Cross Reference to Related Applications
[0001] The present disclosure may contain subject matter related to U.S. Patent Application
Serial Number (unknown), Attorney Docket Number 10990240, titled "Method of Minimizing
Color Hue Shifts in a Single-pass, Bi-directional Inkjet Printer using Direction Dependent
Color Maps" filed on even date herewith.
Field of the Invention
[0002] This invention relates to color printing, and more particularly to minimizing color
hue shift in bi-directional color inkjet printing.
Background of the Invention
[0003] The art of inkjet printing technology is relatively well developed. Commercial products
such as computer printers, graphics plotters, copiers, and facsimile machines employ
inkjet technology for producing hard copy printed output. The basics of this technology
are disclosed, for example, in various articles in the Hewlett-Packard Journal, Vol.
36, No. 5 (May 1985), Vol. 39, No. 4 (August 1988) Vol. 39, No. 5 (October 1988),
Vol. 43, No. 4 (August 1992), Vol. 43, No. 6 (December 1992) and Vol. 45 No. 1 (February
1994) editions. Inkjet devices are also described by W.J. Lloyd and H.T. Taub in Output
Hardcopy Devices, chapter 13 (Ed. R.C. Durbeck and S. Sherr, Academic Press, San Diego,
1988).
[0004] With the increased popularity of inkjet printing comes the increased competition
between manufacturers of inkjet printers. Currently, the most common distinguishing
features between competitive inkjet printers are price, speed, and print quality.
Today, most inkjet printer manufacturers sell a model of printer in each price range
of inkjet printers ranging from low cost home and office printers to high-speed commercial
printers. To be competitive within each price range, the printer manufacturer must
supply a printer with a faster print speed and a better resultant print quality than
his competitors'. With price at a consistent low among the competitive inkjet printer
manufacturers, a fast print speed directly coupled to a superior resultant print quality
is key to the consumer's selection.
[0005] The fastest way to print a contiguous area of color with a scanning inkjet printhead
is to sweep the printhead across the media in a first direction while firing ink droplets
as needed from an array of nozzles, advance the media the height of the array of nozzles
then sweep the printhead in a second, opposite direction firing ink droplets as before.
This is known as single-pass, bi-directional printing. Single-pass because the printhead
passes over each area of the page only one time. There is minimal or no overlap between
adjacent printed rows. Bi-directional because drops are fired while the printhead
is travelling in both the left to right direction and the returning right to left
direction.
[0006] This technique is well known and successful for printing in monochrome. Workers skilled
in this field have recognized, however, that for printing in color a hue shift, or
more precisely a color hue shift, arises between printing left to right over right
to left.
[0007] The reason for this color hue shift is that printheads are traditionally arranged,
physically, on their carriage in a specific sequence. Therefore, if two or more of
the printheads fire while the carriage is moving in one particular direction, the
different ink colors are laid down one on top of another in a corresponding order.
While the carriage is moving in the opposite direction, in the opposite order. When
printing a color that requires the combination of colors from more than one printhead,
even though the combination of colors is the same in either direction of printing,
the order of deposition can change the visible color hue of the combined color.
[0008] The ordering of the dot placement of two superimposed droplets has a significant
influence on the resulting perceived color. For example, laying down magenta on top
of cyan may produce a blue which is biased toward the cyan; whereas printing cyan
on top of magenta may yield a blue which emphasizes magenta. In successive separate
swaths or separately visible color bands, sub-swaths are printed while the printhead
is thus traveling in each of two directions, respectively, the successive swaths or
sub-swaths. Banding that results is often very conspicuous.
[0009] Current inkjet printers minimize color hue shifts in one or both of two ways:
1) Unidirectional printing. This entails firing droplets of ink when the printheads are moving in a single direction
and no firing when printheads are returned in the opposite direction. With this method,
the order in which the color primaries (typically Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow) are printed
remains constant and no directional related color hue shifts occur; and
2) Multi-pass printing. With multi-pass printing, the printheads pass over the same area of the media more
than once in an effort to blend the ordering of the overlaid droplets of ink to diminish
the bi-directional color hue shifts by averaging the order in which the color primaries
are printed.
