FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to a printing apparatus for large format printing. It relates
especially to a large format printer comprising electrostatographic printing devices.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] In large format printing, e.g. poster printing, billboard printing, sign printing,
the weatherability of the print is very important. In that area silk-screen printing
is still a dominant printing method. This method has however many drawbacks : first
of all it is rather time consuming since for every colour a dedicated screen has to
be made and printed, the method is basically analogue and not well compatible with
digital input files.
[0003] More and more images to be printed are available in digital form, so that also in
the printing of large formats, digital addressable printing techniques become indispensable.
[0004] A well known digital addressable printing technique that is useful for large format
printing is ink-jet printing, both with water based inks and with solvent based inks.
An example of an ink-jet printer for large format printing can be found in, e.g.
US-A-5 488 397, wherein a printer is disclosed having two or more parallel ink-cartridges shuttling
over the width of the substrate to be printed while the substrate moves in a direction
basically perpendicular to the direction of movement of the shuttling ink-cartridges.
[0005] In
WO-A-96/01489 an ink-jet printer for large format printing is disclosed wherein a single ink-cartridge
shuttles over the substrate to be printed.
[0006] In
US-A-4 864 328 an in-jet printer is disclosed, wherein only one printing engine (ink-jet head) having
a multiple array of nozzles is moved as a shuttle over the paper.
[0007] In
EP-A-526 205 again an ink-jet printer is disclosed, wherein only one printing engine (ink-jet
head) having a multiple array of nozzles is moved as a shuttle over the paper.
[0008] A commercial ink-jet printer IDANIT 162Ad (trade name) available from Idanit Technologies,
Israel, uses multiple ink-jet printheads mounted in a staggered position over the
width of the substrate to be printed. In this device the printing substrate has to
pass several times under the array of staggered ink-jet printheads while between each
pass the printheads are slightly moved with respect to the drum in a direction parallel
to the width of the substrate. This multi-pass printing enhances the resolution that
can be printed, while in the printhead itself the nozzle can be positioned fairly
far apart. The same concept (but with much less printheads) has also be commercially
implemented in printers such as the Lasermaster DesignWinder, Iris Realist, Stork
Textile Proofer, Polaroid DryJet, ... and is e.g. further described in
WO-A-96/34762.
[0009] Although ink-jet printing provides the possibility for printing large formats in
short time, the resulting printing quality is not always up to the demands, the stability
of the image in, e.g. billboards where the image has to be weatherproof leaves still
room for improvement.
[0010] In
US-A-5 138 366 a thermal printer using at least two thermal printing heads is described for printing
on large substrates. The maximum format for a commercially available large format
printer using thermal technology, however, is 36 inch, as provided by the Matan Sprinter,
Israel.
[0011] In
US-A-5 237 347 an electrophotographic printer is disclosed wherein a single photoconductor is exposed
to the light of several exposure units, so a large latent image can be written on
the photoconductor and after development be transferred to a final substrate. The
printer having the largest printing width for printing full colour images based on
electrophotographic techniques, is e.g. the Xeikon DCP50, having a printing width
of 50 cm. In electrostatic technology full colour printing machines having a printing
with of 54 inch are available, said devices being fed with liquid electrophotographic
developer.
[0012] In
WO-A-96/18506 a shuttling printer using more than one Direct Electrostatic Printing (DEP) engine
is disclosed wherein these engines are placed one after the other for printing multi-colour
swaths.
[0013] In DEP (Direct Electrostatic Printing) toner particles are deposited directly in
an image-wise way on a receiving substrate, the latter not bearing any image-wise
latent electrostatic image.
[0014] 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, or from electrophotography in which an additional step and additional
member is introduced to create the latent electrostatic image (photoconductor and
charging/exposure cycle).
[0015] 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.
[0016] Each control electrode is formed around one aperture and is isolated from each other
control electrode.
[0017] Selected electric 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 perpendicular 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.
[0018] In
EP-A-849 087 a single pass large format printer is disclosed, having at least two printing engines
(DEP engines or electrophotographic engines) which are staggered with respect to the
printing direction so that a large format image can be printed which is larger in
size than the printing width of one of said printing engines.
[0019] In
EP-A-849-645 a large format printer is disclosed having a page wide DEP-printhead structure combined
with multiple smaller sized toner applicator modules, and in
EP-A-849 640 a large format printer is disclosed having a page wide photoconductor combined with
multiple smaller sized toner delivery means.
[0020] In the art of printing large formats, however, slight density fluctuations between
neighbouring image swaths easily lead to overall image deterioration. This phenomenon
can be seen in shuttle printers in which neighbouring printing swaths do, although
they receive the same image input, not always print at the same density. When this
phenomenon appears, banding is seen in the final image. Also in page wide printers,
the printout from neighbouring printing units does not always have exactly the same
density although all printing units are activated by the same digital image input.
This leads again to the problem of uneven density and banding in the final image.
[0021] Thus there is still a need for further improved large format printing devices making
it possible to print at elevated speed with no or very low banding.
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0022] It is an object of the invention to provide a printer for high speed printing of
large format images with good image quality.
[0023] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a printer, printing large
format images with a high printing speed, using dry printing methods and toner particles.
[0024] It is still a further object of the present invention to provide a printer, printing
large format images with a high printing speed, without banding or problems of density
variations.
[0025] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a printer for printing
large format images at high printing speed with good long term stability and reliability.
[0026] Further objects and advantages of the invention will become clear from the description
hereinafter.
