BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention generally relates to methods and apparatus for improved ink jet printing
and more particularly, this invention relates to controlling the amount of ink applied
to each pixel in order to achieve dramatic improvements in image quality and resolution
while minimizing cost and speed penalties.
[0002] The use of ink jet printing systems has grown dramatically in recent years. This
may be attributed to substantial improvements in resolution and overall print quality
coupled with appreciable reductions in cost. Today's ink jet printers offer acceptable
print quality for many commercial, business and household applications at costs fully
an order of magnitude lower than comparable products available just a few years ago.
Notwithstanding their recent success, intensive research and development efforts continue
toward improving ink jet print quality. In general, print quality still falls short
of that produced by more expensive technologies such as photography and offset or
gravure printing. The challenge remains to further improve print quality in ink jet
printing systems without increasing their cost. Efforts toward achieving this goal
are limited due to the fundamental fact that the drop on demand method and most of
the continuous ink jet methods are essentially binary: at each picture element (pixel)
of the paper (or other output media) they must place a droplet of ink or no ink at
all. This sharply limits gray scale resolution.
[0003] Color ink jet printers typically use only three or four colors of ink (magenta, yellow,
cyan and optionally black). Consequently, only a very limited range of color shades
can be printed by different combinations of these colors in each pixel. The range
of colors that can be so formed, i.e. the color resolution, is strictly limited because
more than two or three drops of ink together form a volume that is excessive and therefore
tends to bleed and mottle the paper. This limitation has been circumvented somewhat
by the so-called dither techniques, in which the picture is divided into a large number
of square matrices, each matrix containing a certain number of pixels, such as 4x4
or 8x8 pixels. Different shades of color can be obtained by filling different numbers
of pixels in each matrix with ink. Hence, using a 4x4 matrix 16 different shades of
color and white (no color) can be generated, while an 8x8 matrix allows the rendition
of 64 shades of color in addition to white. Dithering thus reduces the effective spacial
resolution for all colors other than the basic system colors. The
basic system colors of a given system are those colors that can be printed within a single grid location.
Moreover, despite sophisticated dithering and digital halftoning techniques, the relatively
large size of the ink drops generally lead to coarse images, such that the eye perceives
an apparent graininess in the print.
[0004] Printed image quality would be improved dramatically if the color density in each
pixel could be varied continuously. It can be varied nearly continuously by use of
very small pixels, so that they cannot be resolved by the unaided human eye at normal
viewing distances. So for example, an image formed on a grid of 100 pixels to the
millimeter will have the same appearance when viewed by the unaided eye as a truly
continuous tone picture typified by photographic color print. The problem is to achieve
this kind of improved resolution at low cost.
[0005] It is known in the art to form each printed dot with at least two droplets of the
same color ink, each droplet being ejected from a different nozzle, in order to reduce
the effects of nozzles which may be blocked or partially inoperative. The second droplets
of ink are applied during a second or return pass of the printhead. A technique of
this type is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,963,882. This "double dot" technique does
not improve resolution.
[0006] U.S. Patent No. 4,494,128 to Vaught entitled "Gray Scale Printing with Ink Jets"
discloses valving apparatus in a thermal ink jet system for mixing vehicle (dilutant)
with the ink during the actual jet printing process to produce variation in visual
print density (gray scale). Adapting such as system for color mixing in the transducer
chamber is suggested. Such techniques are difficult to implement in practice.
[0007] U.S. Patent No. 4,620,196 to Hertz et al. describes a method and apparatus for high
resolution ink jet printing. The Hertz patent is directed to a rather complex and
therefore expensive system. It describes an ink jet printing system of the type in
which a continuous stream of very small droplets of ink is emitted at a very high,
fixed frequency, such as one million droplets per second. An electric signal called
the "print pulse" controls an electrode surrounding the point of drop formation, so
that the drops generated by the continuous jet are either charged or uncharged. When
these drops subsequently travel through an electric field, the charged drops are deflected
into a catcher while the uncharged drops travel undeflected onto the recording paper.
According to the Hertz patent, the amount of ink applied in each pixel is controlled
by varying the number of droplets applied to the pixel. The number of droplets is
controlled by the time duration or pulse width of the control signal, since droplets
are firing at a constant rate. This technique provides high resolution. For example,
the patent suggests that 0-30 drops of ink might be applied to a given pixel, resulting
in nearly continuous resolution to control color density.
[0008] As stated in the Hertz patent itself, "while the principal of the invention appears
to be and in fact is relatively simple, it is actually very difficult to put into
practice." The Hertz et al. patent discloses several problems associated with the
printing system described above. For example, the diameter of the drops has to be
very small and the drop generation rate must be generally high and essentially constant.
Also, because of the high air resistance encountered by the very small drops, not
only individual drops but also groups of drops tend to merge on their way to the paper
which gives rise to an appreciable graininess. Accordingly, the jet diameter must
be small and its velocity high to ensure a high drop generation rate. Ultrasonic stimulation
of the drop formation process of the jet is essential to ensure high and constant
drop generation rate and to control drop diameter. There must an electrical apparatus
for slightly charging the drops which are meant to reach the paper, with like charges
thereby causing a repulsive force between them to counteract the merging tendencies
of the drops. These and other challenges and added complexities lead to a very high
cost apparatus. Accordingly, the need remains for producing high quality output from
a color ink jet printing system at low cost.
