1. FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to thermal sublimation printing and more particularly
to a method for calibrating the heating elements in a thermal head of said thermal
printing system
2. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Thermal sublimation printing uses a dye transfer process, in which a carrier containing
a dye is disposed between a receiver, such as paper, and a print head formed of a
plurality of individual thermal heat producing elements which will be referred to
as heating elements. The receiver is mounted on a rotatable drum. The receiver and
carrier are generally moved relative to the print head which is fixed. When a particular
heating element is energised, it is heated and causes dye to transfer, e.g. by sublimation,
from the carrier to an image pixel in the receiver. The density of the printed dye
is a function of the temperature of the heating element and the time the carrier is
heated. In other words, the heat delivered from the heating element to the carrier
causes dye to transfer to an image related to the amount of heat transferred to the
carrier.
Thermal dye transfer printer apparatus offer the advantage of true "continuous tone"
dye density transfer. By varying the heat applied by each heating element to the carrier,
a variable dye density image pixel is formed in the receiver.
However, in systems utilising this type of thermal print head it is often observed
that the printing density is not uniform across the page, but that lines, streaks,
and bands are visible. This uneveness can arise from several causes, including variations
in the resistance of different heating elements, variations in the mechanical or thermal
contact between the thermal head and the dye layer, and variations in the thermal
contact between the ceramic base of the head assembly and the heatsink.
[0003] US 4,827,279 discloses a method for measuring the uneveness in the image. According
to this method, first a flat field is printed on a transparent receiver, then a microdensitometer
measures the transmittance values of the receiver, then the digitised values are stored
and finally these are used to adjust the number of heating pulses that are supplied
to the heating elements.
A disadvantage of said method is the fact that this method requires the printing of
a test-image which has to be measured by special equipment and the values need then
to be brought in the printer. Therefor such calibration method can only be carried
out by a service-technician. It would be more convenient if the customer himself could
carry out a calibration of the printer by a calibration built in the printer or even
more preferred where the printer would be able to periodically automatically calibrate
itself.
3. OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
[0004] It is a first object of the present invention to provide a calibration method that
can be carried out by a customer or even may be carried out fully automatically without
intervention of a customer.
Further objects and advantages wil become apparent from the description given hereinbelow.
4. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0005] We now have found that the above objects can be achieved by providing a method for
calibrating the heating elements in a thermal head of a thermal printing system, containing
initial configuration settings for the highest value of resistance of all heating
elements (indicated as R
max) or the largest value of the time-averaged power that can be dissipated by each heating
element (indicated as P
min) of said thermal head and comprising the steps of activating each heating element
under simulated operational conditions taking into account said initial settings,
measuring the current through each heating element and calculating the resistance
or the dissipated power of each heating element, to obtain new values for R
max or P
min.
[0006] Further preferred embodiments of the present invention are set forth in the detailed
description given hereinafter.
5. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0007] Hereinbelow the present invention will be clarified in detail with reference to the
attached drawings, without the intention to limit the invention thereto:
figure 1 is a principe-scheme of a thermal sublimation printer,
figure 2 is a data-flow-diagram of a thermal sublimation printer,
figure 3 is a cross-section of a thermal head,
figure 4 is a chart illustrating the variance in printing density across a page of
a flat-field-print,
figure 5 is a chart illustrating the variance in initial resistance of the individual
heating elements of a thermal head,
figure 6 is a chart illustrating the percentual change in resistance of a heating
element versus the number of times that that element has been used,
figure 7 is a chart illustrating principally the activating strobe pulses of a heating
element with an exemplary duty-cycle,
figure 8 is a chart of a test-image pattern principally according to the present invention,
figure 9 is a chart of a test-image pattern as practically used in a preferred embodiment
of the present invention,
figure 10 is a chart of a test-image pattern signal principally according to the present
invention,
figure 11 is a chart of a test-image pattern signal as practically used in a preferred
embodiment of the present invention,
figure 12 is a chart illustrating practically the activating strobe pulses of a heating
element with an exemplary duty-cycle and with an exemplary skipping according to the
present invention,
figure 13 is a circuit diagram describing the measurement according to the present
invention.
