[0001] This is a continuation-in-part of a copending patent application, that will issue
,having the serial number 07/694,185 entitled METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR CONTROLLING
THE TEMPERATURE OF THERMAL INK JET AND THERMAL PRINTHEADS THROUGH THE USE OF NONPRINTING
PULSES filed in the name of Yeung on May 1, 1991 and owned by the assignee of this
application and incorporated herein by reference. This application relates to copending
application Serial No. entitled INK-COOLED THERMAL INK JET PRINTHEAD filed
in the name of Seccombe et. al on November 30, 1992 and owned by the assignee of this
application and is incorporated herein by reference.
Field of the Invention
[0002] This invention relates generally to the field of thermal ink jet printers and more
particularly to controlling the temperature of thermal ink jet printheads.
Background of the Invention
[0003] Thermal ink jet printers have gained wide acceptance. These printers are described
by W.J. Lloyd and H.T. Taub in "Ink Jet Devices," Chapter 13 of
Output Hardcopy Devices (Ed. R.C. Durbeck and S. Sherr, San Diego: Academic Press, 1988) and U.S. Patents
4,490,728 and 4,313,684. Thermal ink jet printers produce high quality print, are
compact and portable, and print quickly but quietly because only ink strikes the paper.
The typical thermal ink jet printhead (i.e., the silicon substrate, structures built
on the substrate, and connections to the substrate) uses liquid ink (i.e., colorants
dissolved or dispersed in a solvent). It has an array of precisely formed nozzles
attached to a printhead substrate that incorporates an array of firing chambers which
receive liquid ink from the ink reservoir. Each chamber has a thin-film resistor,
known as a thermal ink jet firing chamber resistor, located opposite the nozzle so
ink can collect between it and the nozzle. When electric printing pulses heat the
thermal ink jet firing chamber resistor, a small portion of the ink next to it vaporizes
and ejects a drop of ink from the printhead. Properly arranged nozzles form a dot
matrix pattern. Properly sequencing the operation of each nozzle causes characters
or images to be printed upon the paper as the printhead moves past the paper.
[0004] Drop volume variations result in degraded print quality and have prevented the realization
of the full potential of thermal ink jet printers. Drop volumes vary with the printhead
substrate temperature because the two properties that control it vary with printhead
substrate temperature: the viscosity of the ink and the amount of ink vaporized by
a firing chamber resistor when driven with a printing pulse. Drop volume variations
commonly occur during printer startup, during changes in ambient temperature, and
when the printer output varies, such as a change from normal print to "black-out"
print (i.e., where the printer covers the page with dots).
[0005] Variations in drop volume degrades print quality by causing variations in the darkness
of black-and-white text, variations in the contrast of gray-scale images, and variations
in the chroma, hue, and lightness of color images. The chroma, hue, and lightness
of a printed color depends on the volume of all the primary color drops that create
the printed color. If the printhead substrate temperature increases or decreases as
the page is printed, the colors at the top of the page can differ from the colors
at the bottom of the page. Reducing the range of drop volume variations will improve
the quality of printed text, graphics, and images.
[0006] Additional degradation in the print quality is cause by excessive amounts of ink
in the larger drops. When at room temperature, a thermal ink jet printhead must eject
drops of sufficient size to form satisfactory printed dots. However, previously known
printheads that meet this performance requirement, eject drops containing excessive
amounts of ink when the printhead substrate is warm. The excessive ink degraded the
print by causing feathering of the ink drops, bleeding of ink drops having different
colors, and cockling and curling of the paper. Reducing the range of drop volume variation
would help eliminate this problem.
Summary of the Invention
[0007] For the reasons previously discussed, it would be advantageous to have an apparatus
and a method for reducing the range of drop volume variation.
[0008] The foregoing and other advantages are provided by the present invention which reduces
the range of the drop volume variation by maintaining the temperature of the printhead
substrate above a minimum value known as the reference temperature. The present invention
includes the steps of selecting a reference temperature that can reduce the range
of drop volume variation, measuring the printhead substrate temperature, comparing
the printhead substrate temperature with the reference temperature, and keeping the
printhead substrate temperature above the reference temperature to reduce the range
of drop volume variation.