[0009] U.S. Patent No. 4,499,479 to Chee-Shuen Lee et al. describes gray scale printing
with a cylindrical piezoelectric transducer printing head arranged for varying ink
drop volume in real time. Specifically, the transducer is divided into separately
actuable sections. Drive signals selectively actuate one or more of the sections so
as to form an internal pressure wave in response to print data to form an ink drop
of a desired volume. Amplitude of the drive signals may be varied to further control
ink drop volume. Pulse width of the drive signals additionally may be varied for further
refinement. Control means for providing such drive signals, however, is relatively
complex. Moreover, this strategy of segmenting the transducer is not applicable to
thermal ink jet printing.
[0010] U.S. Patent No. 4,617,580 to Miyakawa discloses an ink jet printer which includes
a detector to determine whether the printing medium is paper or overhead transparency.
In the latter case, the printer applies a plurality of ink droplets onto the usual
one pixel area, slightly offsetting each of the droplets horizontally and/or vertically
from each other, in order to improve coverage of the media as is necessary for ink
jet printing on overhead transparencies. According to that patent, the ink dots may
be vertically shifted by providing a fine feed pitch of the recording paper and the
ink dots may be horizontally shifted by shifting the delay times for the ejection
timings, or by providing a fine horizontal ejection pitch. The droplets are shifted
slightly in order to better cover the pixel area because of the overhead transparency
having a low diffusion property, which leads to a small color dot size for a given
volume ink droplet. Providing finer paper feed pitch (vertical) and/or finer horizontal
resolution (i.e. carriage positioning), however, requires substantial improvements
in the corresponding mechanical assemblies and increases cost dramatically.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The present invention includes methods and apparatus for practicing the methods of
improving gray scale and color resolution in thermal ink jet printing systems without
requiring increased printing grid resolution. The present invention thus substantially
retains known carriage and paper handling electro-mechanical assemblies. The invention
provides for improved resolution within the context of a predetermined pixel grid
by better controlling ink droplet total volume and/or ink dye concentration.
[0012] According to a first aspect of the invention, a nominal or "unit volume" of ink is
defined as a volume of ink selected for covering approximately one pixel location
on a given printing medium. In other words, the unit volume is the usual volume of
a single droplet of ink expelled by a nozzle on the pen. To improve print quality,
ink droplet volume is reduced below the unit volume, and multiple printing passes
are used to permit depositing more than one such reduced-volume ink droplet on each
pixel location. A unit volume of ink therefore may be formed (or approximated) by
depositing at least two reduced-volume ink droplets on the same pixel location.
[0013] In one example, the reduced volume is equal to one-half the unit volume. This has
the advantage of increasing resolution of print density by providing a choice of three
levels, i.e., zero, one-half volume or unit volume rather than the usual binary mode.
The incremental cost of implementing the higher color (or gray scale) resolution is
modest because the printing grid resolution, e.g. 300 DPI, is retained. Thus no modification
to the printer mechanics and drive means that define the printing grid is necessary
to use the invention.
[0014] A second aspect of the invention is to provide at least two different droplet volumes
in a printing system. These may implemented in a single print cartridge or by using
multiple print cartridges. One example is a print cartridge having half of its nozzles
arranged to deliver 1/3 unit volume droplets and the other half arranged to deliver
2/3 unit volume droplets. Where both droplet volumes are available on the same horizontal
line (an "in-line pen layout" -- see FIG. 3A), a single pass of the printhead yields
any one of four possible total ink volumes: 0, 1/3, 2/3 or 3/3 (one) unit volume of
ink at each grid location, thereby increasing resolution. A second pass of the same
printhead allows a total of 4/3, 5/3 or 6/3 (two) units of ink at each grid location,
for a total of seven possible levels. Using an offset pen layout (see FIG. 3B), the
same seven levels are available over four passes. This principle is extendable in
that more variations of droplet volume and more passes could allow for even smaller
dots and larger numbers of dots per printed unit area to achieve even greater resolution.
[0015] A third aspect of the invention is to improve print quality by varying ink colorant
concentration, also called "dye load". Dye load is the relative amount of dye or colorant
in a printing solution, as distinguished from the carrier or solvent portion of the
ink which evaporates soon after the ink is applied to the medium. The dye load of
an ink affects the printed dot color density. Reduced dye load in the ink thus can
be used to improve spacial resolution and increase the number of basic system colors.
[0016] A fourth aspect of the invention is a method of printing that utilizes multiple dye
loads provided in a single pen. For example, a three-chamber pen could be used to
provide three different dye loads of a particular color ink. Three dye concentrations
and two passes provides for 27 gray scale levels. In a color system, three dye concentrations
may be provided for each color. In a CYM system, for example, this arrangement makes
possible 19,683 dot combinations (27 cyan) x (27 magenta) x (27 yellow), thereby providing
19,683 basic system colors.
