1. Field of the invention.
[0001] This invention relates to an apparatus for use in the process of electrostatic printing
and more particularly to a printhead structure for use in Direct Electrostatic Printing
(DEP). In DEP, electrostatic printing is performed directly from a toner delivery
means on a receiving member substrate by means of an electronically addressable printhead
structure.
2. Background of the Invention.
[0002] In DEP (Direct Electrostatic Printing) the toner or developing material is deposited
directly in an imagewise way on a receiving substrate, the latter not bearing any
imagewise latent electrostatic image. In the case that the substrate is an intermediate
endless flexible belt (e.g. aluminium, polyimide etc.), the imagewise deposited toner
must be transferred onto another final substrate. If, however, the toner is deposited
directly on the final receiving substrate, a possibility is fulfilled to create directly
the image on the final receiving substrate, e.g. plain paper, transparency, etc. This
deposition step is followed by a final fusing step.
[0003] This makes the method different from classical electrography, in which a latent electrostatic
image on a charge retentive surface is developed by a suitable material to make the
latent image visible. Further on, either the powder image is fused directly to said
charge retentive surface, which then results in a direct electrographic print, or
the powder image is subsequently transferred to the final substrate and then fused
to that medium. The latter process results in an indirect electrographic print. The
final substrate may be a transparent medium, opaque polymeric film, paper, etc.
[0004] DEP is also markedly different from electrophotography in which an additional step
and additional member is introduced to create the latent electrostatic image. More
specifically, a photoconductor is used and a charging/exposure cycle is necessary.
[0005] A DEP device is disclosed in e.g. US 3,689,935. This document discloses an electrostatic
line printer having a multi-layered particle modulator or printhead structure comprising
:
- a layer of insulating material, called insulation layer ;
- a shield electrode consisting of a continuous layer of conductive material on one
side of the insulation layer ;
- a plurality of control electrodes formed by a segmented layer of conductive material
on the other side of the insulation layer ; and
- at least one row of apertures.
Each control electrode is formed around one aperture and is isolated from each other
control electrode.
[0006] Selected potentials are applied to each of the control electrodes while a fixed potential
is applied to the shield electrode. An overall applied propulsion field between a
toner delivery means and a receiving member support projects charged toner particles
through a row of apertures of the printhead structure. The intensity of the particle
stream is modulated according to the pattern of potentials applied to the control
electrodes. The modulated stream of charged particles impinges upon a receiving member
substrate, interposed in the modulated particle stream. The receiving member substrate
is transported in a direction orthogonal to the printhead structure, to provide a
line-by-line scan printing. The shield electrode may face the toner delivery means
and the control electrode may face the receiving member substrate. A DC field is applied
between the printhead structure and a single back electrode on the receiving member
support. This propulsion field is responsible for the attraction of toner to the receiving
member substrate that is placed between the printhead structure and the back electrode.
The printhead structure as described in US 3,689,935 is thus characterised by the
presence of two electrode layers and is called further on a P2-printhead structure.
The voltages used for image-wise deposition of toner particles is of the order of
about 400 V. Such devices have e.g. been described in US 4,755,837.
[0007] DEP devices according to the principle, disclosed in US 3,689,935, but using only
a single electrode layer, with only control electrodes and no shield electrode have
also been described. In e.g. US 5,099,271, US 5,402,158, EP-A 587 366 and EP-A 617335,
devices have been described that operate according to the DEP principle with typical
voltages of the order of 50 to 100 V. These printhead structures made from polyimide
foils with apertures and control electrodes in a single plane are called further on
P1-printhead structures. P1 printhead structures are characterised by a lower voltage
needed to get toner images on the final receiver, but also by a higher contrast: i.e.
the number of shades of grey between maximum density and minimum is rather low, typically
binary.
[0008] A DEP device according to the P2-design is well suited to print half-tone images.
The densities variations present in a half-tone image can be obtained by modulation
of the voltage applied to the individual control electrodes. Providing printing apertures
in a DEP printhead structure comprising two electrodes (control electrode and shield
electrode) separated by an insulating plastic material, to yield a printhead capable
of producing images with high resolution and also with uniform density pattern is
not an obvious process.
[0009] All printing apertures in the printhead structure must have exactly the predetermined
diameter, the electrodes must stay in place and have a well defined and constant shape,
and the walls of the printing apertures through the insulating plastic must be smooth
to avoid clogging of the printing apertures. After forming the printing apertures
in the printhead structure, each aperture must be individually addressable such as
to be able to yield any density between zero and maximum density. Moreover every printing
aperture has to be addressable to the same extent in order to yield smooth density
pattern. Applying a controlling voltage of a few hundreds of volt between an individual
control electrode and the global shield electrode may not short-circuit the nozzle
and render it useless.