[0009] The scope of the present invention includes heating the printhead substrate during
a print cycle (i.e., the interval beginning when a printer receives a print command
and ending when it executes the last command of that data stream), as well as, heating
it at anytime or heating it continuously. The scope of the present invention includes
heating the printhead substrate by heating the entire cartridge (i.e., the printhead
substrate, the housing, connections between the printhead substrate and the ink supply,
and the ink supply if it is attached to the printhead substrate) by using a cartridge
heater or heating the printhead substrate more directly by driving the firing chamber
resistors with nonprinting pulses (i.e., pulses that do not have sufficient energy
to cause the printhead to fire). The scope of the present invention includes using
a thermal model to estimate the amount of heat to deliver to the printhead substrate
to raise its temperature to the reference temperature and delivering this energy between
swaths to avoid slowing the printer output.
[0010] Another aspect of the present invention varies the reference temperature according
to the print resolution. When a cartridge prints at lower resolution (i.e., skipping
every other dot), the space between the printed dots increases. The present invention
reduces this empty space by increasing the reference temperature of the printhead
substrate so that it produces larger dots. A further aspect of the present invention
is a darkness knob that allows the user to vary the reference temperature and thereby
control the darkness of the print and the time required for it to dry. The present
invention includes a temperature sense resistor deposited around the firing chamber
resistors of the printhead substrate.
[0011] The present invention has the advantage of reducing the range of drop volume variation
and increasing the quality of the print. Other advantages of the invention include
a reduction in the average drop volume since a smaller drop volume range allows the
designer to set the average drop volume to a lower value, a reduction in the amount
of ink that the paper must absorb, and more pages per unit ink volume whether the
ink supply is onboard (i.e., physically attached to printhead substrate so that it
moves with it) or offboard (i.e., stationary ink supply).
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0012] Figure 1 is a block diagram of the present invention.
[0013] Figure 2 is a plot of the thermal model of the printhead substrate used by the preferred
embodiment of the invention.
[0014] Figure 3 is a block diagram of an alternate embodiment of the present invention.
[0015] Figure 4A is a histogram of the distribution of print-cycle temperatures that a population
of printheads substrates without the present invention would experience over a typical
range of user plots.
[0016] Figure 4B is a histogram of the distribution of print-cycle temperatures that a population
of printheads with the present invention would experience over the same typical range
of user plots where the reference temperature equals 40°C.
[0017] Figure 5A is a plot of the distribution of drop volumes for a printhead substrate
without the present invention.
[0018] Figure 5B is a plot of the distribution of drop volumes for a printhead substrate
made according to the preferred embodiment of the invention.
[0019] Figure 6 shows the temperature sense resistor for the preferred embodiment of the
present invention.
[0020] Figure 7A shows print having a resolution of 300x600 dots per inch and
[0021] Figure 7B shows print having a resolution of 300x300 dots per inch.
[0022] Figure 8 shows the effect of increasing the drop size when printing at a resolution
of 300x300 dots per inch.
Detailed Description of the Invention
[0023] A person skilled in the art will readily appreciate the advantages and features of
the disclosed invention after reading the following detailed description in conjunction
with the drawings.
[0024] Drop volume varies with printhead substrate temperature. The present invention uses
this principle to reduce the range of drop volume variation by heating the printhead
substrate to a reference temperature before printing begins and keeping it from falling
below that temperature during printing. The preferred embodiment uses a thermal model
of the printhead substrate to estimate how long to drive the printhead substrate at
a particular power level to raise its temperature to the reference temperature of
the printhead substrate.
[0025] Figure 1 is a block diagram of the preferred embodiment of the present invention.
It consists of a printhead substrate temperature sensor 22, also shown in Figure 6,
a cartridge (i.e., the box that holds the ink and the printhead substrate) temperature
(i.e., the air temperature inside the cartridge which is the ambient temperature of
the printhead substrate) sensor, and a reference temperature generator. The outputs
of these three devices are fed into a thermal model processor/comparator which calculates
how long to drive the firing chamber resistors with nonprinting pulses having a known
power. The preferred embodiment of the invention heats the printhead substrate only
between swaths so it has a printhead position sensor that detects when the printhead
is between swaths. The output of the thermal model and the output of the printhead
position sensor goes to a nonprinting pulse controller that determines when the firing
chamber resistors should be driven with nonprinting pulses. The output of the nonprinting
pulse controller signals a pulse generator when to drive the firing chamber resistors
with one or more packets of nonprinting pulses having the duration specified by the
thermal model processor/comparator.
