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WO1996032811A9 - Stockage a grande capacite d'images de documents comprimees pour imprimantes couleurs numeriques - Google Patents

Stockage a grande capacite d'images de documents comprimees pour imprimantes couleurs numeriques

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Publication number
WO1996032811A9
WO1996032811A9 PCT/US1996/004897 US9604897W WO9632811A9 WO 1996032811 A9 WO1996032811 A9 WO 1996032811A9 US 9604897 W US9604897 W US 9604897W WO 9632811 A9 WO9632811 A9 WO 9632811A9
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
ink
nozzles
drop
image
page
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1996/004897
Other languages
English (en)
Other versions
WO1996032811A3 (fr
WO1996032811A2 (fr
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from AUPN2342A external-priority patent/AUPN234295A0/en
Priority claimed from AUPN2343A external-priority patent/AUPN234395A0/en
Priority claimed from AUPN2340A external-priority patent/AUPN234095A0/en
Priority claimed from AUPN2341A external-priority patent/AUPN234195A0/en
Priority claimed from AUPN2344A external-priority patent/AUPN234495A0/en
Application filed filed Critical
Priority to EP96912652A priority Critical patent/EP0770300A2/fr
Priority to US08/750,312 priority patent/US6002847A/en
Publication of WO1996032811A2 publication Critical patent/WO1996032811A2/fr
Publication of WO1996032811A3 publication Critical patent/WO1996032811A3/fr
Publication of WO1996032811A9 publication Critical patent/WO1996032811A9/fr

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Definitions

  • the present invention is in the field of computer controlled printing 5 devices.
  • the field is data compression and expansion systems for high resolution color printing
  • 3,416,153, 1966 discloses a method of achieving variable optical density of printed spots in CIJ printing using the electrostatic dispersion of a charged drop stream to modulate the number of droplets which pass through a small aperture.
  • This technique is used in ink jet printers manufactured by Iris Graphics.
  • Kyser et al US Pat. No. 3,946,398, 1970 discloses a DOD ink jet printer which applies a high voltage to a piezoelectric crystal, causing the crystal to bend, applying pressure on an ink reservoir and jetting drops on demand.
  • Many types of piezoelectric drop on demand printers have subsequently been invented, which utilize piezoelectric crystals in bend mode, push mode, shear mode, and squeeze mode.
  • Thermal Ink Jet printing typically requires approximately 20 ⁇ J over a period of approximately 2 ⁇ s to eject each drop.
  • the 10 Watt active power consumption of each heater is disadvantageous in itself and also necessitates special inks, complicates the driver electronics and precipitates deterioration of heater elements.
  • the invention provides a high capacity compressed document image storage apparatus including:
  • the invention also provides a method of page image compression including the following steps: (a) dividing said page image into an array of cells of pixels; (b) encoding said cells containing only white pixels to a specific code;
  • pressure means for subjecting ink in said body of ink to a pressure of at least 2% above ambient pressure, at least during drop selection and separation;
  • drop selection means for selecting predetermined nozzles and generating a difference in meniscus position between ink in selected and non- selected nozzles; and (e) drop separating means for causing ink from selected nozzles to separate as drops from the body of ink, while allowing ink to be retained in non- selected nozzles.
  • the invention also provides a printing system incorporating a page image compression system, where the printing system includes a print head comprising:
  • drop selection means for selecting predetermined nozzles and generating a difference in meniscus position between ink in selected and non- selected nozzles; and (d) drop separating means for causing ink from selected nozzles to separate as drops from the body of ink, while allowing ink to be retained in non- selected nozzles, said drop selecting means being capable of producing said difference in meniscus position in the absence of said drop separation means.
  • the invention also provides a printing system incorporating a page image compression system, where the printing system includes a print head comprising:
  • drop selection means for selecting predetermined nozzles and generating a difference in meniscus position between ink in selected and non- selected nozzles; and (d) drop separating means for causing ink from selected nozzles to separate as drops from the body of ink, while allowing ink to be retained in non- selected nozzles.
  • the invention also provides an expansion apparatus for expanding compressed page image data in real-time as the page is being printed, said apparatus including:
  • the invention also provides a method of compressing an image which includes the steps of:
  • the invention also provides a compressed image expansion apparatus comprising:
  • a JPEG decoder which converts first compressed image data to contone pixel data at a first resolution
  • a resolution conversion device which converts said first contone pixel data to a second contone pixel data of a second resolution, said second resolution being different from said first resolution
  • bitmap decoder which converts second compressed image data to bitmap image data at said second resolution
  • creation means to create a third contone pixel data at said second resolution, based upon the pattern of true and false entries in said bitmap image data
  • Figure 1(a) shows a simplified block schematic diagram of one exemplary printing apparatus according to the present invention.