[0027] The objects of the invention are realised by providing a single pass printer, having
a printing width (PW) for printing a toner image on a substrate, the substrate having
a width (WS) and a length (LS), wherein, a number n, equal to or larger than 2, of
printing engines each with a container for developer, said container having an active
portion and with a printing width PWE
i, in a direction of a longitudinal axis, smaller than said printing width PW is provided,
said number n being chosen such that

characterised in that
i) a single central conditioning unit for controlling and monitoring the condition
of the developer is provided, and
ii)said central conditioning unit is equipped with means for circulating said developer
to all of said n printing engines and back to said central unit.
[0028] Preferably said printing width is at least 40 cm, and said longitudinal axes are
essentially parallel.
Preferably said printing engines are electro(stato)graphic engines, especially Direct
Electrostatic Printing (DEP) engines, or electrophotographic engines.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029]
Figure 1 is a schematic illustration of a large format single pass printer with at
least 2 printing engines and with a central conditioning unit according to the present
invention.
Figure 2 shows schematically an other embodiment of a large format single pass printer
with at least 2 printing engines and with a central conditioning unit according to
the present invention.
Figure 3 shows schematically a large format single pass printer that can be equipped
with a central conditioning unit according to the present invention.
Figure 4 shows schematically an other implementation of a large format single pass
printer that can be equipped with a central conditioning unit according to the present
invention.
Figure 5 shows schematically a large format single pass printer with at least 2 printing
engines and with a central conditioning unit according to the present invention, wherein
the printing engines are engines for Direct Electrostatic Printing.
Figure 6 shows schematically a large format single pass four colour printer using
at least two electrophotographic printing engines equipped with central conditioning
units according to this invention.
Figure 7 shows schematically a large format single pass printer with a shuttle using
at least two electrophotographic printing engines to be equipped with central conditioning
units according to this invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Definitions
[0030] In this document "central conditioning unit" is used to describe a unit wherein the
condition of the developer is monitored, controlled and wherein the condition of the
developer (especially with respect to the concentration and the charge of the toner)
is kept constant during printing.
[0031] The wording "active portion of container for developer" is used to indicate the portion
of the container wherein either the sleeve of the magnetic brush, in a printing engine
working with a developer containing magnetic particles, or the surface dispensing
roller, in a printing engine working with a non-magnetic mono component developer,
are loaded with charged toner particles via direct contact between the toning material
and the sleeve or the dispensing roller. In the case of a container for developer
with a magnetic brush assembly said active portion is e.g. the portion in the magnetic
brush assembly in which developer is jumped to the sleeve of the magnetic brush by,
e.g. a rotating transport screw. Additional transport screws or paddles delivering
developer to said active portion, but not delivering said developer material directly
to said sleeve is the "non-active portion of the container".
[0032] In this document the wording "toner transferring element or elements" is used to
designate those parts of a printing engine used to provide a toner image either on
an intermediate image bearing member or on a final substrate to be printed. In a DEP
printing engine, the "toner transferring element" or "element for applying toner particles"
is or are the row(s) of printing apertures in the printhead structure. In an electrophotographic
printing engine, the "toner transferring element" or "element for applying toner particles"
is or are the latent image bearing member(s).
[0033] In this document the wording "staggered printing engines" is used to indicate a number
of printing engines (at least two), each of the printing engines comprising a toner
transferring element, that are positioned in the printer so that at the longitudinal
axis of the toner transferring means, comprised in at least two of the number of printing
engines do not coincide.
[0034] The wording "substrate" or "image receiving element" can in this document mean a
final image receiving element whereon the toner image is printed, as well as an "intermediate
image receiving member" used to accept a toner image and to transfer that image to
a final image receiving member.
[0035] The width of the image receiving substrate (WS) is the dimension of that substrate
that is essentially perpendicular to the direction of movement of the substrate in
the printer.
[0036] The length of the image receiving substrate (WL) is the dimension of that substrate
that is essentially parallel to the direction of movement of the substrate in the
printer.
[0037] It was found and described in
EP-A-849 087, that by using at least two and preferably at least three printing engines, with
a printing width PWE smaller than the total printing width PW of the printer, spread
over the width of the substrate to be printed and arranged so that the longitudinal
axis of the toner transferring elements of at least two of the printing engines do
no coincide, a fast high resolution printer for large (large means herein having a
surface of at least 0.25 m
2 and an image width of at least 30 cm) formats could be built. A printer according
to this invention can be constructed in such a way that any printing width, from 10
cm up to more than, e.g., 5 meter, can be realised. Preferably a printer according
to this invention is manufactured such as to have a printing width (PW) of at least
40 cm, preferably of at least 60 cm and more preferably of at least 120 cm.
[0038] A printer according to this invention is a "single pass" printer, i.e. the substrate
passes the printing engines only once. For example, a printer, wherein several printing
engines are rigidly mounted over the total width of the substrate to be printed, so
that the longitudinal axis of the toner transferring elements of at least two of the
printing engines do not coincide, and that is equipped with means for moving said
substrate with respect to said printing engines in a single direction, is a single
pass printer according to the present invention. In a single pass printer all the
image information being adapted to be printed with printing engines with width WPE,
(i.e. a printing line) is printed in its totality on an area of the substrate being
present near the printing engines and the substrate is moved further on, an a further
line is printed, and so on.
When the toner concentration in the developer is not constant over the printing time,
the amount of charged toner particles that can be brought to the substrate by the
printing engine is also fluctuating in the time, which leads to reduced image quality.