[0010] Printhead structures made from flexprint material, but with a much more complicated
design have also been described in the literature. In US 4,912,489 e.g. a printhead
structure of polyimide with 3 electrode layers is described. A first sheet of polyimide
has a printing aperture with on one side a common shield electrode, and on the other
side individual control electrodes. A second sheet of polyimide is laminated upon
said first sheet of flexprint material and has printing apertures with the same aperture
diameter and registered with a high degree of accuracy with said first sheet with
printing apertures. At the side facing away from said first sheet of flexprint material
screening electrodes are available, said screening electrodes having a diameter that
is larger than the diameter of said apertures.
[0011] In US 5,170,185 a printhead structure is described consisting of two sheets of polyimide
foil laminated to each other. Both sheets have printing apertures with the same aperture
diameter, and both of said printing apertures have to be registered to a high degree
of accuracy. A common shield electrode is provided at a first side of said first flexprint
material facing away from said lamination side. Said second sheet of flexprint material
has individual control electrode at the other side of said laminated printhead structure,
also facing away from said lamination side. Said control electrodes in said second
sheet of flexprint material have conductive patterns inside said printhead structures
as depicted in figure 23 said US 5,170,185.
[0012] In US 5,038,159 a printhead structure is made from a single sheet of flexprint material
but the shape of said printing apertures is made concave in one embodiment of this
invention. The aperture diameter is larger at the side of the common shield electrode
than at the side of the individual control electrodes. The printing aperture is made
in said plastic material in such a way that a concave form is obtained. In a second
embodiment of said invention a single sheet of flexprint material is used. The printing
aperture has a fixed diameter and the individual control electrodes are through-hole-connected
to the shield electrode side. Said shield electrode itself has a much larger diameter
so that it remains electrically insulated from said control electrode. This printhead
structure is also illustrated in figure 2 of said US 5,038,159.
[0013] There is thus still a need for a DEP system, using a printhead structure comprising
two electrodes (control electrode and shield electrode) separated by an insulating
plastic material and wherein printing apertures are present, wherein the printing
apertures are not easily clogged by the toner particles and wherein each aperture
is individually addressable in a reproducible way by low control voltages, and wherein
an image with enhanced grey scale resolution can be obtained, and wherein said printhead
structure can be fabricated in an easy and straightforward way.
3. Objects of the invention
[0014] It is an object of the invention to provide an improved printhead structure for use
in a Direct Electrostatic Printing (DEP) device, printing images with a high density
resolution and with a high spatial resolution.
[0015] It is a further object of the invention to provide an improved printhead structure
for a DEP device combining high spatial resolution with good long term stability and
reliability.
[0016] It is still a further object of the invention to provide a printhead structure for
a DEP device, wherein said printhead structure comprises a control electrode and a
shield electrode separated by an insulating material and printing apertures made through
both said electrodes and said insulating material wherein said printing apertures
are not easily clogged by toner particles and are individually addressable in a stable
an reproducible way.
[0017] It is another object of the invention to provide a method to make said printhead
structure comprising printing apertures through both said electrodes and said insulating
material in an easy and economic way.
[0018] It is a further object of the invention to provide a DEP device comprising a printhead
structure making it possible to print a large tone scale, i.e. a high amount of different
density levels.
[0019] Further objects and advantages of the invention will become clear from the description
hereinafter.
[0020] The above objects are realized by providing a printhead structure comprising, an
insulating material (106c) having a first and a second side, said first side carrying
control electrodes (106a) associated with printing apertures, said second side carrying
a shield electrode (106b), wherein
i) said printing apertures have a longest dimension A, measured on said side of said
insulating material carrying said shield electrode and have a longest dimension D,
measured on said side of said insulating material carrying said control electrodes,
ii) said shield electrode has openings with a dimension B, measured parallel to said
longest dimension A, said dimension B being equal to or larger than said dimension
A,
iii) said control electrodes have openings with a dimension E measured parallel to
said longest dimension D, said dimension E being equal to or larger than said dimension
D,
iv) in each of said openings at least one printing aperture is present, and
v) for each of said printing apertures present in each of said openings, B/A ≥ 1.10
and

.
[0021] In an other embodiment of the present invention,

and E/D ≥ 1.10.