[0017] A fifth aspect of the present invention is a combination of the reduced ink volume
and reduced dye load techniques. These two variables may be controlled independently
to achieve substantial improvements in resolution, again without changing the drive
mechanics, hardware and software that define the printing grid. The benefits of the
invention of course apply to any printer grid size.
[0018] The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become
more readily apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment
which proceeds with reference to the drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019] FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a known ink jet printer mechanism.
[0020] FIG. 2 illustrates a known arrangement of nozzles on a thermal ink jet pen.
[0021] FIG. 3A illustrates an in-line pen layout for providing multiple different ink droplet
volumes in an ink jet print cartridge.
[0022] FIG. 3B illustrates an offset pen layout for providing multiple different ink droplet
volumes in an ink jet print cartridge.
[0023] FIG. 4 illustrates use of reduced-volume ink droplets in color printing.
[0024] FIG. 5 illustrates use of multiple different reduced-volume ink droplets.
[0025] FIG. 6 is a perspective view of an ink jet printer mechanism having multiple pens
disposed therein for providing multiple different ink droplet volumes and/or multiple
different ink dye concentrations.
[0026] FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustrating one implementation of the invention in an ink
jet printing system.
[0027] The following Tables also form part of this specification:
[0028] TABLE 1. Basic System Colors for a Three-Color System, Two Passes.
[0029] TABLE 2. Basic System Colors for 300 DPI Color and 600 DPI Black, Two passes.
[0030] TABLE 3. Basic System Colors for Various Dye Loads and Print Passes.
[0031] TABLE 4. Examples of Hifi Droplets.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Printer Apparatus Overview
[0032] Referring to FIG.1, indicated generally at 10 is a non-continuous ink jet printing
system. Ink jet printers of this type are known in the art of printing, e.g., the
Hewlett-Packard Desk Jet 550C™. The salient elements of the printer include a transverse
rod 12 which spans the width of the printer 10. Mounted on the transverse rod 12 is
a carriage 14 which moves linearly along transverse rod 12. Not shown in FIG. 1 is
a means for advancing the carriage along the transverse rod 12. However, such means
are well known in the art and include stepper motors and gears. Carriage 14 is designed
to receive print cartridges 16 and 18. Print cartridges 16 and 18 each contain separate
reservoirs of ink. In the preferred embodiment, print cartridge 16 contains three
separate color pigments (C,Y,M), and print cartridge 18 contains a fourth color pigment
(K). Located on the underside of each print cartridge is a plurality of ink jet nozzles
through which ink stored in the respective cartridge passes. The ability to selectively
enable the nozzles to form a desired image on a print media is known in the art of
ink jet printing.
[0033] Print media such as paper provided in media tray 20 is removed from the media tray
20 by typically a set of driver rollers (not shown) and advanced along axis X in a
controlled manner. As the print media passes along the X-axis the carriage 14 is advanced
along the transverse rod 12 so as to position print cartridges 16 and 18 over the
print media. When the cartridges 16 and 18 are positioned in the desired location,
the appropriate nozzles on either or both cartridges are enabled. The enabled nozzles
form ink droplets therein which are subsequently deposited on the print media below.
The carriage 14 is then advanced further along the transverse rod 12, usually by an
amount which defines the horizontal resolution of the printer, and the entire process
is repeated. Once the carriage has spanned the entire width of the print media, the
print media is advanced by a predetermined amount, usually defined by the vertical
resolution of the printer, and the carriage 14 retraces its path in the reverse direction
along the transverse rod 12.
[0034] FIG. 2 shows one example of an arrangement of print nozzles on a prior art print
cartridge 22. In this example, each nozzle is represented by a small circle. The print
nozzles are arranged in six parallel vertical columns. (Vertical here meaning perpendicular
to print cartridge travel.) There are sixteen nozzles in each column in this example,
though the number is a matter of design choice. Each pair of columns, for example
columns 24 and 26, are vertically offset from one another by one-half the distance
between adjacent nozzles within a column. This provides better vertical resolution.
For example, it is difficult to implement ink jet nozzles on 1/300th inch spacing
within a single column. 300 dpi printing can be achieved by providing two parallel
columns of nozzles such as columns 24, 26 for each color ink and spacing the nozzles
1/150th of an inch apart vertically within each column. By offsetting the columns
by 1/150th of an inch, 300 dot per inch vertical resolution is available by appropriately
actuating nozzles from one of the two columns as needed.
Reduced Ink Droplet Volume Printing
[0035] A dot is a single spot of ink printed on paper or other medium. Smaller dots improve
print quality by making individual dots less distinguishable. For instance, smaller
dots make smoother, less grainy textures in light color and tones. Increasing the
number of dots in a given area allows more information to be displayed in the same
area of the paper, thereby increasing the number of possible colors or gray levels.
Color transitions between blended hue shifts are smoother and intermediate halftone
colors are more uniform. Other benefits realized are better draft quality, better
composite blacks, lighter secondary colors and increased flexibility in dye balancing.
