![]() PRINTING HEAD OR INKJET PRINTER WITH REDUCED SOLVENT CONSUMPTION
专利摘要:
The invention relates to a print head of a binary continuous jet printer comprising: - means for producing a plurality of ink jets in a cavity (5) delimited by lateral walls (9, 10), and by an upper wall (2) and a lower wall (21), - means (6) for separating drops or sections of one or more of said jets for printing drops or sections which are not used for 'impression ; - a slot (17), which passes through the lower wall (21), allowing the output of the ink drops for printing, - a recovery gutter (70) drops or sections not intended for printing, including: * a first part, whose width goes, in the direction of circulation of the drops in the gutter, while being reduced; a restriction (38), the first part being inclined, with respect to a plane (PO) defined by the path of the jets intended for printing, from the entrance slit of the drops in the trough to the restriction; a second part, for evacuating a gas, or a mixture of gas and liquid, from the restriction (38). 公开号:FR3053923A1 申请号:FR1756810 申请日:2017-07-18 公开日:2018-01-19 发明作者:Bruno Barbet 申请人:Dover Europe SARL; IPC主号:
专利说明:
Holder (s): DOVER EUROPE SARL. Agent (s): BREVALEX Limited liability company. (£ 4) PRINTHEAD OR INK JET PRINTER WITH REDUCED SOLVENT CONSUMPTION. FR 3 053 923 - A1 (5 /) The invention relates to a printhead of a binary continuous jet printer comprising: - means for producing a plurality of ink jets in a cavity (5), delimited by side walls (9, 10), and by an upper wall (2) and a lower wall (21), - Means (6) for separating drops or sections from one or more of said jets intended for printing from drops or sections which are not used for printing; - a slot (17), which passes through the lower wall (21), allowing the exit of the ink drops intended for printing, - a recovery gutter (70) for drops or sections nçn intended for printing, comprising: * A 1 st part, whose width in the direction of droplet flow in gquttière, being reduced; * a restriction (38), the 1 st part being inclined, with respect to a plane (P o ) defined by the path of the jets intended for printing, from the entry slot of the drops in the gutter to the restriction; * A 2 nd part for discharging a gas, or a mixture of gas and liquid since the restriction (38). i PRINTHEAD OR INK JET PRINTER WITH REDUCED SOLVENT CONSUMPTION DESCRIPTION TECHNICAL AREA AND PRIOR ART The invention relates to print heads for printers or binary continuous ink jet printers provided with a multi-nozzle drop generator. It relates more particularly to a printhead or a printer with binary continuous jets in which the consumption of solvent is close to the quantity of solvent contained in the ink which reaches the printing medium. Continuous jet printers include an ink drop generator, and means for separating the paths of the drops produced by the generator and directing them towards a printing medium or towards a recovery gutter. The drop generator comprises nozzles aligned on a nozzle plate along an axis X of alignment of the nozzles. During printing, ink jets are continuously ejected from these nozzles in a Z direction perpendicular to the nozzle plate. Among the continuous jet printers, there are the deviated continuous jet printers and the binary continuous jet printers. In deflected continuous jet printers, the drops formed from a nozzle during the printing time of a position of a print medium are deflected or not deflected. For each printing position and for each nozzle, a segment perpendicular to the direction of movement of the printing medium is printed. The deviated drops are so that they will strike the printing medium on the part of the printed segment which must be taken into account the pattern to be printed. The non-deflected drops are recovered by a recovery gutter. Deviated continuous jet printers generally have few ejection nozzles, but each nozzle can print for each printing position of the support several pixels distributed over the printing segment according to the pattern to be printed. In binary continuous jet printers, ink from a nozzle prints only one pixel per print position. The pixel considered receives no drop or receives one or more drops, depending on the pattern to be printed. Therefore for good printing speed, the nozzle plate has a large number of nozzles, for example 64, allowing the simultaneous printing of as many pixels as nozzles. The drops not intended for printing are recovered by a recovery gutter. Such printers and continuous jet print heads have been widely described. Reference may be made in particular as regards the formation of the jets, their breaks to form drops, the deflection of the drops, in the “prior art” paragraphs of the patents assigned to the present applicant. For example, US patent 8,540,350 (FR 2,952,851) describes a method for avoiding crosstalk between jets coming from nozzles adjacent to each other. Reference may also be made to the prior art described in US Pat. No. 7,192,121 (FR 2851495) relating to the positions of broken jets depending on whether a drop formed by the breaking of the jet is intended or not to strike the printing medium. In continuous jet printers, liquid inks are used. These inks contain a solvent in which components of the ink are dissolved. It is desirable that the ink dries quickly after it has been deposited on the print medium. For this reason, the solvents used are volatile. The most commonly used solvents are methyl ethyl ketone known as “mek” acetone or alcohols such as, for example, ethanol. The use of a volatile solvent, however, involves drawbacks. As it is volatile, the solvent escapes from the ink as vapors. Application WO 2012/038520 provides means to remedy the drawback resulting from the presence of solvent vapor around the jets. Besides a first part of vapors which can condense on the walls of the cavity in which the jets circulate, a second part leaves this cavity by a slit in the cavity through which the drops intended for printing exit. This second part mixes with the ambient air which is thus contaminated. This contamination can lead to a refusal of an environmental quality label. When the solvent concentration exceeds a certain threshold, the air becomes unfit for breathing. Finally, if the concentration rises, the air solvent mixture is potentially explosive. The solution provided by application WO 2012/038520 relates, like the present invention, to binary continuous jet printers. In these printers a small portion of the ink of the order of 10% is directed towards the printing medium. This means that a major part of the ink emitted by the nozzles is directed towards a recovery gutter. The different jets thus together form a liquid curtain which is directed towards the recovery gutter. Only a small part of the ink ejected from the nozzles leaves this curtain in the form of drops which are directed towards the printing medium. These drops leave the cavity through a slot parallel to the direction of alignment of the nozzles. The length of this slot is slightly greater than the distance separating the nozzles from the nozzle plate furthest from each other. The liquid curtain which moves towards the recovery gutter has a speed Vj. By viscosity effect, the air which is around this curtain is drawn in the same direction as the jets. The air immediately in contact with the liquid is entrained at a speed substantially equal to Vj. When one moves away radially from the jet, the air speed decreases, until reaching a limit where its speed is low compared to the speed Vj. The thickness of a so-called "limit" layer is thus the distance separating the liquid air limit, and the limit where the air is no longer entrained by the liquid. The solution provided by the application WO 2012/038520 consists first of all in using an ink whose Schmidt coefficient is close to 1. This has the effect that the solvent vapors emitted by the ink remain practically confined inside of