4. Brief Description of the Drawings
[0022]
Fig. 1 is a schematic illustration of a prior art printhead structure comprising a
shield and control electrodes for use in of DEP.
Fig. 2 is a schematic illustration of two embodiments of a printhead structure according
to the present invention.
Fig. 3 is a schematic illustration of a cross-section of further embodiments of a
printhead structure according to the present invention.
Fig. 4 is a schematic illustration of a possible embodiment of a DEP device incorporating
a printhead structure according to the present invention.
5. Detailed Description of the Invention
[0023] Throughout this document the wording "control electrode" or "control electrodes"
is used to indicate the electrodes that are used to control the flow,of particles
through the printing apertures and that are associated with one or more printing apertures,
but a control electrode is never a common electrode for all printing apertures. These
"control electrodes" are located on a first side (face) of an insulating material
and are isolated from each other, so that different "control electrodes" can have
a different voltage.
[0024] Throughout this document the wording "shield electrode" is used to indicate a continuous
electrode located on a second side (face) of said insulating material, opposite to
the side (face) carrying the control electrodes. On the shield electrode a single
voltage is present and the shield electrode is a common electrode for all printing
apertures.
[0025] In the literature many devices have been described that operate according to the
principles of DEP (Direct Electrographic Printing). All these devices are able to
perform grey scale printing either by voltage modulation or by time modulation of
the voltages applied to control electrodes, controlling the flow of toner particles
from a toner container to a substrate. We have found that, when printing apertures
with small diameter are used in DEP, the image contrast that can be obtained (e.g.
the difference between density for control electrodes at ON-voltage and density for
control electrodes at OFF-voltage) is very dependent upon the type of printhead structure
used. If e.g. a printhead structure as described in US 3,689,935, made from 2 electrode
planes isolated by an insulating plastic member (P2-printhead structure), is used,
then many different levels of grey can be easily obtained by voltage modulation or
time modulation of the control voltage applied on said control electrodes, i.e. a
large tone scale can be printed. This is not only so for grey scale printing, but
also for the printing of a large tonal range in colour images. The voltage level needed
to block completely the toner flux, in order to get image parts with no density, is
rather high. In a printhead structure, wherein said insulating material is thin (a
thin insulating material is advantageous for preventing said printing apertures from
clogging), said high control voltages can short-circuit the shield electrode and the
individual control electrodes, through the printing aperture surrounded by both apertures.
This short-circuiting deteriorates the printhead structure and/or driving IC's leading
to malfunction of the printing device.
The printhead structures according to US 3,689,935 but with only a single plane of
control electrodes (P1-printhead structures) were found to provide a much higher image
contrast if compared with said P2-printhead structures, i.e. can only print a small
tone scale. It was found that short-circuiting and image degradation was less important
for these printhead structures. Moreover, it was found that the control voltage needed
to block the toner flux from toner applicator device to final image receiving member
was much lower than the control voltage needed for a printhead structure according
to a P2-structure. For printing images with enhanced density resolution (e.i. a large
number of density levels between maximum density and minimum density or having a large
tonal range or tone scale) said P1-printhead structures are less suitable.
[0026] Several modifications in printhead structures have been described in e.g. US 4,912,489,
US 5,170,185 and US 5,038,159. The printhead structures described in these documents
do alleviate some of the problem of P2 and/or P1 printhead structures, but the manufacturing
process for these adapted printhead structures is quite complicated making said printhead
structures expensive and less suitable for implementation into DEP-devices with an
excellent compromise between manufacturing cost and image quality.
[0027] Printhead structure of the P1 type, i.e. not comprising a shield electrode, showing
segmented control electrodes have been disclosed in, e.g. US 5,515,084, JP-A 61/110567
and EP-A 720 072. These modifications of a P1 type printhead structure do not overcome
the drawbacks of such a type of printhead structure and are still less well suited
for printing images with enhanced density resolution (e.i. a large number of density
levels between maximum density and minimum density or having a large tonal range or
tone scale)
[0028] It has been found that the problems above can be mastered when a printhead structure
of the P2 type is made wherein, either the shield electrode or the control electrodes
or both do not reach as far as the edge of the printing apertures. Therefore a printhead
structure is manufactured comprising, an insulating material (106c) having a first
and a second side, said first side carrying control electrodes (106a) associated with
printing apertures, said second side carrying a shield electrode (106b), wherein
i) said printing apertures have a longest dimension A, measured on said side of said
insulating material carrying said shield electrode and have a longest dimension D,
measured on said side of said insulating material carrying said control electrodes,
ii) said shield electrode has openings with a dimension B, measured parallel to said
longest dimension A, said dimension B being equal to or larger than said dimension
A,
iii) said control electrodes have openings with a dimension E measured parallel to
said longest dimension D, said dimension E being equal to or larger than said dimension
D,
iv) in each of said openings at least one printing aperture is present, and
v) for each of said printing apertures present in each of said openings, B/A ≥ 1.10
or E/D ≥ 1.10.
