Patent Document

This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/325,134, filed on Jun. 2, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,231,160. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONS 
     1. Field of Inventions 
     The present inventions relate generally to ink jet printers and, more specifically, to apparatus for use with ink jet printers that reduces systematic print quality defects. 
     2. Description of the Related Art 
     Ink jet printers can be used to form text images and graphic images on a variety of printing media including, but not limited to, paper, card stock, mylar and transparency stock. The images are formed on print media by printing individual ink spots (or “pixels”) in a two-dimensional array of rows and columns. A row is often referred to as a “dot rows” or a “pixel row.” Multiple pixel rows are formed to create a pixel array that corresponds to the desired image. 
     Certain ink jet printers include one or more printer cartridges (or “pens”) that are carried on a scanning carriage and are capable of printing multiple pixel rows concurrently to create a larger portion of the pixel array. The printer cartridges typically include a printhead with a plurality of ink ejecting nozzles. A 600 dpi (dots-per-inch) printhead with a ½ inch swath will, for example, typically have two columns with 150 nozzles in each column. A variety of mechanisms may be used to eject the ink from the nozzles. In one such mechanism, the so-called thermal ink ejection mechanism, ink channels and ink vaporization chambers are disposed between a nozzle orifice plate and a thin film substrate that includes arrays of heater elements such as thin film resistors. The heater elements are selectively energized to heat the ink within selected chambers, thereby causing an ink droplet to be ejected from the nozzles associated with the selected chambers to form ink dots at the desired locations on the print medium. 
     During a printing operation, the scanning carriage will traverse back and forth over the surface of the print medium. The print medium is advanced in a direction transverse to that of the movement scanning carriage. As the scanning carriage traverses back and forth, a controller causes the nozzles to eject drops of ink at times intended to result in the desired pixel row and, ultimately, the desired pixel array. 
     One important aspect of printing is image quality which, of course, depends upon the accuracy of the dot placement on the print medium. Variations from perfect dot placement are commonly referred to as dot placement error (DPE). One method of reducing DPE is to simply tighten the tolerances on printer specifications (or DPE specifications) such as drop weight, drop velocity, drop trajectory, medium advancement, printer cartridge/paper spacing, and carriage orientation. This approach is, however, expensive in that meeting relatively tight DPE specification tolerances requires large amounts of design and manufacturing resources to be expended. 
     At some point, the DPE specification tolerance tightening results in image improvement that is beyond the perception level of a typical viewer. In a relatively high resolution printer (300 dpi or higher), the occasional misdirected ink drop will have essentially no effect on overall image quality. A greater impediment to image quality is visible banding, which occurs when DPEs result in regular repeating patterns. In fact, in many applications, DPE tolerances can be relaxed without a perceptible reduction in image quality if visible banding is eliminated. 
     One proposed method of reducing banding is disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. application Ser. No. 08/985,641, filed Dec. 5, 1997, and entitled CARRIAGE RANDOM VIBRATION. Here, a vibration inducing element is added to an otherwise conventional ink jet printer to cause minute, random vibrations of the printhead relative to the print medium. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONS 
     One object of the present inventions is to provide an ink jet printer that avoids, for practical purposes, the aforementioned problems in the art. Another object of the present inventions is to provide a printer that is less susceptible to visible banding than conventional printers. 
     In order to accomplish some of these and other objectives, a printer in accordance with one embodiment of a present invention includes a printhead having a main body portion and a plurality of nozzles arranged such that spacing, measured along the print media scan axis, between at least a first pair of adjacent nozzles is different than the spacing between at least a second pair of adjacent nozzles. Such a printhead may be used to introduce relatively minor directionality errors throughout each pass, preferably along the media scan axis, thereby eliminating the localized directionality errors that result in visible banding. Such minor, systematic errors are relatively unnoticeable and, in any event, are far less noticeable to the eye than the visible banding. As a result, the present invention reduces visible banding without a noticeable reduction in image quality and does so without the expense associated with the tightening of DPE specifications. 
     In order to accomplish some of these and other objectives, a printer in accordance with one embodiment of a present invention includes a printer carriage, a printhead carried by the carriage, and a controller operably connected to the printer carriage and printhead. The controller is adapted to receive image information from a host device corresponding to respective predetermined dot printing locations along the carriage scan axis and to control at least one of the printer carriage and printhead such that at least some dots are intentionally printed at respective adjusted dot printing locations on the carriage scan axis that are offset from their respective predetermined dot locations. 
