US3714928A - Multiple jet channel - Google Patents

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US3714928A
US3714928A US00090363A US3714928DA US3714928A US 3714928 A US3714928 A US 3714928A US 00090363 A US00090363 A US 00090363A US 3714928D A US3714928D A US 3714928DA US 3714928 A US3714928 A US 3714928A
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drops
orifices
charge
coating material
packets
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US00090363A
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R Taylor
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Eastman Kodak Co
Mead Corp
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Mead Corp
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41JTYPEWRITERS; SELECTIVE PRINTING MECHANISMS, i.e. MECHANISMS PRINTING OTHERWISE THAN FROM A FORME; CORRECTION OF TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS
    • B41J2/00Typewriters or selective printing mechanisms characterised by the printing or marking process for which they are designed
    • B41J2/005Typewriters or selective printing mechanisms characterised by the printing or marking process for which they are designed characterised by bringing liquid or particles selectively into contact with a printing material
    • B41J2/01Ink jet
    • B41J2/015Ink jet characterised by the jet generation process
    • B41J2/02Ink jet characterised by the jet generation process generating a continuous ink jet
    • B41J2/03Ink jet characterised by the jet generation process generating a continuous ink jet by pressure

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  • ABSTRACT [5 eld f S ar 3/6 1, In a noncontacting printing system in which drops of 113/637 3 93.44; coating material are projected toward a receiving 346/75 member and their trajectories controlled to provide a desired coating pattern, as in printing, the drops [56] References C'ted formed are much smaller in diameter than usual and UNITED STATES PATENTS are arranged 1n dls crete packets of drops with each packet forming a single dot when it impinges on the 3,373,437 3/1968 Sweet ..346/75 receiving member. 3,023,070 2/l962 Benn....
  • each of the drops passes through an electrostatic deflecting field formed by opposing electrodes, resulting in charged drops being deflected from their trajectories and allowing uncharged drops to pass straight through. In this way a desired pattern of coating may be applied to the receiving member.
  • the drops instead of the charge rings operating in a binary mode, the drops receive a charge of varying intensity as they pass through the charge rings, thereby causing them to be deflected different amounts as they pass through the electrostatic deflecting field.
  • means are provided for charging all drops to a common level and drop placement control is achieved by modulating the intensity of the deflection 'field. All the systems described above have several features in common, including the fact that each of the drops from each of the orifices is treated separately and thus, individually controlled.
  • coating systems of the type herein involved require that there be some overlap of drop deposits on the receiving member. It follows that any decrease in the size of the drops requires an increase in the number of drops deposited. If the drops are to be individually controlled, then the mentioned decrease in drop size results in an increase in the information transfer rate. Thus it can be seen that the above described prior art systems have a lower limit on drop size which is set by the upper limit on system information transfer rate. Such a situation is acceptable if small drops are to be employed for the purpose of improving system resolution. It is not acceptable in many cases wherein usage of small drops may be prompted by other reasons.
  • the present invention resides broadly in a non-contacting coating system which generates a packet of coating drops from a cluster of orifices and employs common charging and deflection means for the packet of drops so that all the drops in the packet are deflected substantially simultaneously.
  • the coating system of the present invention utilizes orifices that are much smaller than those usually found in systems of this general type and arranged in one or more clusters so that the drops from a cluster of orifices may be treated as a group rather than separately. This allows a higher electrostatic charge/mass ratio for each drop because of the greater surface/volume ratio and consequently lower charge and/or deflection voltage.
  • the deflecting field may be either electric or magnetic in nature. Additionally, as noted above in the discussion of the background of the invention, the deflection field may be either static or time variant.
  • the cluster of orifices in a regular pattern such as a matrix
  • specially shaped marks can be imprinted on the receiving member rather than only round dots.
  • a substantially square dot may be printed on the receiving member, giving a much sharper edged print. It will also be seen that the volume of coating material needed to mark a given receiving area is less when a large number of smaller drops are used. This not only results in a saving in printing material but also permits increased drying rates and, when utilizing a material such as paper as the receiving member, decreased problems of cockling.
  • FIG. 1 is an exploded perspective view showing the principal components of a coating system incorporating the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is an enlarged cross sectional view through a portion of a coating head formed in accordance with the present invention
  • FIG. 3 is an enlarged elevational view comparing the amount of printing materials used in a system according to the present invention and a system in which each drop is individually controlled;
  • FIG. 4 is another comparison view but in plan.
  • FIG. 5 is view taken on line 5-5 of FIG. 2.
  • a non-contacting coating system may include a manifold bar 10 having a coating chamber 11 supplied with coating material under pressure through a conduit 13 and having a constant frequency oscillator, as at 14, attached thereto for a purpose to be prsently explained.
  • a filter plate 20 having a central portion 21 formed with a series of extremely small diameter openings therethrough is attached to the lower surface of the manifold bar 10 with a gasket 23, having a slotted central portion 24, interposed therebetween.
  • a second gasket member 26, also having a slotted central portion, as at 28, extends between the lower surface of the filter plate 20 and an inlet plate 30.
  • Inlet plate 30 has a slotted central portion 32 in registration with the slotted portions of the members thereabove and overlying a seris of discrete groups 33 of orifices 34 (see also FIG. 2) formed in an orifice plate 36.
  • a spacer plate 40 is mounted beneath the orifice plate 36 and is provided with a series of openings 42 therein surrounding the orifices in each of the groups 33.
  • a charge ring plate 44 is positioned beneath the spacer plate 40 and is provided with a series of charge rings 46, each of which is connected through a line 48 to a plug 50 engaging a socket 52 which, through a line 54, places each of charge rings in circuit with and controlled by intelligence signals from control unit 56.
  • a clamp bar 58 having a series of openings 60 formed therein concentrically with the charge rings 46,
  • the clamp bar in conjunction with a plurality of bolts, not shown, passing through the clamp bar and the other components of the system and threaded into the manifold bar 10, serves to clamp the assembly together.
