FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to a method and an apparatus used in the process of electrostatic
printing and more particularly in Direct Electrostatic Printing (DEP). In DEP, electrostatic
printing on an image receiving substrate is performed by creating a flow of toner
particles from a toner bearing surface to the image receiving substrate and image-wise
modulating the flow of toner particles by means of an electronically addressable printhead
structure.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] In DEP (Direct Electrostatic Printing) the toner or developing material is deposited
directly in an image-wise way on a receiving substrate, the latter not bearing any
image-wise latent electrostatic image. The substrate can be an intermediate endless
flexible belt (e.g. aluminium, polyimide etc.). In that case the image-wise deposited
toner must be transferred onto another final substrate. Preferentially the toner is
deposited directly on the final receiving substrate, thus offering a possibility 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-A-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 isolation layer ;
- a shield electrode consisting of a continuous layer of conductive material on one
side of the isolation layer ;
- a plurality of control electrodes formed by a segmented layer of conductive material
on the other side of the isolation layer ; and
- at least one row of apertures.
[0006] Each control electrode is formed around one aperture and is isolated from each other
control electrode.
[0007] Selected electric potentials (only DC-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 support for a toner
receiving substrate 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 substrate, interposed in the modulated
particle stream. The receiving 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 electrodes may face the receiving
substrate. A DC-field is applied between the printhead structure and a single back
electrode on the receiving substrate. This propulsion field is responsible for the
attraction of toner to the receiving substrate that is placed between the printhead
structure and the back electrode.
[0008] A DEP printer wherein the printhead structure is a mesh instead of a insulating base
with printing apertures trough this base has been disclosed in
US-A-5 036 341. In this disclosure it is taught to introduce an AC-field with frequency between
2 and 5 kHz and peak voltages between 500 and 2000 V on the toner delivery means in
order to speed up the printing.
[0009] One of the recognised problems with both of these types of printhead structures,
the printing apertures are easily clogged by toner particles when the DEP device is
used over a longer period of time.
[0010] This problem of clogging of the printing apertures has been addressed in several
ways. In e.g.
US-A-4 491 855 different measures are disclosed to minimise clogging . It is proposed in this disclosure
to provide a conveying member on which a layer of toner particles is deposited and
to apply an AC voltage (300 V peak to peak and frequency of 4.5 kHz) between the toner
conveying member and the continuous layer of conductive material (shield electrode)
on the printhead structure. Due to this AC voltage the toner particles "jump" between
the toner conveying member and the surface of the printhead facing said toner conveying
member. It is believed that the "touching" toner particles will assist in delaying
the contamination of the printhead structure and clogging of the apertures. In this
disclosure also a special design of the apertures in the printhead structure and a
special selection of the material from which the printhead structure is made is also
claimed to assist in delaying the clogging. A last measure which is proposed is to
'clean' the printhead structure by periodical electric bursts (spark discharges).
Also in
US-A-4 478 510 the use of a spark discharge to remove toner particles adhered to the printhead is
disclosed.
[0011] In
US-A-4 876 561 clogging of the printhead is prevented by making the apertures large enough and/or
the thickness of the isolating layer small enough.
[0012] In
US-A-4 903 050 an AC voltage is applied to the back electrode as in
US-A-4 755 837, but this disclosure recommends the addition of a shutter and vacuum system is in
order to prevent the dislodged toner to fall onto the receiving substrate.
[0013] In
US-A-5 095 322 clogging of the apertures is prevented by applying to the shield electrode a pulsed
DC-voltage which is 180° out of phase if compared with the AC-voltage applied to the
charged toner conveyor. In an other embodiment a DC-biased AC voltage is applied to
the shield electrode with the same frequency as the AC voltage applied to the charged
toner conveyor but 180° out of phase is used to prevent clogging of the apertures
in the printhead.
[0014] Also mechanical ways to prevent clogging or to clean the printing apertures have
been disclosed. In, e.g.,
US-A-5 153 611,
US-A-5 202 704,
US-A-5 233 392 it is disclosed to prevent clogging of the printing apertures by using an ultrasonic
vibration applied to the printhead. In
US-A-5 283 594 the level of vibration applied to the printhead is different during writing time
and cleaning time. In
US-A-5 293 181 the printhead is vibrated in such a way that a mechanical propagating wave is created.
[0015] In
US-A-5 307 092 an anti-static coating is applied to the electrodes in the printhead so that any
tribocharge that accumulates during writing can be grounded. As a result the net tribocharge
on the printhead (which is unwanted and is responsible for unpredictable results and
clogging) is removed and a better long-time performance results.
[0016] In
WO-A-90 14959 the printhead is treated with pressurised air or vacuum so that the individual toner
particles do not adhere to the printhead for such a large amount if compared with
a printing engine not using the air treatment. In the same document an additional
improvement is described where by the magnetic toner particles are removed from the
printhead by using a much stronger magnetic field during the cleaning cycle than during
the writing cycle.