[0036] We first define a
unit ink droplet volume as the usual volume selected for covering approximately one pixel location on a given
printing medium. To improve print quality, the ink droplet volume is reduced below
the unit volume, and multiple printing passes are used to permit depositing multiple
reduced-volume ink droplets on each grid or pixel location, one droplet per pass.
A grid location is the finest resolution on which the printing device can place dots.
For instance, a 300 dot per inch (dpi) machine prints at 1/300th- inch grid locations.
According to the invention, multiple reduced-volume dots are printed at each grid
location by printing a single dot each time the print cartridge passes over the location.
The total number of dots printed at each location thus is less than or equal to the
number of print passes. (This is not necessarily true for multiple volume printing
with an in-line pen layout, discussed below.)
[0037] In one example of an embodiment of the invention, the print cartridge is modified
so as to provide an ink droplet having one-half of the "unit" volume, i.e. the volume
of a "normal" drop for the same resolution. As the carriage makes a first pass over
the print media either no drop or a half-drop is deposited on each pixel location,
depending upon the desired image. As the carriage makes a second pass over the print
media, the printer again can deposit no drop or a half-drop on any particular pixel
location. Thus, three distinct combinations of drops are available to each pixel location
using two passes: no drops; a single drop; or two drops. In a three-color system,
this strategy provides 27 dot combinations: 6 primaries, 12 secondaries and 8 composite
black or near neutrals (plus white).
[0038] Referring now to FIG. 4, selected dot combinations are illustrated on a predetermined
rectangular grid printing 30, consisting of a regular array of pixel areas, for example
pixels 32,34. Colors are indicated by striping orientation as shown for yellow, cyan
and magenta. The droplet volume, it may be observed, is significantly less than a
unit volume which would substantially cover a pixel area. (More complete coverage
of a pixel can be achieved with even smaller nominal dot size by shifting vertically
and/or horizontally. This "phase shifting" can be effected in the pen layout or by
modifying dot firing timing, but modifying the printing grid is generally not desirable.)
[0039] In FIG. 4, the four adjacent pixels that form the upper left quadrant 36 of grid
30 each contain a single dot of each color. All three colors were printed on each
of two passes, for a total of six droplets. In the upper right quadrant 38, magenta
and cyan dots were printed, again one dot of each color on each of two passes, for
a total four droplets. The lower left quadrant 40 illustrates just one dot each of
yellow and magenta inks and finally, the lower right quadrant 42 shows dots of magenta
and cyan. The lower quadrants could be printed on one or two passes. FIG. 4 illustrates
only a few of the many possible combinations of dots. The 27 possible combinations
are listed in the following Table 1.
Table 1.
Basic System Colors for a Three-Color System, Two Passes, Reduced Volume |
Number |
Cyan |
Magenta |
Yellow |
Comment |
1 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
primary yellow |
2 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
primary cyan |
3 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
primary magenta |
4 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
primary yellow |
5 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
primary cyan |
6 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
primary magenta |
7 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
secondary |
8 |
2 |
0 |
2 |
secondary |
9 |
2 |
0 |
1 |
secondary |
10 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
secondary |
11 |
0 |
2 |
2 |
secondary |
12 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
secondary |
13 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
secondary |
14 |
2 |
2 |
0 |
secondary |
15 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
secondary |
16 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
secondary |
17 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
secondary |
18 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
secondary |
19 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
near neutral |
20 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
near neutral |
21 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
near neutral |
22 |
2 |
1 |
2 |
near neutral |
23 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
near neutral |
24 |
1 |
2 |
2 |
near neutral |
25 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
composite black |
26 |
2 |
2 |
2 |
composite black |
27 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
white (no dots) |
[0040] Note that the selected sequence of printing the various color dots results in a slight
hue shift in the resulting printed image as compared to a different sequence. This
effect can be taken into account to provide an even greater range of basic system
colors than those described here explicitly.
[0041] Translation of computer source data (image data) to specific printer dots is performed
by a printer driver, typically implemented in software. The driver software uses digital
halftoning techniques to translate the image data to the resolution of the target
output device. To illustrate, the present invention may be applied to a 300 x 300
DPI cyan/yellow/magenta printing system. Digital halftoning would be used (in the
printer driver) to reduce the source data from 24 bits per pixel (8 bits per color)
to 6 bits per pixel. The 6-bit data contains three 2-bit components, one each for
cyan, magenta and yellow. Each of the two bits controls one 1/2 unit volume droplet
at a given print grid location.
[0042] Printing with multiple passes has additional advantages. It improves ink bleed control
as well as hides mechanism and pen dot misplacement errors. The incremental costs
of implementing this print mode is minimal since the grid resolution remains constant.
The fine pitch controls for shifting dots as suggested in the Miyakawa patent are
not required. There is a penalty in increased time to print a page, though in many
applications multiple passes are already in use for other reasons such as the so-called
"shingling" technique. Moreover, a choice of print modes may be provided under user
control which would enable the user to disable the high resolution print mode in order
to produce draft quality output at higher speed. The user selection is input to the
driver software to control halftoning.