  • Figure 1(b) shows a cross section of one variety of nozzle tip in accordance with the invention.
  • Figures 2(a) to 2(f) show fluid dynamic simulations of drop selection.
  • Figure 3(a) shows a finite element fluid dynamic simulation of a nozzle in operation according to an embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 3(b) shows successive meniscus positions during drop selection and separation.
  • Figure 3(c) shows the temperatures at various points during a drop selection cycle.
  • Figure 3(d) shows measured surface tension versus temperature curves for various ink additives.
  • Figure 3(e) shows the power pulses which are applied to the nozzle heater to generate the temperature curves of figure 3(c)
  • Figure 4 shows a block schematic diagram of print head drive circuitry for practice of the invention.
  • Figure 5 shows projected manufacturing yields for an A4 page width color print head embodying features of the invention, with and without fault tolerance.
  • Figure 6 is a block schematic diagram of a typical current office or home printing system.
  • Figure 7 is a block schematic diagram of a typical current commercial printing system.
  • Figure 8 is a block schematic diagram of a typical office printing system using page image compression for electronic collation and print on demand digital page storage.
  • Figure 9 is a diagram representing the data encoding scheme of the page image compression system.
  • Figure 10(a) and 10(b) are an example set of patterns to which subcells may be matched for encoding.
  • Figure 11 is a block schematic diagram of a real-time page image expansion system for high speed color printing.
  • Figure 12 is a block schematic diagram of an ASIC to implement real-time expansion of compressed page images.
  • Figure 13 is a block schematic diagram of the expansion section of the ASIC shown in figure 12.
  • Figure 14 is a block schematic diagram of the halftoning section of the ASIC shown in figure 12.
  • the present invention is a high capacity compressed document image storage apparatus for color printing systems.
  • the compressed document storage system is highly suited for use with high speed color pagewidth print heads.
  • the document storage apparatus can also be used with other printing systems, such as color electrophotographic and other systems.
  • the compressed document storage system uses a new compression scheme which is described herein.
  • This page image compression scheme can achieve a typical compression ratio in excess of 80:1 when compared to a CC'MM'YK 800 dpi bitmap, and in excess of 420:1 when compared to an 800 dpi CMYK contone image.
  • This compression is achieved while maintaining a high image quality which is largely indistinguishable from the original image with the naked eye.
  • the high compression ratio allows the storage of more than 1,000 A4800 dpi full color page images on a low cost 1 GByte disk drive.
  • the compression scheme reduces the compressed data rate required for high speed (120 A4 ppm) printing to that which can be achieved using commonly available magnetic hard disk drives.
  • the compressed document storage system can be used for electronic collation. Electronic collation is relevant when multiple copies of a multiple page document are printed. A system without electronic collation will print all copies of the first page, followed by all copies of the second page, and so on. This requires either manual collation, which is inconvenient and time consuming for the user, or mechanical collation, which is bulky, expensive, and normally limited to a maximum number of copies (typically 10 or 20 copies).
  • the compressed document storage system can also be used for print- on-demand applications, where compressed digital copies of various documents are stored locally to the printer, and can be printed when required.
  • the compressed document storage system is composed of the following major components:
  • an image creation system which preferably can operate on a band by band basis. This will usually be a Adobe Postscript' interpreter and Raster Image Processor (RIP).
  • RIP Raster Image Processor
  • a page image compression system which can operate on a band by band basis.
  • a new page image compression scheme which achieves high compression ratio and preserves high image quality is described herein.
  • a mass storage device for storing compressed page images.
  • a 1 GByte HDD can be used to store 1,000 or more pages.
  • an output memory which stores at least one band of the expanded page image.
  • the recommended minimum is the number of lines from the first line of the print engine to the last line of the print engine, plus two bands.
  • the compression scheme can operate on a sequence of page bands, allowing the use of band by band rasterization and avoiding the requirement for a full page memory of uncompressed information.
  • the compression scheme is also suited for real-time expansion for high speed color printing systems.
  • a real-time expansion system capable of expanding 120 pages per minute is disclosed.