It is known in the art to control and monitor the condition of the developer - i.e.
ratio of amount of toner particles to the amount of carrier particles, charge of the
toner particles, etc. - and to automatically adapt the developer condition to the
image density so that the engine prints, when driven by the same image data, the same
optical density level. Means for doing so are disclosed in, e.g., EP-A-785 484, US-A-5
559 579, EP-A-687 962, US-A-5 420 617, US-A-5 231 452, etc..
[0039] In the case of a printer wherein n printing engines, each having a printing width
WPE smaller than the printing width PW, are spread over the total printing width so
that the total printing width can be printed in a single pass, it must not only be
assured that the amount and the charge of the toner particles do remain constant over
the printing time within each of the printing engines, but also that at any moment
of the printing in each of the printing engines the same amount of toner particles
is brought to the toner transferring means and that the (average) charge of the toner
particle is also the same. It seems straightforward to implement, in such a printer
the teachings concerning the monitoring of the condition of the developer to the developer
used in each individual printing engine separately and have all printing engine giving
the same image density when driven by the same image data.
[0040] During experimentation, it was however found that, in a printer as described immediately
above, when the condition of the developer was monitored for each of the printing
engines separately, the printing quality in terms of banding deteriorated with the
printing time, due to the fact that the change in developer condition with the time
was, in spite of the monitoring in each printing engine separately, still not the
same for all the printing engines.
[0041] Further experimentation revealed that when the condition of the developer was controlled
in a central conditioning unit, and when all printing engines received developer from
this central conditioning unit, the image quality reached in a printer wherein n printing
engines, each having a printing width WPE smaller than the printing width PW, are
spread over the total printing width so that the total printing width can be printed
in a single pass, did not or almost invisibly change with the printing time.
[0042] Thus the use of a central conditioning unit, as in the present invention, did not
only simplify the large format single pass printer and make it less expensive and
less bulky (without such a central unit every printing engine needs to have its own
developer control and monitoring unit) but did also lead to better image quality that
remained unaltered over a longer period of printing.
[0043] It was found that for keeping - in a printer as described above - the developer in
perfect condition with the aid of a central conditioning unit it was necessary that
the developer circulated quite rapidly from the central conditioning unit to the printing
engines and back. Preferably the circulating speed is chosen such that at any moment
during printing at most 25 % by volume of the developer is present in the active portion
of the container for developer in the printing engines while at least 75 % are continuously
being circulated through the central conditioning unit for keeping its condition constant.
[0044] For keeping the condition of the developer constant, the central conditioning unit
can be connected not only to a circuit for circulating developer to all printing engines
but also to a reservoir of fresh toner particles. The connection with said reservoir
is equipped with a valve that selectively can be opened and closed depending on the
condition of the developer in the central conditioning unit.
[0045] Moreover to reduce waste, the toner particles that are not used in the transfer to
the substrate, can be recovered and also connected in the central conditioning unit
so that these non-used toner particles are recycled instead of simply dumped.
[0046] In figure 1 a schematic view of a central conditioning unit useful in this invention
is shown coupled to three printing engines (100a, 100b and 100c). Each of printing
engines comprises a container (101a, 101b and 101c) for developer from where the toner
particles are brought to the toner transfer means (not shown). In the heart of the
central unit a container (122) is present wherein the developer (102) containing toner
particles (102a) and carrier particles (102b) can be mixed by one or more mixing means
(107). The mixing provides a tribo-electric charge on the toner particles. The container
is coupled to inlets (120a, 120b, 120c) over a collection vessel (120') for the developer
circulating between the containers for developer of each of the printing engines and
the container (122). Means for moving (116) the developer towards the container are
also provided. The means for moving the developer (116, 116a) or the non-used toner
particles (116b) can be any means known in the art, e.g. paddles moved by a motor,
pumps, Archimedian screws, etc. The container contains further an outlet (121) coupled
to each of the printing engines, this outlet is also provided with means (116a) for
moving the conditioned developer towards the various printing engines using a distribution
box (121') through ducts (121a, 121b and 121c). The container (122) is further coupled
to a vessel (119) containing fresh toner particles , said vessel being coupled to
said container over valve (119a) that can selectively be opened and closed. The container
(122) is coupled to means for monitoring the condition of the developer i.e. to means
for measuring the ratio of toner to carrier particles (118) and/or the charge of the
toner particles. The means for measuring the ratio of toner to carrier particles (118)
and/or the charge of the toner particles are coupled to the valve (119a) for selectively
opening and closing said valve depending on the measured result of the developer condition
and the intended one. Optionally said means for measuring the ratio of toner to carrier
particles (118) and/or the charge of the toner particles can be coupled to the mixing
means (117) so that also the mixing can be used to control the charge of the toner
particles to a predetermined constant value. The means for moving (116, 116b) the
non-used toner particles and the developer from the printing engines towards the container
and the means (116a) for moving the conditioned developer from the central conditioning
unit towards the various printing engines are equipped for giving such a circulating
speed to the developer that at any moment during printing at most 25 % by volume of
the developer is present in the active portion of the container for developer in (101a,
101b and 101c) the printing engines while at least 75 % are continuously being circulated
through the central conditioning unit for keeping its condition constant. The ducts
connecting the central conditioning unit with the various printing engines can be
made from rigid material as well as of flexible material. It is preferred to use ducts
in flexible polymeric material.