the boundary layer. It then consists in placing the apex of the recovery gutter so as to recover, not only the deflected drops not used for printing, but also the air laden with solvent vapor being in the two boundary layers which are found on either side of the curtain of jets. To this end, the distance from the apex to the XZ plane is preferably less than the deviation deviation of the jets at the apex minus the thickness of the boundary layer. The deviation deviation of the jets at the apex is the distance measured along a Y axis perpendicular to the XZ plane, between the XZ plane and the position of a deflected drop at this apex. Application WO 2012/038520 gives the formula for calculating the thickness δ 2 of the boundary layer as a function of the distance L between the nozzle plate and the apex, with a numerical coefficient a of between 3 and 5, typically 3, the kinematic viscosity of the air v a equal to 2.10 5 m 2 .s 1 and the speed Vj of the jets. This same document also explains how to adjust the position of the gutter in a Y direction perpendicular to the XZ plane. To compensate for the pressure loss inside the cavity in which the jets circulate, an air flow of the same flow rate or very slightly greater than the flow of air sucked in by the gutter is injected substantially at the level of the nozzles. A large part of the injected air is sucked in at the recovery gutter, and a small part exits through the outlet slot for the printing drops. The overpressure which is thus maintained in the cavity in which the jets circulate is opposed to the introduction of satellite drops or of dust into this cavity. However, this solution is unsatisfactory and does not allow maximum recovery of the solvent vapors present in the cavity of the print head in which the jets circulate. In addition, it limits the Schmidt coefficient of the ink used. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to devices and methods making it possible, on the one hand, to recover the solvent vapors present in the cavity of the printhead in which the jets circulate as much as possible. It also aims to reduce as much as possible the quantity of solvent vapor which escapes towards the outside of said cavity through the slot for the passage of the drops intended for printing. Compared to the request WO 2012/038520, it also makes it possible to reduce the stress on the Schmidt coefficient of the ink used. The subject of the invention is firstly a print head of a binary continuous jet printer comprising: - a jet circulation cavity, means for producing a plurality of ink jets in said cavity, - Means for separating drops or sections of one or more of said jets intended for printing drops or sections which are not used for printing; - a slit open on the outside of the cavity and allowing the exit of the drops or sections of ink intended for printing, - a gutter for recovering drops or sections not intended for printing. In general, the cavity can be delimited laterally by walls, called side walls. A wall, called the upper wall, and a wall, called the lower wall, delimit it in a direction of flow of the jets. The side walls can be arranged on either side of a plane defined by the plurality of jets and at least partially parallel thereto. According to a first aspect of the invention, the gutter can include: * a 1st part, which has a slot for entering the drops into the gutter, the width of this 1st part going, in the direction of circulation of the drops in the gutter, reducing, an area of this 1st part forming an impact surface of the drops not intended for printing; * Restriction or elbow, the era portion being inclined from the inlet slot drops into the gutter up to the restriction, for example, from the entry slot drops into the gutter to a plane which passes through the jet outlet slot; * A 2 nd portion for discharging the fluid mixture (liquid and gas mixture that results from the impact of drops on the impact surface) from the restriction. Thus, drops or jet sections are not intended for printing are sent to a gutter in which the air flow is, by the geometry of the era of the gutter, accelerate suction of the ink after impact of the drops on the impact surface, then take the ink towards the restriction, which will form a non-return element. Preferably, the 2 nd portion has a width which is increasing from the elbow. The 2nd part of the gutter can be inclined from the restriction. If the ERE portion is inclined from the entrance slit of the drops in the gutter towards the elbow, the 2nd part of the gutter can be tilted in opposite direction. The 2 parts separate the drops which circulate in the gutter from the entry of the latter and from the plane defined by the jets. In other words, if the st portion is inclined from the entrance slit of the drops to a plane which passes through the jet outlet slot, the 2nd part of the channel may be inclined from the restriction away from said plane , as the distance to the restriction increases. Advantageously, the surface of the era of the gutter, forming an impact surface of the deflected drops, is at least in part convex. The invention also relates to a method of operating, or printing, a print head according to the invention, in which the drops or the sections of ink intended for printing are sent to the exit slot, while the drops or sections which are not used for printing are sent to the gutter where they are sucked, with in particular the advantages mentioned above. The invention can therefore be implemented during a printing process. According to another aspect of the invention, which may or may not be taken in combination with the first aspect above, means may be provided for injecting gas into the cavity, and for circulating this gas, in the cavity , towards the means for producing a plurality of ink jets in said cavity, then towards the gutter. It is thus possible to generate an air circulation which will make it possible to bring solvent vapors to the gutter, even from areas of the cavity which are situated outside the boundary layer. In most cases, the gas injected through the injection pipe will be air, but another gas can be injected, in particular nitrogen. The injected gas is directed towards the means which will make it possible to produce a plurality of ink jets in said cavity. Under the effect of stopping the flow of gas by these means, and due to the air entrainment effect of the deflected jets (or not intended for printing), the gas is then entrained downstream in the same direction as the jets, and is sucked into the gutter, due to the depression present at the entrance thereof. Therefore the solvent vapors which were not inside the boundary layer, are nevertheless brought back to the gutter. According to the inventors, these vapors which were not in the boundary layer have two origins: - The first arises from the fact that solvent molecules escape from the boundary layer during the path of the ink between the means for producing a plurality of jets and the gutter; - the second comes from the impact or collision effect against a wall of the gutter of the drops recovered by the gutter. Under the effect of the impact against this wall, gases laden with vapor are entrained out of the gutter and the surface for exchange of the material initially contained in the drop with the environment increases significantly. Thanks to the entrainment effect of the gases arriving in the direction towards the means for producing a plurality of jets and to the vortex effected by these gases, all the vapors which for one reason or another have escaped recovery by the gutter are brought back to it. Air, laden with solvent vapor, which would escape from the recovery gutter would first be entrained towards the nozzle plate by the flow of injected gas. At least part of these vapors return to the recovery gutter. Another part makes one or more turns in the cavity. Note that if the solvent vapor pressure in the cavity increases, the