[0017] In
US-A-4 755 837 an AC voltage is used for the backing electrode during the cleaning cycle. In a preferred
embodiment the AC voltage on the back electrode is phase shifted by 180° if compared
with the AC field (400 V peak to peak, no frequency disclosed) that is used upon the
charged toner conveyor which is needed to obtain a high toner mist production, leading
to high optical densities and short printing times. Further on the AC voltage can
also have a certain DC-offset.
[0018] In
US-A-5 526 029 it is disclosed to use ionised air for blowing over the printhead so that the electrostatic
interaction Of the toner particles with the printhead is reduced and the toner particles
are removed more easily from it than if compared with patent application
WO-A 90 14959 where the air used is not pre-treated at all.
[0019] In
EP-A-780 740 a printhead structure, for a DEP (Direct Electrostatic Printing) device is disclosed
that comprises an insulating material, a slit, formed by two sides (SA and SB) of
said insulating material, as printing apertures and control electrodes characterised
in that only one of said two sides forming said slit carries control electrodes. In
such a printhead structure the chance of clogging of the printing apertures is lower
than in printhead structures wherein fine (maximum dimension around 400 µm) circular,
elliptical, rectangular or square printing apertures are used.
[0020] In
US-A-5 625 392 an edge electrode is described so that instead of individual apertures or a larger
slit as described in
EP-A-780 740 an even larger free zone between the toner applicator and the receiver exists, resulting
in even better properties regarding clogging of the printhead structure.
[0021] Said edge electrode system proposed in
US-A-5 625 392 suffers however from the drawback that, in order to obtain a good image contrast
between image parts of low density and image parts of high density, the overall applied
propulsion field between the toner applicator and the receiver on the back electrode
must be set to a rather low value, leading to only a moderate printing speed.
[0022] In
US-A-5 374 949 an AC-field is superimposed upon the voltage applied to the individual control electrodes.
Two different implementations have been described. In the first one image density
is obtained if an AC-field is set between the toner delivery means and the back electrode
while the control electrodes are kept at the ON-voltage. An additional AC-voltage
can be applied to said control electrodes. In the second implementation said AC-voltage
is applied to the control electrodes in the OFF-state. So it is described in said
patent application that image density is regulated by switching over from a first
DC-voltage to a second DC-voltage for said control electrodes, while on one of said
DC-voltages an additional AC-voltage is superimposed.
[0023] Thus there is still a need for further improved DEP devices with enhanced printing
speed and less clogging that are stable in time.
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0024] It is an object of the invention to provide a DEP device, i.e. a device for direct
electrostatic printing that can print at high speed with low clogging of the control
electrodes and with high maximum density and with a high degree of density resolution
(i.e. for producing an image comprising a high amount of differentiated density levels)
and spatial resolution.
[0025] A further object of the invention is to provide a DEP device that can be used with
a wide variety of types of toner particles, and that can print at high speed with
low clogging of the control electrodes, with high maximum density and with a printing
quality that is constant over a long period of time.
[0026] Further objects and advantages of the invention will become clear from the detailed
description herein after.
[0027] The objects of the invention are realised by providing a device for direct electrostatic
printing comprising
- a means for delivering charged toner particles, said means having a toner bearing
surface coupled to a means for applying a first electric potential to said surface,
- a means for creating a flow of said charged toner particles away from said surface,
- a means for passing an image receiving substrate in said flow,
- a printhead structure having printing apertures and control electrodes, placed between
said toner bearing surface and said image receiving substrate, leaving a gap (d) between
said toner bearing surface and said control electrodes, characterised in that
- said control electrodes are coupled to a means for generating a first AC-field on
said control electrodes and that
- a means for selectively switching said first AC-field on and off in accordance with
image data is placed between said control electrodes and said means for generating
said first AC-field for image-wise controlling said flow of toner particles.
[0028] The objects of the invention are further realised by providing a method for direct
electrostatic printing comprising the steps of
- providing charged toner particles on a surface of a means for delivering toner particles,
- creating an electric potential difference between said surface and an image receiving
substrate for creating a flow of charged toner particles towards said image receiving
substrate from surface,
- interposing a printhead structure, with printing apertures and control electrodes
in said flow of toner particles, for image-wise controlling said flow of toner particles,
- selectively switching an AC-field on and off, in accordance with image data, between
said control electrodes and said toner bearing surface,
- depositing said image-wise controlled flow of toner particles on said image receiving
substrate and
- fixing said toner particles to said substrate.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029]
Figure 1 shows the electric potentials in DEP devices according to the prior art.
Figure 2 shows the electric potentials in a DEP device according to a first embodiment
of the invention.
Figure 3 shows the electric potentials in a DEP device according to a second embodiment
of the invention.
Figure 4 shows a DEP device according to a first embodiment of the invention.
Figure 5 shows a DEP device according to a second embodiment of the invention.
DEFINITIONS
[0030]
- The wording "Toner bearing surface" is used in throughout this document to indicate
the surface of the means for delivering toner particles from where a flow of toner
particles to the image receiving substrate originates.
- The wording "OFF-period" is used to indicate the time during which the control electrode
is kept at an electric potential for blocking the passage of charged toner particles
through the printing apertures controlled by said control electrode.