[0047] In figure 2, a schematic view of a central conditioning unit useful in this invention
is shown coupled to three printing engines (100a, 100b and 100c) as in figure 1. In
this figure the printing engines are further equipped with means (114a, 114b and 114c)
for collecting non used toner particles, by doing so the amount of waste during printing
is minimised. The central conditioning unit is coupled to said means for collecting
the non-used toner particles using a collection vessel (115') through ducts (115a,
115b and 115c). Means (116b) are provided to bring the non-used toner particles from
the printing engines to the container (122) in the central conditioning unit, wherein
the non-used toner particles are mixed with the circulating developer and used again.
[0048] This is a preferred embodiment of this invention.
[0049] The distribution box (121') can be omitted and the separate ducts (121a, 121b and
121c) can originate directly from the container (122) of the central unit for controlling
and monitoring the developer. Also the collection vessels (115' and 120') can be omitted
and the inlets (115a, 115b, 115c, 120a, 120b and 120c) can be connected directly to
the container (122) of the central unit for controlling and monitoring the developer.
It is also possible to omit collection vessel 115' and guiding the non-used toner
particles directly into the ducts for circulating the developer. By doing so the total
printer is simplified as the means for moving the non-used toner particles to the
central conditioning unit can also be omitted.
[0050] A printer wherein n printing engines, each having a printing width WPE smaller than
the printing width PW, are spread over the total printing width so that the total
printing width can be printed in a single pass can be constructed as shown in the
schematic perspective view in figure 3. Three printing engines 100a, b and c), each
with a printing width WPEa, WPEb and WPEc and a respective longitudinal axis in the
direction of said printing width are positioned in a staggered configuration under
an image receiving substrate (109), having a width (WS) and a length (LS) and travelling
in the direction of arrow A. (in fig 2. the substrate is shown as transparent for
the sake of clarity). The respective widths of the printing engines, the number, n,
of printing engines and an optional overlap of some or all of the printing engines,
is chosen in such a way that the desired printing width (PW), preferably larger than
40 cm, is reached, therefore said number n is chosen such that

[0051] It is preferred that the respective longitudinal axis of the respective printing
engines are essentially parallel to each other and to the width of the substrate.
In figure 3, the three staggered printing engines are considered as a set of printing
engines. Such a set of printing engines can be used to print a single colour and when
this is in fact done, then a colour printer according to this invention comprises,
multiple sets of staggered printing engines, e.g., one set for each colour to be printed.
For example, a printer according to the first specific embodiment of this invention,
wherein each set of staggered printing engines prints only one colour, will for printing
four colours, e.g., yellow, magenta, cyan and black (YMCK), comprise four sets of
staggered printing engines. In such a printer each of said four sets of printing engines
is preferably coupled to a central unit for controlling and monitoring the developer
according to this invention.
[0052] In figure 4 a schematic perspective view of a further large format single pass printer
that beneficially can equipped with a central conditioning unit according to this
invention is shown.
[0053] Five printing engines (100a, b, c, d, and e), each with a printing width WPEa, WPEb,
WPEc, WPEd and WPEe and respective longitudinal axis in the direction of said widths
are rigidly arranged so that the respective longitudinal axis are essentially parallel
to each other and that the centre points of the respective printing widths are on
one line. This line is preferably essentially parallel to the width (WS) of the substrate
to be printed. The respective longitudinal axis form an angle α (0°< a < 90°) with
the line through the centre point. Preferably the respective widths of the printing
engines are equal and the number of printing engines installed for realising a printer
with printing width (PW) is determined as a function of the width of the printing
engine and angle α according to the formula :

. When it is desired to achieve a large printing width (PW) with only a limited number
of printing engines the angle a can be calculated from the formula above.
[0054] E.g. for a printer with printing width 80 cm, 3 printing engine each with width 30
cm, the angle α is minimally 27°.
[0055] In figure 4, the five printing engines are considered as a set of printing engines.
Such a set of printing engines can be used to print a single colour and when this
is in fact done, then a colour printer according to this invention comprises, multiple
sets of printing engines, e.g., one set for each colour to be printed, arranged as
shown in figure 4. For example, a printer according to the second specific embodiment
of this invention, wherein each set of printing engines print only one colour, will
for printing four colours, e.g., yellow, magenta, cyan and black (YMCK), comprise
four sets of printing engines. These sets can then be located one after an other and
the substrates moves past said four sets, but since each set prints the totality of
a line at once in one colour, the printer is still a single pass printer. In such
a printer each of said four sets of printing engines is preferably coupled to a central
unit for controlling and monitoring the developer according to this invention.
[0056] The printing engines, used in this invention, are preferably electro(stato)graphic
printing engines and especially electrophotographic and direct electrostatic printing
(DEP) engines. Preferably the printing engines are direct electrostatic printing engines.
Typical DEP devices useful for implementing the present invention have been disclosed
in, e.g. EP-A 675 417, EP-A 708 386, EP-A 710 897, EP-A 710 898, EP-A 731 394, EP-A
736 822, US-A-5 539 438, US-A-5 202 704, US-A-5 283 594, US-A-5 036 341, US-A-5 374
949, US-A-4 814 796, US-A-5 204 696, US-A-5 327 169, etc.
[0057] In a very preferred embodiment of the invention, a large format printer using at
least two printing engines coupled to a central conditioning unit has DEP engines
as described in European Application 98202607.2 filed on August 3, 1998.