[0026] Figure 2 is a plot of the thermal model of the printhead substrate. The printhead
substrate has an exponential temperature rise described by:

A and λ are constants of the system. The inputs to the thermal model include: the
reference temperature, the cartridge temperature (i.e., the temperature of the air
inside the cartridge that surrounds the printhead substrate), and the printhead substrate
temperature. The output parameter, Δt, shown in Figure 2 is the length of time the
firing chamber resistors should be driven with a Power₁ to heat the printhead substrate
to the reference temperature. The equation that defines this time is:

[0027] The advantage of the thermal model is that the printhead substrate reaches the reference
temperature with reduced iterations of measuring the printhead substrate temperature
and heating the printhead substrate. However, the thermal model is part of a closed-loop
system and the system may use several iterations of measuring and heating if needed.
Figure 4A is a histogram that represents the distribution of print-cycle temperatures
that a population of printheads without the present invention would see over a typical
range of user plots. The average print-cycle temperature of these printhead substrates
without the invention is T
APCT and equals 40°C. The preferred embodiment of the invention sets the reference temperature
of a printhead substrate equal to T
APCT. This has the advantage of eliminating half the temperature range and, thus, half
the drop volume variation due to temperature variation.
[0028] The preferred embodiment of the invention heats the printhead substrate to the reference
temperature only during the print cycle. This has the advantage of keeping the printhead
substrate at lower and less destructive temperatures for longer. Additionally, the
preferred embodiment of the invention heats the printhead substrate only between swaths
(i.e., passes of a printhead across the page) to reduce the load on the processor
and prevent a reduction in the print speed. An alternate embodiment of the present
invention heats the printhead substrate continuously. It measures the temperature
of the printhead substrate as it moves across the paper. If it is below the reference
temperature the machine will send either a printing pulse if the plot requires it
or a nonprinting pulse. Alternate embodiments of the invention may heat the printhead
substrate at anytime without departing from the scope of the invention.
[0029] The preferred embodiment of the invention heats the printhead substrate to the reference
temperature by driving the firing chamber resistors with nonprinting pulses (i.e.,
pulses that heat the printhead substrate but are insufficient to cause the firing
chamber resistors to eject drops). Alternate embodiments of the invention can heat
the printhead substrate in any manner (e.g., printing pulses driving any resistive
element, a cartridge heater, etc.) without departing from the scope of the invention.
[0030] In summary, the preferred embodiment uses a thermal model of the printhead substrate,
having inputs of the reference temperature, the cartridge temperature, and the printhead
substrate temperature, that calculates how long the firing chamber resistors of the
printhead substrate should be driven with packets of nonprinting pulses delivering
power at the rate of Power₁ to the printhead substrate between swaths to raise the
printhead substrate temperature to the reference temperature.
[0031] Figure 3 shows an alternate embodiment of the invention that uses an iterative approach
to heating the printhead substrate to the reference temperature. The temperature sensor
measures the printhead substrate temperature. An output signal 25 of the temperature
sensor is processed by either a buffer-amplifier or a data converter and goes to an
error detection amplifier that compares it to a reference temperature signal 36. If
the printhead substrate temperature is less than the reference temperature, the closed-loop
pulse generator will drive the firing chamber resistor with a series of nonprinting
pulses. This process is repeated continuously during the print cycle. This and other
aspects of the present invention are described in U.S. Patent Application 07/694,184
hereby incorporated by reference.
[0032] As stated earlier, Figure 4A is a histogram of the distribution of print-cycle temperatures
for a printhead substrate without the present invention. The average print-cycle temperature,
T
APCT, is 40°C. When the population of printhead substrates with the histogram of print-cycle
temperature distributions shown in Figure 4A adopts the present invention with the
reference temperature set at T
APCT, 40° C, these printhead substrates obtain the histogram of print-cycle temperature
distributions shown in Figure 4B. It is a skewed-normal distribution with the lower
temperatures of Figure 4A avoided by use of the present invention. This printhead
substrate made according to the preferred embodiment of the invention operates at
the reference temperature of 40° C most of the time but it does float up to higher
temperatures including a maximum temperature (i.e., the highest printhead substrate
temperature) when the print duty cycle is high in a warm environment.