[0008] Referring to figure 1, there is shown a global principe-scheme of a thermal printing
apparatus that can be used in accordance with the present invention and which is capable
to print a line of pixels at a time on a receiver or acceptor member (11) from dyes
transferred from a carrier or dye-donor member (12). The receiver (11) is in the form
of a sheet; the carrier (12) is in the form of a web and is driven from a supply roller
(13) onto a take-up roller (14). The receiver (11) is secured to a rotatable drum
or platen (15), driven by a drive mechanism (not shown) which continuously advances
the drum (15) and the receiver sheet (11) past a stationary thermal head (16). This
head (16) presses the carrier (12) against the receiver (11) and receives the output
of the driver circuits. The thermal head (16) normally includes a plurality of heating
elements equal in number to the number of pixels in the data present in a line memory.
The image-wise heating of the dye donor element is performed on a line-by-line basis,
with the heating resistors geometrically juxtaposed each along another and with gradual
construction of the output density. Each of these resistors is capable of being energised
by heating pulses, the energy of which is controlled in accordance with the required
density of the corresponding picture element. As the image input data are denser,
the output energy increases and so the optical density of the hard-copy image (17)
on the receiving sheet. On the contrary, lower density image data cause the heating
energy to be shortened, giving a lighter picture (17).
[0009] The different processing steps are illustrated in the diagram of fig 2. First a digital
signal representation is obtained in an image acquisition apparatus (21). Then, the
image signal is applied via a digital interface (22) and a first storing means (indicated
as "memory" in fig. 2) to a recording unit (23), namely a thermal sublimation printer.
In the recording unit (23) the digital image signal is processed (24). Next the recording
head (16 in fig. 1) is controlled so as to produce in each pixel the density value
corresponding with the processed digital image signal value (24). After processing
(24) and parallel to serial conversion (25) of the digital image signals, a stream
of serial data of bits is shifted into another storing means, e.g. a shift register
(26), representing the next line of data that is to be printed. Thereafter, under
controlled conditions, these bits are supplied in parallel to the associated inputs
of a latch register (27). Once the bits of data from the shift register (26) are stored
in the latch register (27), another line of bits can be sequentially clocked into
said shift register (26). As to the heating elements (28), the upper terminals are
connected to a positive voltage source (indicated as V
th in fig. 2), while the lower terminals of the elements are respectively connected
to the collectors of the driver transistors (29), whose emitters are grounded. These
transistors (29) are selectively turned on by a high state signal (indicated as "strobe"
in fig. 2) applied to their bases and allow current to flow through their associated
heating elements (28). In this way a thermal sublimation hard-copy (17 in fig 1) of
the electrical image data is recorded.
Figure 3 is a detailed cross-section of a thermal head, indicated as part 16 in figure
1. Herein, we perceive a heatsink (31), a temperature sensor (32), a bonding layer
(33), a ceramic substrate (34), a glazen bulb (35), a heating element (36 in fig.
3, being equivalent to 28 in fig. 2) and a wear-resistant layer (37).
[0010] In systems utilising this type of thermal print head it is often observed that the
printing density is not uniform across the page, but that lines, streaks, and bands
are visible in the direction parallel to the page motion. This nonuniformity occurs
even when the input to the thermal head represents a so-called "flat-field", meaning
that the inputs are identical, and thus that all of the heating elements are heating
in response to the same constant input. Said variance in optical density from one
position to another across the width of a print head, for flat fields, is graphically
illustrated by Fig. 4. In searching for a solution to the indicated problem, we experienced
that even for similarly constructed heating elements contained within one thermal
head, there might be an initial variance between the density output created by one
heating element versus the density output created by another heating element with
both of the heating elements receiving pulses of equal type at the same time.
We also experienced that said density variance increases as the number of pulses applied
to each increases. Further, it is often observed that the size of the density uneveness
varies with the amount of heating, the actual temperature and the lifetime of the
thermal head. Thereabove, those elements which dissipate a higher power will cause
sooner a loss of glossiness in the printed image, due to higher local temperature
peaks.
These differences in densities on the printed paper, visible as vertical stripes over
the length of the page, can be explained by differences in the temperature present
in the donor-acceptor-consumables, attained by differences in the power dissipated
by the heating elements.
These differences in temperature and in power can arise from several causes including
variations in the resistance of the heater elements (see parts 28 in figure 2 or 36
in figure 3), variations in the thermal or mechanical contact (37) between the thermal
head and the dye layer, and variations in the thermal contact between the glazen bulb
(35) and the substrate (34) of the head assembly (31).