     A printer in accordance with the present invention will print respective ink dots (i.e. eject ink) at dot printing locations on the carriage scan axis that are varied, by amounts that may change from scan to scan, from the respective dot printing locations that correspond to the image information received from a host device. This, in turn, varies where the dots will actually land on the print medium. As a result, visible banding which results from regular repeating patterns of errors will be reduced or eliminated. Here too, this is accomplished without the expense associated with the tightening of DPE specifications. 
     The above described and many other features and attendant advantages of the present inventions will become apparent as the inventions become better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     Detailed description of preferred embodiments of the inventions will be made with reference to the accompanying drawings. 
     FIG. 1 is a partially cutaway perspective view of a printer in accordance with a preferred embodiment of a present invention. 
     FIG. 2 is a side view of the printer carriage and printhead cartridge illustrated in FIG.  1 . 
     FIG. 3 is a bottom view of the printer carriage and printhead cartridge illustrated in FIG.  2 . 
     FIG. 4 is a perspective view of the printer carriage illustrated in FIG. 2 with the printhead cartridge removed. 
     FIG. 5 is a partial plan view of a printhead orifice plate in accordance with a preferred embodiment of a present invention. 
     FIG. 6 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments of an exemplary multiple nozzle printhead in accordance with a preferred embodiment of a present invention. 
     FIG. 7 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes one, three, five and seven in an eight-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  6 . 
     FIG. 8 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes two, four, six and eight in an eight-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  6 . 
     FIG. 9 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes one, two and three in a six-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  6 . 
     FIG. 10 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes four, five and six in a six-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  6 . 
     FIG. 11 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes one and two in a four-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  6 . 
     FIG. 12 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes three and four in a four-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  6 . 
     FIG. 13 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments of an exemplary multiple nozzle printhead in accordance with another preferred embodiment of a present invention. 
     FIG. 14 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes one and two in an eight-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
     FIG. 15 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes three and four in an eight-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
     FIG. 16 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes five and six in an eight-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
     FIG. 17 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes seven and eight in an eight-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
     FIG. 18 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes one and two in a six-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
     FIG. 19 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes three and four in a six-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
     FIG. 20 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes five and six in a six-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
     FIG. 21 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes one and two in a four-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
     FIG. 22 is a graph showing the nozzle location adjustments in passes three and four in a four-pass printing mode employing a printhead with the exemplary nozzle location adjustments illustrated in FIG.  13 . 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     The following is a detailed description of the best presently known mode of carrying out the inventions. This description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of illustrating the general principles of the inventions. Additionally, it is noted that detailed discussions of various internal operating components of ink jet printers which are not pertinent to the present inventions, such as specific details of the image processing system and interaction with a host computer, have been omitted for the sake of simplicity. 
     As illustrated for example in FIG. 1, a printer  100  in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention includes a chassis  102  that is surrounded by a housing  104 , a print media handling system  106 , and a printing system  108 . One example of a printer that includes the same basic components, albeit without the inventive modifications discussed in greater detail below, is the Hewlett-Packard DeskJet 722 ink jet printer. 
     The exemplary print media handling system  106  includes a feed tray  110  for storing print media, and a series of conventional motor-driven rollers, including a drive roller  112  that is driven by a stepper motor, for advancing print media along the media scan axis from the feed tray into a printing zone  114 , and from the printing zone onto a pair of output drying wing members  116 . The output drying wing members  116 , which are shown in their respective extended positions, hold media on which an image has been printed above any previously printed media output that may be resting in an output tray  118 . After a period that is suitable to allow the previously printed media to dry has passed, the output drying wing members  116  will retract in the respective directions indicated by arrows  120  so as to allow the newly printed media thereon to fall into the output tray  118 . 
     A wide variety of sizes and types of print media can be accommodated by the exemplary print media handling system  106 . To that end, the exemplary print media handling system  106  includes an adjustment arm  122  and an envelope feed slot  124 . 