  • Electrodes 62 are mounted on a lower surface of the assembly of components just described by means of plugs 64 engaging in sockets (not shown) on the bottom of the assembly, and the electrodes are provided with energy from a source indicated somewhat schematically at 66.
  • a catcher 68 consisting of a tubular member 70 having a blade 72 projecting from a slot 74 formed therein, is positioned beneath the electrodes 62 and fastened thereto by any suitable means and the interior of the tubular member 70 is preferably connected to a source of vacuum, indicated schematically at 76.
  • coating material is pumped under pressure through the conduit 13 to the chamber 11 and the manifold and thus passes down through the filter plate and inlet plate to provide coating material under pressure to the orifices 34 in the orifice plate.
  • the coating material is ejected from the orifices 34 in a series of fine filaments 80, each of which has a natural tendency to break down into a stream of discrete drops.
  • the rate of generation will not ordinarily be uniform and the oscillator 14 is provided to impose a constant frequency vibration on the system to cause the filaments to break down into drops of a uniform size at a uniform rate.
  • streams of drops are formed with the drops in each stream synchronized with the drops in each of the other streams.
  • the charge ring be located at the point where the filaments begin to break down into drops.
  • the spacer plate is, therefore, provided to insure that the charge ring plate 44 with its associated charge rings 46 is properly positioned in this regard.
  • each charge ring 46 controls the charge distribution at the tips of all fluid filaments issuing from an associated cluster of orifices.
  • this treatment may be either binary or a sampled value of a filament tip charge of varying intensity.
  • each of the drops in a packet is treated substantially simultaneously. That is, they are all either deflected or not deflected and either caught, or imprinted on the receiving member. While the drops are necessarily slightly separated as they pass downwardly through the various components of the coating system, when they impinge upon the receiving member 84 they spread out somewhat to overlap and form a composite dot of coating material.
  • the orifices in a particular cluster of orifices may be arranged in any desired pattern, it will often be preferable to arrange the orifices, as best seen in FIG. 5, in a regular matrix having an even number of columns 86 and rows 88. This permits the imprinting of dots of coating material of substantially square outline, as seen in FIG. 4, to minimize unnecessary overlap of dots while still obtaining sharp resolution.
  • the volume of coating material necessary to imprint a dot of comparable size is much smaller when the dot is formed from a plurality of small drops rather than from a single large drop. This not only results in a saving of coating material but permits faster drying times and lessens problems of cockling when utilizing a receiving member of paper or the like.
  • each of the drops in each packet of drops is either charged or not charged as the drops pass through the charge rings 46. Thereafter, the drops in each packet are either deflected or not deflected, depending upon whether or not they have been charged, as they pass between the deflecting electrodes 62.
  • the principles of the present invention may also be incorporated in a system in which'the packets of drops are treated in a somewhat different manner. For example, the charge imposed on the drops in one packet may be different from the charge on the drops in another packet so that the mean trajectories of the packets will be deflected different amounts as they pass through the deflecting field established by the deflecting electrodes 62.
  • the present invention finds utility in a system in which the charges imposed on the drops by the charging rings or electrodes 46 are constant and a separate set of deflecting electrodes is pro vided for each cluster of orifices, with the strength of the deflecting field established by each set of deflecting electrodes varied to obtain variable deflection of the drops of each group as they pass therebetween.
  • drops generated in packets in accordance with this invention could be controlled by coding a physical characteristic other than electrical charge. For instance, packets of magnetically polarized drops could be deflected by the action of an appropriate magnetic field. Regardless of the specific manner in which the drops are treated, however, it will be apparent that the same advantageous results accrue.
  • a noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a cluster of orifices, means for supplying coating material under pressure to said orifices to form streams of synchronized drops of coating matefial from said orifices with synchronized drops from each of said streams forming packets of drops, charge means positioned downstream of said orifices and defining means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly treating each drop in each packet of drops, deflection field generating means positioned downstream of said charge means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly controlling the trajectory of the drops in each packet, and means for catching packets of drops traversing some predetermined trajectory from said deflection field generating means.
  • a noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a plurality of discrete clusters of orifices, means for supplying coating material under pressure to each of said cluster of orifices to form streams of drops of coating material from each of said discrete clusters with the drops from each of said streams forming packets of drops, charge means positioned downstream of said clusters of orifices and defining one electrode for each cluster of orifices and for substantially simultaneously and uniformly treating each drop in a particular packet of drops, deflection field generating means positioned downstream of said charge means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly controlling the trajectory of all of the drops in each particular packet of drops, and means for catching packets of drops traversing some predetermined trajectory from said deflection field generating means.
  • a noncontacting coating system comprising: an elongated orifice plate, means defining a series of regularly spaced clusters of orifices through said orifice plate, means for supplying a liquid coating material under pressure to each of said orifices in said clusters of orifices, a charge ring plate extending coextensively with said orifice plate, a series of charge rings mounted in and extending through said charge ring plate, each of said charge rings being concentrically positioned with respect to one of said clusters of orifices whereby all of the streams of drops of coating material ejected from the orifices of a cluster will pass through a corresponding charge ring positioned concentrically thereto, control means associated with said charge rings for selectively applying an electric charge to predetermined packets of drops of coating material as they pass through said charge rings, means establishing a constant potential electrostatic deflection field positioned downstream of said charge rings in the trajectory of coating drops passing through said charge rings to cause packets of drops charged by said charge rings as they pass there
  • a noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a cluster of orifices, a common fluid' supply reservoir and means for maintaining said reservoir under stream forming pressure for generating a stream of drops of coating material at the exit of each orifice in said cluster, an oscillating transducer in communication with said reservoir for causing the drops in said streams to be generated in synchronized packets, a