There is an initial difference in the resistance values of the resistor elements in
a thermal head caused by small inhomogeneities during the production process. Figure
5 is a chart illustrating the differences in initial resistance of the individual
heating elements of a thermal head.
As the heating member becomes worn, its resistance changes and thereafter it breaks.
During the lifetime of a thermal head the resistance values of the heating elements
will change due to an aging process generally due to thermal oxidation of the resistor
layer (ref 36 in fig. 3): the resistance value (R
e) of a heating element decreases depending on the number of the electrical pulses
applied, typically -15% after some 10⁸ pulses. So the more frequently an element is
used, the faster its resistance value will decrease. In order to keep the print quality
constant, these changes should be compensated. Fig. 6 shows a typical plot of percent
(%) change in resistance of a representative one of the printhead elements or ΔRe/Re
% drift, versus the number of times that the heating element has been pulsed. Note
that as the number of pulses increases the thermal printhead resistance can decrease
in value by about 15% and then start to rapidly increase.
[0011] Furthermore, the resistance for each element within the print head may change in
a unique, independent manner, so that the initial Gaussian distribution of resistance
of individual elements is not maintained throughout the operating life of the print
head.
[0012] In order to illustrate said variances by practical numerical values, we experienced
that the resistance value R
e (e.g. nominally 2600 Ω) of every resistor element can be different: between several
thermal heads there can be an initial "between-variation" of about ± 15% regarding
the nominal resistance value (e.g. between 2210 Ω and 2990 Ω); within one thermal
head there can be an initial "within-variation", e.g. assymetric differences of -
5% to + 10% regarding same said nominal resistance value; later on, due to aging,
the resistance value of the individual heating elements can vary up to minus 15% .
[0013] It has been found that an extremely important parameter causing uneveness in the
image is the deviation of the actual resistance or the actual power of the heating
elements from their initial settings. Consequently, by measuring the actual resistance
or the power of the heating elements in a thermal printing system, new settings therefor
can be obtained that can be stored in the printer and used to compensate uneveness.
According to the present invention, we provide a method for calibrating the heating
elements in a thermal head of a thermal printing system, containing initial configuration
settings at least for the highest value of the resistance (R
max) or the largest value of the time-averaged power that can be dissipated by all heating
elements (hereinafter referred to as P
min) and comprising the steps of activating each heating element under simulated operational
conditions taking into account said initial settings, measuring the current through
each heating element and calculating the resistance or the dissipated power of each
heating element, to obtain new values for R
max or P
min.
Because of the facts that the resistance value and the dissipated power of an heating
element are strongly dependent on their temperature (which itself is not known exactly),
and secondly the fact that the exact values of the parameters of the analytical relations
between the values at room temperature and at operational temperatures are not available,
it is not easy to guarantee results with high accuracy if making the measurements
at room temperature and afterwards recalculating the results to any other temperature.
Thus, we take the approach by making the measurements under nearly real printing conditions,
preferably with contact between the head and the drum but in abscence of any consumable,
which can be compensated for in the measurement method in accordance with the present
invention. The resulting simulated operational conditions aim to attain in each heating
element of the thermal head the same temperature (e.g. T
e = 150 °C) in accordance with the configuration settings as laid down in the system-calibration
when the printer was leaving the factory.
[0014] Of course, a calibration in presence of the donor- and acceptor-consumables is also
possible in connection with the present invention and would be more accurate and even
does not need any specific compensation for the abscence of the consumables during
said calibration. But, the practical possibility of calibration in abscence of the
consumables, as described in the present invention delivers to the consumer an enormous
advantage in that no consumables have to be wasted, which results in a low calibration-cost
and additionally in less ecological garbage.
[0015] As the temperature of the heating elements is generated by the electrical power dissipated
in each heating element when activated by a power supply with voltage V, we citate
the well-known formula
which clearly shows that, in general, a measurement of the resistance of the heating
element (R
e) relates, though inversely, to the electric power (P
e) and hence to the temperature of the heating element (T
e).