     As illustrated for example in FIGS. 1-4, the exemplary printing system  108  includes a printer carriage slider rod  126  that is supported by the chassis  102  and a printer carriage  128  that reciprocatingly slides (or scans) back and forth along the slider rod, thereby defining the carriage scan axis. Referring more specifically to FIGS. 2-4, the exemplary printer carriage  128  consists primarily of a main body  130  having a rear wall  132 , a front apron  134 , L-shaped side walls  136  and  13 B, and an alignment web  140  that divides the -interior of the main body into first and second chambers  142  and  144 . The first and second chambers  142  and  144  respectively house first and second removable ink jet printhead cartridges  146  and  148  (also referred to as “pen cartridges,” “print cartridges” and “cartridges”). A pair of latch members  150  and  152 , which are pivotably attached to a hinge  154 , hold the printhead cartridges  146  and  148  in place. 
     The exemplary printer carriage  128  illustrated in FIGS. 1-4 also includes a pair of bearings  156  which slidably support the carriage on the slider rod  126 . A vertical anti-rotation guide arm  158  having a slide bushing  160  is attached to the main body rear wall  132 . The slide bushing  160  engages a horizontally extending anti-rotation guide bar  162 . The bearings  156  and slide bushing  160  provide a three-point printer carriage support system, while the vertical anti-rotation guide arm  158 , slide bushing, and horizontally extending anti-rotation guide bar  162  prevent the printer carriage  128  from pivoting forwardly about the slider rod  126 . 
     As noted above, the printer carriage  128  reciprocatingly scans back and forth on the slider rod  126 . Referring to FIGS. 1 and 4, an endless belt  164 , which is driven in a conventional manner, is used to drive the printer carriage  128 . A linear encoder strip  166  is sensed to determine the position of the printer carriage  128  on the scan axis using conventional techniques. The encoder strip  166  is, in conventional printers, indexed at time  0  to determine the nozzle firing times (i.e. the times at which the nozzles eject ink during each pass). Such indexing may be varied in accordance an invention herein, as is discussed in greater detail below. 
     Turning to the printhead cartridges, the exemplary printhead cartridges  146  and  148  illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 include printheads  168  and  170  that each have a plurality of downwardly facing ink ejecting nozzles. One example of a suitable ink jet printer carriage, which may be modified in the manner discussed below with reference to FIGS. 5-22, is disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/757,009, filed Nov. 26, 1996, which is incorporated herein by reference. Additionally, although the illustrated embodiment includes two printhead cartridges (a monotone cartridge  146  and a tri-color cartridge  148 ), other combinations, such as four discrete monochrome cartridges or a single monotone cartridge, may also be employed. 
     The exemplary printer  100  illustrated in FIG. 1 also includes a controller  172  on a printed circuit board  174 . The controller  172  receives instructions from a host device such as a personal computer and, in response to these instructions, controls the operations of the various components in the print media handling system  106  and the printing system  108 . More specifically, the controller  172  controls the. advancement of a sheet of print media  174  through the printing zone  114  by way of the print media handling system  106 , the reciprocating movement of the printer carriage  128 , and the firing of the various printhead cartridge nozzles based on the location of the print medium, the location of the printer carriage and the instructions from the host device. 
     In accordance with one invention herein, one or all of the printhead cartridges include a nozzle spacing arrangement wherein the nozzles are not all equally spaced. As illustrated for example in FIG. 5, one embodiment of a present invention may include a printhead nozzle plate  176  having a plurality of nozzles  178 . The exemplary nozzle plate  176 , which is only partially illustrated in Figure S and is not drawn to scale, includes  524  nozzles at 600 dpi, with the odd numbered nozzles in a first column and the even numbered nozzles in a second column. Thus, nozzle number  1  is the first nozzle (or nozzle closest to the ink source) in the odd numbered column, nozzle number  2  is the first nozzle in the even numbered column, and so on. The columns are offset from one another by approximately one dot row in the media scan axis direction such that successive dot rows are made up of dots produced by nozzles in opposite columns. If the nozzles in each column were equally spaced in the conventional manner, the nozzles would be located at the nominal nozzle locations  180  shown in dashed lines, which is where the controller  172  in the present invention assumes that they are. In accordance with a present invention, however, many of the nozzles are in fact located at respective actual nozzle locations, shown in solid lines, that are offset from their respective nominal nozzle locations by an adjustment amount AL. 