[0043] This principle of the invention may be extended to further reductions in ink volume,
with the result of corresponding improvements in print quality. For example, 1/3 unit
volume droplets may be printed over three passes. Similarly, the ink volume may be
reduced to 1/4 of the unit droplet volume, and four print passes utilized. One-quarter
volume droplets provides five levels of density at each grid location for each primary
ink (four levels of ink plus no ink). Five levels provide 5x5x5 or 125 combinations
of primary color droplets at each grid location in a three-color system. The system
thus has 125 basic system colors.
[0044] Other variations may be used, such as further reducing the ink droplet volume to
1/8 the nominal value. One-eighth droplet volume provides nine density levels for
each primary color, resulting in 9x9x9 or 729 possible color combinations at each
grid location over nine passes (for a three color pen). In a four color (e.g. KCMY)
system, a 1/8 drop volume would yield 9x729 or 6,561 basic system colors.
[0045] Print quality can be still further improved by increasing the black ink resolution
in combination with the reduced-volume strategy. Since most image information is contained
in the gray content, a substantial improvement in color quality can be gained for
a small increase in cost using this approach. To illustrate, in a 300 DPI color system,
increasing the gray resolution to 600 DPI essentially provides resolution up to a
five-level gray system at each grid or pixel location. One-half unit volume color
dots may be printed as above, over two passes. Black ink, however, could be printed
with 0,1,2 or 4 dots in a 2 by 2 dot superpixel which fills a 300 x 300 grid location.
The black droplet volume is about 1/4 of the nominal 300 DPI droplet volume. This
arrangement provides four gray levels at each pixel with minimum black dot size. The
available dot combinations at each pixel are summarized in the following Table 2.
More than 50 of the combinations are useable.
TABLE 2.
Basic System Colors for 300 DPI Color and 600 DPI Black, Two passes, Reduced Volume. |
(a) 27 colors |
(with no black) |
(b) three grays |
(black dots only) |
(c) six dark primaries |
(six primaries plus one black dot at each pixel) |
(d) six darker primaries |
(six primaries plus two black dots at each pixel) |
(e) 12 dark secondaries |
(12 secondaries plus one black dot at each pixel) |
(f)12 darker secondaries |
(12 secondaries plus two black dots at each pixel) |
[0046] Thus, the reduced-volume print method improves color and/or gray scale print quality
by implementing reducing dot size and increasing the number of dots in a given area.
Importantly, improved print quality also may be achieved without a linear increase
in the number of passes by providing multiple droplet volumes, described next.
Multiple Volume Printing
[0047] Another aspect of the invention is to employ multiple different droplet volumes within
a single drop-on-demand printing system. Preferably, multiple different droplet volumes
are implemented in a single print cartridge, although multiple cartridges may be mounted
on a single carriage. Each of the available droplet volumes is predetermined. Referring
now to FIG. 6, a portion of an ink jet printer is shown in perspective view. A modified
carriage 70 is mounted on a transverse rail 72. Carriage 70 is arranged to receive
and transport four print cartridges 62, 64, 66 and 68. Each cartridge is arranged
to provide droplets of ink of a single color, for example C,M,Y or K. Each cartridge
further is arranged to provide for selection among at least two different droplet
volumes of the corresponding ink on demand.
[0048] One example of a pen nozzle arrangement ("pen layout") for printing multiple ink
droplet volumes is illustrated in FIG. 3A. Referring to FIG. 3A, the nozzles are arranged
in three pairs of columns, one pair of columns for each color. For example, both columns
78 and 80 eject drops of cyan ink. However, the droplet volume ejected by the nozzles
in column 78 is less than that of column 80. For example, column 78 nozzles may provide
1/8 unit volume droplets, and column 80 provide 3/8 volume droplets.
[0049] Variations in ink droplet volume need not necessarily be provided by altering nozzle
or bore size. Appropriate modifications to the internal construction of the cartridge,
and/or variation of the drive signals that control the cartridge may be used to alter
droplet volume. Control of droplet volume in a thermal ink jet print head is discussed
in U.S. Pat. No. 4,339,762 incorporated herein by this reference.
[0050] A printing method that employs multiple different droplet volumes allows wider control
of droplet volumes without a linear increase in the number of print passes. For example,
a print cartridge may be provided having half its dots at 1/3 unit volume and the
other half at 2/3 unit volume. The nozzles may be arranged so that both volumes are
available on the same horizontal line, thereby allowing printing either or both volumes
on a single pass. We call this an in-line pen layout, illustrated in FIG. 3A. Using
a pen so arranged, 0, 1/3, 2/3 or 3/3 droplet volumes may be printed at each grid
location on a single pass. Alternatively, the nozzles may be arranged with the different
volumes vertically offset from each other, as in FIG. 3B. We call this an offset pen
layout. Other arrangements, such as diagonal layouts, are possible. Two passes of
the offset layout pen provide the four ink volume levels just mentioned.