[0010] Both methods are effective at reducing or eliminating color hue shifts, thereby improving
the print quality, but they also slow the printing process significantly. The consumer
will have to compromise print speed to get the desired color print quality.
[0011] To solve this problem, the desired inkjet printer must be able to print bi-directionally,
so there is no time wasted on a carriage return; print in a single-pass mode, so there
is no time wasted on overlapping printing; and the deposition of ink droplets to form
composite colors must be performed in the same sequence whether traversing in a right
to left direction or a left to right direction, thereby eliminating the directional
related color hue shifts.
[0012] With the increasing use of inkjet printers for high quality color printing in the
home and in the office, it is desirable for the consumer to be able to achieve the
highest quality color inkjet printing within their selected price range without having
to compromise printing speed.
Summary of the Invention
[0013] An inkjet printer has a printing width and utilizes a plurality of printheads. The
plurality of printheads has an axis of symmetry, and a first row of ink expulsion
nozzles and a second row of ink expulsion nozzles. The first and second rows are disposed
essentially parallel to each other and symmetrically disposed about the axis of symmetry.
There is also a third and a fourth row of ink expulsion nozzles. The third and fourth
rows are also disposed essentially parallel to each other and symmetrically disposed
about the axis of symmetry. The inkjet printer also has a printhead carriage which
holds the plurality of printheads and is arranged to traverse in a first direction
parallel to the printing width of the inkjet printer. The printhead carriage positions
the plurality of printheads to expulse color ink droplets onto a media in a particular
sequence. This arrangement also allows the printhead carriage to traverse in a second
direction, opposite the first direction, which positions the plurality of printheads
to expulse color ink droplets onto the media in the same particular sequence.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0014]
FIG. 1 is an isometric view of an inkjet printer of the preferred embodiment of the
invention.
FIG. 2 is an isometric view of an inkjet print cartridge for the printer of FIG. 1
according to one embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 3 is a plan view of the front surface of the flexible inkjet printhead circuit
of FIG. 2 removed from the print cartridge and layed flat.
FIG. 4 depicts a inkjet printhead and ink supply configuration for the printer of
FIG. 1.
FIG. 5A depicts a four-nozzle high section across a width of the four inkjet printheads
of FIG. 4 illustrating the arrangement and colors of ink droplets emerging from the
rows of nozzles of each inkjet print cartridge.
FIG. 5B depicts composite ink droplet deposition on a portion of media deposited in
a left to right pass and a portion of media deposited in a right to left pass of overlaid
ink droplets created with the nozzle row configuration illustrated in FIG. 5A.
FIG. 6 depicts the inkjet print cartridges, ink supplies and the fluidic conduit interconnects
of the preferred embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 7A depicts a four-nozzle high section across a width of the four inkjet printheads
of FIG. 6 illustrating the arrangement and colors of ink droplets emerging from the
rows of nozzles of each inkjet print cartridge of the preferred embodiment.
FIG. 7B depicts composite ink droplet deposition on a portion of media deposited in
a left to right pass and a portion of media deposited in a right to left pass of overlaid
ink droplets created with the nozzle row and ink distribution configuration of FIG.
7A using all nozzles to print in the single-pass, bi-directional mode of the present
invention.
FIG. 8A depicts an alternate embodiment of the nozzle layout of the present invention.
FIG. 8B depicts a portion of a left to right pass and a portion of a right to left
pass of overlaid ink droplets created with the alternative nozzle configuration illustrated
in FIG. 8A.
Detailed Description of a Preferred Embodiment
[0015] The preferred embodiment of the inkjet printer, as is about to be described, prints
bi-directionally, so there is no time wasted on a carriage return; prints in a single-pass
mode, so there is no time wasted on overlapping printing; and the deposition of ink
droplets to form composite colors is performed in the same sequence whether traversing
in a right to left direction or a left to right direction, thereby minimizing the
directional related color hue shifts.