- The wording "ON-period" is used to indicate the time during which the control electrode
is kept at an electric potential for letting charged toner particles pass through
the printing apertures controlled by said control electrode.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0031] It is known in the art of DEP (direct electrostatic printing), as described in the
background art section above, that, in a DEP device, in a DC-field, a flow of charge
toner particles is created between a means for delivering charged toner particles
and an image receiving substrate. A printhead structure, having control electrodes
around printing apertures, is interposed in said flow of toner particles for image-wise
controlling said flow of toner particles. From the prior art disclosures, it becomes
clear that the application of an AC-field to the surface of a means for delivering
toner particles be used to increase the printing speed by providing a denser flow
of toner particles in the vicinity of the printing apertures. This dense flow of toner
particles from the surface bearing charged toner particles to a back electrode is
a continuous flow, and this dense flow is image-wise modulated by putting a DC-voltage
upon the control electrodes present in said printhead structure. Said DC-voltage either
has a further propagating field (leading to image density) or a blocking field (leading
to no-image density).
[0032] Levelling or reversing the propulsion field rapidly leads to toner adherence upon
the printhead structure and to the wall of the printing apertures in the insulating
material of the printhead structure, this leads to clogging of the printing apertures
and thus to image artefacts and poor print quality, e.g., white dots or lines in even
density patches due to the fact that some printing apertures are totally clogged.
In most of the prior art disclosures, the flow of toner particles towards the printhead
structure is a continuous one and the image-wise modulation is done by image-wise
blocking the passage of the toner flow through printing apertures. The problems of
clogging is in the prior art mainly addressed by means to relieve the clogging once
it happened and not so much in ways to prevent the clogging.
[0033] It was surprisingly found that the flow of toner particles could image-wise be modulated
by image-wise modulating an AC-field existing over the spacing between the toner bearing
surface and the printing apertures. When no AC-field is formed between a particular
control electrode around a printing aperture and the toner bearing surface, that printing
aperture is totally blocked. When an AC-field is formed between a particular control
electrode around a printing aperture and the toner bearing surface, that printing
aperture lets charged toner particles pass in amounts related to the force of the
electric AC-field. Grey levels can be printed by, e.g., time modulating the presence
of the AC-field over the spacing between the toner bearing surface and the printing
apertures.
[0034] This way of image-wise modulating the flow of charged toner particles, greatly reduced
toner adhesion upon said printhead structure. It seems - without being bound by any
theory - that by lmage-wise varying the presence of an AC-field over the spacing between
the toner bearing surface and the printing apertures, the charged toner particles
are no longer continuously flowing from the toner bearing surface to the control electrodes,
where it is image-wise blocked in and freed from the printing apertures to print an
image. It seems on the contrary that a kind of image-wise modulated flow of charged
toner particles is generated when needed by image-wise applying an AC-field over the
gap between the toner bearing surface and the printing apertures.
[0035] Therefore, the present invention includes a device for direct electrostatic printing
comprising, apart from the usual components (i.e. means for creating a flow of toner
particles from a toner bearing surface towards an image receiving member, a printhead
structure with printing apertures and control electrodes interposed in said flow for
image-wise controlling said flow), means for image-wise switching an AC-field over
the gap the gap between the toner bearing surface and the printing apertures.
[0036] In the prior art devices for direct electrostatic printing, wherein an AC-field is
present over the gap between the toner bearing surface and the control electrode,
the AC-field is not image-wise changed and is always present. That AC-field, being
always present, makes toner particles continuously low from the toner bearing surface
to and in the printing apertures, when an aperture has to be blocked, a DC-voltage
largely different from the DC-voltage on the toner bearing surface is applied to block
the passage of toner particles. In a DEP device (a device for Direct Electrostatic
Printing) according to this invention an AC-field can be image-wise switched on and
off, creating a flow of toner particles when needed, so that high resolution printing,
even with pixels with dimensions around 100 µm, is possible.
[0037] In figure 1a, 1b and 1c the electric potentials on the shield electrode (SE), the
surface bearing the toner particles (TS) and the control electrode (CE) are shown
for prior art DEP devices. The notation CE
OFF designates the potential of the control electrode when the printing apertures blocks
the flow of toner particles and CE
ON the potential of the control electrode when the printing apertures lets the flow
of toner particles pass uninfluenced. The X-axis in the figure show the line time
(LT), i.e. the time necessary to print one line.
[0038] Throughout the text, the potentials on the shield electrode, on the control electrodes,
on the toner bearing surface, etc., are given for DEP devices using negatively charged
toner particles. It is obvious that, by changing the polarity of the potentials, the
present invention also works with positively charged toner particles.
[0039] Figure 1a shows the electric potentials for a DEP device as disclosed in
US-A-4 491 851. The shield electrode (SE) is kept at ground potential (i.e. 0 V, DC), the toner
bearing surface is kept at a DC-potential - 100 V, whereon an AC-potential with peak
to peak voltage 400 V and a frequency 1/λ
1 is applied. When he printing aperture is intended to stop the toner flow completely
(CE
OFF), a DC voltage of - 300 V is applied to the control electrode, when the printing
aperture is intended to let the toner flow uninfluenced (CE
ON), a DC voltage of - 0 V is applied to the control electrode, (i.e. the control electrode
is grounded).