     The benefits of such offsetting can be explained as follows. A printhead with perfect nozzle directionality will, of course, produce the best image, while a printhead with only a few regions of directionality errors will produce visible banding over multiple passes. The present invention, on the other hand, may be used to introduce relatively minor directionality errors throughout the printhead, preferably along the media scan axis. Such minor, systematic errors are far less noticeable to the eye than the visible banding that results from having only localized directionality errors. 
     In one implementation, and as shown by way of example in FIG. 6, the adjustment amount ΔL may vary from dot row to dot row in such a manner that a regular, repeating, essentially sinusoidal pattern of adjustment amounts is formed. In the illustrated example, the adjustment amount ΔL varies from positive one-fourth of a dot row (about 12 microns in the 600 dpi embodiment) to negative one-forth of a dot row. Positive and negative are indicative of direction along the media scan axis. This aspect of the invention is also illustrated in FIG. 5, where nozzles  11 - 23  are identified by nozzle number with their respective adjustment amounts ΔL in parenthesis. Note, for example, that nozzle number  13  is offset by 9 microns in one direction and nozzle number  21  is offset by 12 microns in the negative, or opposite, direction. 
     The exemplary nozzle arrangement illustrated in FIGS. 5 and 6 may be employed in printers that operate in a variety of print modes such as, for example, the eight-pass, six-pass and four-pass modes. The exemplary printhead includes 524 nozzles, of which 504 (here, nozzles  11 - 514 ) will be used in any of the eight-pass, six-pass and four-pass modes. Thus, the eight-pass mode will employ a 63 nozzle advance after each pass, the six-pass mode will employ a 84 nozzle advance and the four-pass mode will employ a 128 nozzle advance. A 504 nozzle selection is particularly useful because this number is a whole number multiple of 21, i.e. (8) (63) (21)=(6) (84) (21)=(4) (128) (21)=504. Thus, the same printhead with a 21 nozzle adjustment period can be used for all three print modes. 
     Turning to FIGS. 7 and 8, the adjustment amounts ΔL as a function of image row number for the various passes in an eight-pass mode are shown. Note that in the first pass image row number  1  corresponds to nozzle  11  and image row number  2  corresponds to nozzle  12 , while in the second pass image row number  1  corresponds to nozzle  74  and image row number  2  corresponds to nozzle  75 . The adjustment amounts ΔL as a function of image row number for the various passes in the six-pass mode are shown in FIGS. 9 and 10, while the adjustment amounts for the four-pass mode are shown in FIGS. 11 and 12. In each case, the period of the essentially sinusoidal variation of the adjustment amount ΔL is 21 image rows (or 21 consecutively numbered nozzles). 
     Although the variation of the adjustment amounts ΔL in the embodiment illustrated in FIGS. 5-12 results in essentially uniform adjustment amounts from pass to pass, and essentially introduces systematic uniform dot placement error into the printing process, such uniformity is not required. In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in FIG. 13, the adjustment amounts ΔL range from positive one-fourth of a dot row (about 12 microns in the 600 dpi embodiment) to negative one-forth of a dot row as they did in the prior embodiment. However, the magnitude of the adjustment amounts is not uniform from pass to pass or from period to period. 
     As in the previously described embodiment, nozzles  11 - 514  are employed in all three of the print modes. With respect to the eight-pass mode, the adjustment amounts ΔL as a function of image row number for passes one (dash line) and two (solid line) are shown in FIG. 14, passes three (dash line) and four (solid line) are shown in FIG. 15, passes five (dash line) and six (solid line) are shown in FIG. 16, and passes seven (dash line) and eight (solid line) are shown in FIG.  17 . Turning to the six-pass mode, the adjustment amounts ΔL as a function of image row number for passes one (dash line) and two (solid line) are shown in FIG. 18, passes three (dash line) and four (solid line) are shown in FIG. 19, and passes five (dash line) and six (solid line) are shown in FIG.  20 . Finally, the adjustment amounts ΔL as a function of image row number for passes one (dash line) and two (solid line) in the four-pass mode are shown in FIG. 21, and passes three (dash line) and four (solid line) are shown in FIG.  22 . 