[0016] FIG. 1 illustrates a perspective view of an inkjet printer 100 incorporating the
present invention. A media tray 110 holds a supply of input paper or other print media.
When a printing operation is initiated, a sheet of paper or media in media tray 110
is fed into inkjet printer 100 and is then brought around in a U-direction towards
an output tray 114. The sheet is stopped in a print zone 118 and a printhead carriage
102, containing multiple dual color inkjet printheads 108 and a single color printhead
106, is scanned along carriage traverse rail 104 across a printing width 120 of the
inkjet printer 100 for printing a swath of ink onto the paper or media below. The
sheet is advanced and the process repeats now in an opposite movement of the printhead
carriage 102 until the entire sheet has been printed, at which point the printed media
is ejected onto output tray 114.
[0017] Dual color inkjet printheads 108 and single color printhead 106 are fluidically coupled
to removable secondary ink supplies 112 by ink conduits 116. Typically, these secondary
ink supplies 112 hold Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black inks. An example of a commercially
available three color inkjet print cartridge is a Model HP5659A available from Hewlett-Packard
Co. Optionally, there is one single multi-colored cartridge that replaces the dual
color inkjet printheads 108 and the single color printhead 106 containing varying
combinations of colors. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, each single
color inkjet printhead 106, dual color inkjet printhead 108, and secondary ink supply
112 is provided with an integral memory device which stores data that is used by inkjet
printer 100 to control its printing operations.
[0018] FIG. 2 is an isometric view of a dual color inkjet printhead 108 according to one
embodiment of the present invention. The inkjet printhead 108 includes a primary ink
supply 212 and a flexible inkjet printhead circuit 202. The flexible inkjet printhead
circuit 202 is formed on a flexible polymer tape using Tape Automated Bonding (TAB)
techniques. One conventional technique is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,917,286 (Pollacek).
The flexible inkjet printhead circuit 202 includes an ink expulsion region 201 comprising
a first nozzle row 206 and a second nozzle row 208. Each nozzle row contains a plurality
of ink expulsion nozzles 210. The parallel nozzle rows, reference numerals 206 and
208, of ink expulsion nozzles 210, also commonly referred to as orifices, are formed
in the flexible polymer tape by, for example, laser ablation. The tape may be purchased
commercially as KAPTON tape, available from 3M Corporation. Other suitable tape may
be formed of UPILEX or its equivalent. Alternatively, the ink expulsion nozzles 210
can be formed In a nickel or gold plate and attached to the flexible polymer tape.
[0019] A back surface of the flexible inkjet printhead circuit 202 (not shown) includes
conductive traces formed, for example, by a conventional photolithographic etching
and/or plating process. These conductive traces are terminated at one end by large
electrical interconnect pads 214 designed to interconnect with an inkjet printer,
and on the opposite end with the circuitry on a semiconductor substrate (not shown)
attached to the back surface of the flexible inkjet printhead circuit 202 behind an
ink expulsion region 201. The inkjet printheads, 106 and 108, are designed to be installed
in a printer so that the electrical interconnect pads 214, which extend through to
the front surface of the flexible inkjet printhead circuit 202, contact printer electrodes
thereby providing externally generated energization signals to the inkjet printhead.
[0020] In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, each dual color inkjet printhead
108 has a divided primary ink supply 212, which contains two colors of ink. For clarity,
FIG. 2 shows a flexible circuit centerline 204 where one color is stored and dispensed
from one half of a primary ink supply 212 located approximately behind a first side
of the flexible circuit centerline 204 using a first nozzle row 206 on that side.
The second color of ink is stored and dispensed from the remaining half of the primary
ink supply 212 located approximately behind the second side of the flexible circuit
centerline 204 using a second nozzle row 208 on that side. As the ink is depleted
from any of the primary ink supplies 212 of each dual color inkjet printheads 108
or the single color printhead 106, ink is replenished through ink conduits 116 from
a secondary ink supply 112 (FIG. 1) containing the appropriate color of ink.