[0040] Figure 1b shows the electric potentials for a DEP device as disclosed in
US-A-5 095 322. The shield electrode (SE) is kept at ground potential (i.e. 0 V, DC) whereon an
AC-potential with peak to peak value of 200 V and frequency 1/λ
2 is applied. The toner bearing surface is kept at a DC-potential - 100 V, whereon
an AC-potential with peak to peak voltage 400 V and a frequency 1/λ
1 is applied. Both AC-voltages are 180 degrees out of phase. When the printing aperture
is intended to stop the toner flow completely (CE
OFF), a DC voltage of - 300 V is applied to the control electrode, when the printing
aperture is intended to let the toner flow uninfluenced (CE
ON), a DC voltage of - 0 V is applied to the control electrode, (i.e. the control electrode
is grounded).
[0041] Figure 1c shows the electric potentials for a DEP device as disclosed in
US-A-5 374 949. The shield electrode (SE) is kept at ground potential (i.e. 0 V, DC). The toner
bearing surface is kept at a DC-potential - 100 V, whereon an AC-potential with peak
to peak voltage 400 V and a frequency 1/λ
1 is applied. When the printing aperture is intended to stop the toner flow completely
(CE
OFF), a DC voltage of - 300 V is applied to the control electrode and on this DC voltage
a small AC-voltage (e.g., 20 V peak to peak) with frequency 1/λ
3 is applied. When the printing aperture is intended to let the toner flow uninfluenced
(CE
ON), a DC voltage of - 0 V is applied to the control electrode, (i.e. the control electrode
is grounded). Since the AC-voltage applied on the control electrodes in the OFF-period
is very small compared to the DC-voltage and to the AC-voltage on the toner bearing
surface, (see fig. 4c of
US-A-5 374 949), there is both during the OFF-period and the ON-period an AC-field present over
the gap between the toner bearing member and the control electrode.
[0042] Figure 2 shows the electric potentials for an embodiment of a DEP device according
to this invention. The device according to this invention can comprise a shield electrode,
then, the shield electrode (SE) is preferably kept at ground potential (i.e. 0 V,
DC). The device can also be operated without shield electrode, therefore the figure
only shows the potentials on the toner bearing surface (TS) and the potential of the
control electrode when the printing apertures blocks the flow of toner particles (CE
OFF) and the potential of the control electrode when the printing apertures lets the
flow of toner particles pass uninfluenced (CE
ON). The toner bearing surface is kept at a DC-potential - 100 V, whereon an AC-potential
with peak to peak voltage 400 V and a frequency 1/λ
1 is applied. When the printing aperture is intended to stop the toner flow completely
(CE
OFF), a DC voltage of - 100 V is applied to the control electrode and an AC-potential
with peak to peak voltage 400 V and a frequency 1/λ
1 is applied on top of said DC-potential. The AC voltage on the toner bearing surface
and on the control electrode are in phase. Thus the AC-field on the control electrode
and the AC-field on the tone bearing surface balance each other out and no AC-field
exists over the gap between the toner bearing surface and the control electrodes when
the printing aperture has to block the toner flow. When the printing aperture is intended
to let the toner flow uninfluenced (CE
ON), a DC voltage of - 0 V is applied to the control electrode, (i.e. the control electrode
is grounded). Thus, an AC-field exists over the gap between the toner bearing surface
and the control electrodes when the printing aperture has to let toner particles pass
freely.
[0043] Figure 3 shows the electric potentials for an other embodiment of a DEP device according
to this invention. The device according to this invention can comprise a shield electrode,
then, the shield electrode (SE) is preferably kept at ground potential (i.e. 0 V,
DC). The device can also be operated without shield electrode, therefore the figure
only shows the potentials on the toner bearing surface (TS) and the potential of the
control electrode when the printing apertures blocks the flow of toner particles (CE
OFF) and the potential of the control electrode when the printing apertures lets the
flow of toner particles pass uninfluenced (CE
ON). The toner bearing surface is kept at a DC-potential of 0 V (i.e. it is grounded).
When the printing aperture is intended to stop the toner flow completely (CE
OFF), a DC voltage of 0 V is applied to the control electrode, and again no AC-field
exists over the gap between the toner bearing surface and the control electrodes when
the printing aperture has to block the toner flow. When the printing aperture is intended
to let the toner flow uninfluenced (CE
ON), an DC voltage of + 100 V is applied to the control electrode, on top of which an
AC-potential with peak to peak voltage 400 V and a frequency 1/λ
1 is applied. Again, an AC-field exists over the gap between the toner bearing surface
and the control electrodes when the printing aperture has to let toner particles pass
freely.