amount of vapor absorbed by the gutter also increases, so that the vapor pressure in the cavity tends to remain substantially constant. It is noted that the advantage of using an ink whose Schmidt coefficient is close to 1 is to confine a major part of the solvents inside the boundary layer. Thanks to the invention, the vapors which escape from this boundary layer are recovered. The constraint on the value of the Schmidt coefficient is therefore reduced, it can therefore be chosen up to a high value, for example up to 5 or be strictly greater than 1 and less than 5. The means for injecting gas into the cavity may comprise a conduit, which opens at least partially in front of the gutter, or a face which laterally delimits the gutter on the side of the cavity, relative to a plane (P o ) defined by the path of the jets intended for printing the drops. In the previous case, with a conduit opening into the cavity, the distance (b) between the side walls of the cavity is preferably less than the distance between an upper wall of the cavity and the point of the conduit closest to this wall superior. As a variant, the means for injecting gas into the cavity comprise a conduit, which opens into the cavity by passing through the lower wall. More preferably, in a printhead according to the invention, the path of the gas injected into the cavity, in the direction of the means for producing a plurality of ink jets, is greater than the path in a direction perpendicular to a plane ( P o ) defined by the path of the jets intended for printing. The plane (P o ), defined by the path of the jets intended for printing the drops, separates the inlet, into the cavity, from the means for injecting gas therein, and the gutter or the inlet of the gutter. Similarly, the outlet slot is disposed between the inlet, into the cavity, of the means for injecting gas therein, and the gutter. The means for injecting gas into the cavity can allow gas to be injected in a direction at least partly perpendicular or at least partly parallel, to a plane (P o ) defined by the path of the jets intended for printing. A deflection surface of a gas introduced into the cavity can be provided on the path of a gas coming from the means for injecting gas into the cavity. It is for example a surface of a stud or an obstacle or a guide arranged on the path of a gas introduced into the cavity. The slot, open to the outside, can advantageously have a shape which diverges from the inside towards the outside of the cavity. The invention also relates to a method of operating, or printing, a print head as just described, in which the drops or the sections of ink intended for printing are sent to the slit, while the drops or sections which are not used for printing are sent to the gutter where they are sucked; during these different phases, a gas circulates in the cavity towards the means for producing a plurality of ink jets in said cavity, then towards the gutter. The invention can therefore be implemented during a printing process. Whatever the embodiment considered of a device or a method according to the invention, the means for separating drops or sections of one or more of said jets intended for the printing of drops or sections which are not used for the printing may include at least one electrode formed against, or in, one of these walls. At least one electrode can be flush with the surface of the wall in question. Thus the drops or sections which are not used for printing are deflected by the electrostatic effect of at least one electrode on the drops. Preferably, the entry slot of the gutter is disposed at the bottom of the wall against, or in which at least one of these electrodes is formed. A part of the wall against which at least one electrode is formed advantageously moves away from the plane defined by the plurality of jets. In a printhead according to the invention, an edge of the entry slot of the gutter can be located directly above one of the edges of the slot, which optimizes the recovery of drops not intended for the impression. The gutter for recovering the drops not intended for printing may have a wall, or a part, downstream, a part of which is situated inside the cavity. In one embodiment, the apex of the recovery gutter is located at a distance L from the plane XZ less than or equal to the deviation deviation of the jets at the niveauο level of this apex minus the thickness of the boundary layer around the jets deflected at this apex. This characteristic improves the recovery, not only of the ink not used for printing but also of the vapors present inside the boundary layer surrounding these jets. A device or method according to the invention allows a reduction in the quantity of solvent vapor escaping outside a print head of a binary continuous jet printer. According to another aspect, the dynamic pressure of the gas injected into the cavity is adjusted so that a resultant of a speed vector of the gas flow is directed in the direction Z in the upstream downstream direction. In this way the gas flow does not disturb the trajectory of drops intended for printing which follow a trajectory coincident with the axis Z of the nozzle from which they exit. Indeed, the gas flow will "feed" the curtain of jets; the pressure effect (by the injected gas) will be roughly equal to, or will compensate for, the suction effect. The gas flow therefore does not cause any disturbance. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS An exemplary embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which; FIG. 1 represents a schematic view of a print head mainly showing the components of the print head located downstream of the nozzles; FIG. 2A represents a diagrammatic section of a cavity of a printing head, according to one aspect of the invention, this section being made along a plane parallel to the plane YZ and containing one of the axes Z of a nozzle . FIG. 2B represents a variant of the structure of FIG. 2A; FIG. 3 represents a sectional view of a cavity of a printing head according to one aspect of the invention, the section being made along a parallel to the plane YZ and containing one of the axes Z of a nozzle. FIG. 4 represents another embodiment of a print head according to the invention as well as a simulation of an air circulation in this print head. FIG. 5 represents a detail of a cavity of an embodiment of a printhead according to the invention, Figure 6 shows the main blocks of an inkjet printer. Figure 7 shows a structure of an inkjet printer to which the present invention can be applied. In the figures, similar or identical technical elements are designated by the same reference numbers. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS A general structure of the print head is explained below, in connection with FIG. 1. The head comprises a drop generator 1. This generator comprises a nozzle plate 2 on which are aligned, along an axis X (contained in the plane of the figure), an integer n of nozzles 4, including a first 4i and a last nozzle 4 n . The first and last nozzles (4i, 4n) are the nozzles furthest from each other. Each nozzle has an axis of emission of a jet parallel to a direction or an axis Z (located in the plane of FIG. 1), perpendicular to the nozzle plate and to the axis X mentioned previously. A third axis, Y, is perpendicular to each of the two axes X and Z, the two axes X and Z extending in the plane of Figure 1. In the figure, we can see the 4 X nozzle. Each nozzle is in hydraulic communication with a pressurized stimulation chamber. The drop generator has as many stimulation chambers as there are nozzles. Each room is equipped with an actuator, for example a piezoelectric crystal. An example of design of a stimulation chamber is described in document US 7,192,121. Downstream of the nozzle plate are means, or sorting block, 6 which make it possible to separate the drops intended for printing from the drops or sections of jets which are not