[0021] With dual color inkjet printheads 108 each dispensing two colors of ink, there are
the number of printheads 108 times two rows of nozzles, each of which can contain
a different color. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, there are three dual
color inkjet printheads 108, with the first three rows of nozzles in a particular
order and the second three rows of nozzles in the reverse order (CMYYMC). This symmetry
of colors allows the inkjet printer 100 to dispense colors of ink in the same order
regardless of printing direction (right to left or left to right). A further discussion
of this symmetry is forthcoming.
[0022] FIG. 3 is a planar view of the front surface of the flexible inkjet printhead circuit
202 removed from the dual color inkjet print cartridge 108. Affixed to the back of
the flexible printhead circuit 202 in the ink expulsion region 201 is the silicon
substrate (not shown) containing a plurality of individually energizable thin film
resistors. Each resistor is located generally behind a single ink expulsion nozzle
210 and acts as an ohmic heater when selectively energized by one or more pulses applied
sequentially or simultaneously to one or more of the electrical interconnect pads
214.
[0023] FIG. 4 depicts a typical configuration of multiple single color inkjet printheads
106 each having a primary ink supply 212 and secondary ink supply 112 in a configuration
of the current inkjet technology. Each printhead is a single color inkjet printhead
106 (both first nozzle row 206 and second nozzle row 208 dispense the same ink color)
and are in fluid communication with a secondary ink supply 112 by an ink conduit 116.
For clarity, the color of ink contained within each secondary ink supply 112 and primary
ink supply 212 is shown in the shaded cutout windows on the fronts of each device.
From left to right, the shading corresponds to Black, Cyan, Magenta and Yellow. This
shading scheme will remain consistent throughout this specification.
[0024] On one surface of the single color inkjet printhead 106 is the attached flexible
inkjet printhead circuit 202 which has two rows of ink expulsion nozzles (FIG. 1)
where ink droplets 401 are ejected onto some form of media beyond. Typically, the
single color inkjet printheads 106 are ordered Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow (CMY) with
the Black (B) printhead on either side of the three-color printheads.
[0025] Typically, the physical placement of the secondary ink supplies 112, the fluid conduits
116, and the inkjet print cartridges in an inkjet printer 110 are similar as that
shown in FIG. 1. However, other inkjet printing systems have the secondary ink supplies
112 attached to the inkjet print cartridges wherein both are stationed in the print
cartridge carriage 102 and travel together along carriage traverse rail 104.
[0026] FIG. 5A depicts a section of four adjacent ink expulsion nozzles 210 from each inkjet
printhead 108, across a width of the four inkjet printheads 108 of FIG. 4 FIG. 5A
illustrates the arrangement and colors of ink droplets 401 emerging from the rows
of ink expulsion nozzles 210 of each inkjet printhead 108 with the colors ordered,
as indicated by the shading, in nozzles rows from left to right as BBCCMMYY (Black,
Cyan, Magenta, Yellow). In a preferred embodiment, each color has two rows of nozzles.
[0027] FIG. 5B is representative of the deposition of ink droplets 401 from the four-high
section of ink expulsion nozzles 210 of FIG. 5A in both a left to right pass 530 of
the inkjet print cartridges 106 and a right to left pass 540 of inkjet print cartridges
106. In this example, on the left to right pass 530, a shade of green is created by
the combining of a droplet of Yellow ink from one of the two rows of a first ink color
nozzles 501 and a droplet of Cyan ink from one of the two rows of a second ink color
nozzles 503. An overlapping of droplets of Cyan ink with droplets of Yellow ink create
the four by four matrix of first composite color "greenish hue" dots 531 as shown
by area 530. Due to the left to right traverse of print cartridge carriage 102 (FIG.
1) and the physical BBCCMMYY ordering of the inkjet print cartridges 106, as shown
in FIG. 5A, the first ink color nozzles 501 (Yellow) must be dispensed first with
the ink droplets in the second ink color nozzles 503 (Cyan) being dispensed second.