[0033] As stated earlier the preferred embodiments of the present invention, sets the reference
temperature equal to T
APCT because it has the advantage of eliminating half the temperature range and half the
range of drop volume variation due to temperature variation. Alternate embodiments
could set the reference temperature equal to any temperature, such as above the maximum
temperature, equal to the maximum temperature, somewhere between T
APCT and the maximum temperature, or below T
APCT without departing from the scope of the invention.
[0034] Another aspect of the invention, is a darkness control knob, shown in Figure 1, that
allows the user to change the reference temperature and thereby adjust the darkness
of the print or the time required for the ink to dry according to personal preference
or changes in the cartridge performance. Adjustments of the darkness control knob
can cause the reference temperature to exceed the maximum temperature.
[0035] Raising the reference temperature has the advantage of reducing the range of printhead
substrate temperature variation and if the reference temperature equals the maximum
temperature, the printhead substrate temperature will not vary at all. But raising
the reference temperature places increased stress on the printhead substrate and the
ink and the likelihood of increased chemical interaction of the ink and the printhead
substrate. This results in decreased reliability of the printhead. Also, a printhead
substrate with a higher reference temperature will require more time for heating.
Another disadvantage of raising the reference temperature is that all ink jet printer
designs built to date have shown a higher chance of misfiring at higher printhead
substrate temperatures.
[0036] Figure 5A shows the drop volume range for a printhead substrate without the present
invention. The X-axis is the volume of the drops and the Y-axis is the percentage
of drops having that volume. The peak of the distribution curve is at 52.5 pico liters.
The vertical lines are the lower acceptability limit (i.e., the smallest acceptable
drops) and upper acceptability limit (i.e., the largest acceptable drop). The largest
drops produced by a printhead substrate without the present invention exceed the upper
acceptability limit and cause the feathering, bleeding, and block (i.e., the sleeve
of a transparency film adheres to the printed area of the film and permanently changes
the surface of the film) problems, as well as, the cockling and curling problems mentioned
earlier.
[0037] Drop volume is a function of the printhead substrate temperature, geometric properties
of the printhead such as resistor size or nozzle diameter, and the energy contained
in a printing pulse. As shown in Figure 5A, the drop volume range of printheads without
the present invention is large. Typically, the drops ejected by previously-known printers
at the cold, start-up printhead substrate temperatures are too small and produce substandard
print. To produce larger drops at the cold, start-up temperatures, the properties
of a printhead without the present invention, such as its geometry, must be adjusted
so that the drops produced by a cold printhead substrate at power-on are large enough
to produce satisfactory print (i.e., completely formed characters of adequate darkness).
When these printhead substrates heat-up, they produce drops of excessively large volumes
(as shown in Figure 5A) that change the saturation level of the graphics, make the
text bloomy, and create print that does not dry quickly and results in ink that bleeds,
blocks , or smears and paper that cockles or curls. For these reasons, it is desirable
to reduce the volume of the larger drops.
[0038] Figure 5B shows the drop volume range for a printhead substrate made according to
the present invention. The peak of the distribution curve is at 47.5 pico liters and
both the lower end and the upper end of the drop distribution fits inside the limits
of acceptability. This volume distribution was obtained by using the present invention
which keeps the printhead substrate temperature from falling below the reference temperature
and by skewing the entire range of drop volumes down to lower drop volumes. This is
accomplished by changing the geometry of the printhead such as the size of the resistors
and the orifice diameter. Thus, an advantage of the present invention is that the
largest drops can be eliminated by skewing down the entire range of drop volumes.
[0039] Figure 6 shows the temperature sense resistor 22 that the preferred embodiment of
the invention uses. Temperature sense resistor 22 measures the average temperature
of a printhead substrate 20 since it wraps around all nozzles 24 of printhead substrate
20. The temperature of the ink in the drop generators is the temperature of greatest
interest, but this temperature is difficult to measure directly but temperature sense
resistor 22 can measure it indirectly. The silicon is thermally conductive and the
ink is in contact with the substrate long enough that the temperature averaged around
the head is very close to the temperature of the ink by the time the printhead ejects
the ink.
[0040] Printhead substrate temperature sensor 22 is inexpensive to manufacture because it
does not require any processing steps or materials that are not already a part of
the manufacturing procedure for thermal ink jet printheads. However, it must be calibrated
using standard calibration techniques, an accurate thermistor located in the printer
box, and a known temperature difference between the printhead substrate and printer
box. Other possibilities for calibrating printhead substrate temperature sensor 22
include laser trimming of the resistor.