  • the clock to the print head 50 is generated from the system clock
  • JTAG test circuits 499 may be included.
  • the invention constitutes a drop-on-demand printing mechanism wherein the means of selecting drops to be printed produces a difference in position between selected drops and drops which are not selected, but which is insufficient to cause the ink drops to overcome the ink surface tension and separate from the body of ink, and wherein an alternative means is provided to cause separation of the selected drops from the body of ink.
  • the separation of drop selection means from drop separation means significantly reduces the energy required to select which ink drops are to be printed. Only the drop selection means must be driven by individual signals to each nozzle.
  • the drop separation means can be a field or condition applied simultaneously to all nozzles.
  • the drop selection means may be chosen from, but is not limited to, the following list:
  • the drop separation means may be chosen from, but is not limited to, the following list:
  • DOD printing technology targets shows some desirable characteristics of drop on demand printing technology.
  • the table also lists some methods by which some embodiments described herein, or in other of my related applications, provide improvements over the prior art. DOD printing technology targets
  • TJJ thermal ink jet
  • piezoelectric inkjet systems a drop velocity of approximately 10 meters per second is preferred to ensure that the selected ink drops overcome ink surface tension, separate from the body of the ink, and strike the recording medium.
  • These systems have a very low efficiency of conversion of electrical energy into drop kinetic energy.
  • the efficiency of TU systems is approximately 0.02%).
  • This means that the drive circuits for TU print heads must switch high currents.
  • the drive circuits for piezoelectric ink jet heads must either switch high voltages, or drive highly capacitive loads.
  • the total power consumption of pagewidth TU printheads is also very high.
  • An 800 dpi A4 full color pagewidth TU print head printing a four color black image in one second would consume approximately 6 kW of electrical power, most of which is converted to waste heat. The difficulties of removal of this amount of heat precludes the production of low cost, high speed, high resolution compact pagewidth TU systems.
  • One important feature of embodiments of the invention is a means of significantly reducing the energy required to select which ink drops are to be printed. This is achieved by separating the means for selecting ink drops from the means for ensuring that selected drops separate from the body of ink and form dots on the recording medium. Only the drop selection means must be driven by individual signals to each nozzle.
  • the drop separation means can be a field or condition applied simultaneously to all nozzles.
  • Drop selection means shows some of the possible means for selecting drops in accordance with the invention.
  • the drop selection means is only required to create sufficient change in the position of selected drops that the drop separation means can discriminate between selected and unselected drops.
  • the preferred drop selection means for water based inks is method 1: "Electrothermal reduction of surface tension of pressurized ink”.
  • This drop selection means provides many advantages over other systems, including; low power operation (approximately 1% of TU), compatibility with CMOS VLSI chip fabrication, low voltage operation (approx. 10 V), high nozzle density, low temperature operation, and wide range of suitable ink formulations.
  • the ink must exhibit a reduction in surface tension with increasing temperature.
  • the preferred drop selection means for hot melt or oil based inks is method 2: "Electrothermal reduction of ink viscosity, combined with oscillating ink pressure".
  • This drop selection means is particularly suited for use with inks which exhibit a large reduction of viscosity with increasing temperature, but only a small reduction in surface tension. This occurs particularly with non-polar ink carriers with relatively high molecular weight This is especially applicable to hot melt and oil based inks.
  • the table “Drop separation means” shows some of the possible methods for separating selected drops from the body of ink, and ensuring that the selected drops form dots on the printing medium.
  • the drop separation means discriminates between selected drops and unselected drops to ensure that unselected drops do not form dots on the printing medium.
  • drop separation means may also be used.
  • the preferred drop separation means depends upon the intended use. For most applications, method 1: “Electrostatic attraction”, or method 2: “AC electric field” are most appropriate. For applications where smooth coated paper or film is used, and very high speed is not essential, method 3: 'Troximity" may be appropriate. For high speed, high quality systems, method 4: 'Transfer proximity” can be used. Method 6: “Magnetic attraction” is appropriate for portable printing systems where the print medium is too rough for proximity printing, and the high voltages required for electrostatic drop separation are undesirable. There is no clear 'best' drop separation means which is applicable to all circumstances.
  • FIG. 1 A simplified schematic diagram of one preferred printing system according to the invention appears in Figure 1(a).
  • An image source 52 may be raster image data from a scanner or computer, or outline image data in the form of a page description language (PDL), or other forms of digital image representation.
  • This image data is converted to a pixel-mapped page image by the image processing system 53.