[0044] Thus in DEP devices according to the present invention the toner flow is completely
blocked when no AC-field is present over the gap between the toner bearing surface
and the control electrode that is strong enough to displace charged toner particles
over that gap into the printing aperture controlled by that control electrode. Thus,
DEP device wherein during the OFF-period of a control electrode (the period wherein
the control electrode blocks the printing aperture that it controls) a weak AC-field
is present over the gap between the toner bearing surface and the control electrode,
is within the scope of this invention even when, due to that AC-field, charged toner
particles are indeed detached from the toner bearing surface, but do not travel into
the printing aperture.
[0045] Grey levels can then be printed by bringing the control electrode and the toner bearing
surface only a fraction of the line time (LT) to the same electric potential, thus
blocking the toner flow for only a fraction of the line time (LT). This time modulation
is a preferred embodiment of the present invention. It is possible, for increasing
the number of grey levels that can be printed, to have a DC-voltage on the control
electrodes deviating from the DC-voltage on the toner bearing surface and/or to have
an AC-voltage on the control electrodes deviating from the AC-voltage on the toner
bearing surface. Thus it is possible to choose the strength of the AC-field over the
gap between the toner bearing surface and the control electrodes such that so that,
e.g. not D
max is formed, but only three quarter of D
max., half of D
max, a quarter of D
max, etc. By combining a time modulation with a modulation of the strength of the AC-field,
it is possible to print a higher number of density levels, than when using time-modulation
alone or using the modulation of the strength of the AC-field alone.
[0046] In figure 4 a DEP device according to the present invention is shown. In this device
the electric potentials on the different parts of the device are taken as described
above in the first embodiment of the invention.
[0047] The DEP device shown comprises means for delivering toner particles with a container
(101)for developer (102) wherein a magnetic brush (103) having a core (103a) wherein
magnets are present and a sleeve (103b) rotatably mounted around the core is present.
The developer (102) can be a mono component developer with magnetic toner particles
and then on the surface of the sleeve of the magnetic brush, toner particles are present,
i.e. the surface of the sleeve (103b) of the magnetic brush is the toner bearing surface.
The developer (102) can also be a multi-component developer containing magnetic carrier
particles and non-magnetic toner particles and then on the sleeve of the magnetic
brush carrier and toner particles are present, but the sleeve is still the toner bearing
surface in the sense of this invention. The magnetic brush (103) can have a fixed
core (103a) and a sleeve (103b) rotatably mounted around the core equipped with means
for rotating the core. In another embodiment, the core (103a) of the magnetic brush
is also equipped with means for rotating the core and can thus also be rotated and
the sleeve (103b) can be rotated around the core or kept stationary. (The means for
rotating the core and/or the sleeve are not shown in the figure). The part of the
magnetic brush that rotates, does so in the direction of arrow B. A device (118) for
generating a DC-voltage and an AC-voltage is connected to the sleeve of the magnetic
brush and applies a DC-voltage (DC1) and an AC-field (AC1) to said sleeve (the toner
bearing surface). Between said device for generating DC1 and AC1 and the toner bearing
surface, optionally a further means for providing a DC and/or AC-potential (116) to
the toner bearing surface may be present. The amount of developer on the toner bearing
surface is regulated by a doctor blade (113).
[0048] The device, as shown, further comprises a back electrode (105) connected to a DC
voltage source applying a voltage DC4 to the back electrode. An image receiving substrate
(108) is passed by means for moving the substrate (107) in the direction of arrow
A between the printhead structure (106) and the back electrode by conveying means
(107). The difference between voltage DC4 and voltage DC1 applies a DC-propulsion
field wherein a flow of toner particles (104) is created from the sleeve of the magnetic
brush ( the toner bearing surface) to the image receiving substrate on the back electrode.
The AC-field (AC1) on the sleeve of the magnetic brush makes the flow (104)of toner
particles denser than when no AC-field would be present.
[0049] A printhead structure (106), with an insulating material (106c) carrying control
electrodes (106a) is interposed in the flow (104) of toner particles. The control
electrodes (106a) can selectively be connected, over switch (115) either to a device
(119) for generating a DC-voltage (DC3) and an AC-field (AC3) or to said device (118)
for generating a DC-voltage (DC1) and an AC-voltage (AC1). Between said device for
applying a DC-voltage (DC3) and an AC-field (AC3) to the control electrode, optionally
a further means for providing a DC and/or AC-potential (117) to the control electrode
may be present.
[0050] By image-wise modulating the electric potential applied by switch (115) to the control
electrodes, the flow of charged toner particles is image-wise modulated in the vicinity
of the control electrodes. The voltage applied to the control electrodes can be varied
between a value totally blocking the passage of the toner particles (i.e. when switch
115 connects the control electrodes to when DC1 and AC1). The toner flow passes totally
unimpeded when AC3 = 0 and DC3 = 0 (i.e. when the control electrode is grounded).
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the control electrode is grounded for
printing full density through the printing aperture it controls and the grey levels
are printed by time modulating the switching of a switch (115) between the devices
providing DC3 and AC3 and the devices providing DC1 and AC1. In the simplest implementation
no device (119) for generating a DC-voltage (DC3) and an AC-field (AC3) is incorporated,
and the switch (115) switches the control electrode between the device (118) connected
to the toner bearing surface and the ground. It is possible, as described above, to
apply a DC-voltage (DC3) having a value different from DC1 and/or an AC-field (AC3)
having a value different from the AC-field (AC1) to the control electrode, for partially
blocking the printing apertures and at the same time again time modulating the switching
of switch 115. By doing so, the number of grey levels that can be printed can be enhanced.