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  • Electrostatic Spraying Apparatus (AREA)
  • Application Of Or Painting With Fluid Materials (AREA)
  • Coating Apparatus (AREA)

Abstract

In a noncontacting printing system in which drops of coating material are projected toward a receiving member and their trajectories controlled to provide a desired coating pattern, as in printing, the drops formed are much smaller in diameter than usual and are arranged in discrete packets of drops with each packet forming a single dot when it impinges on the receiving member.

Description

United States Patent Taylor 1 1 Feb. 6, 1973 [541 MULTIPLE JET CHANNEL 3,586,907 6/1971 Beam ..239 15 i 3,577,198 5/1971 Beam .....346/75 [75 l Inventor Tayhr Dayton 2,716,826 9/1955 Huebner ...117/93.4 [73] Assignee: The Mead Corporation, Dayton, 2,685,536 8/1954 Starkey etalm. ..l 17/9.3.4 1 OhiO 3,054,697 9/1962 Irland ct a]. l7/93.44 3,052,213 9 1962 Schaffert ..ll8/637 [22] Filed: Nov. 17, 1970 [21] Appl, N 90,363 Primary ExaminerMervin Stein Assistant Examiner-Leo Millstein 52 us. c1; 1l8/624, 117/934, 117/9344, Ammey*Mmechal French Bugg 118/621, ll8/627,239/l5 1511 1111.01. ..B05c 5/02 [57] ABSTRACT [5 eld f S ar 3/6 1, In a noncontacting printing system in which drops of 113/637 3 93.44; coating material are projected toward a receiving 346/75 member and their trajectories controlled to provide a desired coating pattern, as in printing, the drops [56] References C'ted formed are much smaller in diameter than usual and UNITED STATES PATENTS are arranged 1n dls crete packets of drops with each packet forming a single dot when it impinges on the 3,373,437 3/1968 Sweet ..346/75 receiving member. 3,023,070 2/l962 Benn.... 3,606,973 9/l971 Davis .346/75 8 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures PATENTEI] FEB 6 I975 INVENTOR RICHARD P. TAYLOR ATTORNEYS MULTIPLE JET CHANNEL CROSS REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS Image Construction System Using Multiple Arrays of Drop Generators, Ser. No. 768,790, filed Oct. 18, 1968, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,560,641, and Laminated Coating Head, Ser. No. 877,250 filed Nov. I7, 1969, now Pat. No. 3,586,907.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The above noted, related applications disclose noncontacting systems in which drops of coating material are projected toward a receiving member and their trajectories electrostatically altered to provide patterned coating, as in printing. This is accomplished in the systems described in these applications by projecting the coating material through a series of orifices to form fine filaments of coating material. The filaments of coating material have a natural tendency to break down into drops and this natural drop generation is stabilized by applying a constant frequency oscillation to the system. As each drop travels toward the receiving member it passes through a charge ring and as it does, a charge is either applied or not applied to that particular drop. Thereafter, each of the drops passes through an electrostatic deflecting field formed by opposing electrodes, resulting in charged drops being deflected from their trajectories and allowing uncharged drops to pass straight through. In this way a desired pattern of coating may be applied to the receiving member.
In similar systems, instead of the charge rings operating in a binary mode, the drops receive a charge of varying intensity as they pass through the charge rings, thereby causing them to be deflected different amounts as they pass through the electrostatic deflecting field. In still another system of this general type means are provided for charging all drops to a common level and drop placement control is achieved by modulating the intensity of the deflection 'field. All the systems described above have several features in common, including the fact that each of the drops from each of the orifices is treated separately and thus, individually controlled.
It will be appreciated that coating systems of the type herein involved require that there be some overlap of drop deposits on the receiving member. It follows that any decrease in the size of the drops requires an increase in the number of drops deposited. If the drops are to be individually controlled, then the mentioned decrease in drop size results in an increase in the information transfer rate. Thus it can be seen that the above described prior art systems have a lower limit on drop size which is set by the upper limit on system information transfer rate. Such a situation is acceptable if small drops are to be employed for the purpose of improving system resolution. It is not acceptable in many cases wherein usage of small drops may be prompted by other reasons.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention resides broadly in a non-contacting coating system which generates a packet of coating drops from a cluster of orifices and employs common charging and deflection means for the packet of drops so that all the drops in the packet are deflected substantially simultaneously. Thus, the coating system of the present invention utilizes orifices that are much smaller than those usually found in systems of this general type and arranged in one or more clusters so that the drops from a cluster of orifices may be treated as a group rather than separately. This allows a higher electrostatic charge/mass ratio for each drop because of the greater surface/volume ratio and consequently lower charge and/or deflection voltage. I
In this regard, although the term voltage is used, it will be apparent that the deflecting field may be either electric or magnetic in nature. Additionally, as noted above in the discussion of the background of the invention, the deflection field may be either static or time variant.