used for printing. The drops emitted or sections of jets, emitted by a nozzle and intended for printing, follow a trajectory along the axis Z of the nozzle and will strike a printing medium 8, after having passed through an outlet slot 17. This slot is open to the outside of the cavity and allows the exit of the ink drops intended for printing; it is parallel to the direction X of alignment of the nozzles, the axes of direction Z of the nozzles passing through this slot, which is on the face opposite to the nozzle plate 2. It has a length at least equal to the distance between the first and the last nozzle. In the remainder of the present application as well as in the claims, the term “cavity” designates the area of the space in which the ink circulates between the nozzle plate 2 and the slot 17 for the outlet of the drops intended for printing. or between the nozzle plate and the recovery gutter. The nozzle plate 2 forms in fact an upper wall of the cavity. The emitted drops or sections of jets, emitted by a nozzle and not intended for printing, are deflected by the means 6 and are recovered by a recovery gutter 7 and then recycled. The gutter has, in the direction X, a length at least equal to the distance between the first and the last nozzle. Sectional views of various examples of printhead structure, according to various aspects of the invention, are explained in more detail below, in connection with Figures 2A - 4. We first explain common aspects to these different achievements. These cuts are made along a plane parallel to the plane YZ, and containing the axis Z of a nozzle 4. The representation of each cut keeps the same shape over the distance going, in the direction X (perpendicular to the plane of each of the figures 2A-4), from the first nozzle 4i to the last nozzle 4 n . In these figures, only the cavity 5 is shown in which the jets circulate. P o denotes the plane which passes through the 4x nozzle and which is parallel to the XZ plane. This plane is perpendicular to each of Figures 2A - 4 and passes through all the nozzles, which are aligned along X. It also passes through the slot 17. A trace of this plane is shown in Figure 3 in broken lines. The upper part of the cavity is delimited by the wall 2, which also forms, or comprises, the nozzle plate or comprises the nozzles. The lower part of the cavity is delimited by a lower wall 21, crossed by the slot 17, and by a part of the gutter 7. Walls 9 and 10 limit the lateral extension, along the axis Y. The cavity further comprises, on one side of the plane P o , a side wall 9, preferably parallel to the plane P o and contiguous with the plate 2 with nozzles. A wall 10, located on the other side of the plane P o , faces the wall 9. The cavity is therefore delimited, on either side of the plane P o , by these 2 walls 9 and 10. By convention the side of the plane P o where the wall 10 is located and the gutter 7 is called the first side of this plane, the other side (where the wall 9 is located) is called the second side. The wall 10 has ends, in the direction X, which are contiguous with the nozzle plate 2. In the part close to the nozzle plate 2 and over a length which is preferably slightly greater than the distance between the first 4iet last nozzle 4 n, this wall may include a slot 14, which will suck ink that is deposited on the nozzle plate or in its vicinity. At the bottom of this wall 10, there is the inlet slot of the recovery gutter 7, 70 to allow the drops which are deflected to be recovered so that they do not pass through the slot 17. The gutter can be placed in hydraulic communication with the slot 14, using a conduit 13 which opens into the gutter and which is located behind the wall 10 relative to the plane P o . On the wall 10 are flush the means 6 for selecting and deflecting the drops not intended for printing. These means mainly include electrodes. They are intended to be connected to tensioning means, not shown in the figure. Preferably, the distance between the wall 10 and the plane P o , measured in the direction Y, perpendicular to the plane P o , is, starting from the plate 2, first constant; this corresponds to the era 10i portion of the wall 10 which is substantially parallel to P o. Then, in a second portion 10 2 further away from the plate 2 as the era 10i part, from a point 61 of inclination of the wall 10, the distance between the wall 10 and the plane P o is growing away from the nozzle plate. This structure allows the wall 10 to be close to the plane P o , and parallel to it, in a 1st part of the cavity located near the 4 X nozzles, where the path of the drops is hardly modified. , even when the drops located further downstream on this path are deflected to enter the recovery gutter 7. This is what we see in FIGS. 2A - 4, where a path of drops is deflected towards the gutter 7, 70: the upper part of the jet is not, or is only very little, deflected, while, from a point 61 of inclination of the wall 10, the jet deviates more and more, almost linearly, from the plane P o . We can speak of a ballistic path of the jet downstream of the electrostatic field area. A lower part of the wall 10 and a wall 12, located behind the wall 10 with respect to the plane P o , define, facing a wall 11, a conduit, or gutter 7, 70 for discharging the drops which will not be used for printing. The walls 10 and 12 are preferably joined together, the reference 18 designating the junction line of these two walls 10 and 12; this line is parallel, or substantially parallel, to the direction X. They form an upper wall of the gutter. The wall 11 forms a lower wall of the gutter. It includes a preview ere partie lli, furthest upstream in the direction of droplet flow in the conduit 7, 70 and a second portion 11 2, the further downstream. The optional conduit 13 can open into the upper wall 12 and hydraulically connect the recovery gutter 7, 70 to a conduit 141 hydraulically connected to the slot 14. The reference 28 designates a junction line of the parts 11 and 11 2 of the wall 11; this line is parallel, or substantially parallel, to direction X and to the line 18. The most upstream part 11i, at the entrance to the duct 7, 70 of the bottom wall 11, ends in an end part 15, which advantageously constitutes its apex (or apex). It is the point on the surface 11 which is closest to the plane P o . Preferably, this apex 15 also forms part of a wall 16 which is parallel to the plane P o and which forms one of the walls surrounding or delimiting the outlet slot 17. In other words, the point most upstream of the gutter is plumb with the slot 17 for leaving the cavity. This optimizes the recovery of the drops: thanks to this configuration, any deflected drop, even slightly, will be recovered by the gutter. The slot 17 constitutes an opening of the cavity 5 through which the drops intended for printing pass. In Figure 3 is shown in dotted lines representing the axis of the nozzle 4 X. This axis passes through the center of slot 17. Another wall of the cavity is constituted by the wall 21: it is substantially parallel to the plate 2, but the most distant from the latter in the cavity 5. In other words, it is situated on the side of the slot of outlet 17. One end of this wall can form an inlet edge of the slot 17, facing the wall 16 already mentioned above. A wall 210, substantially perpendicular to the wall 21, delimits, with the wall 16, the outlet slot 17: the drops will circulate between these 2 walls, before leaving the slot 17 and crashing onto the support d impression 8. As a variant, the walls 16 and 210 move away from one another, as shown in broken lines in FIG. 2A. This funnel shape makes it possible to avoid capturing or intercepting drops which would deviate slightly from their trajectory at the outlet of the cavity 5 but which could still be directed towards the printing medium. This shape of the walls 16 and 210 can be applied to the other embodiments or examples of embodiment