  • This may be a raster image processor (RIP) in the case of PDL image data, or may be pixel image manipulation in the case of raster image data.
  • Continuous tone data produced by the image processing unit 53 is halftoned. Halftoning is performed by the Digital
  • Halftoning unit 54 Halftoned bitmap image data is stored in the image memory 72.
  • the image memory 72 may be a full page memory, or a band memory.
  • Heater control circuits 71 read data from the image memory 72 and apply time- varying electrical pulses to the nozzle heaters (103 in figure 1(b)) that are part of the print head 50. These pulses are applied at an appropriate time, and to the appropriate nozzle, so that selected drops will form spots on the recording medium 51 in the appropriate position designated by the data in the image memory 72.
  • the recording medium 51 is moved relative to the head 50 by a paper transport system 65, which is electronically controlled by a paper transport control system 66, which in turn is controlled by a microcontroller 315.
  • the paper transport system shown in figure 1(a) is schematic only, and many different mechanical configurations are possible. In the case of pagewidth print heads, it is most convenient to move the recording medium 51 past a stationary head 50. However, in the case of scanning print systems, it is usually most convenient to move the head 50 along one axis (the sub-scanning direction) and the recording medium 51 along the orthogonal axis (the main scanning direction), in a relative raster motion.
  • the microcontroller 315 may also control the ink pressure regulator 63 and the heater control circuits 71. For printing using surface tension reduction, ink is contained in an ink reservoir 64 under pressure. In the quiescent state (with no ink drop ejected), the ink pressure is insufficient to overcome the ink surface tension and eject a drop.
  • a constant ink pressure can be achieved by applying pressure to the ink reservoir 64 under the control of an ink pressure regulator 63.
  • the ink pressure can be very accurately generated and controlled by situating the top surface of the ink in the reservoir 64 an appropriate distance above the head 50. This ink level can be regulated by a simple float valve (not shown).
  • ink is contained in an ink reservoir 64 under pressure, and the ink pressure is caused to oscillate.
  • the means of producing this oscillation may be a piezoelectric actuator mounted in the ink channels (not shown).
  • the ink is distributed to the back surface of the head 50 by an ink channel device 75.
  • the ink preferably flows through slots and/or holes etched through the silicon substrate of the head 50 to the front surface, where the nozzles and actuators are situated.
  • the nozzle actuators are electrothermal heaters.
  • an external field 74 is required to ensure that the selected drop separates from the body of the ink and moves towards the recording medium 51.
  • a convenient external field 74 is a constant electric field, as the ink is easily made to be electrically conductive.
  • the paper guide or platen 67 can be made of electrically conductive material and used as one electrode generating the electric field.
  • the other electrode can be the head 50 itself.
  • Another embodiment uses proximity of the print medium as a means of discriminating between selected drops and unselected drops.
  • Figure 1 (b) is a detail enlargement of a cross section of a single microscopic nozzle tip embodiment of the invention, fabricated using a modified CMOS process.
  • the nozzle is etched in a substrate 101 , which may be silicon, glass, metal, or any other suitable material. If substrates which are not semiconductor materials are used, a semiconducting material (such as amorphous silicon) may be deposited on the substrate, and integrated drive transistors and data distribution circuitry may be formed in the surface semiconducting layer.
  • Single crystal silicon (SCS) substrates have several advantages, including:
  • Print heads can be fabricated in existing facilities (fabs) using standard VLSI processing equipment; 3) SCS has high mechanical strength and rigidity; and 4) SCS has a high thermal conductivity.
  • the nozzle is of cylindrical form, with the heater 103 forming an annulus.
  • the nozzle tip 104 is formed from silicon dioxide layers 102 deposited during the fabrication of the CMOS drive circuitry.
  • the nozzle tip is passivated with silicon nitride.
  • the protruding nozzle tip controls the contact point of the pressurized ink 100 on the print head surface.
  • the print head surface is also hydrophobized to prevent accidental spread of ink across the front of the print head.
  • nozzle embodiments of the invention may vary in shape, dimensions, and materials used.
  • Monolithic nozzles etched from the substrate upon which the heater and drive electronics are formed have the advantage of not requiring an orifice plate.
  • the elimination of the orifice plate has significant cost savings in manufacture and assembly.
  • Recent methods for eliminating orifice plates include the use of 'vortex' actuators such as those described in Domoto et al US Pat. No. 4,580,158, 1986, assigned to Xerox, and Miller et al US Pat. No. 5,371 ,527, 1994 assigned to
  • This type of nozzle may be used for print heads using various techniques for drop separation.