[0028] Where the inkjet printer 100 is printing in a single-pass, bi-directional mode, after
the inkjet printer 100 prints across the media from left to right, then indexes the
print media, it will print the next swath of printing while the print cartridge carriage
102 is traversing right to left. For the example shown in FIG. 5B, this results in
the four by four matrix of second composite color "greenish hue" ink dots 541 shown
in FIG. 5B as right to left pass 540. Reversing the movement of the print cartridge
carriage 102, reverses the order of the inkjet print cartridges 106 and, as a result,
the second ink color nozzles 503 (Cyan) will be dispensed before the first ink color
nozzles 501 (Yellow).
[0029] The difference between the first composite color greenish hue ink dots 531 applied
in the left to right pass 530 of the inkjet printer 100 and the second composite color
greenish hue ink dots 541 which are attempting to create the same color hue in a right
to left pass 540, creates a visible "banding" effect or a color hue shift between
adjacent swaths of printing. This banding varies depending on the combinations of
primary colors required, but can be very noticeable as a typical swath of inkjet printing
is approximately .30 to 1.00 inches ,or 7.62 to 25.40 mm, high.
[0030] Another inkjet printer has all three colors (Cyan, Yellow, and Magenta) contained
in the same print cartridge, with the rows of nozzles in parallel, and located together
in one six-row ink expulsion region 201 disposed on one single flexible inkjet printhead
circuit 202. An example of a commercially available three color inkjet print cartridge
is a Hewlett-Packard Model C1823A. The black print cartridge, however, is a separate
print cartridge, typically placed to the left of the three-color cartridge. In this
printer, the ink in the three-color cartridge is channeled to the particular nozzle
row from the corresponding primary ink container thereby maintaining the CCMMYY color
ordering. Therefore, deposition of ink droplets is similar to the described method
of FIG. 5A and FIG. 5B above.
[0031] FIG. 6 depicts a combination of the single color inkjet print cartridge 106 (FIG.
4), the multiple dual color inkjet printheads 108 (FIG. 2), their respective secondary
ink supplies 112, and the fluidic conduit interconnects 116 of the preferred embodiment
of the present invention. As shown in FIG. 6, each dual color inkjet printhead 108
is of a similar size and shape as the single color inkjet printhead 106, but the primary
ink supply 212 of each dual color inkjet printhead 108 is divided into two chambers
which may each contain a different color of ink. In a preferred embodiment of the
present invention, there are four secondary ink supplies 112 (Black, Cyan, Yellow,
Magenta). The Black secondary ink supply 112, through an ink conduit 116, supplies
the single color inkjet printhead 106 with ink. Each of the remaining three secondary
ink supplies 112, through a pair of ink conduits 116, supply two primary ink supplies
212 of the remaining three dual color inkjet printheads 108.
[0032] The secondary ink supplies 112 distribute ink to the dual color inkjet printheads
108 in an order such that there is symmetry in the ordering of the colors of ink within
the nozzle rows of six primary ink supplies 212. For example, in FIG. 6, the two outside
primary ink supplies of the dual color inkjet printheads 108 contain the second ink
color (Cyan in the preferred embodiment). The first ink color (Yellow in the preferred
embodiment) is in both of the primary ink supplies 212 of the second dual color inkjet
print cartridge 108. The third ink color (Magenta in the preferred embodiment) is
in the remaining two primary ink supplies 212. This symmetry allows the dispensing
of the ink in the same order whether the print cartridge carriage 102 (FIG. 1) is
traversing right to left or left to right.
[0033] Alternatively, the middle dual color inkjet print cartridge 108 could have only one
nozzle row, therefore only one primary ink supply 212 as the symmetry of the color
of inks would be maintained. This results in an ink color ordering of BBCMYMC. Another
order is contemplated where Black is the center color resulting in an ordering of
CMYBBYMC. This would require four dual color inkjet print cartridges 108 and eliminate
the need for the single color inkjet print cartridge 106. Any of the aforementioned
orderings would produce the symmetrical ink dispensing desired in the present invention.