In a simple implementation
[0051] The control electrodes in said printhead structure are placed apart from the toner
bearing surface, leaving a gap (d) between the control electrodes and the toner bearing
surface; a spacer (110) keeps the gap (d) constant during operation of the device.
[0052] The device comprises further means (109) for fixing the toner particles to the image
receiving substrate.
[0053] In figure 4, the toner bearing surface is the surface of the sleeve of a magnetic
brush, in figure 5 a device according to a further embodiment of the invention is
shown, wherein the toner bearing surface is the surface of an applicator carrying
toner particles derived from a non-magnetic mono-component developer.
[0054] The device, shown in figure 5 is the same as the one shown in figure 4, except for
the toner bearing surface, so only the numericals different from those used in figure
1 will be described. In a container (101) for non magnetic mono component developer
a roller (112) is present, having a surface. On this surface toner particles are applied
by means of a feeding roller (111) made of porous foamed polymers. A developer mixing
blade (114) mixes and transports said non-magnetic mono-component developer towards
said feeding roller. A doctor blade (113) regulates the thickness of the charged toner
particles upon the surface said roller (112), i.e. on the toner bearing surface.
[0055] In the DEP device shown in figure 4 only a device (118) only generating a DC-potential
(DC1) is connected to the sleeve of the toner bearing surface. The control electrodes
(106a) can over a switch 115 selectively be connected to a device (119) providing
an AC-field (AC3) and a device providing a DC-voltage (DC3) or to the device (118)
providing a DC-voltage (DC1) on the toner bearing surface. The DC potential (DC3)
and the AC-field (AC3) are image-wise modulated in order to modulate the toner flow
through the control electrodes. The voltage applied to the control electrodes can
be varied between a value totally blocking the passage of the toner particles when
the switch (115) connects the control electrode to the device (118) providing a DC-voltage
(DC1), and a value leaving the toner flow pass totally unimpeded when the switch (115)
connects the control electrode to the device (119) providing a DC-voltage (DC3)and
an AC-field (AC3). Intermediate settings of DC3 and AC3 make it again possible, as
described above, to increase the number of grey levels that can be printed.
[0056] In the figures 4 and 5 the toner bearing surface is the surface of the sleeve of
a magnetic brush (in fig 4), or the surface of an applicator for non-magnetic mono-component
developer (in fig 5). A DEP device according to this invention can also be equipped
with a charged toner conveyer (CTC) on the surface of which charged toner particles
are applied by a magnetic brush or an applicator for non-magnetic mono-component developer.
In this case the toner bearing surface is the surface of the CTC and the means for
applying the AC-field (AC1), are connected to that surface.
[0057] The control electrodes can be coupled to a means for generating an AC-field on said
control electrodes and a means for selectively switching said AC-field on and off
in accordance with image data, as in this invention, in any DEP device known in the
art. Typical DEP devices that can be adapted for producing a device according to this
invention are disclosed in, e.g.,
EP-A-795 802, EP-A-780 740, EP-A-740 224, EP-A-731 394, EP-A-712 055, US-A-5 606 402,
US-A-5 523 777, GB-A-2 108 432, US-A-4 743 926, etc..
[0058] The insulating material, used for producing printhead structure, useful in a DEP
device according to the present invention, can be glass, ceramic, plastic, etc. Preferably
said insulating material is a plastic material, and can be a polyimide, a polyester
(e.g. polyethylelene terephthalate, polyethylene naphthalate, etc.), polyolefines,
an epoxy resin, an organosilicon resin, rubber, etc.
[0059] The selection of an insulating material for the production of a printhead structure
useful in a DEP device according to the present invention, is governed by the elasticity
modulus of the insulating material. Insulating material, useful in the present invention,
has a elasticity modulus between 0.1 and 10 GPa, both limits included, preferably
between 2 and 8 GPa and most preferably between 4 and 6 Gpa. The insulating material
has a thickness between 25 and 1000 µm, preferably between 50 and 200 µm.
[0060] The back electrode (105) of a DEP device according to this invention, can also be
made to co-operate with the printhead structure, said back electrode being constructed
from different styli or wires that are galvanically isolated and connected to a voltage
source as disclosed in e.g.
US-A- 4, 568 ,955 and
US-A-4, 733, 256. The back electrode, co-operating with the printhead structure, can also comprise
one or more flexible PCB's (Printed Circuit Board).
