From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Inkjet printers' are a type of
computer printer that operates by propelling tiny droplets
of liquid
ink
onto paper. They are the most common type of
computer printer for the general consumer due to their low
cost, high quality of output, capability of printing in vivid
color, and ease of use.
In general
In the personal and
small business computer market, inkjet printers currently
predominate. Inkjets are usually inexpensive, quiet,
reasonably fast, and many models can produce high quality
output. Like most modern technologies, the present-day inkjet
has built on the progress made by many earlier versions. Among
many contributors,
Hewlett-Packard and
Canon can claim a substantial share of credit for the
development of the modern inkjet. In the worldwide consumer
market, four manufacturers account for the majority of inkjet
printer sales: Canon, Hewlett-Packard,
Epson, and
Lexmark.
Technology
Ink jet printers use one of three main technologies:
thermal, piezoelectric, and continuous.
Thermal Ink Jet
Most consumer ink jet printers (Epson
being a notable exception) work by having a print cartridge
with a series of tiny electrically-heated chambers constructed
by
photolithography. To produce an image, the printer runs a
pulse of current through the heating elements. A steam
explosion in the chamber forms a bubble, which propels a
droplet of ink onto the paper (hence Canon's tradename for its
inkjets, Bubblejet). When the bubble condenses, surplus
ink is sucked back up from the printing surface. The ink's
surface tension pumps another charge of ink into the
chamber through a narrow channel attached to an ink reservoir.
Thermal ink jet technology is used almost exclusively in
the consumer ink jet market. The ink used must be water-based,
but the print head may be produced at less cost than other ink
jet technologies.
Note that this is not the same thing as a
thermal printer, commonly found in ATMs and cash register
receipt printers.
Piezoelectric Ink Jet
All Epson printers and most commercial and industrial ink
jet printers use a
piezoelectric crystal in each nozzle instead of a heating
element. When current is applied, the crystal bends, forcing a
droplet of ink from the nozzle. Piezoelectric ink jet allows a
wider variety of inks than thermal or continuous ink jet but
is more expensive.
The emerging
Ink jet material deposition market uses ink jet
technologies, typically piezoelectric ink jet, to deposit
materials on substrates.
Continuous Ink Jet
The continuous ink jet method is used commercially for
marking and coding of products and packages. The first patent
on the idea is from 1867, by William Thomson. The first
commercial model was introduced in 1951 by Siemens. In
continuous ink jet technology, a high-pressure pump directs
liquid ink from a reservoir through a microscopic nozzle,
creating a continuous stream of ink droplets. A piezoelectric
crystal causes the stream of liquid to break into droplets at
regular intervals. The ink droplets are subjected to an
electrostatic field created by a charging electrode as they
form. The field is varied according to the degree of drop
deflection desired. This results in a controlled, variable
electrostatic charge on each droplet. Charged droplets are
separated by one or more uncharged “guard droplets” to
minimize electrostatic repulsion between neighboring droplets.
The charged droplets are then directed (deflected) to the
receptor material to be printed by electrostatic deflection
plates, or are allowed to continue on undeflected to a
collection gutter for reuse. The more highly charged droplets
are deflected to a greater degree.
Continuous ink jet is one of the oldest ink jet
technologies in use and is fairly mature. One of its
advantages is the very high velocity (~50 m/s) of the ink
droplets, which allows the ink drops to be thrown a long
distance to the target. Another advantage is freedom from
nozzle clogging as the jet is always in use. Volatile solvents
(ketones and alcohols) can therefore be used, giving the
ability of the ink to "bite" into the substrate and dry
quickly. The fluid handling systems can be quite complex.
Droplets are generated at ~75 to 125 kHz; only a few percent
of the droplets are used to print; the rest are recycled.
Inkjet Inks
black ink refill kit for inkjet printer
color ink refill kit for inkjet printer
refilling a
canon ink tank
The basic problem with inkjet inks is the conflicting
requirement for a colouring agent that will stay on the
surface and rapid dispersement of the carrier.