  • Figure 2 shows the results of energy transport and fluid dynamic simulations performed using FTDAP, a commercial fluid dynamic simulation software package available from Fluid Dynamics Inc., of Illinois, USA.
  • FTDAP Fluid Dynamics Inc.
  • This simulation is of a thermal drop selection nozzle embodiment with a diameter of 8 ⁇ m, at an ambient temperature of 30°C.
  • the total energy applied to the heater is 276 nJ, applied as 69 pulses of 4 nJ each.
  • the ink pressure is 10 kPa above ambient air pressure, and the ink viscosity at 30°C is 1.84 cPs.
  • the ink is water based, and includes a sol of 0.1 % palmitic acid to achieve an enhanced decrease in surface tension with increasing temperature.
  • a cross section of the nozzle tip from the central axis of the nozzle to a radial distance of 40 ⁇ m is shown.
  • Heat flow in the various materials of the nozzle including silicon, silicon nitride, amorphous silicon dioxide, crystalline silicon dioxide, and water based ink are simulated using the respective densities, heat capacities, and thermal conductivities of the materials.
  • the time step of the simulation is 0.1 ⁇ s.
  • Figure 2(a) shows a quiescent state, just before the heater is actuated. An equilibrium is created whereby no ink escapes the nozzle in the quiescent state by ensuring that the ink pressure plus external electrostatic field is insufficient to overcome the surface tension of the ink at the ambient temperature. In the quiescent state, the meniscus of the ink does not protrude significantly from the print head surface, so the electrostatic field is not significantly concentrated at the meniscus.
  • Figure 2(b) shows thermal contours at 5°C intervals 5 ⁇ s after the start of the heater energizing pulse. When the heater is energized, the ink in contact with the nozzle tip is rapidly heated. The reduction in surface tension causes the heated portion of the meniscus to rapidly expand relative to the cool ink meniscus.
  • Figure 2(d) shows thermal contours at 5°C intervals 20 ⁇ s after the start of the heater energizing pulse.
  • the ink pressure has caused the ink to flow to a new meniscus position, which protrudes from the print head.
  • the electrostatic field becomes concentrated by the protruding conductive ink drop.
  • Figure 2(e) shows thermal contours at 5°C intervals 30 ⁇ s after the start of the heater energizing pulse, which is also 6 ⁇ s after the end of the heater pulse, as the heater pulse duration is 24 ⁇ s.
  • the nozzle tip has rapidly cooled due to conduction through the oxide layers, and conduction into the flowing ink.
  • the nozzle tip is effectively 'water cooled' by the ink. Electrostatic attraction causes the ink drop to begin to accelerate towards the recording medium. Were the heater pulse significantly shorter (less than 16 ⁇ s in this case) the ink would not accelerate towards the print medium, but would instead return to the nozzle.
  • Figure 2(f) shows thermal contours at 5°C intervals 26 ⁇ s after the end of the heater pulse.
  • the temperature at the nozzle tip is now less than 5°C above ambient temperature. This causes an increase in surface tension around the nozzle tip.
  • the rate at which the ink is drawn from the nozzle exceeds the viscously limited rate of ink flow through the nozzle, the ink in the region of the nozzle tip 'necks', and the selected drop separates from the body of ink.
  • the selected drop then travels to the recording medium under the influence of the external electrostatic field.
  • the meniscus of the ink at the nozzle tip then returns to its quiescent position, ready for the next heat pulse to select the next ink drop.
  • One ink drop is selected, separated and forms a spot on the recording medium for each heat pulse. As the heat pulses are electrically controlled, drop on demand ink jet operation can be achieved.
  • Figure 3(a) shows successive meniscus positions during the drop selection cycle at 5 ⁇ s intervals, starting at the beginning of the heater energizing pulse.
  • Figure 3(b) is a graph of meniscus position versus time, showing the movement of the point at the centre of the meniscus.
  • the heater pulse starts 10 ⁇ s into the simulation.
  • Figure 3(c) shows the resultant curve of temperature with respect to time at various points in the nozzle.
  • the vertical axis of the graph is temperature, in units of 100°C.
  • the horizontal axis of the graph is time, in units of 10 ⁇ s.
  • the temperature curve shown in figure 3(b) was calculated by F DAP, using 0.1 ⁇ s time steps.