[0058] A schematic, non-limitative, example of a large format printer incorporating a central
conditioning unit according to this invention and having at least 2 DEP engines (engines
for Direct Electrostatic Printing) each with printing width WPE smaller than the printing
width of the printer is shown in figure 5. The printer comprises means for moving
a substrate (109) to be printed in the direction of arrow A at linear speed LSS, and
means for fixing (110) the toner image to the substrate. Two identical DEP engines
(100a and 100b) are shown, coupled to a single central conditioning unit. Each of
the DEP engines has a back electrode (105) located on the same first side of the substrate
to be printed, the back electrodes are kept at a DC-voltage (V4). This voltage is
preferably the same in all DEP engines present in the printer. On the second side
of the substrate, in each DEP engine a population of charged toner particles, is generated
in a magnetic brush assembly (104), with a non-magnetic sleeve (104b) and a magnetic
core (104a). By means of a DC-field (V5) and/or an AC-field (AC1), charged toner particles
are jumped from said sleeve (104b) of the magnetic brush (104), rotating in the direction
of arrow C with a linear surface speed, LSM to the surface (103a) of a Charged Toner
Conveyer (CTC) (103), that has a radius R and that rotates in the direction of arrow
B at a linear surface speed. The surface of the CTC is kept at a DC voltage (V1) and/or
an AC voltage (AC2). The DC voltage (V1) on the surface of the CTC is different from
the DC voltage (V4) on the back electrode. Thus a propulsion field is created between
the surface of the CTC and the back electrode wherein a flow (111) of charged toner
particles from the CTC to the back electrode is created. A printhead structure (106)
comprising printing apertures (107) and a common shield electrode (106b) is placed
in that flow. The surface of the CTC is moved near the printing apertures (107) to
bring said charged toner particles in the development zone (113). This development
zone is the space between the surface of the CTC and printhead structure wherein the
propulsion field creates said flow (111) of toner particles towards an image receiving
member (109) to be printed. Around each printer aperture a control electrode is present,
applying an image-wise varying DC voltage (V3) to control electrodes (106a) around
the printing apertures, the strength of the propulsion field can be changed so as
to let said charged toner particles image-wise pass the printing apertures. The remaining
charged toner particles are further displaced downstream of the printing zone to a
cleaning station (114, 115) in which the non-used toner particles are completely removed
from the surface of said CTC to have a bare surface again. Then the CTC moves further
on towards the magnetic brush , located upstream of the development zone where again
a fresh population of charged toner particles, wherein no wrong sign toner particles
are present, is provided on the surface of the CTC. During printing developer is circulated
from the container (122) of the central conditioning unit to the containers for developer
(101) of each of the printing engines by means (116, 116a, 116b) for moving the developer
through outlet (121) and distribution box (121') and from said containers for developer
(101) back to the container (122) in the central conditioning unit through outlets
(120) in the containers (101) and collecting box (120'). The means for moving the
developer are equipped so as to have at any moment during printing at most 25 % by
volume of the developer is present in the active portion of the containers (101a,
and 101b) of the printing engines while at least 75 % are continuously circulated
through the central conditioning unit for keeping its condition constant. The container
(122) is further coupled to a vessel (119) containing fresh toner particles , said
vessel being coupled to said container over valve (119a) that can selectively be opened
and closed. The container (122) is coupled to means for monitoring the condition of
the developer i.e. to means for measuring the ratio of toner to carrier particles
(118) and/or the charge of the toner particles. The means for measuring the ratio
of toner to carrier particles (118) and/or the charge of the toner particles are coupled
to the valve (119a) for selectively opening and closing said valve depending on the
measured result and the intended one. Optionally said means for measuring the ratio
of toner to carrier particles (118) and/or the charge of the toner particles can be
coupled to the mixing means (117) so that also the mixing can be used to control the
charge of the toner particles to a predetermined constant value.
[0059] The non-used toner particles that have been removed by collecting means (114, 115)
from the CTC in every printing unit are recycled to the single central conditioning
unit by means (116b) for moving the non-used toner over a collecting box (115')
[0060] 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 using toner particles
according to the present invention, be different from the location shown in fig. 5.
[0061] Although in fig. 5 an embodiment of a device for a DEP method using two electrodes
(106a and 106b) on printhead 106 is shown, it is possible to implement a DEP method,
using toner particles according to the present invention using devices with different
constructions of the printhead (106). It is, e.g. possible to implement a DEP method
with a device having a printhead comprising only one electrode structure as well as
with a device having a printhead comprising more than two electrode structures. The
apertures in these printhead structures can have a constant diameter, or can have
a broader entrance or exit diameter.
[0062] The back electrode (105) of this DEP device 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).
[0063] Between said printhead structure (106) and the charged toner conveyer (103) as well
as between the control electrode around the 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 (106) different
electrical fields are applied. In the specific embodiment of a device, useful for
a DEP method, using a printing device with a geometry according to the present invention,
shown in fig 5. voltage V1 is applied to the sleeve of the charged toner conveyer
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. In other embodiments of the present invention multiple
voltages V2
0 to V2
n and/or V4
0 to V4
n can be used. Voltage V5 is applied to the surface of the sleeve of the magnetic brush.
[0064] In a DEP device according to the present invention an additional AC-source can beneficially
be connected to the sleeve of said magnetic brush.
[0065] The magnetic brush 104 preferentially used in a DEP device according to the present
invention is of the type with stationary core and rotating sleeve.
[0066] In a DEP device, according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, 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 kA/m up to 20 kA/m (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 in EP-A-675 417.