[0029] There are several embodiments of a printhead structure according to the present invention.
[0030] In a first embodiment, the control electrodes reach as far as the edges of the printing
apertures associated with each of the control electrodes, i.e.

and the shield electrode does not reach as far as the edges of the printing apertures.
Such a printhead structure has been illustrated in fig 2a. In this figure 106b is
the shield electrode, 106c represents the insulating material, and 107 represent a
printing aperture. In the figure 2a, only one printing aperture is present in the
opening of the shield electrode. The control electrode on the other side of the insulating
material is not shown. In this figure, A, represents the longest dimension of the
printing apertures measured on said side of said insulating material carrying said
shield electrode and B represents the dimension of the opening in the shield electrode
measured in the direction of said longest dimension (A). A cross section through such
a printhead structure, along the plane X,X' and X'' (figure 2a), is shown in figure
3a. The printing aperture (107) has a longest dimension A and the shield electrode
(106b) has an opening with dimension B measured in the same direction as dimension
A. Dimension B is larger than dimension A so that B/A ≥ 1.10. At the other side of
the insulating material (106c) a control electrode (106a) is present around printing
aperture 107. The control electrode extends as far as the edge of the printing aperture,
and the longest dimension D (i.e.

). A printhead structure, wherein more than one printing aperture is present in the
opening in the shield electrode, are also within the scope of this first embodiment
of a printhead structure according to the present invention. A printhead structure,
wherein the shield electrode 106b is only a thin track of conducting material surrounding
all arrays of printing apertures (107), as illustrated in fig 2b, is also within the
scope of this first embodiment of the present invention. In this first embodiment
of the present invention, when

, it is preferred that for each of the printing apertures, comprised in the opening
of the shield electrode, 1.5 ≤ B/A ≤ 15, it is more preferred that 2 ≤ B/A. ≤ 10.
[0031] Hereinafter the "longest dimension" of a printing aperture has to be understood as
the diameter of the circle defining said printing aperture in the case of circular
printing apertures, as the side of the square defining said printing aperture in the
case of square printing apertures, as the longest side of the rectangle defining said
printing apertures in the case of rectangular printing apertures, as the longest axis
of the ellipse defining said printing aperture in the case of elliptic printing apertures.
When the printing aperture is defined by a polygon (either regular or irregular),
the longest dimension is to be understood as the diameter of the smallest circumscribed
circle.
[0032] In a second embodiment of the invention, the shield electrode reaches as far as the
edges of the printing apertures, i.e.

, and E > D. It was found that such a P2 printhead structure also gives low incidence
of short-circuiting and makes it possible to print a large tone scale (i.e. many different
density levels) when the control electrodes surrounding the printing apertures were
not present as far as the edge of the printing apertures. Thus also a P2 printhead
structure, wherein the shield electrode reaches as far as the edges of the printing
apertures (i.e.

) and the control electrodes do not reach as far as the edges of the printing apertures
associated with them, is within the scope of this invention. Such a printhead structure
is illustrated in fig 3b. In figure 3b, the printing aperture (107) has a longest
dimension D, measured on said side of said insulating material carrying said control
electrodes and a longest dimension A, measured on said side of said insulating material
carrying said shield electrode, the shield electrode (106b) has an opening with dimension
B measured in the same direction as dimension A. At the other side of the insulating
material (106c) a control electrode (106a) is present around printing aperture 107.
The control electrode, has an opening with dimension E measured in the same direction
as dimension D. Dimension B is equal to dimension A (i.e. the shield electrode extends
as far as the edges of the printing aperture) and the dimension E > D, such that E/D
≥ 1.10. In this second embodiment of the present invention, for each of the printing
apertures, preferably, 1.25 ≤ E/D ≤ 15, and more preferably 2 ≤ E/D ≤ 10. A printhead
structure wherein more than one printing aperture is associated with a single control
electrode is within the scope of this embodiment of the present invention, as long
as for each of the printing apertures associated with said single control electrode
the relations between D and E, detailed above, are fulfilled.
