CONDENSATION CONTROL IN AN INKJET PRINTER
20220396085 · 2022-12-15
Assignee
Inventors
- Nicholas James Meisner (Corvallis, OR, US)
- Joseph Martin Santich (Corvallis, OR, US)
- Alon Levin (Netanya, IL)
Cpc classification
B41J2002/14362
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J29/377
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
In one example, a process to control condensation in an inkjet web printer includes injecting hot, dry air into the print zone. In another example, a shroud assembly includes a shroud spanning a full width of the print zone and having openings therein through which printheads are exposed during printing and an air injector attached to or integral with the shroud. The air injector spans a full width of the print zone upstream from all of the openings in the shroud. The air injector is configured to discharge air down and downstream with respect to a print media moving through the print zone during printing.
Claims
1. A shroud assembly for a group of printheads that define a print zone in an inkjet printer, the assembly comprising: a shroud spanning a full width of the print zone and having openings therein through which the printheads are exposed during printing; and an air injector attached to or integral with the shroud, the air injector spanning a full width of the print zone upstream from all of the openings in the shroud and the air injector configured to discharge air down and downstream with respect to a print media moving through the print zone during printing.
2. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the air injector comprises: a plenum spanning the full width of the print zone; and an outlet from the plenum through which air may be discharged from the plenum during printing, the outlet spanning a full width of the print zone and oriented down and downstream with respect to a print media moving through the print zone during printing.
3. The assembly of claim 2, wherein the outlet is oriented down and downstream 30° to 60° with respect to the print media moving through the print zone during printing.
4. The assembly of claim 3, wherein the outlet is located at least 4 cm upstream from a nearest opening in the shroud.
5. The assembly of claim 4, wherein the outlet is configured to discharge 275 kPa plenum air at 15 m/s to 50 m/s.
6. The assembly of claim 5, wherein the outlet comprises multiple holes sized and shaped to discharge 275 kPa plenum air at 15 m/s to 50 m/s.
7. A condensation control system for an inkjet printer with a printhead that defines a print zone, the system comprising: a heater to heat air; a dehumidifier to dry air, the heater and the dehumidifier in fluid communication with one another to make hot, dry air; a plenum upstream from and spanning a full width of the print zone; an outlet from the plenum through which air may be discharged from the plenum during printing, the outlet spanning a full width of the print zone and oriented down and downstream with respect to a print media moving through the print zone during printing; and a pump to pressurize the plenum with the hot, dry air.
8. The system of claim 7, comprising a controller configured to: cause the heater to heat air to 40° C. to 55° C. and the dehumidifier to dry the heated air to 5% or less relative humidity to make the hot, dry air; or cause the dehumidifier to dry air to 5% or less relative humidity and the heater to heat the dried air to 40° C. to 55° C. to make the hot dry air; and cause the pump to pressurize the plenum with the hot, dry air.
9. The system of claim 8, wherein the outlet is configured to discharge 275 kPa plenum air at 15 m/s to 50 m/s.
10. The system of claim 9, wherein the outlet comprises multiple holes sized and shaped to discharge 275 kPa plenum air at 15 m/s to 50 m/s.
11. A process to control condensation in an inkjet web printer that includes an inkjet printhead defining a print zone spanning substantially a full width of a moving print media web, the process comprising injecting hot, dry air into the print zone.
12. The process of claim 11, wherein injecting hot, dry air into the print zone comprises injecting hot, dry air 30° to 60° down and downstream toward the moving web at 15 m/s to 50 m/s.
13. The process of claim 11, wherein injecting hot, dry air into the print zone comprises injecting hot, dry air into the print zone from a location at least 4.0 cm upstream from the nearest printhead.
Description
DRAWINGS
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[0010] The same part numbers refer to the same or similar parts throughout the figures. The figures are not necessarily to scale.