By forming the cluster of orifices in a regular pattern, such as a matrix, specially shaped marks can be imprinted on the receiving member rather than only round dots. For example, using a matrix having an even number of columns and rows of orifices, a substantially square dot may be printed on the receiving member, giving a much sharper edged print. It will also be seen that the volume of coating material needed to mark a given receiving area is less when a large number of smaller drops are used. This not only results in a saving in printing material but also permits increased drying rates and, when utilizing a material such as paper as the receiving member, decreased problems of cockling.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is an exploded perspective view showing the principal components of a coating system incorporating the present invention;
FIG. 2 is an enlarged cross sectional view through a portion of a coating head formed in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 3 is an enlarged elevational view comparing the amount of printing materials used in a system according to the present invention and a system in which each drop is individually controlled;
FIG. 4 is another comparison view but in plan; and
FIG. 5 is view taken on line 5-5 of FIG. 2.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS With reference initially to FIG. 1 of the drawings, it will be seen that a non-contacting coating system may include a manifold bar 10 having a coating chamber 11 supplied with coating material under pressure through a conduit 13 and having a constant frequency oscillator, as at 14, attached thereto for a purpose to be prsently explained. A filter plate 20 having a central portion 21 formed with a series of extremely small diameter openings therethrough is attached to the lower surface of the manifold bar 10 with a gasket 23, having a slotted central portion 24, interposed therebetween. A second gasket member 26, also having a slotted central portion, as at 28, extends between the lower surface of the filter plate 20 and an inlet plate 30.
Inlet plate 30 has a slotted central portion 32 in registration with the slotted portions of the members thereabove and overlying a seris of discrete groups 33 of orifices 34 (see also FIG. 2) formed in an orifice plate 36. A spacer plate 40 is mounted beneath the orifice plate 36 and is provided with a series of openings 42 therein surrounding the orifices in each of the groups 33. A charge ring plate 44 is positioned beneath the spacer plate 40 and is provided with a series of charge rings 46, each of which is connected through a line 48 to a plug 50 engaging a socket 52 which, through a line 54, places each of charge rings in circuit with and controlled by intelligence signals from control unit 56. A clamp bar 58, having a series of openings 60 formed therein concentrically with the charge rings 46,
is positioned beneath the charge ring plate. The clamp bar, in conjunction with a plurality of bolts, not shown, passing through the clamp bar and the other components of the system and threaded into the manifold bar 10, serves to clamp the assembly together.
Electrodes 62 are mounted on a lower surface of the assembly of components just described by means of plugs 64 engaging in sockets (not shown) on the bottom of the assembly, and the electrodes are provided with energy from a source indicated somewhat schematically at 66. A catcher 68, consisting of a tubular member 70 having a blade 72 projecting from a slot 74 formed therein, is positioned beneath the electrodes 62 and fastened thereto by any suitable means and the interior of the tubular member 70 is preferably connected to a source of vacuum, indicated schematically at 76.
With reference to FIGS. 1 and 2, it will be seen that coating material is pumped under pressure through the conduit 13 to the chamber 11 and the manifold and thus passes down through the filter plate and inlet plate to provide coating material under pressure to the orifices 34 in the orifice plate. The coating material is ejected from the orifices 34 in a series of fine filaments 80, each of which has a natural tendency to break down into a stream of discrete drops. The rate of generation, however, will not ordinarily be uniform and the oscillator 14 is provided to impose a constant frequency vibration on the system to cause the filaments to break down into drops of a uniform size at a uniform rate. Thus, streams of drops are formed with the drops in each stream synchronized with the drops in each of the other streams. It is preferable that the charge ring be located at the point where the filaments begin to break down into drops. The spacer plate is, therefore, provided to insure that the charge ring plate 44 with its associated charge rings 46 is properly positioned in this regard.
'As seen in FIG. 2 each charge ring 46 controls the charge distribution at the tips of all fluid filaments issuing from an associated cluster of orifices. Thus a similar charge treatment may be accorded all drops within one synchronously generated drop packet. As explained above, this treatment may be either binary or a sampled value of a filament tip charge of varying intensity. Subsequently, when the packets of drops pass between the electrodes 62 or other means establishing the deflection field, each of the drops in a packet is treated substantially simultaneously. That is, they are all either deflected or not deflected and either caught, or imprinted on the receiving member. While the drops are necessarily slightly separated as they pass downwardly through the various components of the coating system, when they impinge upon the receiving member 84 they spread out somewhat to overlap and form a composite dot of coating material.
While the orifices in a particular cluster of orifices may be arranged in any desired pattern, it will often be preferable to arrange the orifices, as best seen in FIG. 5, in a regular matrix having an even number of columns 86 and rows 88. This permits the imprinting of dots of coating material of substantially square outline, as seen in FIG. 4, to minimize unnecessary overlap of dots while still obtaining sharp resolution.
It will also be noted from FIGS. 3 and 4 that the volume of coating material necessary to imprint a dot of comparable size is much smaller when the dot is formed from a plurality of small drops rather than from a single large drop. This not only results in a saving of coating material but permits faster drying times and lessens problems of cockling when utilizing a receiving member of paper or the like.