The mathematical minimum power -being the largest power that can be generated by all
the heating elements of the thermal head- thus occurs at the highest values of the
resistances, symbolicaly abbreviated as R
max, and amounts for
As the method of the present invention aims to calibrate under simulated operational
conditions, including a flat-field situation, the activating power of all the heating
elements has to be equal. This can preferably be attained by restricting the power
of each heating element down to the power (P
min) as dissipated in the heating element with the highest resistance value (R
max), which itself may be determined by measurement of the current through each heating
element.
[0016] In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the activation of the heating
elements is executed pulse-wisely, in a special manner as indicated in Fig. 7, which
shows the current pulses applied to a single heating element (ref 28 in Fig. 2). The
repetition strobe period (t
s) consists of one heating cycle (t
son) and one cooling cycle (t
s - t
son) as indicated in the same fig. 7. The strobe-pulse width (t
son) is the time an enable strobe-signal (ref "strobe" in fig. 2) is on. The duty-cycle
of a heating element is the ratio of the pulse width (t
son) to the repetition strobe period (t
s). In a printer in connection with the present invention, the strobe period (t
s) preferably is a constant, but the pulse-width (t
son) may be adjustable, according to a precise rule which will be explained later on;
so the duty-cycle may be varied accordingly. Supposing that the maximal number of
obtainable density-values attain N levels, the line time (t
l) is divided in a number (N) of strobe pulses each with repetition strobe periods
t
s as indicated on fig. 7. In the case of e.g. 1024 density-values (according to a 10-bits
format of the corresponding electrical image signal values), the maximal diffusion
time would be reached after 1024 sequential strobe periods.
[0017] As mentioned above, before delivery of a printer to a customer, each apparatus is
calibrated at the factory. Herein the initial settings for which the printer is configured
include a reference resistance value, being the resistance value of the heating element
which actually has the highest value of all heating elements (e.g. R
max = 2600 Ω) and/or a reference time-averaged power ( e.g. P
min = 62 mW). Said initial settings for which the printer is configured may further include:
- a reference voltage (e.g. Vth = 14.7 V)
- a reference strobe period (e.g. ts = 17.58 µsec)
- a reference strobe pulse time (e.g. tson = 13.2 µsec) or a reference duty-cycle (e.g. 75 percent)
- a reference ambient temperature (e.g. Ta = 25°C)
- a reference thermal head temperature (e.g. Tth = 25°C)
- a small flat field printing pattern (e.g. 100 dots x 100 dots)
- cooling of the thermal head by an electrical fan built in the printing apparatus
- type of consumables to be used with the printer.
[0018] For a number of settings, deviations from their initial settings will occur due to
one or more of the above-mentioned influencing parameters, so that after some time
of operation a reconfiguration of the initial settings will be needed.
[0019] Opposite to the prior art as described in e.g. EP 0 458 507 which activates rather
continuously by pulse-width modulation, in a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
the pulse-wisely activation of the heating elements is used discontinuously, as already
indicated in fig. 7. Therefor, it will be much more precise to measure the time-averaged
electric power (indicated as P
ave) -in order to incorporate the duty-cycle- instead of the resistance value, and secondly
-in order to attain a flat-field situation- it will be necessary to adapt the above
formula to the time-averaged power that can be dissipated by all heating elements
The progress of technology attained by the introduction of time-averaged power measurements
as described in the present invention, still brings a further advantage, namely in
that possible uneveness in density due to inherent differences in switching characteristics
(e.g. time delay, exponential rise-time, etc) are automatically weighted out. Experiencing
that said differences may result in differences in pulse profile and thus in differences
in strobe-on time, practically up to about e.g. 90 nanosecondes, these time-differences
in the prior art of pulse-number modulation may cause differences in density and even
may accumulate. As in a preferred embodiment, the method of the present invention
measures the time-averaged power, said differences are immediately corrected, no accumulation
takes place and no unwanted differences in density are created.
[0020] In a next preferred embodiment of the present invention, said simulated operational
conditions which are very close to the printing operational conditions, especially
regarding the temperature in the heating elements, may further include predetermined
values of the voltage applied to the thermal head (V
th) and predetermined values of the temperature of the thermal head (T
th) and of the temperature of the ambient (T
a).