[0033] In a third embodiment of the invention a printhead structure is provide wherein both
the control electrodes and the shield electrode do not reach as far as the edges of
the printing apertures. Such a printhead structure is illustrated in fig 3c. In figure
3b, the printing aperture (107) has a longest dimension D, measured on said side of
said insulating material carrying said control electrodes and a longest dimension
A, measured on said side of said insulating material carrying said shield electrode,
the shield electrode (106b) has an opening with dimension B measured in the same direction
as dimension A. At the other side of the insulating material (106c) a control electrode
(106a) is present around printing aperture 107. The control electrode, has an opening
with dimension E measured in the same direction as dimension D. Dimension B is larger
than dimension A (i.e. the shield electrode does not extend as far as the edges of
the printing aperture), and B/A ≥ 1.10 and the dimension E > D, (i.e. the control
electrode does not extend as far as the edges of the printing aperture), such that
E/D ≥ 1.10. In a preferred implementation of this third embodiment of the invention,
1.5 ≤ B/A ≤ 15 and 1.25 ≤ E/D ≤ 15; in a more preferred embodiment 2 ≤ B/A ≤ 10 and
2 ≤ E/D ≤ 10.
[0034] The insulating material contained in a printhead structure according to the present
invention can be any insulating material known in the art, e.g. ceramic materials,
glass, plastic, etc. It is preferred to use plastic materials as insulating material
in a printhead structure of the present invention or thin glass (thickness lower than
400 µm) having a failure stress (under tensile stress) equal to or higher than 1 x
10
7 Pa and an elasticity modulus (Young's modulus) equal to or lower than 10 x 10
10 Pa.
[0035] The thickness of the insulating material is preferably between 10 and 200 µm, more
preferably between 50 and 100 µm.
[0036] The printing apertures of a printhead structure according to the present invention
can have any form, they can be circular, elliptic, square, rectangular, etc. The printing
apertures in a printhead structure according to the present invention can be of the
type wherein each individual control electrode surrounds at least two apertures (107),
both with an aspect ratio AR > 1 and part of said control electrode separates said
apertures (107). Such printhead structure have been disclosed in EP-A 754 557
[0037] Printhead structures according to the present invention can be made in an easy and
convenient as known to those skilled in the art. It is e.g. possible to start from
conventional polyimide foil with double side clad copper surfaces. First of all the
control electrodes with printing apertures and conductive patterns are etched on one
side of said flexprint material. Second the pattern of the common shield electrode
is etched at the other side of said flexprint material. Both sides are registered
so that the centre of each printing aperture is well aligned for both shield electrode
side and control electrode side. The apertures can be made by different techniques
such as e.g. excimer laser burning from the control electrode side making use of the
copper control electrode as mask for the laser light. Additional cleaning such as
plasma etching can be applied in order to obtain a better quality regarding aperture
definition and insulating power. Additional thin protective dielectric coatings can
be applied over said conductive patterns and/or insulating material.
[0038] The insulation quality is improved by applying typical thin dielectric coatings above
said patterned structure.
Description of the DEP device
[0039] A DEP device, comprising a printhead structure according to this invention, comprises
essentially
a) toner delivery means,
b) means for attracting charged toner particles to a substrate,
c) means for forming a toner flow from said toner delivery means towards said substrate,
and
d) means for image wise modulating said toner flow.
Said means for image wise modulating said toner flow comprise a printhead structure
according to this invention.
[0040] In figure 4, a non limitative example of a device for implementing a DEP device incorporating
a printhead structure according to the present invention, is shown.
[0041] The DEP device shown in figure 4 comprises :
(i) a toner delivery means (101), comprising a container for developer (102) and a
magnetic brush assembly (103), this magnetic brush assembly forming a toner cloud
(104)
(ii) a back electrode (105)
(iii) a printhead structure, made from a plastic insulating film (106c), coated on
both sides with a metallic film. The printhead structure comprises one continuous
electrode surface, hereinafter called "shield electrode" (106b) facing in the shown
embodiment the toner delivering means and a complex addressable electrode structure,
hereinafter called "control electrode" (106a) around printing apertures (107), facing,
in the shown embodiment, the toner receiving member in said DEP device. The location
and/or form of the shield electrode (106b) and the control electrode (106a) can, in
other embodiments of a device for a DEP method, be different from the location shown
in fig. 4.