In the above description a binary system has been described wherein each of the drops in each packet of drops is either charged or not charged as the drops pass through the charge rings 46. Thereafter, the drops in each packet are either deflected or not deflected, depending upon whether or not they have been charged, as they pass between the deflecting electrodes 62. It will be apparent, however, that the principles of the present invention may also be incorporated in a system in which'the packets of drops are treated in a somewhat different manner. For example, the charge imposed on the drops in one packet may be different from the charge on the drops in another packet so that the mean trajectories of the packets will be deflected different amounts as they pass through the deflecting field established by the deflecting electrodes 62.
It will also be seen that the present invention finds utility in a system in which the charges imposed on the drops by the charging rings or electrodes 46 are constant and a separate set of deflecting electrodes is pro vided for each cluster of orifices, with the strength of the deflecting field established by each set of deflecting electrodes varied to obtain variable deflection of the drops of each group as they pass therebetween. Further it may be appreciated that drops generated in packets in accordance with this invention could be controlled by coding a physical characteristic other than electrical charge. For instance, packets of magnetically polarized drops could be deflected by the action of an appropriate magnetic field. Regardless of the specific manner in which the drops are treated, however, it will be apparent that the same advantageous results accrue.
While the methods and forms of apparatus herein described constitute preferred embodiments of the invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to these precise methods and forms of apparatus, and that changes may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention.
What is claimed is:
1. A noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a cluster of orifices, means for supplying coating material under pressure to said orifices to form streams of synchronized drops of coating matefial from said orifices with synchronized drops from each of said streams forming packets of drops, charge means positioned downstream of said orifices and defining means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly treating each drop in each packet of drops, deflection field generating means positioned downstream of said charge means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly controlling the trajectory of the drops in each packet, and means for catching packets of drops traversing some predetermined trajectory from said deflection field generating means.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein: said orifices are arranged in a matrix pattern.
3. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein: said orifices are arranged in columns having an equal number of rows and rows having an equal number of columns.
4. A noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a plurality of discrete clusters of orifices, means for supplying coating material under pressure to each of said cluster of orifices to form streams of drops of coating material from each of said discrete clusters with the drops from each of said streams forming packets of drops, charge means positioned downstream of said clusters of orifices and defining one electrode for each cluster of orifices and for substantially simultaneously and uniformly treating each drop in a particular packet of drops, deflection field generating means positioned downstream of said charge means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly controlling the trajectory of all of the drops in each particular packet of drops, and means for catching packets of drops traversing some predetermined trajectory from said deflection field generating means.
5. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein said orifices in each of said clusters of orifices are arranged in a matrix pattern.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said orifices in each of said clusters of orifice are arranged in columns having an equal number of rows and rows having an equal number of columns.
7. A noncontacting coating system comprising: an elongated orifice plate, means defining a series of regularly spaced clusters of orifices through said orifice plate, means for supplying a liquid coating material under pressure to each of said orifices in said clusters of orifices, a charge ring plate extending coextensively with said orifice plate, a series of charge rings mounted in and extending through said charge ring plate, each of said charge rings being concentrically positioned with respect to one of said clusters of orifices whereby all of the streams of drops of coating material ejected from the orifices of a cluster will pass through a corresponding charge ring positioned concentrically thereto, control means associated with said charge rings for selectively applying an electric charge to predetermined packets of drops of coating material as they pass through said charge rings, means establishing a constant potential electrostatic deflection field positioned downstream of said charge rings in the trajectory of coating drops passing through said charge rings to cause packets of drops charged by said charge rings as they pass therethrough to be deflected by said deflection field, and means for catching said packets of drops deflected by said deflection field.
8. A noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a cluster of orifices, a common fluid' supply reservoir and means for maintaining said reservoir under stream forming pressure for generating a stream of drops of coating material at the exit of each orifice in said cluster, an oscillating transducer in communication with said reservoir for causing the drops in said streams to be generated in synchronized packets, a