Small inkjet printers as being used in offices or at home,
all use aqueous inks based on a mixture of water,
glycol and some dyes or pigments. These inks are inexpensive
to manufacture, but are difficult to control on the surface of
media and therefore require often specially coated media.
Aqueous inks are mainly being used in printers with
disposable, so-called thermal, inkjet heads, as these heads
require water in order to perform.
In professional wide format printers, a much wider range of
inks are being used. All these inks require piezo inkjet
heads:
In solvent inks,
VOCs are the main ingredient. Advantage of these inks is
that they are very inexpensive and enable printing on uncoated
vinyl substrates, which are used a lot in advertising for
billboards and fleet graphics.
UV-curable inks consist mainly of acrylic monomers
with an initiator package. After printing, the ink has to be
cured by a high dose of UV-light. Advantage of UV-curable inks
is that they dry instantly, can print on a wide range of
uncoated substrates and make a very robust image. A
disadvantage is that they are more expensive and require
expensive curing modules in the printer.
Dye sublimation inks contain special
sublimation dyes and are used to print directly or
indirectly on fabrics that consist of a high percentage of
polyester fibres. In a heating step the dyes sublimate into
the fibers and create an image with strong color and good
durability.
Inkjet head design
Two main design philosophies operate in inkjet head design.
Each has strengths and weaknesses.
The fixed-head philosophy provides an inbuilt print
head (often referred to as a 'Gaither Head') that is designed
to last for the whole life of the printer. The idea is that
because the head need not be replaced every time the ink runs
out, consumable costs are typically lower and the head itself
can be more precise than a cheap disposable one. On the other
hand, if the head is damaged, it is usually necessary to
replace the entire printer.
Epson have traditionally used fixed print heads featuring
micropiezo technology. These print heads are available in
consumer products and are traditionally more accurate in dot
placement than comparable thermal printers.
Other fixed head designs are more likely to be found on
industrial high-end printers and large format plotters.
Because development of a fixed (or piezo) inkjet
head requires a large investment in research and development,
there are only very few companies offering them: Trident, Xaar,
Spectra, Hitachi, Scitex Vision (recently acquired by
Hewlett-Packard), Brother, Konica and ToshibaTec (the latter 2
being licensees of Xaar).
The disposable head philosophy uses a print head
which is part of the replaceable
ink cartridge. Every time the printer runs out of ink, the
entire cartridge is replaced with a new one. This adds to the
cost of
consumables and makes it more difficult to manufacture a
high-precision head within reasonable cost limits, but also
means that a damaged print head is only a minor problem: the
user can simply buy a new cartridge.
Hewlett-Packard has traditionally favoured the disposable
print head, as did Canon in its early models.
An intermediate method does exist: a disposable ink tank
connected to a disposable head, which is replaced infrequently
(perhaps every tenth ink tank or so). Most high-volume
Hewlett-Packard inkjet printers use this setup, with the
disposable print heads used on lower volume models.
Canon now uses (in most models) replaceable print heads
which are designed to last the life of the printer, but can be
replaced by the user if they should become clogged. For models
with "Think Tank" technology, the ink tanks are separate for
each ink color. Hewlett-Packard is now also experimenting with
fixed print heads on many of their upcoming low-volume models.
Advantages
Compared to earlier consumer-oriented printers, ink jets
have a number of advantages. They are quieter in operation
than impact
dot matrix or
daisywheel printers. They can print finer, smoother
details through higher printhead resolution, and many ink jets
with photorealistic-quality color printing are widely
available.
In comparison to more expensive technologies like
thermal wax,
dye sublimations, and
laser printers, ink jets have the advantage of practically
no warm-up time and lower cost per page (except when compared
to laser-printers).
Disadvantages
The disadvantages of inkjets include flimsy print heads
(prone to clogging) and expensive ink cartridges (sometimes
costing US$30 – $40 or more). This typically leads
value-minded consumers to consider
laser printers for medium-to-high volume printer
applications. Alternatively, consumers can save money by using
compatible generic cartridges or re-filling kits. However,
damage to the printer due to inferior quality ink is typically
not covered under the manufacturer's warranty.