(iv) conveyer means (108) to convey an image receptive member (109) for said toner
between said printhead structure and said back electrode in the direction indicated
by arrow A.
(v) means for fixing (110) said toner onto said image receptive member.
The back electrode (105) of this DEP device can also be made to cooperate with the
printhead structure, said back electrode being constructed from different styli or
wires that are galvanically insulated and connected to a voltage source as disclosed
in e.g. US 4,568,955 and US 4,733,256. The back electrode, cooperating with the printhead
structure, can also comprise one or more flexible PCB's (Printed Circuit Board).
[0042] Between said printhead structure and the magnetic brush assembly (103) as well as
between the control electrode around the printing apertures (107) and the back electrode
(105) behind the toner receiving member (109) as well as on the single electrode surface
or between the plural electrode surfaces of said printhead structure different electrical
fields are applied. In the specific embodiment of a device, useful for a DEP method,
shown in fig 4. voltage V1 is applied to the sleeve of the magnetic brush assembly
103, voltage V2 to the shield electrode 106b, voltages V3
0 up to V3
n for the control electrode (106a). The value of V3 is selected, according to the modulation
of the image forming signals, between the values V3
0 and V3
n on a time-basis or grey-level basis. Voltage V4 is applied to the back electrode
behind the toner receiving member, the potential difference V4-V1 create a propulsion
field wherein toner particles flow from the toner delivery means to the image receptive
member. In other embodiments of the present invention multiple voltages V2
0 to V2
n and/or V4
0 to V4
n can be used.
[0043] In a DEP device according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, said
toner delivery means 101 creates a layer of multi-component developer on a magnetic
brush assembly 103, and the toner cloud 104 is directly extracted from said magnetic
brush assembly 103. In other systems known in the art, the toner is first applied
to a conveyer belt and transported on this belt in the vicinity of the printing apertures.
A device according to the present invention is also operative with a mono-component
developer or toner, which is transported in the vicinity of the printing apertures
(107), via a conveyer for charged toner. Such a conveyer can be a moving belt or a
fixed belt. The latter comprises an electrode structure generating a corresponding
electrostatic travelling wave pattern for moving the toner particles.
[0044] The magnetic brush assembly (103) preferentially used in a DEP device according to
an embodiment of the present invention can be either of the type with stationary core
and rotating sleeve or of the type with rotating core and rotating or stationary sleeve.
[0045] Several types of carrier particles, such as described in EP-A 675 417 can be used
in a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
[0046] Any toner particles, black, coloured or colourless, can be used in a DEP device comprising
a printhead structure according to the present invention. It is preferred to use toner
particles as disclosed in EP-A 715 218, that is incorporated by reference, in combination
with a printhead structure according to the present invention.
[0047] A DEP device making use of the above mentioned marking toner particles can be addressed
in a way that enables it to give black and white. It can thus be operated in a "binary
way", useful for black and white text and graphics and useful for classical bilevel
halftoning to render continuous tone images.
[0048] A DEP device according to the present invention is especially suited for rendering
an image with a plurality of grey levels. Grey level printing can be controlled by
either an amplitude modulation of the voltage V3 applied on the control electrode
106a or by a time modulation of V3. By changing the duty cycle of the time modulation
at a specific frequency, it is possible to print accurately fine differences in grey
levels. It is also possible to control the grey level printing by a combination of
an amplitude modulation and a time modulation of the voltage V3, applied on the control
electrode.
[0049] The combination of a high spatial resolution, obtained by the small-diameter printing
apertures (107), and of the multiple grey level capabilities typical for DEP, opens
the way for multilevel halftoning techniques, such as e.g. described in EP-A 634 862.
This enables the DEP device, according to the present invention, to render high quality
images.
EXAMPLES
[0050] A printhead structure was made from a polyimide film of 50 µm thickness (insulating
material 106c), double sided coated with a 17.5 µm thick copper film. The printhead
structure had two rows of printing apertures. On the back side of the printhead structure,
facing the receiving member substrate, a square shaped control electrode (106a) was
arranged around each aperture. Each of said control electrodes was individually addressable
from a high voltage power supply. On the front side of the printhead structure, facing
the toner delivery means, a common shield electrode (106b) was present. The printing
apertures where square and had a longest dimension, measured at the side of the shield
electrode, A, of 200 µm. The printing apertures had a longest dimension, measured
at the side of the control electrodes, D of 200 µm. The total width of the square
shaped copper control electrodes was 300 micron, the longest dimension of their opening
E was also 200 micron. The dimension of the opening in the common shield electrode,
measured in the direction of the longest dimension of the printing apertures present
in said opening of said shield electrode, B, was 300 µm. The ratio B/A was thus 1.50
and the ratio E/D was 1.00. Said printhead structure was fabricated in the following
way. First of all the control electrode pattern was etched by conventional copper
etching techniques. Then the shield electrode pattern was etched by conventional copper
etching techniques. The apertures were made by a step and repeat focused excimer laser
making use of the control electrode patterns as focusing aid. After excimer burning
the printhead structure was cleaned by a short isotropic plasma etching cleaning.