[0021] This results from the knowledge that the maximum element temperature T
e,max , approximately reached after some 3 to 5 thermal time constants, depends on the
thermal characteristics of the thermal head and of the consumables (being carrier
or donor ref 12 in fig. 1 and acceptor or receiver 11 in same fig. 1) and on the applied
voltage and accompanying strobe duty cycle
Herein, (V
th - V
ls) is the real voltage activating the heating elements, and equals the power supply
(V
th, see fig. 2) minus the voltage dropped over the logical switching circuit (e.g. V
ls = 0.2 Volt) which was schematicaly represented by a switching transistor (ref. 29
in fig. 2) and R
e is the resistance of a heating element.
[0022] The above-mentioned pulse-wisely activation of the heating elements preferably will
be executed with a measurement duty-cycle, defined in a preparatory step, and calculated
from a mathematical model. Said model prescribes the time-averaged power dissipated
in a heating element, on the basis of the electronic formula
Herein, R
max represents the highest resistance value of the heating elements as contained in the
initial settings.
[0023] From another point of view, we experienced that the time-averaged power dissipated
in a heating element can also be expressed by the next formula
In accordance with the present invention, the really applied thermal head voltage
(V
th) is measured, the real ambient temperature (T
a) is measured (e.g. by the temperature of the drum) and the real thermal head temperature
(T
th) is measured. Bringing these values in the aforementioned mathematical model [6],
the numerical value of P
ave can be calculated and then brought into equation [5].
Herefrom, a specific measuring duty-cycle (t
son/t
s) can be defined by adapting the strobe pulse width (t
son), knowing the fixed value for the strobe period (t
s) which can be contained in the initial settings of the printing system. As a further
consequence, the activation of the heating elements while measuring may restrict the
available power in each element to P
min, as contained in the initial settings, to obtain the same operational temperature
(T
e,max).
[0024] Preferably during the measurements of the heating elements, the puls-wisely activation
of each heating element is effected in accordance with a special electrical test-image
pattern, which allows every heating member to be tested. This pattern (symbollically
illustrated in fig. 8) preferably includes lines of dots, wherein each dot represents
a heating element: on each line one pixel is activated, while said activated dot of
each line is sequentially moved across the pattern.
[0025] In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the thermal head consists of
e.g. 2880 heating elements and the test-image pattern is basically a white page with
2880 lines, wherein every line contains exactly one heated pixel, further indicated
as "test-dot". The position of said pixel in every line is equal to its line number
(e.g. 0 to 2879), so that the resultant measurement path runs diagonaly across the
test-page (see fig. 8).
[0026] Figure 10 is a chart of an electrical test-image pattern signal during the measurements
of the heating elements, according to the present invention, and thus allocates one
test-dot pro line from the top-left to the right-bottom of the (soft) page.
[0027] According to the method of the present invention, each test-dot is preferably energised
with a digital value corresponding to the density-value for which the human eye has
the highest sensitivity for visual perception in the output print on the receiving
material of density differences around this density-value . We have found that for
output prints on black and white transparent film, said highest sensitivity appears
at an optical density of about 1.
[0028] More in particular, one of the preferred embodiments further completes the generating
of said test-image pattern by the following signals: pro said test-dot and in the
same line a number of neighbouring dots on the left and on the right of the generated
central dot are switched on and off. It results herefrom that the aforementioned diagonal
test-line (fig. 8), in reality now becomes a diagonal test-band (fig. 9). Whereas
fig. 10 gives a principal electrical test-image pattern signal corresponding to said
diagonal test-line, figure 11 is a chart of an electrical test-image pattern signal
of a preferred embodiment as it is practically applied to each central test-dot, which
thus is surrounded at its left side and at its right side by e.g. 50 pixels with a
value of the image signal somewhat lower as the measuring density-value (e.g. 923).
As a global consequence of the activation of the neigbouring elements, and the diagonal
test pattern and the thermal inertia or time-constant of the thermal head, the measurement
method of the present invention thus simulates the flat field conditions which were
also used in the factory-calibration.
[0029] Thanks to the policy of generating an electrical test-image pattern without printing
any test-page on a receiver, the measurement can be carried out without the need for
any consumable, which is a great advantage of the present invention for the customer.
Further advantages lie in the facts that the calibration can be carried out fully
automatically, without the need for a service-technician and in the fact that new
settings for the resistance or the dissipated power of each heating element are automatically
brought into the system.