  • the local ambient temperature is 30 degrees C.
  • Temperature histories at three points are shown: A - Nozzle tip: This shows the temperature history at the circle of contact between the passivation layer, the ink, and air.
  • C - Chip surface This is at a point on the print head surface 20 ⁇ m from the centre of the nozzle. The temperature only rises a few degrees. This indicates that active circuitry can be located very close to the nozzles without experiencing performance or lifetime degradation due to elevated temperatures.
  • Figure 3(e) shows the power applied to the heater.
  • Optimum operation requires a sharp rise in temperature at the start of the heater pulse, a maintenance of the temperature a little below the boiling point of the ink for the duration of the pulse, and a rapid fall in temperature at the end of the pulse.
  • the average energy applied to the heater is varied over the duration of the pulse. In this case, the variation is achieved by pulse frequency modulation of
  • the sub-pulse frequency in this case is 5 Mhz. This can readily be varied without significantly affecting the operation of the print head. A higher sub-pulse frequency allows finer control over the power applied to the heater. A sub-pulse frequency of 13.5 Mhz is suitable, as this frequency is also suitable for minimizing the effect of radio frequency interference (RFI).
  • RFID radio frequency interference
  • ⁇ r is the surface tension at temperature T
  • k is a constant
  • M is the molar mass of the liquid
  • x is the degree of association of the liquid
  • p is the density of the liquid.
  • water based ink for thermal ink jet printers often contains isopropyl alcohol (2-propanol) to reduce the surface tension and promote rapid drying.
  • Isopropyl alcohol has a boiling point of 82.4°C, lower than that of water.
  • a surfactant such as 1-Hexanol (b.p. 158°C) can be used to reverse this effect, and achieve a surface tension which decreases slightly with temperature.
  • a relatively large decrease in surface tension with temperature is desirable to maximize operating latitude.
  • a surface tension decrease of 20 mN/m over a 30°C temperature range is prefe ⁇ ed to achieve large operating margins, while as little as lOmN/m can be used to achieve operation of the print head according to the present invention.
  • the ink may contain a low concentration sol of a surfactant which is solid at ambient temperatures, but melts at a threshold temperature. Particle sizes less than 1,000 A are desirable. Suitable surfactant melting points for a water based ink are between 50°C and 90°C, and preferably between 60°C and 80°C. 2)
  • the ink may contain an oil/water microemulsion with a phase inversion temperature (PIT) which is above the maximum ambient temperature, but below the boiling point of the ink.
  • PIT phase inversion temperature
  • the PIT of the microemulsion is preferably 20°C or more above the maximum non-operating temperature encountered by the ink. A PIT of approximately 80°C is suitable.
  • Tnks can be prepared as a sol of small particles of a surfactant which melts in the desired operating temperature range.
  • surfactants include carboxylic acids with between 14 and 30 carbon atoms, such as:
  • the melting point of sols with a small particle size is usually slightly less than of the bulk material, it is preferable to choose a carboxylic acid with a melting point slightly above the desired drop selection temperature.
  • a good example is Arachidic acid.
  • carboxyhc acids are available in high purity and at low cost.
  • the amount of surfactant required is very small, so the cost of adding them to the ink is insignificant.
  • a mixture of carboxyhc acids with slightly varying chain lengths can be used to spread the melting points over a range of temperatures. Such mixtures will typically cost less than the pure acid.
  • the surfactant sol can be prepared separately at high concentration, and added to the ink in the required concentration.
  • An example process for creating the surfactant sol is as follows: 1) Add the carboxylic acid to purified water in an oxygen free atmosphere. 2) Heat the mixture to above the melting point of the carboxylic acid. The water can be brought to a boil.
  • the ink preparation will also contain either dye(s) or pigment(s), bactericidal agents, agents to enhance the electrical conductivity of the ink if electrostatic drop separation is used, humectants, and other agents as required.
  • Anti-foaming agents will generally not be required, as there is no bubble formation during the drop ejection process.
  • Inks made with aniomc surfactant sols are generally unsuitable for use with cationic dyes or pigments. This is because the cationic dye or pigment may precipitate or flocculate with the aniomc surfactant.
  • a cationic surfactant sol is required.
  • the family of alkylamines is suitable for this purpose. Various suitable alkylamines are shown in the following table:
  • the method of preparation of cationic surfactant sols is essentially similar to that of anionic surfactant sols, except that an acid instead of an alkali is used to adjust the pH balance and increase the charge on the surfactant particles.