Finally a thin coating of PLASTIK70 (trade name), commercially available from Kontakt
Chemie, CRC Industries NV, Belgium was applied over both surfaces of said printhead
structure.
[0051] The toner delivery means (101) was a stationary core/rotating sleeve type magnetic
brush comprising two mixing rods and one metering roller. One rod was used to transport
the developer through the unit, the other one to mix toner with developer.
[0052] The magnetic brush assembly (103) was constituted of the so called magnetic roller,
which in this case contained inside the roller assembly a stationary magnetic core,
showing nine magnetic poles of 500 Gauss (0.05 T) magnetic field intensity and with
an open position to enable used developer to fall off from the magnetic roller. The
magnetic roller contained also a sleeve, fitting around said stationary magnetic core,
and giving to the magnetic brush assembly an overall diameter of 20 mm. The sleeve
was made of stainless steel roughened with a fine grain to assist in transport (Ra
< 50 µm).
A scraper blade was used to force developer to leave the magnetic roller. And on the
other side a doctoring blade was used to meter a small amount of developer onto the
surface of said magnetic brush assembly. The sleeve was rotating at 100 rpm, the internal
elements rotating at such a speed as to conform to a good internal transport within
the development unit. The magnetic brush assembly (103) was connected to an AC power
supply with a square wave oscillating field of 600 V at a frequency of 3.0 kHz with
0 V DC-offset.
[0053] A macroscopic "soft" ferrite carrier consisting of a MgZn-ferrite with average particle
size 50 µm a magnetisation at saturation of 29 emu/g (36.5 µT.m
3/kg) was provided with a 1 µm thick acrylic coating. The material showed virtually
no remanence.
[0054] The toner used for the experiment had the following composition : 97 parts of a co-polyester
resin of fumaric acid and propoxylated bisphenol A, having an acid value of 18 and
volume resistivity of 5.1 x 10
16 ohm.cm was melt-blended for 30 minutes at 110° C in a laboratory kneader with 3 parts
of Cu-phthalocyanine pigment (Colour Index PB 15:3). A resistivity decreasing substance
- having the following structural formula : (CH
3)
3N
+C
16H
33Br
- was added in a quantity of 0.5 % with respect to the binder. It was found that -
by mixing with 5 % of said ammonium salt - the volume resistivity of the applied binder
resin was lowered to 5x10
14 Ω.cm. This proves a high resistivity decreasing capacity (reduction factor : 100).
[0055] After cooling, the solidified mass was pulverized and milled using an ALPINE Fliessbettgegenstrahlmühle
type 100AFG (tradename) and further classified using an ALPINE multiplex zig-zag classifier
type 100MZR (tradename). The resulting particle size distribution of the separated
toner, measured by Coulter Counter model Multisizer (tradename), was found to be 6.3
µm average by number and 8.2 µm average by volume. In order to improve the flowability
of the toner mass, the toner particles were mixed with 0.5 % of hydrophobic colloidal
silica particles (BET-value 130 m
2/g).
[0056] An electrostatographic developer was prepared by mixing said mixture of toner particles
and colloidal silica in a 4 % ratio (w/w) with carrier particles. The tribo-electric
charging of the toner-carrier mixture was performed by mixing said mixture in a standard
tumbling set-up for 10 min. The developer mixture was run in the development unit
(magnetic brush assembly) for 5 minutes, after which the toner was sampled and the
tribo-electric properties were measured, according to a method as described in the
above mentioned EP-A 675 417, giving q = -7.1 fC, q as defined in said application.
[0057] The distance ℓ between the front side of the printhead structure (106) and the sleeve
of the magnetic brush assembly (103), was set at 450 µm. The distance between the
back electrode (105) and the back side of the printhead structure (106) (i.e. control
electrodes 106a) was set to 500 µm and the paper travelled at 1 cm/sec. The shield
electrode (106b) was grounded : V2 = 0 V. To the individual control electrodes an
(imagewise) voltage V3 between 0 V and -300 V was applied. The back electrode (105)
was connected to a high voltage power supply of +500 V. To the sleeve of the magnetic
brush an AC voltage of 600 V at 3.0 kHz was applied, without DC offset.