     In accordance with another invention herein, minor directionality errors may be introduced along the carriage scan axis by selectively varying the carriage scan velocity or the firing times of the nozzles with, for example, the controller  172 , to reduce or eliminate visible banding. As a result, the printer will print respective ink dots (i.e. eject ink) at dot printing locations on the carriage scan axis that are varied from the respective dot printing locations that correspond to the image information received from a host device which, in turn, varies where the dots will actually land on the print medium. Such variations in scan velocity or firing times may be employed in a printer that includes a conventional printhead, or in a printer including a printhead configured as described above with reference to FIGS. 5-22. This technique is especially useful when visible banding is due to error in ink drop velocity, carriage scan velocity, and printer cartridge/paper spacing. In addition, because it can be implemented through use of the controller  172 , as opposed to requiring modification of the print cartridge and/or other mechanical devices, the present technique can be selectively turned on and off by the user as needed or desired. 
     Although not required, the error distribution is preferably Gaussian, as opposed to uniform. In. other words, most of the dot rows are at about the location that corresponds to the image information received from a host device, while some are close to the location that corresponds to the image information received from a host device, and a few are farther away. Also, in a four-pass print mode, the magnitude of the variation will be less than that in a six-pass print mode which, in turn, will be less than that in an eight-pass print mode. 
     Turing first to variations in carriage velocity, a carriage in a 600 dpi printer will typically travel at 20 inches/second (ips). The controller  172  can, for example, be used to vary the carriage scan velocity such that the nozzles print dots at locations on the carriage scan axis that are offset by plus or minus one-forth of a dot row from the locations on the carriage scan axis that actually correspond to the image information received from a host device. Such variations in dot printing location correspond to variations in carriage velocity of between about plus and minus 4 ips assuming an ink drop flight time of 0.1 msec. [Note that 4 ips×600 dpi×0.1 msec=0.24 dot.] Variations in carriage velocity preferably change from pass to pass and, in some passes, there will be no variation at all. As a result, systematic visible banding will be substantially reduced or eliminated. The variations can be random, or there can be some pattern to them. 
     In one preferred embodiment, the scan speed may range from 18 to 22 ips. Thus, in an eight-pass mode, for example, the carriage velocity may be 18 ips, 19 ips, 19.5 ips, 20 ips, 20 ips, 20.5 ips, 21 ips, and 22 ips on successive passed. A six-pass mode could, for example, have carriage velocities of 18 ips, 19 ips, 20 ips, 20 ips, 21 ips, and 22 ips, while a four-pass mode could have carriage velocities of 19 ips, 19.5 ips, 20.5 ips, and 21 ips. 
     The controller  172  can also be used to vary the firing times of the nozzles. Nozzles in 600 dpi printer with a carriage velocity of 20 ips will fire (i.e. eject ink) once every 83 microseconds. Thus, to vary the firing times by an amount that corresponds to a range of plus or minus one-fourth of a dot row, for example, the firing times must be accelerated or delayed by amounts within a range of 0-20 microseconds. 
     Such timing variations may be implemented as follows. As noted above, the encoder strip  166  is normally indexed at time 0. The timing of the firing of the nozzles can be accelerated or delayed by varying the index time by amounts ranging from minus 20 microseconds to plus 20 microseconds. Variations in index times preferably vary from pass to pass and, in some passes, there will be no variation at all. As a result, systematic visible banding will be substantially reduced or eliminated. The variations can be random, or there can be some pattern to them. 
     For example, in an eight-pass mode, the encoder strip  166  can, for example, be indexed at −20 microseconds, −10 microseconds, −5 microseconds, 0 microseconds, 0 microseconds, +5 microseconds, +10 microseconds, and +20 microseconds. In a six-pass mode, the indexing may, for example, be at −5 microseconds, −10 microseconds, −5 microseconds, +5 microseconds, +10 microseconds, and +15 microseconds, while in a four-pass mode the encoder strip  166  may be indexed at −12 microseconds, −6 microseconds, +6 microseconds, and +12 microseconds. 
     Although the present inventions have been described in terms of the preferred embodiment above, numerous modifications and/or additions to the above-described preferred embodiment would be readily apparent to one skilled in the art. By way of example, but not limitation, variations in firing times could be accomplished by applying a random generator to each firing pulse. It is intended that the scope of the present inventions extend to all such modifications and/or additions.

Technology Category: 7