[0067] It is preferred to use in a DEP device according to the present invention, toner
particles with an absolute average charge over mass ratio (|q/m|) corresponding to
5 µC/g ≤ |q/m| ≤ 15 µC/g, preferably to 8 µC/g ≤ |q/m| ≤ 11 µC/g. The charge to mass
ratio of the toner particles is measured by mixing the toner particles with carrier
particles, and after 15 min of charging the q/m-ratio is measured with a device such
as the Toshiba TB-200 blow-off tester. In this disclosure the charge to mass ratio
is taken as the absolute value, as a DEP device according to this invention can function
either with negatively charged toner particles or with positively charged toner particles
depending on the polarity of the potential difference between V1 and V4. 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 that is incorporated
herein by reference.
[0068] It is preferred in large format printers using at least two printing engines coupled
to a central conditioning unit according to this invention, not-only to prevent changes
in toner concentration in the different printing units, but also to use toner particles
with a narrow charge distribution, i.e. the charge of the toner particles shows a
distribution wherein the coefficient of variability (v), i.e. the ratio of the standard
deviation to the average value, is equal to or lower than 0.4 preferably lower than
0.3. The charge distribution 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.
In, e.g., US-A-5 569 567, US-A-5 622 803 and US-A-5 532 097 it is disclosed how to
prepare both negatively and positively chargeable toner particles with narrow charge
distribution. It is a preferred embodiment of the invention to use toner particles
prepared according to the method described in these disclosures.
[0069] 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 bi-level
half-toning to render continuous tone images.
[0070] A large format printer according to this invention using DEP devices 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.
[0071] The combination of a high spatial resolution and of the multiple grey level capabilities
typical for DEP, opens the way for multilevel half-toning 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.
[0072] The embodiment of a large format printer with a central development unit according
to this invention as schematically shown in figure 5, i.e. wherein the printing proceeds
with DEP engines and with a two-component developer comprising magnetic carrier particles
and non-magnetic toner particles and wherein the non-used toner particles are recycled
in the printing process is the most preferred embodiment of the invention. In an other
preferred embodiment of the present invention the outlet of developer in the individual
printing engines (120a, 120b, 120c) is used as transportation help in the recovery
system for non-used toner , thus the ducts (115a, 115b, 115c) for non-used toner are
led in the outlet of developer in the individual printing engines (120a, 120b, 120c)
so that said recovered toner particles can be transported to said central conditioning
station with the aid of said developer material that also has to be transported to
said central conditioning unit. It is equally well suitable to lead the outlets of
developer in the individual printing engines (120a, 120b, 120c) directly to the collecting
means (114,115) of the different printing units and transporting said combined used
developer and recuperated toner to said central conditioning unit.
[0073] Nevertheless large format printers with a central conditioning unit according to
this invention wherein the non-used toner particles are not recycled and only the
developer is circulated from the central conditioning unit to the printing engines
and back are within the scope of the present invention.
[0074] Also large format printers with a central conditioning unit according to this invention
(in which toner particles are conditioned and/or pre-charged) using DEP engines printing
with non-magnetic mono-component developer are within the scope of the present invention.
[0075] As said above, large format printers using at least two printing engines coupled
to a central conditioning unit according to this invention, can be implemented with
classical electrophotographic printing engines. Examples of such printers are described
in figures 4 and 5 of EP-A-849 087 that is incorporated herein by reference. In figure
6 a large format single pass four colour printer using at least two electrophotographic
printing engines equipped with central conditioning units according to this invention
is shown. The printer comprises means (108) to move the substrate (109) in web form,
withdrawn from a roll (109') in the direction of arrow A and means (110) to fix the
toner image to the substrate. The printer is shown with only two printing stations
(engines) (100a and b), each having an intermediate toner receiving member (206a and
b), rotating in the direction of the arrow. The stations (100a and b) comprise further,
arranged around each of the intermediate members (206a and b), electrophotographic
engines (Y, M, C, K), for each colour, that image-wise deliver toner particles to
the intermediate member. Each of the electrophotographic engines comprises a photoconductive
drum (201), rotating in the direction of the arrow. The photoconductive drum contacts
the intermediate member (206) or is arranged very close to it. Around each photoconductive
drum are arranged in the direction of rotation : a cleaning unit (202), a charging
unit (203), an exposure unit (204) and a toner delivering unit (205). The toner delivering
unit (205) of each of the electrophotographic engines the in printing engines (100a
and 100b)containing developer of the same colour are connected to a central conditioning
unit according to this invention. In the figure only the connections of the engine
printing the yellow colour (Y) are shown. During printing developer is circulated
from the container (122) of the central conditioning unit to the toner delivering
unit (205) of each of the printing engines printing the yellow image (Y) by means
(116, 116a, 116b) for moving the developer through outlet (121) and distribution box
(121') and from said toner delivering unit (205) back to the container (122) in the
central conditioning unit through outlets (120) in the toner delivering unit (205)
and collecting box (120'). The means for moving the developer are equipped so as to
have at any moment during printing at most 25 % by volume of the developer is present
in the active portion of the toner delivering unit (205) of the printing engines while
at least 75 % are continuously circulated through the central conditioning unit for
keeping its condition constant. The container (122) is further coupled to a vessel
(119) containing fresh toner particles , said vessel being coupled to said container
over valve (119a) that can selectively be opened and closed. The container (122) is
coupled to means for monitoring the condition of the developer i.e. to means for measuring
the ratio of toner to carrier particles (118) and/or the charge of the toner particles.