DESCRIPTION
[0011] In high speed thermal inkjet printing, print defects caused by the condensation of water on the exposed surfaces of printheads and other structures in the print zone may limit printing speed, ink density and the type of print media. The occurrence of defect-causing condensation increases with faster printing speeds, higher printhead nozzle densities, and a wider range of print media weights and coatings. A new technique has been developed to help reduce condensation by lowering the dew point in the print zone below the temperature of nearby surfaces on printheads and other structures. Hot dry air is injected into the print zone under conditions sufficient to lower the dew point in the print zone to reduce condensation but without disturbing ink drops jetted on to the print media. For example, testing shows that 40° C. to 55° C. air with a relative humidity of 5% or less injected into the print zone at a 45° angle down toward the print media at 50 m/s significantly reduces condensation without disturbing ink drops jetted on to the moving media.
[0012] Examples of the new technique may be implemented in a shroud assembly that includes a shroud with openings for the printheads and an air injector attached to or integral with the shroud immediately upstream from the printhead openings. The air injector has a plenum and an outlet from the plenum through which pressurized air in the plenum is discharged at the desired speed across the full width of the print zone. The outlet is oriented to discharge the hot dry air down and downstream into the print zone at the desired angle.
[0013] These and other examples described below and shown in the figures illustrate but do not limit the scope of the patent, which is defined in the Claims following this Description.
[0014] As used in this document: “dry” air means air with a relative humidity 5% or lower; “hot” air means air with a temperature 40° C. or higher; a “memory” means any non-transitory tangible medium that can embody, contain, store, or maintain instructions for use by a processor and may include, for example, circuits, integrated circuits, ASICs (application specific integrated circuits), hard drives, random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), and memory cards and sticks and other portable storage devices; and a “printhead” means an inkjet type dispenser for a 2D or 3D printer to dispense ink or other liquids, for example as drops or streams.
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[0016] Controller 20 represents the programming, processors and associated memory, and the electronic circuitry and components needed to control the operative elements of system 10. In particular, in this example controller 20 includes a memory 28 with condensation control instructions 30 and a processor 32 to read and execute instructions 30. Although controller 20 is shown separate from heater 12, dehumidifier 14, and pump 16 in
[0017] Air pump 16 may be implemented, for example, as an air compressor located upstream from air injector 18 in the direction air flows to plenum 22 to push hot, dry air into plenum 22. Heater 12 may be implemented, for example, as an inline process air heater with an electric heating element. Dehumidifier 14 may be implemented, for example, as a water trap in a compressed air system used to pressurize plenum 22. It may be desirable in some implementations to heat the ambient air, which lowers relative humidity, and then dehumidify the heated air. Thus, in the example shown in
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[0019] Printing station 38 includes an arched printing unit 44 and a dryer 46 under arched printing unit 44. In this example, arched printing unit 44 includes a first printing unit 44A for printing on one side of web 36 and a second printing unit 44B for printing on the other side of web 36. First printing unit 44A includes a first series of printheads 48, 50, 52, and 54 arranged along an arc on one side of arched printing unit 44. Second printing unit 44B includes a second series of printheads 56, 58, 60, and 62 arranged along an arc on the other side of arched printing unit 44. Each printhead 48-62 represents one or multiple printheads that together define a corresponding print zone 64 spanning substantially the full width of print media web 36. In one example, printheads 48-54 and 56-62 dispense black (K) ink, magenta (M) ink, cyan (C) ink, and yellow (Y) ink, respectively, on to print media 36 as it moves through each print zone 64.
[0020] In the example shown in
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[0022] Hot dry air is injected into print zone 64 under conditions sufficient to lower the dew point in the print zone to reduce condensation without disturbing ink drops jetted on to print media 36. Arrow 72 in
[0023] Testing also indicates that injecting the hot, dry air down toward the print media at about 45° enables reduced condensation without disturbing ink drops jetted on to the moving media. As shown in
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[0027] Air injector 18 from
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[0029] The examples shown in the figures and described above illustrate but do not limit the patent, which is defined in the following Claims.
[0030] “A” and “an” used in the claims means one or more.