[0051] Referring now to FIG. 5, a portion of a printing grid 44 has three columns of pixels,
columns 46, 50 and 54. The pixels that form column 46 each contain one dot of ink,
for example dot 48, each dot having approximately 1/3 unit volume. The pixels that
form column 50 also each contain one dot of ink, for example dot 52, these dots having
approximately 2/3 unit volume. The pixels that form column 54 each contain two dots
of ink, for example multiple dot 56. Dot 56 is formed of a 2/3 volume droplet 57 together
with a 1/3 volume droplet 58. Any or all of these dots may be printed on a single
pass using an in-line pen layout as described, or printed over two passes using the
offset pen layout. This aspect of the invention is extendable by selecting other variants
of droplet volume, and using additional passes to allow even smaller dots and larger
numbers of dots per area. We have found these techniques to provide substantial improvements
in print quality without changing the basic printing grid resolution.
[0052] In another example, a print cartridge has half of its nozzles arranged to deliver
1/8 unit volume ink droplets, and the other half at 3/8 unit droplet volume. In this
case, two print passes (using an in-line pen layout) provide nine density levels,
i.e. any one of 0, 1/8, 2/8, 3/8, 4/8, 5/8, 6/8, 7/8 and 8/8 units total ink volume
at each grid location. The same resolution is achieved using four passes of the offset
pen layout. Volumes exceeding the normal unit volume, i.e. 10/8 (125%) and 12/8 (150%)
also are available on four passes. These may be useful, for example, when printing
overhead transparencies or other media that require increased ink volume. In a color
system, for example a CMY system, nine levels per pixel per color provides for (9
cyan) x (9 magenta) x (9 yellow) equals 729 dot combinations or basic system colors.
[0053] There is some latitude in which dot combinations are actually used and how data is
encoded to drive the printer. For example, seven or eight of the nine possible ink
volumes of the previous example may be selected as the most useful. In that case,
the driver software may be arranged to provide 3-bit data per color per pixel, thereby
specifying one of the selected levels.
[0054] The present invention can be applied to other scanning head printing or imaging technologies
where the absolute dot size is quantisized and the effective dot size or density increases
when multiple absolute dots form a larger effective dot.
Reduced Dye Load Printing
[0055] Another aspect of the invention is to improve print quality by moderating ink concentration,
also called "dye load". We first define a
standard dye load as the usual or normal dye load selected for forming a dot of acceptable size and
density (and other characteristics) when a unit volume droplet of the standard dye
load ink is applied to a given medium. A one-half dye load ink droplet (still unit
volume) thus would provide only one-half as much dye to the paper as a dot of unit
dye load ink. The reduced-dye load dot has a lower optical density than the standard
dye load dot.
[0056] Reducing dye load has the advantage of increasing density resolution. For example,
reducing dye load to one-half of the standard dye load provides essentially three
dot sizes, i.e., zero, half dye load or standard dye load, rather than the usual binary
mode. Two passes may be necessary to print a full-density dot on a given pixel (i.e.
two of the one-half dye load dots), depending on the pen layout. However, two passes
are used in many ink jet printer applications for other reasons. Moreover, the incremental
cost of achieving higher resolution through reduced dye load is modest because, as
in the case of reduced ink droplet volume techniques, the existing printer grid resolution,
e.g. 300 DPI, may be used. No modification is necessary, therefore, to standard printer
mechanics and drive means that define the printing grid.
[0057] A reduced dye load method is particularly attractive because it may be implemented
in many ink jet printer systems without any hardware modifications. The reduced dye
ink may be provided in replaceable print cartridges, and the necessary changes in
printing strategy are implemented in the dithering software. As explained above with
regard to ink droplet volume, the dye load may be reduced to for example 1/2, 1/3,
1/4 etc with a corresponding increase in the number of print passes.
[0058] Multiple different dye loads may be especially advantageous. Preferably, such various
dye loads are available within a single print cartridge. This strategy allows substantial
increases in resolution (number of density levels) without a linear increase in the
number of passes. Ink droplets of various dye concentrations can be combined in a
single pixel. An example is a system having three dye loads available, and using two
passes of the print head. This would allow up to two drops of each dye concentration
to be delivered to each grid location. The dye loads are selected so that one medium
drop is darker than two light drops, and one dark drop is darker that two medium drops.
[0059] Then 27 density levels are available on two passes. The first level is where there
are no drops deposited. The second level includes only a single light drop. The third
level corresponds to two light drops deposited one atop another on subsequent passes.
As was stated earlier, two light drops produces a lighter drop than one medium drop
of level four. Level five includes one medium drop and a light drop. Level six includes
two light drops and a single medium drop. Level seven consists of two medium drops,
each deposited on a separate pass of the carriage. Level eight includes two medium
drops and a light drop, wherein the light drop and one of the medium drops is deposited
on the first pass and the second medium drop is deposited on the second pass.