  • a pH of 6 using HCl is suitable.
  • a microemulsion is chosen with a phase inversion temperature (PIT) around the desired ejection threshold temperature. Below the PIT, the microemulsion is oil in water (O/W), and above the PIT the microemulsion is water in oil (W/O). At low temperatures, the surfactant forming the microemulsion prefers a high curvature surface around oil, and at temperatures significantly above the PIT, the surfactant prefers a high curvature surface around water. At temperatures close to the PIT, the microemulsion forms a continuous 'sponge' of topologically connected water and oil.
  • PIT phase inversion temperature
  • Polyoxypropylene (POP) can be combined with POE in POE/POP block copolymers to lower the cloud point of POE chains without introducing a strong hydrophobicity at low temperatures.
  • POP Polyoxypropylene
  • Two main configurations of symmetrical POE/POP block copolymers are available. These are:
  • Meroxapol [HO(CHCH 3 CH 2 O) x (CH 2 CH 2 O) v (CHCH 3 CH 2 O) z OH] varieties where the average x and z are approximately 4, and the average y is approximately 15 may be suitable.
  • a dispersion of microfine particles of a surfactant with a melting point substantially above the quiescent temperature, but substantially below the drop ejection temperature, can be added to the hot melt ink while in the liquid phase.
  • a polar/non-polar microemulsion with a PIT which is preferably at least 20°C above the melting points of both the polar and non-polar compounds.
  • Suitable materials will generally have a strong intermolecular attraction, which may be achieved by multiple hydrogen bonds, for example, polyols, such as Hexanetetrol, which has a melting point of 88°C.
  • operation of an embodiment using thermal reduction of viscosity and proximity drop separation, in combination with hot melt ink is as follows.
  • solid ink Prior to operation of the printer, solid ink is melted in the reservoir 64.
  • the reservoir, ink passage to the print head, ink channels 75, and print head 50 are maintained at a temperature at which the ink 100 is liquid, but exhibits a relatively high viscosity (for example, approximately 100 cP).
  • the Ink 100 is retained in the nozzle by the surface tension of the ink.
  • the ink 100 is formulated so that the viscosity of the ink reduces with increasing temperature.
  • the ink pressure oscillates at a frequency which is an integral multiple of the drop ejection frequency from the nozzle.
  • part of the selected drop freezes, and attaches to the recording medium.
  • ink pressure falls, ink begins to move back into the nozzle.
  • the body of ink separates from the ink which is frozen onto the recording medium.
  • the meniscus of the ink 100 at the nozzle tip then returns to low amplitude oscillation.
  • the viscosity of the ink increases to its quiescent level as remaining heat is dissipated to the bulk ink and print head.
  • One ink drop is selected, separated and forms a spot on the recording medium 51 for each heat pulse. As the heat pulses are electrically controlled, drop on demand inkjet operation can be achieved.
  • Printing apparatus and methods of this invention are suitable for a wide range of applications, including (but not limited to) the following: color and monochrome office printing, short run digital printing, high speed digital printing, process color printing, spot color printing, offset press supplemental printing, low cost printers using scanning print heads, high speed printers using pagewidth print heads, portable color and monochrome printers, color and monochrome copiers, color and monochrome facsimile machines, combined printer, facsimile and copying machines, label printing, large format plotters, photographic duphcation, printers for digital photographic processing, portable printers inco ⁇ orated into digital 'instant' cameras, video printing, printing of PhotoCD images, portable printers for 'Personal
  • the table "Comparison between Thermal inkjet and Present Invention” compares the aspects of printing in accordance with the present invention with thermal inkjet printing technology.
  • a direct comparison is made between the present invention and thermal ink jet technology because both are drop on demand systems which operate using thermal actuators and liquid ink. Although they may appear similar, the two technologies operate on different principles.
  • Thermal ink jet printers use the following fundamental operating principle.
  • a thermal impulse caused by electrical resistance heating results in the explosive formation of a bubble in liquid ink. Rapid and consistent bubble formation can be achieved by superheating the ink, so that sufficient heat is transfe ⁇ ed to the ink before bubble nucleation is complete.
  • ink temperatures of approximately 280°C to 400°C are required.
  • the bubble formation causes a pressure wave which forces a drop of ink from the aperture with high velocity. The bubble then collapses, drawing ink from the ink reservoir to re-fill the nozzle.