Additionally, the symmetrical ordering of inks can be extended for any number of inks,
for example ABCD...|...DCBA.
[0034] FIG. 7A is a section of the single color inkjet print cartridges 106 and the three
dual color inkjet print cartridges 108 of FIG. 6 depicting the arrangement and colors
of ink droplets 401 emerging from the rows of nozzles of each flexible inkjet printhead
circuit 202. FIG. 7A is illustrative of a four-high section of ink expulsion nozzles
210 from the flexible inkjet printhead circuit 202 with the colors ordered in the
nozzles rows from left to right as BBCMYYMC. Each color has two rows of ink expulsion
nozzles 210 and these two rows of ink expulsion nozzles 210 are symmetrical about
an axis of symmetry 720. The axis of symmetry 720 is perpendicular to the printing
width 120 of inkjet printer 100 (FIG. 1). Each dual color print cartridge 108 has
its rows of ink expulsion nozzles 210 divided by flexible circuit centerline 204 (FIG.2).
[0035] The reason for the symmetrical ordering of the colors of inks is to minimize the
color hue shift associated with the inability of an asymmetrical ordering to dispense
ink in a like order when operating in a single-pass, bi-directional print mode as
previously shown and discussed in FIG. 4, FIG. 5A and FIG. 5B.
[0036] FIG. 7B depicts a left to right pass 730 and a right to left pass 740 of overlaid
ink droplets created with the nozzle row and ink distribution configuration of FIG.
7A using all ink expulsion nozzles 210 to print in the single-pass, bi-directional
mode of the preferred embodiment of the present invention. These matrices of ink droplets
are an example of alternating the ordering of the layering of the colors to get visibly
one single color. In the left to right pass 730, first combined ink droplet 541 is
created from an ink droplet from nozzle row 703 and an inkjet droplet from nozzle
row 701 or nozzle row 702. The second combined ink droplet 531 is created from an
ink droplet 401 from nozzle row 701 or nozzle 702 and an ink droplet from nozzle row
704. These two combined droplets, 541 and 531, represent the same color. However,
as discussed previously and shown in FIG. 5B, with an area of first combined ink droplets
541 and an adjacent area of second combined ink droplets 531 a color hue shift is
apparent between the two areas as demonstrated by left to right pass 530 and right
to left pass 540. With the alternating ink droplet pattern of the preferred embodiment
of the present invention as shown in FIG. 7B, the left to right pass 730 and the right
to left pass 740 will appear to be the same color or hue. There will be a minimal
color hue shift detectable between adjacent rows.
[0037] With all ink expulsion nozzles 210 being utilized in the alternating pattern shown
in FIG. 7B, there will be no compromise in print speed to achieve this desirable high
print quality.
[0038] In a fourth alternate embodiment, to achieve an even higher print quality, a first
nozzle row 206 of each dual color inkjet printhead 108 is used for left to right printing
only, while the second nozzle row 208 of each dual color inkjet printhead 108 is used
for right to left printing only. This allows every combined droplet to be disposed
in the same order, thereby creating an even more contiguous area of color in a single-pass,
bi-directional printing mode. Although this compromises the printing speed, as only
half of the nozzles are available for dispensing in each direction, the user can decide
to forego speed for the higher print quality, for example for photos or precision
illustrations.
[0039] A fifth alternate implementation is shown in FIG. 8A. Each color primary grouping
contains enough ink expulsion nozzles 210 to represent half of the vertical resolution
of the pen. Dimensional reference number 810 depicts the standard vertical spacing
in an inkjet print cartridge where dimensional reference number 820 depicts twice
the standard vertical spacing. Every other ink droplet 401 row is dispensed in an
opposite order offset by one droplet 401 row.
