, it is sufficient to vary the number K
forced into the adder 76 by means of the switch 80.
[0031] By entering a number K' less than K, a forward slope of the characters will be obtained,
which will be all the more pronounced the more K' differs from K. On the other hand,
in similar manner, a backward slope of the characters will be obtained by entering
a number K" greater than K. In fact, let us suppose that we enter a number K' = 41
by means of the switch 80. In this situation, the multiplexer 86 will read the information
of the column of dots corresponding to the second nozzle U
1 in an address location in the memory 62 shifted by 41 locations, whereby the second
nozzle U
1 will print the dots in positions advanced by one step with respect to the preceding
state. In a similar manner, all the other nozzles U
2, U
3, ... U
19 will print their dot in a position advanced respectively by one, two, .... nineteen
printing positions with respect to the normal state. In this way, an alignment of
the dots of each printed column which is sloped forward will be obtained. In a completely
similar manner, a backward slope of the columns of printed dots will be obtained if
K is taken as greater than 42.
[0032] The printing speed can be considerably increased due to the cyclic updating of the
memory 62. In fact, as already described hereinbefore, the information relating to
the columns of dots of the characters to be printed is stored in the memory 62 in
cyclic succession; simultaneously, the output multiplexer 86 extracts successively
from each column just stored a bit corresponding to the dot to be printed by means
of each of the twenty nozzles of the head. In consequence, due to the simultaneousness
of the writing and reading of the information in the memory 62, the speed of loading
of the register 94 by the multiplexer 86 is considerably increased. As a result, the
printing speed of the nozzles can also be increased up to values such as to be able
to turn to account the maximum frequency of repetition of the emission of drops of
ink by each piezoelectric element.
[0033] Among many possible modifications, we mention that the number K selected to vary
the slope of the characters may be entered directly from the controller 72 instead
of through the switch 80 (Fig. 5). In this case, the number K selected is forced directly
by the controller 72 into the adder 76 on the basis of predetermined instructions
processed by the controller in response to predetermined commands received in known-
manner. Consequently, the entering device So in Fig. 5 is eliminated and the bus 77
is connected between the controller 72 and the adder 76.
[0034] Moreover, in order to facilitate the operations of mounting and removal of the head
of Figs. 1 and 2, the tubes 24 can be cut so as not to project from the rear plate
5 (Fig. 7). Small pieces of tubing 24' projecting inside the container 34 are cemented
through the front plate 33' of the container 34. The tubes 30 are fitted over these
small pieces 24'. In this way, the container 34 can be separated from the block 48
without having to slip the tubes 30 off the tubes 24. The plate 33' of the container
34 is fixed rigidly by means of screws and locating pins, not shown in the drawing,
so as to ensure registration between the tubes 24 and 24'.
1. An ink jet printing head (1) comprising a tube (24) for ejecting ink, the ink electing
tube being provided with a transducer (36) selectively operable for expelling a drop
of ink through a corresponding nozzle (U), the ink electing tube (24) being secured
to a supporting structure (2, 34) and connected by an ink conducting tube (30) to
an ink reservoir (31) carried by the structure (2, 34), the ink conducting tube (30)
being made of a flexible material, characterised in that the ink conducting tube (30)
has a length greater than the distance between the ink ejecting tube (24) and the
reservoir (31), and by a winding member (130) carried by the structure (2, 34) between
the ink ejecting tube (24) and the reservoir (31), the ink conducting tube (24) being
wound on the winding member (130) in an arrangement which optimises the utilization
of space.
2. A printing head according to claim 1, characterised by comprising a plurality of
tubes (24) for ejecting ink, each ink electing tube being connected to the reservoir
by a respective ink conducting tube (30) of flexible material, and each ink ejecting
tube being provided with a respective transducer (36).
3. A printing head according to claim 2, characterised in that the winding member
(130) comprises a cylindrical drum fixed to the supporting structure (2, 34), each
ink conducting tube (30) being wound around the drum (130) for one and a half turns,
between diametrically opposite positions on the circumference of the drum.
4. A printing head according to claim 3, characterised in that the ink conducting
tubes (30) are wound around the drum (130) so that each half turn on the drum-left
free by one of the ink conducting tubes is occupied by the first half turn of an adjacent
ink conducting tube, whereby the axial length of the drum occupied by the ink conducting
tubes is minimised.
5. A printing head according to any of claims 2 to 4, characterised in that the structure
(2, 34) is carried by a carriage (10) movable with respect to a printing support (16),
and in that the reservoir (31) is connected through a flexible conduit (32) to a stationary
ink tank.
6. A printing head according to claim 5, wherein the ink ejecting tubes (24) are parallel
to one another and lie in a plane inclined with respect to the direction of movement
of the carriage (10), characterised in that the supporting structure comprises front
and back parallel spaced plates (3, 5), the ink ejecting tubes (24) being perpendicular
to and fixed to the plates, the plates defining a first cavity therebetween, and the
first cavity being filled with a polymerizable resin (4R) , whereby the plates (3,
5), the tubes (24) and the resin (4R) form a single block.
7. A printing head according to claim 6, characterised in that each ink electing tube
(24) projects beyond the back plate and is connected to the reservoir (31) by means
of a flexible ink conducting tube (30) secured to the proiecting end of the tube,
the ink conducting tubes (30) being supported by a fixed cylindrical drum (130) mounted
on the supporting structure (2, 34) with the ink conducting tubes (30) passing around
the drum (130) alternately in opposite directions for one and a half turns so as to
minimise the axial length of the drum occupied by the ink conducting tubes.
R. A printing head according to claim 6, characterised in that the supporting structure
(2, 34) comprises a second cavity adjacent to the first cavity, the second cavity
being formed in a container (34) and bounded by a third plate (33), the container
(34) being disengageably attachable to the block (3, 5, 24, 48) in a position in which
the third plate and the back plate (5) are adjacent and tubular connecting means (24')
mounted on the third plate are aligned with the ink ejecting tubes (24), the tubular
connecting means (24') each having an end projecting into the second cavity beyond
the third plate (33') and the ink conducting tubes (30) being connected to the said
projecting ends.
9. A printing head according to claim 6, 7 or R, characterised in that the transducers
are electrically connected to a printed circuit element (40) disposed in the first
cavity of the structure and perpendicularly to the ink ejecting tubes (24), the element
being traversed by the transducers and projecting from the resin block, whereby the
transducers are electrically accessible from outside.