of the cavity, described in the present application. Finally, the reference 211 designates the outer surface of the cavity, into which the outlet of the slot 17 opens. An example of the operation of these cavities is as follows. A continuous jet of ink is emitted from the print head. The deflection of this jet is controlled by the electrodes 6 to create, as a function of a pattern to be printed and the position of the support 8, drops intended or not intended for printing. The drops intended for printing move along the axis Z (in the plane P o ) and pass through the slot 17. The drops not intended for printing are deviated from the axis Z (or from the plane P o ), and follow a trajectory which causes them to strike the bottom wall 11 of the gutter 7, 70. As the gutter is connected to a source of vacuum, the ink of these drops, which have struck the wall 11, leave, with air, the cavity 5 through the gutter. Furthermore, the duct 13 and the slot 14 can maintain a slight depression at the level of the nozzle plate 2. This depression makes it possible to absorb ink which, by capillarity, is deposited on the nozzle plate 2. In Figure 2A is shown a particular aspect of an embodiment of the invention. The reference 70 designates a recovery gutter, for example of the type known in the prior art according to the teaching of document WO 2012/038520. Pumping means (not shown in the figure) can be connected to the gutter to suck up the ink which enters the latter. A lateral conduit 20 allows the communication of the cavity 5 with a pressure source not shown One of the walls of this conduit 20 is the wall 21; a 2 nd wall 22, which faces to the wall ere and parallel thereto, the wall 9 joins, wherein an opening allows the conduit opening into the cavity 5. The duct 20 is disposed laterally at the bottom of the cavity, that is to say, along the axis Z, on the side opposite to the plate 2. It is also arranged, laterally, on the side opposite to that in which the gutter 70 opens. This duct 20 will make it possible to circulate, in the direction of the cavity 5 and substantially parallel to the wall 21, a flow of air or gas, as represented by the arrow 200i. In the cavity, means 27 are also provided, which will make it possible to deflect, before it reaches the space above the slot 17, the flow 200i from its initial trajectory, which is substantially parallel to the wall 21. Thus, this gas flow will go up towards the top of the cavity, that is to say towards the plate 2. In the illustrated embodiment, these means 27 comprise for example an obstacle, such as a plate or (here) a pad, which the flow 200i will meet and which will allow it to be deflected as indicated above. The 1st wall 21 can be terminated, before the slot 17, by this obstacle. The stud 27 has, in the plane of the figure, a substantially rectangular or square shape. It is delimited, on the side of the duct 20, by a face 24, parallel to the plane P o . D denotes the distance between the plane of the wall 24 and the wall 9. This distance D is less than the distance separating the wall 9 from the plane P o . The upper part of the pad Y1 is formed by a flat part 25, substantially parallel to the nozzle plate 2. Finally a part or wall 26, parallel to the plane P o forms a wall of the slot 17 opposite the wall 16. This wall 26 is located in the extension of the wall 210, already described above. The jet circulates between these walls 16, 26, before leaving the slot 17 and crashing onto the printing medium 8. The walls 16 and 26 are located on either side of the plane P o . It can be noted that the part 111, located under the surface 11, can be movable laterally, in the direction Y, in order to better position the apex 15 at the start of operation (which can also be the case for the configuration of the figure 3). In all cases, in operation, the walls 16 and 26 are preferably located at an equal distance from the plane Po. The operation of this cavity can be as follows: a gas jet 200i is sent through the conduit 20 towards the cavity 5. The air which thus enters the cavity 5 is deflected by the wall the wall 24 of the means 27 and is directed towards the top of the cavity, in the direction of the nozzle plate 2. The air first follows an upward path, in the vicinity from the wall 9, then a downward path, downstream, inside the boundary layer which surrounds the jets. These effects are favored for certain configurations of the cavity: if the distance, measured along Z, between the point of intersection between the walls 9 and 20, and the nozzle plate 2 and b is called, the distance measured according to Y, between walls 9 and 10, then condition a> b promotes the effects described above, by allowing the vortex to settle; if a <b, then the vortex can only be installed more difficult (the air risks going to directly impact the curtain of jets). FIG. 2A shows the gas circulation, materialized by curved arrows, obtained in the cavity and which results from the gas injection means 20 and means Y1 for deflecting the gas flow. This representation illustrates the fact that the gas will describe, inside the cavity 5, a vortex which tends to concentrate the air in the vicinity of the trajectory of the deflected jets. Thus, the vapors which are located far from the trajectory of the deflected jets are brought towards it, are then absorbed by the gutter 70 and are evacuated as illustrated in FIG. 2A by the arrow 200 2 . The gas vortex generated by the circulation of gas in the cavity 5 is stable, therefore all the drops intended for printing are deflected by the same amount relative to the Z axis. The positions of the printing drops on the support printing relative to each other will therefore be independent of the deviation value. The possible deviation is small enough that the drops continue to pass through the slot 17 without hitting the walls 16 and 26. During the operation of the cavity, a suction is imposed at the outlet of the gutter 70 by pumping means (not shown in the figure). Furthermore, a positive pressure is imposed on the inlet of the conduit 20 (to circulate the air flow 200i) by pumping means (not shown in the figure). It is therefore possible to obtain a pressure equal to, or close to, the external pressure P ext , at a point or a central zone 5i of the cavity. Depending on the pressure values imposed at the outlet of the gutter 70 and at the inlet of the conduit 20, the position and the volume of this central zone 5i can vary. The presence of this zone is favorable because, if the pressure in the cavity is lower than the external pressure, air will enter the cavity 5 and disturb the flow of the jets; if the pressure in the cavity is greater than the external pressure, air will exit from the cavity 5, carrying solvent vapors. The air flow in the cavity will circulate around the pressure zone 5i close to the external pressure P ext . A variant of the structure of FIG. 2A is illustrated in FIG. 2B, where a conduit 213, which, for example, runs along the external surface 211, opens into the cavity 5 through an orifice 201 produced in the wall 21. This conduit 213 allows the communication of the cavity 5 with a source of overpressure not shown. This conduit 213 will make it possible to circulate, in the direction of the cavity 5 and substantially parallel to the wall 9, a flow of air or gas, as represented by the arrow 214. The operation of this cavity can be as follows: a gas jet 214 is sent through the conduit 213 towards the cavity 5. The air thus enters the cavity 5 and is directed towards the top of the cavity, in the direction of the plate to nozzle 2. The air first follows an ascending path, in the vicinity of the wall 9, then a descending path, downstream, inside the boundary layer which surrounds the jets. The presence of means such as the means 27 (shown in broken lines in FIG. 2B) is not necessary, since the gas flow circulates, from its entry into the cavity, from the bottom to the top