The means for measuring the ratio of toner to carrier particles (118) and/or the charge
of the toner particles are coupled to the valve (119a) for selectively opening and
closing said valve depending on the measured result and the intended one. Optionally
said means for measuring the ratio of toner to carrier particles (118) and/or the
charge of the toner particles can be coupled to the mixing means (117) so that also
the mixing can be used to control the charge of the toner particles to a predetermined
constant value.
[0076] The non-used toner particles that have been removed in the cleaning unit (202) are
recycled to the single central conditioning unit by means (116b) for moving the non-used
toner over a collecting box (115').
Transfer means (not shown),.e.g. a transfer corona, can be incorporated in the printing
engines to assist both the transfer of the toner particles from the latent image bearing
member to the intermediate member and from the intermediate member to the substrate
to be printed. Only the coupling of the electrophotographic printing engines for printing
the yellow image to the central conditioning unit are shown in the figure. The three
other central conditioning units are very schematically shown and are marked M, K,
C to indicate that these are coupled to the printing engines printing printing the
magenta, cyan and black image respectively.
[0077] It is e.g. possible to take an electrophotographic printing engine as the Xeikon
DCP/50D for which the multiple development stations are made more compact and less
expensive and for which both magnetic brush assemblies with the same colour developer
(e.g. front side of page and back side of page) are fed from a single central conditioning
unit where a monitoring and regulation of the toner concentration takes place. Also
an implementation in which no dual sided printing takes place but in which multiple
magnetic brush assemblies are staggered with respect to each other in order to obtain
a much larger printing width (e.g. 3 units staggered in order to obtain an electrophotographic
full colour printing press with printing width of 1.5 m in which all 3 units - or
6 units for a recto-verso version - are fed from a single container for developer
in which toner concentration is monitored and adapted) falls within the scope of the
present invention.
[0078] In a moving shuttle-type printer wherein the shuttle has a wide printing width and
carries at least two printing engines so that a large format image is written in separate
image bands (swaths), can be implemented with a central conditioning unit according
to this invention when the printing engines on the shuttle printing the same colour
are coupled to a central conditioning unit. Such a printer has been disclosed in EP-A-849
087. An implementation according to the present invention has the additional benefit
that said moving shuttle system does not need multiple heavy developer supplies, so
that its movement can be made less complicated and less expensive thanks to said central
conditioning unit that can be placed on the moving parts of the shuttle printer, but
preferably it is NOT placed upon said moving parts of said shuttle type printer. The
shuttle is travelling over the image receiving member (substrate) in a first direction,
preferably a direction that is essentially parallel to the width of the substrate
to be printed. After having printed a single band over the width of the substrate,
the substrate is moved in a direction different from said first direction, over a
length corresponding to the width of the printhead structure and toner delivering
means. The shuttle can have a printing with of at least 30 cm, preferably the shuttle
has a printing width of at least 40 cm, more preferably 60 cm, and for printing very
large substrate in a short printing time, even at least 120 cm. This is different
from the shuttling printers known in the art while by a shuttle of this invention
broader bands can be printed. This means that even with a fairly low shuttling speed
of the printer a large format print can be made in a short time. Such a shuttling
printer can very beneficially be used for printing images of very large dimension
(e.g. > 5 meter width) with a very high printing speed (e.g. > 500 m
2/hour).
[0079] A shuttle according to the present invention can, e.g., comprises three printing
engines with a width of, e.g., 0.3 m, that are staggered and mounted in a shuttle
in such a way that the three engines shuttle together without changing their relative
positions to each other. Such a printer makes it possible, when the shuttling proceeds
with the longest dimension of the shuttling printers (i.e. in this example 0.9 m width)
perpendicular to the width of the large substrate, to print in one shuttle movement
a band that is 0.9 m wide. It is clear that such a shuttle can be constructed with
less or more printing engines, with wider or smaller engines, etc., without going
beyond the scope of this invention.
[0080] In figure 7, a schematic view of a printer with shuttling printing engines is shown
as a projection of the shuttle in the plane of the substrate (109) to be printed.
[0081] The shuttle (112), comprising 3 printing engines (100a, b and c), the respective
engines having a width WPEa, b and c, moves over the width (WS) of the substrate to
be printed in the direction of arrow B, and after having printed a single band over
the width of the substrate, the substrate is moved in the direction of arrow A over
a length corresponding to the working width (i.e. the width of the band (swath width
of the shuttle, SWS) that can be printed) of the shuttle (112). The shuttle returns
in a direction opposite to arrow B and prints the next swath.
EXAMPLES
[0082] Throughout the printing examples, the same developer, comprising toner and carrier
particles was used.
The carrier particles
[0083] A macroscopic "soft" ferrite carrier consisting of a MgZn-ferrite with average particle
size 50 µm, a magnetisation at saturation of 36 µTm
3/kg (29 emu/g) was provided with a 1 µm thick acrylic coating. The material showed
virtually no remanence.
The toner particles
[0084] The toner used for the experiment had the following composition : 97 parts of a co-polyester
resin of fumaric acid and bispropoxylated 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 formula : (CH
3)
3N
+C
16H
33 Br
- was added in a quantity of 0.5 % with respect to the binder, as described in WO-A-94/027192.
[0085] After cooling, the solidified mass was pulverised and milled using an ALPINE Fliessbettgegenstrahlmühle
type 100AFG (trade name) and further classified using an ALPINE multiplex zig-zag
classifier type 100MZR (trade name). The average particle size was measured by Coulter
Counter model Multisizer (trade name), was found to be 6.3 µm by number and 8.2 µm
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).