[0061] The present invention incorporates the operation of a DEP device according to the
present invention in a method for direct electrostatic printing comprising the steps
of :
- providing charged toner particles on a surface of a means for delivering toner particles,
- creating an electric potential difference between said surface and an image receiving
substrate for creating a flow of charged toner particles towards said image receiving
substrate from surface,
- placing a printhead structure, with printing apertures and control electrodes in said
flow of toner particles, leaving a gap (d) between said toner bearing surface and
said control electrodes,
- selectively switching an AC-field on and off, in accordance with image data, over
said gap (d) between said toner bearing surface and said control electrodes, for image-wise
controlling said flow of toner particles,
- depositing said image-wise controlled flow of toner particles on said image receiving
substrate and
- fixing said toner particles to said substrate.
[0062] A DEP device according to the present invention can also be operated without back
electrode in a method for DEP printing on an insulating image receiving substrate,
having a first and a second face, comprising the steps of :
- applying a conductive layer upon said first face of said insulating substrate,
- connecting said conductive layer by conductive charge applying device to a voltage
source providing a first DC-potential on said substrate,
- providing charged toner particles on a surface of a means for delivering toner particles,
- creating an electric potential difference between said surface and an image receiving
substrate for creating a flow of charged toner particles towards said image receiving
substrate from surface,
- placing a printhead structure, with printing apertures and control electrodes in said
flow of toner particles, leaving a gap (d) between said toner bearing surface and
said control electrodes,
- selectively switching an AC-field on and off, in accordance with image data, over
said gap (d) between said toner bearing surface and said control electrodes, for image-wise
controlling said flow of toner particles,
- depositing said image-wise controlled flow of toner particles on said image receiving
substrate and
- fixing said toner particles to said substrate.
[0063] A method for direct electrostatic printing operating without back electrode has been
disclosed in European Application 96202228 filed on August 8, 1996.
[0064] A DEP device according to the present invention can further be operated in a method
for direct electrostatic printing with reduced banding comprising the steps of :
- creating a DC-potential difference between an image receiving substrate and a magnetic
brush assembly having a rotatably mounted core and a sleeve rotatably mounted around
said core;
- rotating said core at a rotational speed equal to or higher than 500 rotations per
minute and rotating said sleeve at a rotational speed equal to or lower than 10 rotations
per minute;
- applying a developer with toner particles and magnetically attractable carrier particles
on said magnetic brush assembly;
- creating a flow of toner particles directly from said magnetic brush assembly to said
image receiving substrate;
- interposing a printhead structure, carrying control electrodes in said flow of toner
particles,
- placing a printhead structure, with printing apertures and control electrodes in said
flow of toner particles, leaving a gap (d) between said toner bearing surface and
said control electrodes,
- selectively switching an AC-field on and off, in accordance with image data, over
said gap (d) between said toner bearing surface and said control electrodes, for image-wise
controlling said flow of toner particles,
- depositing said image-wise controlled flow of toner particles on said image receiving
substrate and
- fixing said toner particles to said substrate.
[0065] In this method the core is preferably kept stationary. A method and device for direct
electrostatic printing wherein the toner bearing surface is the sleeve of a magnetic
brush with a rotating core, has been described in European Application 96202286, filed
on August 14, 1996.
[0066] In a DEP device, according to the present invention, operating in the methods described
above, and wherein the surface of the sleeve of the magnetic brush is used as toner
bearing surface, (i.e. the toner flow originates directly from the surface of the
sleeve of the magnetic brush), any type of known carrier particles and toner particles
can successfully be used. It is however preferred to use "soft" magnetic carrier particles.
"Soft" magnetic carrier particles useful in a DEP device according to a preferred
embodiment of the present invention are soft ferrite carrier particles. Such soft
ferrite particles exhibit only a small amount of remanent behaviour, characterised
in coercivity values ranging from about 4 up to 20 kA/m (from 50 up to 250 Oe). Further
very useful soft magnetic carrier particles, for use in a DEP device according to
a preferred embodiment of the present invention, are composite carrier particles,
comprising a resin binder and a mixture of two magnetites having a different particle
size as described in
EP-B-289 663. The particle size of both magnetites will vary between 0.05 and 3 µm. The carrier
particles have preferably an average volume diameter (d
v50) between 10 and 300 µm, preferably between 20 and 100 µm. More detailed descriptions
of carrier particles, as mentioned above, can be found EP 675 417, that is incorporated
herein by reference.
[0067] It is preferred to use in a DEP device according to the present invention, toner
particles with an absolute average charge (|q|) corresponding to 1 fC < |q| < 20 fC,
preferably to 1 fC < |q| < 10 fC. The absolute average charge of the toner particles
is measured by an apparatus sold by Dr. R. Epping PES-Laboratorium D-8056 Neufahrn,
Germany under the name "q-meter". The q-meter is used to measure the distribution
of the toner particle charge (q in fC) with respect to a measured toner diameter (d
in 10 µm). From the absolute average charge per 10 µm (|q|/10µm) the absolute average
charge |q| is calculated. Moreover it is preferred that the charge distribution, measured
with the apparatus cited above, is narrow, i.e. shows a distribution wherein the coefficient
of variability (ν), i.e. the ratio of the standard deviation to the average value,
is equal to or lower than 0.33. Preferably the toner particles used in a device according
to the present invention have an average volume diameter (d
v50) between 1 and 20 µm, more preferably between 3 and 15 µm. More detailed descriptions
of toner particles, as mentioned above, can be found in EP-A-675 417. In fact any
toner known in the art can be used in a DEP-device according to this invention, it
can be toners produced by a pulverisation process, a polymerisation process, a coagulation
process, etc. Very good toner particles for use in any DEP device and thus also for
use in a DEP device according to this invention, are toner paticles as described in
US-A-5 633 110. In that disclosure the use in DEP of toner particles having as topological criterium
that the ratio of the length of the long axis of the projected microscopic image of
said particles to the length of the short axis is between 1.00 and 1.40, said ratio
being the average of the ratios measured on at least 20 different toner particles
and said toner particles after addition of 0.5 % by weight of fumed hydrophobic silica
having a specific surface area of 260 m
2/g show a ratio of apparent density (ρ
app) over real density (ρ
real)

[0068] 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.