[0030] When no contact between the thermal head and the drum is made during the measurement,
the thermal head is not thermally loaded by the carrier nor by the receiver and per
consequence the temperature T
e,max will be somewhat higher then during printing. To avoid this unwanted temperature
rise, the strobe pulse width is decreased according to a constant amount in temperature,
preferably between 30 and 50 degrees (°C), or according to an amount in power, preferably
about 30 percent (%). This correction is integrated in the mathematical model further
taking into account the actual types of consumables.
[0031] In accordance with the present invention, during the puls-wisely activation of each
heating element according to the generated electrical test-image pattern, the current
through each heating element is measured, this in order to obtain the power dissipation
and the resistance values and the heating elements.
[0032] First, pro central test-dot (as illustrated in fig. 8 and 10), during an activated
strobe pulse (t
son, as illustrated in fig. 7) the instantaneous value of the current (I
e) of the heating element corresponding to said test-dot is measured. Physically, this
current is defined by
During the same strobe-period (t
s as illustrated in fig. 7) also the average value of the current I
ave is measured. Physically, this current is defined by
After said measurements (pro central dot) of I
e and I
ave, and since (V
th-V
ls) was already measured before, the time-averaged power (P
ave) now can be calculated according to the next relation
Finally, the resistance of each separate heating element (R
e) can be derived from the just mentioned measurements of currents by rearrangement
of formula [7]
In summary, the activation of the heating elements preferably according to the electrical
test-image pattern is followed by measuring pro central dot the instantaneous current
(I
e) and the corresponding time-averaged current (I
ave), calculating pro central dot the time-averaged power (P
ave) and by calculating pro central dot the resistance of the corresponding heating element
(R
e).
[0033] Referring to Figure 13, there is shown a functional circuit diagram describing a
preferred embodiment for measuring the required values. In order to measure the current
through a heating element (indicated as R₁ and R₂ in fig 13, or as ref 131 in fig.
13, equivalent to ref 28 in fig. 2, or ref 36 in fig. 3) of the thermal head, the
power wires (133a, 133b) can be disconnected by means of a power relays (134a). Also
the capacitors (135) parallel on the power supply (132), which itself is adjustable
but stabilised by an electronic regulator (136), can be disconnected by means of a
relays (134b). The minus-wire (133c) of the thermal head is connected to the virtual
ground (137) of an operational amplifier (138). The current (I
e) through the heating element (131) is fed through a high precision resistor (139)
with resistance R
prec used as a feedback resistor to said operational amplifier and the voltage drop (V
o) over this high precision resistor is measured in two different ways, namely instantaneously
and time-averagedly, by
and by
To save time, the two measurements, I
e and I
ave, are preferably done at the same time. Therefore these values are preferably kept
in a sample and hold device (141a, 141b) at the moment the central test-dot (e.g.
strobe pulse 1023) is applied. Then said measured values are converted from analog
to digital values by an analog to digital convertor (140) and stored in a memory means.
To obtain the instantaneous and the time-averaged values of the current (I
e, I
ave), low pass filters may be used. Hereto fig. 13 indicates a low pass filter (142b)
for the measurement of I
ave and a switchable low pass filter (142a) for the measurement of I
e.
Since at this stage of the method according to the present invention, there are already
known for each heating element of the thermal head the numerical values for P
ave [calculated with formula 9] and for R
e [calculated with formula 10], the new values for R
max or P
min may be retrieved and be used in order to attain good eveness in the printed density.
[0034] As the diffusion process for a pixel is a function of its temperature, the printed
density is a function of the applied power. To obtain equal densities, the available
time-averaged power for every heating element may be made equal and preferably equal
to the power of the heating element actually producing the lowest time-averaged power
(P
min) and was determined in the foregoing measurement procedure. The equalising of the
power in the heating elements may be realised in two consecutive steps, which now
will be explained.
[0035] First, because the power dissipated by the element with the lowest power can increase
during the lifetime of the thermal head and also because another element can become
reference element -as is described extensively in the aforementioned detailed description
of the measurement method- , in a next calibration, the eventually increased power
of the actual reference element may be kept constant by reducing the pulse duration
of the strobe pulses and thus reducing the duty-cycle accordingly (cf. fig. 7). Thus,
while printing, all heating elements may be activated with a reduced, but common duty-cycle.