of the latter. During the operation of the cavity, a suction is imposed at the outlet of the gutter 70 by pumping means (not shown in the figure). Furthermore, a positive pressure is imposed on the inlet of the conduit 213 (to circulate the flow 214) by pumping means (not shown in the figure). The other aspects described above in connection with FIG. 2A also apply to the structure of FIG. 2B (gas circulation, gas vortex, pressure equal to, or close to, the external pressure P ext , at a point or a central zone 5i of the cavity). FIG. 3 represents a schematic section of a printhead according to another particular aspect of an embodiment of the invention. The embodiment of this Figure 3 does not include a conduit 20, opening into the cavity. One sees in this figure that the channel 7 has a ere the part 7i, which starts at the entry slot drops into the gutter and whose cross-section or width, is being reduced, preferably gradually, moving away from the plane P o and from the plate 2. This makes it possible to confer on the air flow which circulates in the gutter a speed which increases from the entry of the gutter. This first part 7i has the shape of a conduit inclined downwards in the figure, or towards a plane parallel to the plane XY and which passes through the outlet slot 17. A 2 nd part 72 follows the 1st part 7i, in the direction of circulation of the drops collected by the gutter 7. The section of this 2 nd part, or its width, will preferably increase, moving away from the plane Po and approaching the plate 2. This shape makes it possible to create a Venturi effect. The air flow circulating in this part of the gutter has a decreasing speed. A constant section of this 2nd part, or of its width, is possible within the framework of the invention, but then without creating a Venturi effect. The gutter has, in this second part 7 2 , the shape of a conduit inclined towards the top of the figure, or towards the plane of the nozzle plate, in order to reduce the bulk of the device: an inclination of this second part 7 2 towards the bottom of the figure would cause an increased distance between the nozzle plate 2 and the outer surface 211, in which the exit from the slot 17 is made. We therefore seek to have an average angle, between the 2 parts 7i and 7 2 , less than or equal to 90 °. The section or width of the duct 7 is for example measured in a plane perpendicular to the surface of one of the walls 10, 11, 12 which delimit the gutter. The sections of the different parts are calculated so that the gutter generates a pressure difference of around 150 mbar, or between 50 mbar and 500 mbar. In an area located between the part 7i st and 2 nd part 7 2, and in the vicinity of this area, the duct 7 forms a curved portion, or restriction or a bend 38, which will allow to avoid a return of drops of ink towards the cavity 5 and which will define a zone for changing the inclination of the gutter, this restriction 38 forming the part of the gutter furthest from the plane of the plate 2. The progressive reduction in section of the 1st part 7i will make it possible, first of all, to capture, with good efficiency, the drops in a section, forming the inlet and the widest section part of the gutter. The drops are then taken, in that the part ere, to the wall 11 on which they will be crushed, which will form a two-phase air-liquid which is then pumped into the restriction 38, which, by its curved shape and its narrowness (width between 50 pm and 300 or 400 pm), will not allow a return of this mixture to the 1st part 7i. Advantageously, the preview ere partie lli of the bottom wall 11, is at a distance d from the plane of the nozzle plate 2 which decreases when the distance to P o decreases plane. The same applies to the portion of the wall 10 which is located upstream from the line 18. In other words, the closer a point on the surface lli (respectively 10) is to the plane P o , the more it is also close to the plane of the plate 2. This part lli defines a volume which is situated above the surface lli and which the ink passes through before spreading over the wall lli. This volume is preferably at least partly substantially concave, which is favorable for the capture of the drops which come to crash on this surface lli. The portion of the surface 10, which faces it, is first substantially planar, then is curved, to join the axis 18. The reference 11 2 designates the part most downstream, in the conduit 7, of the lower wall 11. In the illustrated embodiment, the gutter has, as explained above, in a 2 nd part, the shape of a conduit inclined upwards in the figure, this part 11 2 being at a distance d from the plane of the nozzle plate 2 which decreases when the distance to the plane P o increases. The same applies to the portion of the wall 12 which is located downstream of the line 18. In other words, the closer a point on the surface 11 2 (respectively 12) is to the plane P o , the more it is also distant from the plane of the plate 2. Preferably, this part 11 2 forms a substantially flat portion of the lower wall 11. The portion of the surface 12 which faces it is first, in the vicinity of the line 18, slightly curved then substantially planar. It is in an area located between lines 18 and 28, and in the vicinity of this area, that the conduit 7 forms the restriction 38, which will make it possible to avoid a return of the ink drops towards the cavity 5. This restriction 38 results, in this example, from the width restriction then from the change in orientation of the direction of the inclination of the gutter 7, which is first inclined downwards, in the 1st part 7i, then inclined towards up into the 2 nd portion 7 2. The smallest section or width, in the sense explained above, of the gutter is within this restriction 38. The operation of this cavity is that described above, but the restriction 38, formed in the vicinity of lines 18 and 28, makes it possible to avoid a return of drops to the cavity 5. The other advantages, in terms of operation, of the 'example of Figure 3, were mentioned above, in connection with the description of the structure. As a variant, the gutter is of the type which has just been described, in connection with FIG. 3, but with the structure described in connection with FIG. 2A, with a lateral conduit 20 for injecting gas. Such an embodiment is shown in FIG. 4. In another variant (not shown), the gutter is of the type which has just been described, in connection with FIG. 3, but with the structure described in connection with FIG. 2B, with a gas injection pipe from the bottom of the cavity. In the case of a structure with lateral gas injection, and with a gutter of the type described in connection with FIG. 3, the inventors carried out a simulation. They therefore selected conditions for the entry of air into cavity 5 in order to obtain the vortex and applied the Comsol® software. This software uses a finite element decomposition of the cavity volume according to a certain mesh. One obtains a value of flow and conditions of flow inside the elements of the mesh in which one is interested. In the present case, a constraint relative to the direction of the speed vector at the level of the XZ plane has been added: this constraint is that the component of the speed vector of the gases in finite elements, containing a part of the plane XZ, is much higher to the component perpendicular to this plane. Thus the direction of the printing drops is disturbed as little as possible. In this way, the air flow along Y disrupts the path of the jets as little as possible. Figure 4 shows the result of such a simulation. It can be seen that the gas, at the outlet of the conduit 20, is deflected towards the top of the cavity, circulates along the wall 9, joins the nozzle plate 2, then is brought back towards the gutter 7. The air circulates well around the point or the pressure zone close to the external pressure (atmospheric pressure). As can be understood