[0041] The preferred embodiment of the invention heats the printhead substrate by using
packets of nonprinting pulses. The power delivered by these packets equals the number
of nozzles times the frequency of the nonprinting pulses (which can be much higher
than that of the printing pulses since no drops are ejected from the printhead) times
the energy in each nonprinting pulse. This power parameter is used to create the thermal
model shown in Figure 2. The number of nozzles and the frequency of the nonprinting
pulses are constant and set by other aspects of the printhead design. Alternate embodiments
of the invention can vary the frequency of the nonprinting pulses and pulse some but
not all of the nozzles without departing from the scope of the invention.
[0042] In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the nonprinting pulses have the same
voltage as the printing pulses so that the various time constants in the circuit are
the same for printing pulses and nonprinting pulses. The pulse width and energy delivered
by printing pulses are adjusted according the characteristics of each particular printhead.
The width of nonprinting pulses is equal to or less than .48 times the width of the
printing pulse so that it has little chance of ever ejecting ink from the printhead.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the printing pulses have a width of
2.5 µsec. and the nonprinting pulses have a width of .6µsec.
[0043] The preferred embodiment of the invention changes the reference temperature with
changes in resolution that are caused by a change in print speed. At the standard
print speed, the resolution is 300 dots per inch along the paper feed axis and 600
dots per inch across the width of the paper in the carriage scan direction which translates
into twice the number of dots across the width of the paper. Figure 7A shows the coverage
of dots in 300 x 600 dot per inch print. If the print speed is doubled, the printhead
operates the same way but the resolution becomes 300 x 300 dots per inch. Figure 7B
shows the coverage of dots when the resolution is reduced to 300 x 300 dots per inch
print. Holes open up between the dots. At the lower resolution modes, the present
invention increases the reference temperature to T
LDref, shown in Figure 2, so that the printhead ejects drops with a larger volume that
produces larger dots that better fill in the empty space between the dots as shown
in Figure 8.
[0044] The increase in temperature between T
ref and T
LDref depends on how drop volume increases with temperature, the pl/°C rating, and the
dot size versus drop volume. If the printhead experiences .5pl change per degree C,
then switching from T
ref = 40°C to T
LDref = 55° C produce a drop volume change of 7.5pl. Even though the reference temperature
is increased, the pulse width and voltage remain the same.
[0045] All publications and patent applications cited in the specification are herein incorporated
by reference as if each publication or patent application were specifically and individually
indicated to be incorporated by reference.
[0046] The foregoing description of the preferred embodiment of the present invention has
been presented for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended
to be exhaustive nor to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Obviously
many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings. The
embodiments were chosen in order to best explain the best mode of the invention. Thus,
it is intended that the scope of the invention to be defined by the claims appended
hereto.
1. A method for reducing a range of drop volume variation of a thermal ink jet printhead,
comprising the steps of:
a. selecting a reference temperature that can reduce the range of drop volume variation;
b. measuring a temperature of the printhead substrate (20);
c. comparing the printhead substrate (20) temperature with the reference temperature;
and
d. heating the printhead substrate (20) to the reference temperature to reduce the
range of drop volume variation.
2. The method, as in claim 1, further comprising the step of heating the printhead substrate
(20) by driving a firing chamber resistor on the printhead substrate with nonprinting
pulses.
3. The method, as in claim 1 or 2, further comprising the step of heating the printhead
substrate (20) to the reference temperature during the print cycle.
4. The method, as in claim 3, further comprising the step of setting the reference temperature
equal to a maximum temperature of the printhead substrate (20).
5. The method, as in claim 3, further comprising the step of setting the reference temperature
below an average print-cycle temperature.
6. The method, as in claim 3, further comprising the step of setting the reference temperature
between an average print-cycle temperature and a maximum temperature of the printhead
substrate (20).
7. The method, as in claim 3, further comprising the step of setting the reference temperature
equal to approximately an average print-cycle temperature of the printhead substrate
(20).
8. The method, as in claim 1 or 2 or 7, further comprising the step of increasing the
reference temperature when a print resolution of the printhead substrate (20) decreases.
9. The method, as in claim 1 or 2 or 7, further comprising the step of using a thermal
model of the printhead substrate (20) to estimate how much energy the nonprinting
pulses should deliver to the firing chamber resistors.
10. The method, as in claim 1 or 2 or 7, further comprising the step of varying the reference
temperature in response to an user input.