Claims (8)

1. A noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a cluster of orifices, means for supplying coating material under pressure to said orifices to form streams of synchronized drops of coating material from said orifices with synchronized drops from each of said streams forming packets of drops, charge means positioned downstream of said orifices and defining means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly treating each drop in each packet of drops, deflection field generating means positioned downstream of said charge means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly controlling the trajectory of the drops in each packet, and means for catching packets of drops traversing some predetermined trajectory from said deflection field generating means.
1. A noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a cluster of orifices, means for supplying coating material under pressure to said orifices to form streams of synchronized drops of coating material from said orifices with synchronized drops from each of said streams forming packets of drops, charge means positioned downstream of said orifices and defining means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly treating each drop in each packet of drops, deflection field generating means positioned downstream of said charge means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly controlling the trajectory of the drops in each packet, and means for catching packets of drops traversing some predetermined trajectory from said deflection field generating means.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein: said orifices are arranged in a matrix pattern.
3. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein: said orifices are arranged in columns having an equal number of rows and rows having an equal number of columns.
4. A noncontacting coating system comprising: means defining a plurality of discrete clusters of orifices, means for supplying coating material under pressure to each of said cluster of orifices to form streams of drops of coating material from each of said discrete clusters with the drops from each of said streams forming packets of drops, charge means positioned downstream of said clusters of orifices and defining one electrode for each cluster of orifices and for substantially simultaneously and uniformly treating each drop in a particular packet of drops, deflection field generating means positioned downstream of said charge means for substantially simultaneously and uniformly controlling the trajectory of all of the drops in each particular packet of drops, and means for catching packets of drops traversing some predetermined trajectory from said deflection field generating means.
5. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein said orifices in each of said clusters of orifices are arranged in a matrix pattern.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said orifices in each of said clusters of orifice are arranged in coLumns having an equal number of rows and rows having an equal number of columns.
7. A noncontacting coating system comprising: an elongated orifice plate, means defining a series of regularly spaced clusters of orifices through said orifice plate, means for supplying a liquid coating material under pressure to each of said orifices in said clusters of orifices, a charge ring plate extending coextensively with said orifice plate, a series of charge rings mounted in and extending through said charge ring plate, each of said charge rings being concentrically positioned with respect to one of said clusters of orifices whereby all of the streams of drops of coating material ejected from the orifices of a cluster will pass through a corresponding charge ring positioned concentrically thereto, control means associated with said charge rings for selectively applying an electric charge to predetermined packets of drops of coating material as they pass through said charge rings, means establishing a constant potential electrostatic deflection field positioned downstream of said charge rings in the trajectory of coating drops passing through said charge rings to cause packets of drops charged by said charge rings as they pass therethrough to be deflected by said deflection field, and means for catching said packets of drops deflected by said deflection field.
US00090363A 1970-11-17 1970-11-17 Multiple jet channel Expired - Lifetime US3714928A (en)