[0040] In FIG. 8B, first combined ink droplet 541 is created by layering second color ink
droplet 801 then first color ink droplet 802, while in the adjacent row of ink droplets,
second combined ink droplet 531 is created by first color ink droplet 803 then second
color ink droplet 804. The color hue shift, for this alternate example, will still
occur, but on an ink droplet row basis rather than on a print swath basis as shown
and described in FIG. 5B. However, at ink droplet row resolution, the color hue shift
becomes much more difficult for the human eye to detect so the overall result is a
reduction in observable color hue shift.
[0041] The aforementioned discussion and illustration of the present invention disclose
the ability to achieve the highest quality color inkjet printing by implementing minimal,
low cost solutions to the current inkjet technology in order to minimize the color
hue shifts experienced in the previous inkjet printing systems while avoiding printing
speed or printing cost compromises.
1. A printer (100) having a printing width (120), comprising:
a plurality of printheads (108) having an axis of symmetry (720), having a first row
(206) of ink expulsion nozzles (210) and a second row (208) of ink expulsion nozzles
(210), said first row (206) of ink expulsion nozzles (210) and said second row (208)
of ink expulsion nozzles (210) disposed essentially parallel to each other, expulsing
ink droplets (401) of a first ink, and symmetrically disposed about said axis of symmetry
(720), and having a third row of ink expulsion nozzles (210) and a fourth row of ink
expulsion nozzles (210), said third row of ink expulsion nozzles (210) and said fourth
row of ink expulsion nozzles (210) disposed essentially parallel to each other, expulsing
ink droplets (401) of a second ink, and symmetrically disposed about said axis of
symmetry (720); and,
a printhead carriage (102) holding said plurality of printheads (108) and arranged
to traverse in a first direction parallel to the printing width (120) and to position
said plurality of printheads (108) to expulse ink droplets (401) of said first ink
and said second ink onto a media in a particular sequence, and arranged to traverse
in a second direction, opposite said first direction, and to position said plurality
of printheads (108) to expulse ink droplets (401) of said first ink and said second
ink onto said media in said particular sequence.
2. The printer (100) of claim 1, wherein each of said plurality of printheads (108) having
said first nozzle row (206) for dispensing said first ink color, further comprising
a second nozzle row (208), apart from said first nozzle row (206), for dispensing
said second ink color.
3. The printer (100) of claim 2, having three said printheads (108), a first three rows
of said plurality of nozzle rows (206) print when printing in said first direction
and a second three of said plurality of nozzle rows (206) print when printing in said
second direction.
4. An inkjet printhead (108), comprising:
a first and a second plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210) associated with a first
ink, said first plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210) spaced apart from said second
plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210), said first and said second plurality of
ink expulsion nozzles (210) disposed on the inkjet printhead (108) and arranged symmetrically
about an axis of symmetry (720); and
a third and a fourth plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210) associated with a second
ink, said third plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210) spaced apart from said fourth
plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210), said third and said fourth plurality of
ink expulsion nozzles (210) disposed on the inkjet printhead (108) and arranged symmetrically
about said axis of symmetry (720).
5. The inkjet printhead (108) of claim 4, wherein said first plurality of ink expulsion
nozzles (210), said second plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210), said third plurality
of ink expulsion nozzles (210), and said fourth plurality of ink expulsion nozzles
(210) are each arranged into a row of nozzles that is parallel with said axis of symmetry
(720).
6. The inkjet printhead (108) of claim 4, further comprising, a fifth and a sixth plurality
of ink expulsion nozzles (210) associated with a third ink color, said fifth plurality
of ink expulsion nozzles (210) spaced from said sixth plurality of ink expulsion nozzles
(210), and disposed on the inkjet printhead (108) and symmetrically about said axis
of symmetry (720).