Examples 2-12
[0058] A printhead structure was fabricated in the same way as described for example 1,
except that the longest dimension of the printing apertures, measured at the side
of the shield electrode, (A), the longest dimension of the printing apertures, measured
at the side of the control electrodes, (D), the dimension of the opening in shield
electrode, measured in the direction of the longest dimension of the printing apertures
(B) and the dimension of the opening in the control electrode, measured in the direction
of the longest dimension of the printing apertures (E) were modified. The modifications
are summarized in table 1.
Comparative examples C1 and C2
[0059] For comparative examples C1 and C2 prior art printhead structures P2 and P1 were
used, fabricated in the same way as described above. For C1 both the shield electrode
and the control electrodes reached as far as the edges of the printing aperture. This
was a printhead structure of the P2 type.
For C2 the shield electrode layer was completely omitted and the control electrodes
reached as far as the edges of the printing apertures. This was a printhead structure
of the P1 type.
The printing
[0060] Grey scale images with 16 time-modulated levels were printed with all printhead structures
as tabulated in table 1.
The extent of the tone scale that could be printed with a printhead structure of the
P1 type, comparative example 2 (CE2), was measured as the average slope of the curve
D versus time-modulated grey level value in the D range 0.2 Dmax to 0.8 Dmax. This
extent of printed tone scale was set to be 1.00, and the extent tone scale that could
be printed with the other printhead structure of the examples and comparative example
were related to said extent of tone scale. A larger figure means that a larger tone
scale could be printed. These figure are presented in table 1 under the heading "ton".
The reliability of the printhead structure was determined as the number of defect
printing apertures (probably due to short-circuiting of shield and control electrode)
after applying a control electrode voltage of 500 V between said control electrodes
and shield electrode (or earth) for one hour. The number of defects in a P2 type printhead
(comparative example 1, (CE1)), was set to 1.00, the defects of the other printhead
structures were related to the number of defects of the printhead structure of the
P2 type, so that a lower figure is better. These values are also tabulated in table
1 under the heading 'def'.
TABLE 1
| Ex# |
Printing aper* |
Shield† |
Control+ |
B/A |
E/D |
Def |
Ton |
| |
A |
D |
B |
E |
|
|
|
|
| 1 |
200 |
200 |
300 |
200 |
1.50 |
1.00 |
20 |
212 |
| 2 |
200 |
200 |
350 |
200 |
1.75 |
1.00 |
7 |
164 |
| 3 |
200 |
200 |
400 |
200 |
2.00 |
1.00 |
2 |
152 |
| 4 |
200 |
200 |
1,100 |
200 |
5.50 |
1.00 |
0 |
118 |
| 5 |
200 |
200 |
3,000 |
200 |
15.0 |
1.00 |
0 |
113 |
| 6 |
200 |
200 |
5,000 |
200 |
25.0 |
1.00 |
0 |
113 |
| 7 |
200 |
200 |
7,000 |
200 |
35.0 |
1.00 |
0 |
112 |
| 8 |
200 |
200 |
20,000 |
200 |
200 |
1.00 |
0 |
106 |
| 9 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
120 |
1.00 |
1.20 |
50 |
243 |
| 10 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
140 |
1.00 |
1.40 |
40 |
243 |
| 11 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
150 |
1.00 |
1.50 |
25 |
236 |
| 12 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
170 |
1.00 |
1.70 |
15 |
212 |
| CE1 |
200 |
200 |
200 |
200 |
1.00 |
1.00 |
100 |
257 |
| CE2 |
200 |
200 |
np |
200 |
np |
1.00 |
0 |
100 |
* Longest dimension of the printing apertures :
A : measured at the side of the insulating material carrying the shield electrode
in µm.
D : measured at the side of the insulating material carrying the control electrode
in µm. |
| + B : dimension of the opening in the shield electrode measured in the direction of
longest dimension A, in µm. |
† : dimension of the opening in the control electrode measured in the direction of
longest dimension D, in µm.
Def : percentage of the number of defects compared to CE1
Ton : relative extension of the printable tone scale compared to CE2.
np : not present |
From table 1 it is clear that the printhead structures according to the present invention
can offer a combination of stable results without short-circuiting and the possibility
of printing a fairly large tone scale (a high density resolution).