[0069] 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 AC and/or DC-voltage applied on the control
electrodes 106a and/or by a time modulation of said AC an/or DC-voltage. 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 voltages, applied on the control electrode.
[0070] The combination of a high spatial resolution 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 with title "Screening method for a rendering device having
restricted density resolution". This enables the DEP device, according to the present
invention, to render high quality images.
EXAMPLES
EXAMPLE 1
The printhead structure.
[0071] A printhead structure (106) was made from a polyimide film of 50 µm thickness (106c),
double sided coated with a 5 µm thick copper film. The printhead structure (106) had
two rows of printing apertures. On the back side of the printhead structure, facing
the receiving member substrate, a rectangular shaped control electrode (106a) was
arranged around each aperture. Each of said control electrodes was connected over
2 MΩ resistors to a HV 507 (trade name) high voltage switching IC, commercially available
through Supertex, USA, that was powered from a high voltage power amplifier. On the
back side of the printhead structure, facing the back electrode, a common shield electrode
(106b) was present. The printing apertures were rectangular shaped with dimensions
of 200 by 100 µm. The total width of the rectangular shaped copper control electrodes
and connecting lines was 80 µm. The width of the aperture in the common shield electrode
was 1600 µm. Said printhead structure was fabricated in the following way. First of
all the control electrode pattern and 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, commercially available from Kontakt Chemie, was
applied over the control electrode side of said printhead structure.
The toner delivery means
[0072] The toner delivery means was a commercially available toner cartridge comprising
non magnetic mono component developer, the COLOR LASER TONER CARTRIDGE MAGENTA (M3760GIA),
for the COLOR LASER WRITER (Trade names of Apple Computer, USA). The toner bearing
surface is the surface of an aluminium roller (112), whereon tone particles are applied
by a feeding roller (111) The toner particles carried a negative charge.
The printing engine
[0073] The printhead structure, mounted in a PVC-frame (116), was bent with frictional contact
over the surface of the roller of the toner delivery means. The 50 µm thick polyurethane
coating was used as self-regulating spacer means (110).
[0074] A back electrode was present behind the paper whereon the printing proceeded, the
distance between the back electrode (105) and the back side of the printhead structure
(i.e. control electrodes (106a)) was set to 1000 µm and the paper travelled at 200
cm/min.
[0075] The back electrode was connected to a high voltage power supply, applying a voltage
DC4 of + 1000 V to the back electrode. To the toner bearing surface of the toner delivery
means a sinusoidally changing AC voltage (AC1) with 400 V peak to peak and a frequency
of 3 kHz was applied and a DC-offset (DC1) of -100 V. The DC-propulsion field, i.e.
the potential difference between DC4 and DC1, was 1100 V. To the individual control
electrodes an (image-wise-selected) voltage was applied selected from 0 V (printing
a pixel of maximum density) or the same voltage as applied to the toner delivery means
(DC1 and AC1 with the same amplitude and phase as the voltages applied to the toner
bearing surface: printing a pixel with minimum density). Grey scale images of a human
face and control wedges from maximum to minimum density were printed during several
minutes after which the image quality and toner accumulation upon said printhead structure
was observed. Said printing example showed extremely good results.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE
[0076] The same experiment was done as described in example 1 except that pixels with maximum
density were created by putting 0 V upon the control electrodes, while pixels of minimum
density were created by putting -280 V upon said control electrodes. In contrast to
example 1 already after having printed a few images, "lost lines" of white density
were observed in the printouts and toner accumulation upon said printhead structure
could be easily observed. In the wedges also the band of maximum density showed different
white lines that only disappeared after printing for a certain time at maximum density.
EXAMPLE 2.
[0077] The same experiment as described in example 1 was repeated except that the toner
delivery means was grounded and to the control electrodes a sinusoidally changing
AC-field of 400 V (peak to peak) with -100 V DC offset ( 3 kHz) was used for pixels
of maximum image density while only 0 V DC was used for pixels of minimum image density.
Compared to example 1 only one AC signal was necessary and phase shifting compared
to the AC applied towards the toner bearing surface, due to the capacitance of the
different control electrodes, could not interfere. The maximum image density was lowered
to 90% compared with example 1 but no missing lines nor toner accumulation upon said
printhead structure could be observed.