Article on generic inks
Other disadvantages include ink bleeding, where ink is
carried sideways away from the desired location by the
capillary effect; the result is a muddy appearance on some
types of paper. Most ink jet printer manufacturers also sell
special
clay-treated
paper designed to reduce bleeding, but such paper is expensive
and sometimes has a peculiar texture.
Because the ink used in most inkjets is water-soluble, care
must be taken with inkjet-printed documents to avoid even the
smallest drop of water, which can cause severe "blurring" or
"running." Also,
highlighter markers cannot be used with such documents.
Underlying business model
A common
business model for inkjet printers involves selling the
actual printer at or even below production cost, while
dramatically marking up the price of the (proprietary) ink
cartridges. Hewlett-Packard, for example were recently able to
cover the entire 12-month losses accumulated by their other
division with the profits made by their consumables division,
and have a little left over.
Alternatives for consumers are cheaper copies of
cartridges, produced by other companies, and refilling
cartridges themselves, for which special refill sets are for
sale. As a result of the large differences in pricing due to
OEM markups, there are many companies specializing in these
types of alternative off-brand ink cartridges. Most printer
manufacturers discourage refilling disposable cartridges.
Aside from the obvious economic reasons, the heating elements
in thermal cartridges often burn out when the ink supply is
depleted, permanently damaging the print head.
Some inkjet printers enforce this
tying using
microchips in the cartridges to prevent the use of
third-party or refilled ink cartridges. In
Lexmark v. Static Control, the
Supreme Court of the United States ruled that
circumvention of this technique does not violate the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act. In fact, the
European Commission ruled this practice anticompetitive:
it will disappear in newer models sold in the European Union.
Professional inkjet printers
Besides the well known small inkjet printers for home and
office, there is a market for professional inkjet printers;
most of them being for wide format printing. "Wide format"
means that there are printers ranging in print width from 24"
inch up to 5 meters. The application of most of these printers
is for printing advertising graphics; a minor application is
printing of designs by architects or engineers.
In terms of units, the major supplier is
Hewlett-Packard. They supply over 90 percent of the market
for printers for printing technical drawings. The major
products in their
Designjet series are the Designjet 500/800, the Designjet
1050 and the Designjet 4000/4500. Besides this they also have
the Designjet 5500, a 6 color printer that is used especially
for printing graphics.
A few other suppliers of low volume wide format printers
are
Epson,
Kodak and
Canon. Epson has a group of 3 Japanese companies around it
that all use predominantly heads and inks coming from Epson:
Mimaki, Roland and Mutoh.
More professional high-volume inkjet printers are made by a
range of companies. These printers can range in price from
25,000€ to as high as 1.5 million €. Carriage widths on these
units can range from 54" to 192" and ink technologies tend
toward solvent, eco-solvent and UV-curing as opposed to
water-based (aqueous) ink sets. Major applications where these
printers are used are for outdoor settings for billboards,
truck sides and truck curtains, building graphics and banners,
while indoor displays include point-of-sales displays, backlit
displays, exhibition graphics and museum graphics.
The major suppliers for professional wide- and grand-format
printers include: Inca, Durst, Océ, NUR, Lüscher, VUTEk, Zünd,
Scitex Vision, Gandinnovations, Mutoh, Mimaki, Roland DGA,
Seiko I Infotech, Leggett and Platt, Agfa, Raster Printers and
MacDermid ColorSpan.
Inkjet Printing of Functional Materials
Three-dimensional printing constructs a prototype by
printing cross-sections on top of one another.
High-end inkjet printers can be used to produce fine-art
prints called
giclées.
U.S.
Patent 6,319,530 teaches a "Method of photocopying an
image onto an edible web for decorating iced baked goods". In
plain English, this
invention enables one to inkjet print a food-grade color
photograph on a
birthday cake's surface. Many bakeries now carry
Edible Image brand printers.
Inkjet printers and similar technologies are to be used in
the production of many microscopic items. See
MEMS.