[0060] Level nine consists of two light drops and two medium drops with one light drop and
one medium drop deposited on each of two successive passes. To produce levels 10-18,
a single dark drop is added to levels 1-9. To produce levels 19-27, a second dark
drop is added on the second pass to levels 10-18. In this manner, twenty-seven different
levels of color intensity or gray-levels can be produced for each color using three
die concentrations while making only two passes over the print media. In a three-color
system, (27 cyan) x (27 magenta) x (27 yellow) = 19,683 dot combinations are available
using this three dye load method over just two passes.
[0061] In one operative example of an embodiment of the invention, a dark drop has 100%
concentration (i.e. the standard dye load), a medium drop has a 20% concentration,
and a light drop has a 2% concentration. Note that this combination yields a wide
dynamic range while using a minimum number of drops or passes. Specific dye loads
may be optimized empirically for particular print media and environmental conditions.
Varying dye load and the number of print passes provides various ranges of gray levels
and color combinations. Some examples are summarized in the following Table 3:
TABLE 3.
Basic System Colors for Various Dye Loads and Print Passes. |
No. Dye Loads |
Print Passes |
Gray Levels |
Basic System Colors |
3 |
1 |
8 |
512 |
3 |
4 |
125 |
1.953 Million |
2 |
2 |
9 |
729 |
2 |
4 |
25 |
15,625 |
[0062] Referring once again to FIG. 4, recall that four print cartridges 62, 64, 66 and
68 are disposed on a single carriage. Each cartridge is arranged to provide droplets
of ink of a single color, for example C,M,Y or K. Previously, each cartridge was of
ink of a single color, for example C,M,Y or K. Previously, each cartridge was described
as providing at least two different droplet volumes of the corresponding ink on demand.
Alternatively, each cartridge may be arranged to provide at least two different dye
concentrations of the corresponding ink. For example, three-chamber pens are known
for providing three colors of ink. A known ink cartridge could instead be filled with
three different dye concentrations of the same color ink for implementing the methods
described herein. In using multiple different reduced dye loads
Hybrid Systems - Hifi Droplets
[0063] Another aspect of the present invention is to combine the reduced ink volume and
reduced dye load techniques disclosed above. An example is a printing method that
employs both a reduced-volume ink droplet (say 1/4 unit volume) and a reduced dye
load (say 1/2 of a standard dye load). A dot formed by this printing method provides
approximately 1/8 the normal dot size and density. We will call a reduced-volume droplet
of reduced-dye load ink an "hifi" (high fidelity) droplet. Multiple hifi droplets
are used, as noted above, to provide nine density levels in this example. This implementation
provides extraordinary color print quality in a 300 DPI ink jet printer. Other hifi
droplets may be selected to achieve even greater resolution. In general, the hifi
dot size and density produced by this technique will be approximately the product
of the relative droplet volume times the relative dye load. A few examples illustrate
the point in the following Table 4:
TABLE 4.
Examples of Hifi Droplets. |
Relative Droplet Volume |
Relative Dye Load |
Minimum Effective Dot Size/Density |
Available Density Levels |
1/4 |
1/2 |
1/8 |
9 |
1/3 |
1/3 |
1/9 |
10 |
1/8 |
1/2 |
1/16 |
17 |
[0064] The combination of reduced volume and reduced dye load may be preferable in some
applications as it eases the resolution requirements as to each variable. For example,
a one-fourth unit drop volume may be difficult to implement due to pen limitations.
By reducing dye load in half, a one-fourth dot size may be implemented using a one-half
unit droplet volume.
[0065] Other variations of number of dye concentrations, and number of print passes are
possible using the methods described above. As the total number of droplets increases
within a given grid location, the drop size must decrease so that the total fluid
per unit area of the print media does not exceed the capacity of that media to absorb
it. In systems where the total possible drops per pixel (number of passes x number
of dye concentrations x number of pens), exceeds the media's capacity, driver software
or system hardware can be configured to limit the allowed combinations. Thus the benefits
of more levels and more saturated primary colors are made available without undue
bleeding and other ill effects of saturating the paper.
[0066] FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustrating one implementation of the invention in an ink
jet printing system. Graphic image data (source data) 82, for example 24-bit RGB data,
is provided by a host system or application software to a printer driver 84. Printer
driver 84 includes digital halftoning software for reducing the source data to a desired
resolution. The resulting print data, which may be for example 6-bit CMY or 8-bit
CMYK data, or a greater number of bits reflecting the increased resolution of the
invention, may be converted to form a printer control language file, conversion step
86. The printer control language file in turn is provided to a printer mechanism such
as an ink jet printer 88 of the type described above.
[0067] Printer 88 may be arranged to provide one or more reduced-volume ink droplets for
reduced-volume printing. In that case, data 92 indicating the available ink droplet
volumes are input to the printer driver 84. Printer 88 also may be arranged to provide
one or more reduced-dye loads or ink concentrations for reduced dye load printing.
In that case, data 94 indicating the available dye concentrations are input to the
printer driver 84. When both data 92 and 94 are provided, hifi droplets may be used.