from FIGS. 2A and 4, the circulation of air generated in the cavity makes it possible to bring, towards the gutter, with the deflected ink flow, solvent vapors present in the cavity. The positioning of the conduit 20 at the bottom of the cavity, on the side of the slot 17, makes it possible to obtain a path of the injected gas, first ascending in the cavity, towards the plate 2, then descending, towards the gutter 7. As illustrated in FIG. 5, whatever the shape of the gutter, the apex of the latter is advantageously located at a distance L from the plane P o less than or equal to the deviation D of deflection of the jets, at this level. apex (along the Z axis), reduced by the thickness δ of the boundary layer around the jets deflected at the level of this apex. A device according to the invention is supplied with ink by an ink tank not shown in the figures. Various means of fluid connection can be used to connect this reservoir to a print head according to the invention, and to recover the ink which comes from the recovery gutter. An example of a complete circuit is described in US 7,192,121 and can be used in combination with the present invention. Whatever the embodiment envisaged, the instructions for activating the means 4i-4 n for producing ink jets and the means for pumping the gutter, and / or the means for sending a gas into the cavity are sent by means of control (also called "controller"). It is also these instructions which will make it possible to circulate ink under pressure in the direction of 4i-4 n means , then to generate the jets according to the patterns to be printed on a support 8. These control means are for example produced in the form of a processor or a microprocessor, programmed to implement a method according to the invention. It is this controller which controls means 4i-4 n , the pumping means of the printer, and in particular of the gutter, as well as the means for sending a gas into the cavity and / or the opening and closing of valves on the path of the various fluids (ink, solvent, gas). The control means can also ensure the storage of data, for example data for measuring ink levels in one or more reservoirs, and their possible processing. In Figure 6 there is shown the main blocks of an inkjet printer which can implement one or more of the embodiments described above. The printer comprises a console 300, a compartment 400 containing in particular the circuits for conditioning the ink and the solvents, as well as reservoirs for the ink and the solvents (in particular, the reservoir from which the ink recovered by the gutter is brought back). Generally compartment 400 is in the lower part of the console. The upper part of the console includes command and control electronics as well as display means. The console is hydraulically and electrically connected to a print head 100 by an umbilicus 203. A gantry not shown makes it possible to install the print head facing a print medium 8, which moves in a direction materialized by an arrow. This direction is perpendicular to an alignment axis of the nozzles. The drop generator comprises nozzles and a cavity of the type according to one of the embodiments described above. The invention is particularly advantageous in applications where the air or gas flow rate in the cavity is high, since a high air flow rate results in an even greater risk of allowing solvent to escape. For example, the flow rate can be of the order of several hundred l / h, for example still between 50 l / h or 100 l / h and 500 l / h, for example still around 300 l / h. These values apply in particular to the case of a nozzle plate of 64 nozzles, but the invention also applies to the case of a nozzle plate with a lower number of nozzles, for example 32, or in the case of a nozzle plate with a higher number of nozzles, for example 128. The speed of the jets can be between 5 m / s and 20 m / s, for example it is around 15 m / s. An example of a fluid circuit 400 of a printer to which the invention can be applied is illustrated in FIG. 7. This fluid circuit 400 comprises a plurality of means 410, 500, 110, 220, 310, each associated with a specific functionality. We also find the head 1 and the navel 203. This circuit 400 is associated with a removable ink cartridge 130 and a solvent cartridge 140, which is also removable. The reference 410 designates the main tank, which can accommodate a mixture of solvent and ink. The reference 110 designates the set of means which make it possible to withdraw, and optionally to store, solvent from a cartridge 140 of solvent and to supply the solvent thus withdrawn to other parts of the printer, this involves supplying the main tank 410 with solvent, or cleaning or maintaining one or more of the other parts of the machine. The reference 310 designates the set of means which make it possible to withdraw ink from an ink cartridge 130 and to supply the ink thus withdrawn to supply the main reservoir 410. As can be seen in this figure, according to the embodiment presented here, the sending, to the main tank 410 and from the means 110, of solvent, passes through these same means 310. At the outlet of the reservoir 410, a set of means, generally designated by the reference 220, makes it possible to pressurize the ink withdrawn from the main reservoir, and to send it to the print head 1. According to one embodiment, illustrated here by the arrow 250, it is also possible, by these means 220, to send ink to the means 310, then again to the reservoir 410, which allows a recirculation of the ink inside of the circuit. This circuit 220 also makes it possible to empty the reservoir in the cartridge 130 as well as to clean the connections of the cartridge 130. The system shown in this figure also includes means 500 for recovering fluids (ink and / or solvent) which returns from the print head, more precisely from the gutter 7 of the print head or of the circuit. head rinse. These means 500 are therefore arranged downstream from the umbilicus 203 (relative to the direction of circulation of the fluids which return from the print head). As can be seen in FIG. 7, the means 110 can also make it possible to send solvent directly to these means 500, without passing either through the umbilicus 203 or through the printing head 1 or through the recovery gutter. The means 110 may comprise at least three parallel supplies solvent, toward the head 1, the 2 nd to the means 500 and the 3rd to means 310. Each of the means described above is provided with means, such as valves, preferably solenoid valves, which make it possible to direct the fluid concerned towards the chosen destination. Thus, from the means 110, solvent can be sent exclusively to the head 1, or to the means 500 or to the means 310. Each of the means 500, 110, 210, 310 described above may be provided with a pump which can handle the fluid of interest (respectively: the pump st, 2 nd pump, pump 3 rd, 4 th pump). These different pumps perform different functions (those of their respective means) and are therefore different from each other, even if these different pumps can be of the same type or similar types (in other words: none of these pumps 'performs 2 of these functions). In particular, the means 500 comprise a pump (the 1st pump) which makes it possible to pump the fluid, recovered, as explained above, from the print head, and to send it to the main reservoir 410. This pump is dedicated to the recovery of fluid from the printhead and is physically different from the 4 th pump means 310 dedicated to the transfer of ink or the 3rd pump means 210 dedicated to the pressurizing of ink leaving the reservoir 410. The means 110 comprise a pump (the 2 nd pump) which makes it possible to pump the solvent and to send it to the means 500 and / or the means 310 and / or to the printing head 1. Such a circuit 400 is controlled by the control means described above, these means are generally contained in the console 300 (FIG. 6).