The developer
[0086] An electrostatographic developer was prepared by mixing said mixture of toner particles
and colloidal silica in a 9 % ratio (wt/wt) with carrier particles. The triboelectric
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 magnetic brush for
5 minutes, after which the toner was sampled and the tribo-electric properties were
measured using the Toshiba TB-200 blow-off device, resulting in a q/m-ratio of -14
µC/g.
The printhead structure (106)
[0087] A printhead structure (106) was made from a polyimide film of 50 µm thickness, 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
image receiving member, 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. The printing
apertures were rectangular shaped with dimensions of 360 by 120 µm. The dimension
of the central part of the rectangular shaped copper control electrodes was 500 by
260 µm. The apertures were spaced so to obtain a resolution of 33 dots/cm (85 dpi).
On the front side of the printhead structure, facing the charged toner conveyer roller,
a common shield electrode (106b) was arranged around the aperture zone leaving a free
polyimide zone of 1620 µm. Said printhead structure was fabricated in the following
way. First of all the control 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.
Container for developer
[0088] A large container for developer was used equipped with mixing means so that 20 kg
of developer was constantly shaken. A smaller amount of developer was pumped by transport
screws to the individual magnetic brush assemblies. No toner monitoring device was
present in said container for developer. Regulation of said toner concentration was
done by calculating the amount of toner printed from the image signals and adding
an amount of 102 % of said calculated removed toner concentration. (It was found that
about 2% of said calculated toner amount "disappeared" in the printing process).
The charged toner conveyer (CTC)
[0089] The CTC was a cylinder with a sleeve made of aluminium, coated with TEFLON (trade
name of Du Pont, Wilmington, USA) with a surface roughness of 2.2 µm (Ra-value) and
a diameter of 30 mm. The charged toner conveyer (103) was connected to an AC power
supply (AC1) with a square wave oscillating field between 1750 V peak to peak at a
frequency of 3.0 kHz with +50 V DC-offset. Said CTC was equipped with a stainless
steel scraper blade removing all remaining toner particles from said CTC-surface and
collecting said removed toner particles by means of a developer transport to a single
container for developer.
Magnetic brush assembly (MB)
[0090] Charged toner particles were propelled to this conveyer from a stationary core (104a)/rotating
sleeve (104b) type magnetic brush (104) 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.
[0091] The magnetic brush 104 was constituted of the so called magnetic roller, which in
this case contained inside the roller assembly a stationary magnetic core (104a),
having three magnetic poles with an open position (no magnetic poles present) to enable
used developer to fall off from the magnetic roller (open position was one quarter
of the perimeter and located at the position opposite to said CTC (103). The magnetic
brush was so constructed that during operation fresh developer was pumped into its
developer container at such a large flux that a large amount of developer was also
falling out of the magnetic brush again. Said amount of "exhausted" developer falling
out of said magnetic brush assembly was pumped over the scraper blade means in said
charged toner conveyer to said container for developer in which 20 kg of developer
was present. The sleeve (104b) of said magnetic brush had a diameter of 20 mm and
was made of stainless steel roughened with a fine grain to assist in transport (Ra=3
µm) and showed an external magnetic field strength in the zone between said magnetic
brush and said CTC of 0.045 T, measured at the outer surface of the sleeve of the
magnetic brush. The magnetic brush was connected to a DC power supply with a -50 V
DC-offset.
[0092] A scraper blade was used to force developer to leave the magnetic roller. On the
other side a doctoring blade was used to meter a small amount of developer onto the
surface of said magnetic brush. The sleeve was rotating at a linear surface speed
(LSM) four times higher than the linear surface speed (LSC) of said CTC roller, and
in a direction opposite to the rotation direction of said CTC-roller.
The reference surface of said CTC was placed at a distance between 650 µm from the
reference surface of said magnetic brush.
The printing engine
[0093] A printhead structure, mounted in a PVC-frame, was bent with frictional contact over
the surface of the roller of the charged toner conveyer roller. A 50 µm (this is distance
d) thick polyurethane coating was used as self-regulating spacer means (110). The
printhead structure in combination with the charged toner conveyer, the magnetic brush,
the scraper-blade with toner recovery, the developer supply to said magnetic brush
and the developer "recuperation" in said magnetic brush, was combined in a single
frame, called "printing unit". Three of said printing units were staggered on 2 lines,
without overlap so as to obtain a printing width of 46 cm (using printhead structures
having a printing width of 154 mm).
[0094] A single 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
(d
B) was set to 1000 µm and the paper travelled a linear speed (LSM) of 200 cm/min. The
back electrode was connected to a high voltage power supply, applying a voltage V4
of + 1000 V to the back electrode.
[0095] The shield electrodes 106b were grounded : V2 = 0 V. To the individual control electrodes
an (image-wise) voltage V3 between 0 V and +280 V was applied.
Measurement of printing quality
[0096] A printout made on paper with a DEP device and developer described above, was judged
for homogeneity of the image density and possible banding after a long printing run.
[0097] Image banding could not be observed with this printing device. As a comparative example
a printout was made with the same configuration but now the toner concentration was
regulated for each magnetic brush assembly separately. After many meters of printing
the "structure" of the 3 printing units, building the total printout, became clearly
visible in the printing result.
[0098] It must be clear for those skilled in the art that many other implementations of
cleaning, recovery and mixing systems can be provided without departing from the spirit
of the present invention.