Pen layout information 98, for example in-line versus offset pen layout, is input
to the driver as well. Information defining the printer and the ink cartridge(s) installed
in the printer may be provided by a "print set-up" routine or the like in the host
machine. Alternatively, this information may be read or sensed automatically in the
printer and provided to the driver as indicated by dashed line 96. Additionally, a
user or the host machine may provide an indication of a desired maximum number of
dots per pixel 90 for input to the driver. A user may select a "draft mode" for example,
having a small number of dots per pixel, to reduce the number of print passes, thereby
trading off print quality in exchange for increased speed and reduced ink usage.
[0068] Having illustrated and described the principles of our invention in a preferred embodiment
thereof, it should be readily apparent to those skilled in the art that the invention
can be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles.
We claim all modifications coming within the spirit and scope of the accompanying
claims.
1. In a non-continuous drop-on-demand ink jet printing system (10), the printing system
having a predetermined printing grid (30) defining an array of pixel locations (32,34)
and having a unit ink droplet volume selected for covering approximately one pixel
location on a printing medium, a method of printing at a selected pixel location comprising:
providing a print cartridge (16) having a nozzle for delivering a droplet of ink,
the nozzle being located on a carriage (14) that traverses across the printing medium
parallel to its surface;
reducing the ink droplet volume so that the nozzle delivers a reduced-volume droplet
of ink (48) on demand having a volume less than the unit ink drop volume; and
depositing at least one reduced-volume droplet of ink (48) onto the printing medium
at the selected pixel location, each reduced-volume droplet being deposited on a different
traverse of the carriage, thereby printing the pixel with a gray scale resolution
greater than the printing grid resolution.
2. A method of printing according to claim 1 wherein the reduced droplet volume is approximately
1/Nth of the unit droplet volume, where N is an integer, to allow printing any one
of N+1 different volumes of ink at the selected pixel location over at most two passes
of the carriage.
3. A method according to claim 1 wherein:
the print cartridge (16) has at least three nozzles (FIG. 2), each nozzle arranged
for delivering a respective one of three different color inks (CMY);
said reducing the ink droplet volume includes providing a reduced-volume droplet
on demand of each color ink; and
said depositing step includes, on each pass of the carriage, depositing up to one
reduced-volume droplet of each color ink at the selected pixel location (FIG. 4),
thereby printing the pixel location with improved color resolution without modifying
the printing grid.
4. A method according to claim 3 further comprising:
increasing a black ink resolution for printing black ink at a greater number of
dots per unit distance than the color resolution defined by the printing grid (30);
reducing the black ink droplet volume in proportion to the increase in black ink
printing resolution; and
at the pixel location (32,34), printing a combination of the reduced-volume color
ink droplets and the reduced-volume black ink droplets (Table 2).
5. A method according to claim 1 further comprising:
providing first and second different ink droplet volumes on demand on the same
carriage (FIGS. 3A,3B), each of the first and second volumes being less than the unit
volume;
depositing up to one first volume droplet onto the selected pixel location on the
medium; and
depositing up to one second volume droplet onto the same pixel location on the
medium, thereby depositing at the pixel location a total volume of ink equal to any
one of of no ink, the first volume, the second volume or the first volume plus the
second volume, for printing the pixel location with four-level gray scale resolution
over at most two passes of the carriage.
6. In a non-continuous drop-on-demand ink jet printing system (10), the printing system
having a predetermined printing grid (30) defining an array of pixel locations (32,34)
and having a unit ink droplet volume selected for covering approximately one pixel
location on a printing medium, a method of printing at a selected pixel location comprising:
defining a selected ink concentration as a standard dye load;
selecting the unit volume and the standard dye load at respective levels adequate
for forming a dot on the print medium sized to approximately cover the pixel location
when a unit volume droplet of the standard dye load ink is deposited on the pixel
location;
providing a droplet of ink on demand having a reduced dye load less than the standard
dye load; and
depositing at least one reduced-dye load droplet of ink onto the printing medium
at the selected pixel location, thereby printing the pixel with improved gray scale
resolution without changing the printing grid.
7. A method according to claim 6 wherein:
the reduced volume is approximately equal to one-fourth of the unit volume; the
reduced dye load is approximately equal to one-half of the standard dye load; and
said depositing step includes
depositing up to a total of eight hifi droplets on the same pixel location over
multiple print passes, thereby providing nine gray scale levels per pixel.
8. A printing method according to claim 6 wherein the printing system has at least three
ink colors and said providing step includes providing reduced-dye load droplets on
demand of each of the three different color inks.
9. A method according to claim 8 wherein the reduced-dye load for all three color inks
is approximately equal to 1/Nth of the standard dye load, where N is an integer greater
than 1, to allow printing any one of N+1 different amounts of dye of each color at
the selected pixel location over N print passes, thereby providing (N+1) ^3 (cubed)
different possible basic system colors at the selected pixel location without modifying
the system printing grid.
10. A method according to claim 8 further comprising:
reducing the volume of each droplet of reduced-dye load ink to a reduced-volume
less than the unit volume, thereby forming a hifi droplet; and wherein said providing
step includes depositing hifi droplets of each of the three different color inks on
demand to the pixel location.