7. An inkjet printer (100) having a printing width (120), comprising:
an inkjet printhead (108), comprising:
a first and a second plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210) associated with a first
ink color, said first plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210) spaced apart from said
second plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210), disposed on the inkjet printhead
(108), and arranged symmetrically about an axis of symmetry (720), and
a third and a fourth plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210) associated with a second
ink color, said third plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210) spaced apart from said
fourth plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210), disposed on the inkjet printhead
(108), and arranged symmetrically about said axis of symmetry (720); and
a printhead carriage (102) for holding said inkjet printhead (108), said printhead
carriage (102) traversing in a first direction parallel to said printing width (120)
of said inkjet printer (100) and perpendicular to said axis of symmetry (720) while
expulsing a plurality of ink droplets (401) from said first, said second, said third,
and said fourth ink expulsion nozzles (210) onto a print media, then said printhead
carriage (102) traversing in a second direction opposite said first direction while
expulsing said plurality of ink droplets (401) onto said print media.
8. The inkjet printhead (108) of claim 7, wherein said first plurality of ink expulsion
nozzles (210), said second plurality of ink expulsion nozzles (210), said third plurality
of ink expulsion nozzles (210), and said fourth plurality of ink expulsion nozzles
(210) are each arranged into a row of nozzles that is parallel with said axis of symmetry
(720).
9. The inkjet printhead (108) of claim 8, further comprising, a fifth and a sixth plurality
of ink expulsion nozzles (210) associated with a third ink color, said fifth plurality
of ink expulsion nozzles (210) spaced apart from said sixth plurality of ink expulsion
nozzles (210), and disposed on the inkjet printhead (108) and arranged symmetrically
about said axis of symmetry (720).
10. A method of minimizing color hue shifts in an inkjet printer (100), said inkjet printer
(100) having a plurality of printheads (108) and a printhead carriage (102) for holding
the printheads (108), the method comprising the steps of:
receiving a print command from a controller to print a plurality of composite ink
dots (531) onto a print media, each of said plurality of composite ink dots (531)
comprising a plurality of ink droplets (401);
expulsing said plurality of ink droplets (401) from the printheads (108) according
to said print command, while the printhead carriage (102) traverses in a first direction,
wherein each of said plurality of composite color dot (531) is constructed in a prescribed
order of said plurality of ink droplets (401); and
expulsing said plurality of ink droplets (401) from the printheads (108) according
to said print command, while the printhead carriage (102) traverses in a second direction,
said second direction opposite said first direction, wherein each of said plurality
of composite color dots (531) is constructed in said prescribed order of said plurality
of ink droplets (401).
11. A method of depositing composite dots (531) onto a media with a printer (100) having
a plurality of printheads (108) and a printing width (120), the method comprising
the steps of:
expulsing a first matrix of a first color ink droplet (401) from a first printhead
(108) of the plurality of printheads (108) onto the media, and expulsing a second
matrix of a second color ink droplet (401) from a second printhead (108) of the plurality
of printheads (108) onto at least part of said first color ink droplets (401) on the
media, thereby creating a composite matrix (530) of the composite dots of a perceptible
third color while said printheads (108) traverse in a first direction parallel to
said printing width (120) of said printer (100); and
expulsing a third matrix of said second color ink droplets (401) from said second
printhead (108) onto the media, and expulsing a fourth matrix of said first color
ink droplets (401) from said first printhead (108) onto at least a portion of said
second color ink droplets (401) on the media, thereby creating the composite matrix
(540) of the composite dots (541) of the perceptible third color while said printheads
(108) traverse in a second direction.
12. A method of depositing composite dots (531) onto a media with a printer (100) having
at least one printhead (108) and a printing width (120), the method comprising the
steps of:
expulsing a first droplet (401) of a first ink onto the media, and expulsing a second
droplet (401) of a second ink onto at least part of said first droplet (401), thereby
creating a first hue composite dot (531) of a perceptible third color; and
expulsing a third droplet (401) of said second ink on the media, and expulsing a fourth
droplet (401) of said first ink onto at least part of said first droplet (401), thereby
creating a second hue composite dot (541) of said perceptible third color,
wherein a composite matrix (730) of said composite dots of said perceptible third
color is created by alternating said first hue composite dots (531) of said perceptible
third color and said second hue composite dots (541) of said perceptible third color.