权利要求:
Claims (16) [1" id="c-fr-0001] 1. Printhead of a binary continuous jet printer comprising: a cavity (5) for circulation of the jets, delimited by lateral walls (9, 10), and by an upper wall (2) and a lower wall (21), - means (4, 4i, 4 X , 4 n ) for producing a plurality of ink jets in said cavity (5), - Means (6) for separating drops or sections from one or more of said jets intended for printing from drops or sections which are not used for printing; - a slot (17), which passes through the lower wall (21), open to the outside of the cavity (5) and allowing the exit of the drops or sections of ink intended for printing, - a recovery gutter (7, 70) for drops or sections not intended for printing, this gutter comprising: * a 1st part, which has an entry slit for the drops in the gutter, the width of this 1st part going, in the direction of circulation of the drops in the gutter, reducing, an area (lli) of this ere the portion an impact surface of the deflected drops; * A restriction (38), the l st portion being inclined relative to a plane (P o) defined by the path of the jets for printing, since the entry slot drops into the gutter up to the restriction; * A 2 nd part for discharging a gas, or a mixture of gas and liquid since the restriction (38). [2" id="c-fr-0002] 2. The print head according to claim 1, in which the 2 nd part (7 2 ) has a width which increases from the restriction (38). [3" id="c-fr-0003] 3. Printhead according to one of claims 1 or 2, the surface (li) of the 1st part (7i) of the gutter, defining a volume, in which the drops circulate, at least partly concave. [4" id="c-fr-0004] 4. Printhead according to one of claims 1 to 3, the 2 nd part of the gutter being inclined from the restriction (38), in the opposite direction from the 1st part. [5" id="c-fr-0005] 5. A printhead according to claim 4, the l st portion being inclined from the entrance slit of the drops to a plane perpendicular to the direction of the droplets or portions of said one or more jets for printing and which passes through the outlet slot of the jets, the 2 nd part of the gutter being inclined from the restriction away from said plane, as the distance to the restriction increases. [6" id="c-fr-0006] 6. Printhead according to one of claims 1 to 5, the restriction (38) having a width between 50 pm and 300 pm. [7" id="c-fr-0007] 7. Printhead according to one of claims 1 to 6, the walls (9, 10) being arranged on either side of a plane (P o ) defined by the plurality of jets, and arranged at least partly parallel to it. [8" id="c-fr-0008] 8. A printhead according to claim 7, the means (6) for separating drops or sections of one or more of said jets intended for printing drops or sections which are not used for printing, comprising a or several electrodes disposed in or against one of said walls (10). [9" id="c-fr-0009] 9. A printhead according to claim 8, the inlet slot in the gutter, drops or sections not intended for printing, being disposed at the bottom of the wall (10) in or against which the electrodes ( 6) are arranged. [10" id="c-fr-0010] 10. Print head according to one of claims 8 or 9, a part (IO2) of the wall (10) in or against which the electrodes (6) are arranged moving away from the plane (Po) defined by the plurality of jets. [11" id="c-fr-0011] 11. Printhead according to one of claims 1 to 10, an edge (15) of the gutter inlet slot being located directly above one of the edges (16) of the slot (17) . [12" id="c-fr-0012] 12. Printhead according to one of claims 1 to 11, the most upstream part, at the entrance of the gutter (7, 70) of the impact surface (1 li) of the deflected drops, is ending with an end part (15), which constitutes its apex. [13" id="c-fr-0013] 13. Printhead according to one of claims 1 to 12, the apex of the recovery gutter being located at a distance L from a plane (Po), defined by the plurality of jets, less than or equal to l deviation of the jets at this apex minus the thickness of the boundary layer around the jets deflected at this apex. [14" id="c-fr-0014] 14. A method of operating a print head according to one of claims 1 to 13, wherein the drops or sections of ink intended for printing are sent to the slot (17), while the drops or sections that are not used for printing are sent to the gutter where they are sucked. [15" id="c-fr-0015] 15. The method of claim 14, wherein the flow rate of a gas flowing in the cavity is between 50 l / h and 500 l / h. [16" id="c-fr-0016] 16. Ink jet printer comprising a print head according to one of claims 1 to 13, as well as a console (305), one compartment (400) of which contains reservoirs for ink and solvents and circuits for conditioning the ink and the solvents, an upper part of the console comprising an electronic command and control unit as well as display means, the console being hydraulically and electrically connected to the print head by a umbilicus (203). S.58634 1/6
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日 US20170173960A1|2017-06-22| CN107020816B|2019-12-03| FR3045459A1|2017-06-23| US10336077B2|2019-07-02| US11084288B2|2021-08-10| US20190248143A1|2019-08-15| EP3466692A1|2019-04-10| EP3225400A1|2017-10-04| FR3053923B1|2019-07-05| EP3225400B1|2019-01-09| CN107020816A|2017-08-08| FR3045459B1|2020-06-12|
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Sarl|LIQUID COMPOSITION, IN PARTICULAR INK, FOR CONTINUOUS BINARY DIE PRINTING WITH UNLATCHED DROPS, USE OF THE SAME, MARKING METHOD, AND BRAND SUBSTRATE.|FR3065394B1|2017-04-21|2019-07-05|Dover Europe Sàrl|METHOD AND DEVICE FOR HYDRODYNAMIC INKJET DEFLECTION| FR3082777A1|2018-06-21|2019-12-27|Dover Europe Sarl|METHOD AND DEVICE FOR DETECTING THE PROPER FUNCTIONING OF NOZZLES OF A PRINTHEAD| FR3082778A1|2018-06-21|2019-12-27|Dover Europe Sarl|PRINTHEAD OF AN INK JET PRINTER WITH 2 RECOVERY GUTTERS, INCLUDING A MOBILE| EP3674088A1|2018-12-28|2020-07-01|Dover Europe Sàrl|Improved ink jet print head with water protection| CN110356115B|2019-08-01|2020-11-20|京东方科技集团股份有限公司|Print shower nozzle cleaning and maintenance device|
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2018-01-02| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 3 | 2018-01-26| PLSC| Publication of the preliminary search report|Effective date: 20180126 | 2019-12-31| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 5 | 2020-12-28| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 6 | 2021-12-31| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 7 |
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申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题 FR1563124|2015-12-22| FR1563124A|FR3045459B1|2015-12-22|2015-12-22|PRINTHEAD OR INK JET PRINTER WITH REDUCED SOLVENT CONSUMPTION| FR1756810A|FR3053923B1|2015-12-22|2017-07-18|PRINTING HEAD OR INKJET PRINTER WITH REDUCED SOLVENT CONSUMPTION|FR1756810A| FR3053923B1|2015-12-22|2017-07-18|PRINTING HEAD OR INKJET PRINTER WITH REDUCED SOLVENT CONSUMPTION| 相关专利
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