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AU (1) AU3540571A (en)
BE (1) BE775272A (en)
CA (1) CA944808A (en)
CH (1) CH542662A (en)
DE (1) DE2148655C3 (en)
FR (1) FR2114447A5 (en)
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Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3878518A (en) * 1974-02-04 1975-04-15 Ibm Method and apparatus for linearly amplifying the deflection of a droplet of a liquid magnetic stream
US3915113A (en) * 1972-10-26 1975-10-28 Cambridge Consultants Multicolour yarn printing apparatus
US4302761A (en) * 1976-09-30 1981-11-24 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Ink jet system printer of the charge amplitude controlling type capable of printing different size characters
US4324117A (en) * 1980-06-11 1982-04-13 The Mead Corporation Jet device for application of liquid dye to a fabric web
US4385588A (en) * 1979-11-28 1983-05-31 Societe Industrielle De Decoration Et Application "Sida" Electrifiable-material applicator
US4396924A (en) * 1979-12-10 1983-08-02 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Recording head for ink mosaic printers
US4550323A (en) * 1982-06-30 1985-10-29 Burlington Industries, Inc. Elongated fluid jet printing apparatus
US4596990A (en) * 1982-01-27 1986-06-24 Tmc Company Multi-jet single head ink jet printer
WO1988002698A1 (en) * 1986-10-16 1988-04-21 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Multilayer ink writing head
US4740384A (en) * 1983-10-12 1988-04-26 Basf Lacke & Farben Ag Process and apparatus for applying two or more colors of paint
US5229171A (en) * 1991-12-23 1993-07-20 Research Triangle Institute Apparatus and method for uniformly coating a substrate in an evacuable chamber
US5258774A (en) * 1985-11-26 1993-11-02 Dataproducts Corporation Compensation for aerodynamic influences in ink jet apparatuses having ink jet chambers utilizing a plurality of orifices
US6309050B1 (en) * 1998-09-08 2001-10-30 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Ink jet recording apparatus having deflection means for deflecting droplets of ink emitted through a nozzle
US20060203046A1 (en) * 2005-03-14 2006-09-14 Eastman Kodak Company Top feed droplet generator
US20100079516A1 (en) * 2008-09-29 2010-04-01 Yusuke Nakazawa Liquid application apparatus, liquid storage method and inkjet recording apparatus

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CA1012198A (en) * 1974-07-19 1977-06-14 Stephan B. Sears Method and apparatus for recording with writing fluids and drop projection means therefor
JPS55131882A (en) * 1979-04-02 1980-10-14 Canon Inc Electronic equipment
US4721968A (en) * 1983-09-22 1988-01-26 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Ink jet transparency-mode recorder
DE4128590A1 (en) * 1991-08-28 1993-03-04 Kumag Ag Multi-nozzle transfer of printing ink using pneumatic jets - electronically controlling timing of valve operations blowing ink out of individual nozzles of linear array