[0036] Second, as all other heating elements could dissipate more power as the actual reference
element, the further and individual reduction of the power of said other elements
may preferably be done by skipping a number of heating pulses (see fig. 12). By said
skipping a number of heating cycles of those heating elements that generate too much
instantaneous power, the time-averaged power of all heating elements becomes equal
and so the temperatures of the elements do. Therefor, in a preferred embodiment of
the present invention, the calibration method further comprises the sequential steps
of first limiting the printing power of each heating element by commonly reducing
the strobe duty-cycle of all heating elements, and secondly of skipping for each heating
element an individual-apt number of strobe-pulses.
In reference to fig. 7 and supposing that the maximal number of obtainable density-values
(or "heating-values") attains N levels, the line time t
l (e.g. t
l = 16 msec) is divided in a number of strobe pulses each with repetition strobe periods
t
s (e.g. t
s = 16 µsec). In the case of e.g. 1024 heating-values, the maximal diffusion time would
be reached after 1024 sequential strobe periods (N=1024).
In order to keep, in every line and for a given print-density, the available energy
per individual pixel constant, the individually compensated energy (E
ic) of a heating element should be equal to a reference energy (E
ref). Said reference energy per line is restricted below a physical upper-bound energy
(E
limit) defined by the physical constraints of the printing system (regarding lifetime of
the heating element, melting or burning of the carrier or the receiver consumable,
loss of glossiness of the printing material) and may be laid down in the initial configuration
settings
Explicitating this equation [13] by
wherein P
iave is the time-averaged power dissipated in a heating element with index i, P
ref = P
min being the time-averaged power dissipated in the reference heating element and e.g.
N
ref = 1024 being the number of strobe-periods pro line-time.
As the strobe period (t
s) is a constant (cfr. initial settings), equation [14a] reduces to

b]
from which
The number of energy quanta (N
ref - N
c) is not applied to the resistor element with index i, but skipped, as illustrated
by the timing diagram of fig 12. This figure 12 is a chart illustrating practically
the activating strobe-pulses of a heating element (with an exemplary duty-cycle and
exemplary skipping) according to the present invention.
In the upper part of said figure 12, a pulse-train is drawn as activating the reference
heating element (with R
max or P
min), thus generating the restricted power as it is available in the actual printing
cycle, after reducing the common duty-cycle as it was necessary to compensate the
power for decrease of the resistance during the lifetime. In the lower part of figure
12, a corrected pulse-train is drawn as activating another heating element with e.g.
R
e = 0.75 R
max and which in the abscence of the present invention, would dissipate e.g. 25 percent
of energy above said reference (thus 125% E
ref). As illustrated by fig. 12, every fourth strobe pulse may be skipped. In this way,
to obtain equal densities for equal image signal data, the available time-averaged
power for every heating element may be made equal and preferably equal to the power
of the heating element actually having the lowest time-averaged power (P
min) or the highest resistance (R
max).
[0037] By equalising the power to all heating elements, also the individual temperature
profiles will become equal, meaning that the evolution of the temperature of the heating
elements in function of the diffusion time will show the same curvature (e.g. T
e rises exponentially up to 150 °C in about 30 ms).
[0038] Although the invention has been described with respect to preferred embodiments,
it is not to be so limited, as changes and modifications can be made within the intended
scope of the present invention defined by the appended claims.
[0039] It is clear that while measuring in accordance with the present invention, at the
same occasion one could detect when a resistor becomes out of range. If the actual
value of the resistance of a heating element lies outside the tolerances of e.g. 15%
of the initial value, a "resistor out of range error" indication could be displayed
to the customer.
[0040] The measurement of the resistance of each heating resistor, conducted by means of
an R-measurement test pattern, may occur at the power up of the system, after a number
(e.g. 300) of prints, after a change of consumable, etc.
[0041] As the calibration method described in the present invention accounts for deviations
in the resistance or the dissipated power of each heating element as prescribed in
the initial configuration settings, within the same scope, also compensations may
be made in order to reach good printed eveness regarding other parameters, such as
voltage drop of the power supplied to the heating elements, evolution of the ambient
temperature during the calibration, etc. This invention may be used as well for grey-scale
thermal sublimation printing as well as for colour thermal sublimation printing. Further,
the printing may be applied in graphic representations, in medical imaging, in facsimile
transmission of documents etc.