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US2685536A (en) * 1944-09-29 1954-08-03 Ransburg Electro Coating Corp Method for electrostatically coating articles
US2716826A (en) * 1951-10-24 1955-09-06 Huebner Company Apparatus for reproducing images
US3023070A (en) * 1957-05-20 1962-02-27 Burroughs Corp Atmosphere for electrographic printing
US3052213A (en) * 1958-12-17 1962-09-04 Ibm Electrostatic printer apparatus for printing with liquid ink
US3054697A (en) * 1960-02-29 1962-09-18 Ford Motor Co Electrostatic painting
US3373437A (en) * 1964-03-25 1968-03-12 Richard G. Sweet Fluid droplet recorder with a plurality of jets
US3577198A (en) * 1969-11-24 1971-05-04 Mead Corp Charged drop generator with guard system
US3586907A (en) * 1969-11-17 1971-06-22 Mead Corp Laminated coating head
US3606973A (en) * 1969-11-17 1971-09-21 Mead Corp Filter plate for a coating head

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2685536A (en) * 1944-09-29 1954-08-03 Ransburg Electro Coating Corp Method for electrostatically coating articles
US2716826A (en) * 1951-10-24 1955-09-06 Huebner Company Apparatus for reproducing images
US3023070A (en) * 1957-05-20 1962-02-27 Burroughs Corp Atmosphere for electrographic printing
US3052213A (en) * 1958-12-17 1962-09-04 Ibm Electrostatic printer apparatus for printing with liquid ink
US3054697A (en) * 1960-02-29 1962-09-18 Ford Motor Co Electrostatic painting
US3373437A (en) * 1964-03-25 1968-03-12 Richard G. Sweet Fluid droplet recorder with a plurality of jets
US3586907A (en) * 1969-11-17 1971-06-22 Mead Corp Laminated coating head
US3606973A (en) * 1969-11-17 1971-09-21 Mead Corp Filter plate for a coating head
US3577198A (en) * 1969-11-24 1971-05-04 Mead Corp Charged drop generator with guard system

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3915113A (en) * 1972-10-26 1975-10-28 Cambridge Consultants Multicolour yarn printing apparatus
US3878518A (en) * 1974-02-04 1975-04-15 Ibm Method and apparatus for linearly amplifying the deflection of a droplet of a liquid magnetic stream
US4302761A (en) * 1976-09-30 1981-11-24 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Ink jet system printer of the charge amplitude controlling type capable of printing different size characters
US4385588A (en) * 1979-11-28 1983-05-31 Societe Industrielle De Decoration Et Application "Sida" Electrifiable-material applicator
US4396924A (en) * 1979-12-10 1983-08-02 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Recording head for ink mosaic printers
US4324117A (en) * 1980-06-11 1982-04-13 The Mead Corporation Jet device for application of liquid dye to a fabric web
US4596990A (en) * 1982-01-27 1986-06-24 Tmc Company Multi-jet single head ink jet printer
US4550323A (en) * 1982-06-30 1985-10-29 Burlington Industries, Inc. Elongated fluid jet printing apparatus
US4740384A (en) * 1983-10-12 1988-04-26 Basf Lacke & Farben Ag Process and apparatus for applying two or more colors of paint
US5258774A (en) * 1985-11-26 1993-11-02 Dataproducts Corporation Compensation for aerodynamic influences in ink jet apparatuses having ink jet chambers utilizing a plurality of orifices
WO1988002698A1 (en) * 1986-10-16 1988-04-21 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Multilayer ink writing head
US5229171A (en) * 1991-12-23 1993-07-20 Research Triangle Institute Apparatus and method for uniformly coating a substrate in an evacuable chamber
US6309050B1 (en) * 1998-09-08 2001-10-30 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Ink jet recording apparatus having deflection means for deflecting droplets of ink emitted through a nozzle
US20060203046A1 (en) * 2005-03-14 2006-09-14 Eastman Kodak Company Top feed droplet generator
US7350900B2 (en) 2005-03-14 2008-04-01 Baumer Michael F Top feed droplet generator
US20100079516A1 (en) * 2008-09-29 2010-04-01 Yusuke Nakazawa Liquid application apparatus, liquid storage method and inkjet recording apparatus
US8342668B2 (en) * 2008-09-29 2013-01-01 Fujifilm Corporation Liquid application apparatus, liquid storage method and inkjet recording apparatus

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
NL7115806A (en) 1972-05-19
BE775272A (en) 1972-03-01
JPS5148858B1 (en) 1976-12-23
NL168171B (en) 1981-10-16
DE2148655B2 (en) 1980-01-24
AU3540571A (en) 1973-05-10
CH542662A (en) 1973-10-15
NL168171C (en) 1982-03-16
DE2148655C3 (en) 1980-09-18
CA944808A (en) 1974-04-02
GB1366102A (en) 1974-09-11
DE2148655A1 (en) 1972-06-15
IT938670B (en) 1973-02-10
FR2114447A5 (en) 1972-06-30

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