  • Thermal ink jet printing has been highly successful commercially due to the high nozzle packing density and the use of well established integrated circuit manufacturing techniques.
  • thermal inkjet printing technology faces significant technical problems including multi-part precision fabrication, device yield, image resolution, 'pepper' noise, printing speed, drive transistor power, waste power dissipation, satellite drop formation, thermal stress, differential thermal expansion, kogation, cavitation, rectified diffusion, and difficulties in ink formulation.
  • yield The percentage of operational devices which are produced from a wafer run is known as the yield. Yield has a direct influence on manufacturing cost. A device with a yield of 5% is effectively ten times more expensive to manufacture than an identical device with a yield of 50%.
  • Figure 5 is a graph of wafer sort yield versus defect density for a monolithic full width color A4 head embodiment of the invention.
  • the head is 215 mm long by 5 mm wide.
  • the non fault tolerant yield 198 is calculated according to Mu ⁇ hy's method, which is a widely used yield prediction method. With a defect density of one defect per square cm, Mu ⁇ hy's method predicts a yield less than
  • Figure 5 also includes a graph of non fault tolerant yield 197 which explicitly models the clustering of defects by introducing a defect clustering factor.
  • the defect clustering factor is not a controllable parameter in manufacturing, but is a characteristic of the manufacturing process.
  • the defect clustering factor for manufacturing processes can be expected to be approximately 2, in which case yield projections closely match Mu ⁇ hy's method.
  • a solution to the problem of low yield is to inco ⁇ orate fault tolerance by including redundant functional units on the chip which are used to replace faulty functional units.
  • redundant sub-units In memory chips and most Wafer Scale Integration (WSI) devices, the physical location of redundant sub-units on the chip is not important However, in printing heads the redundant sub-unit may contain one or more printing actuators. These must have a fixed spatial relationship to the page being printed. To be able to print a dot in the same position as a faulty actuator, redundant actuators must not be displaced in the non-scan direction. However, faulty actuators can be replaced with redundant actuators which are displaced in the scan direction. To ensure that the redundant actuator prints the dot in the same position as the faulty actuator, the data timing to the redundant actuator can be altered to compensate for the displacement in the scan direction.
  • the minimum physical dimensions of the head chip are determined by the width of the page being printed, the fragility of the head chip, and manufacturing constraints on fabrication of ink channels which supply ink to the back surface of the chip.
  • the minimum practical size for a full width, full color head for printing A4 size paper is approximately 215 mm x 5 mm. This size allows the inclusion of 100% redundancy without significantly increasing chip area, when using 1.5 ⁇ m CMOS fabrication technology.
  • Figure 5 shows the fault tolerant sort yield 199 for a full width color A4 head which includes various forms of fault tolerance, the modeling of which has been included in the yield equation.
  • This graph shows projected yield as a function of both defect density and defect clustering.
  • the yield projection shown in figure 5 indicates that thoroughly implemented fault tolerance can increase wafer sort yield from under 1% to more than 90% under identical manufacturing conditions. This can reduce the manufacturing cost by a factor of 100.
  • Fault tolerance is highly recommended to improve yield and reliability of print heads containing thousands of printing nozzles, and thereby make pagewidth printing heads practical. However, fault tolerance is not to be taken as an essential part of the present invention.
  • FIG. 6 A schematic diagram of a digital electronic printing system using a print head of this invention is shown in Figure 6.
  • This shows a monolithic printing head 50 printing an image 60 composed of a multitude of ink drops onto a recording medium 51.
  • This medium will typically be paper, but can also be overhead transparency film, cloth, or many other substantially flat surfaces which will accept ink drops.
  • the image to be printed is provided by an image source 52, which may be any image type which can be converted into a two dimensional array of pixels.
  • Typical image sources are image scanners, digitally stored images, images encoded in a page description language 0?DL) such as Adobe Postscript, Adobe Postscript level 2, or Hewlett-Packard PCL 5, page images generated by a procedure-call based rasterizer, such as Apple QuickDraw, Apple Quickdraw GX, or Microsoft GDI, or text in an electronic form such as ASCII.
  • This image data is then converted by an image processing system 53 into a two dimensional a ⁇ ay of pixels suitable for the particular printing system. This may be color or monochrome, and the data will typically have between 1 and 32 bits per pixel, depending upon the image source and the specifications of the printing system.
  • the image processing system may be a raster image processor (RIP) if the source image is a page description, or may be a two dimensional image processing system if the source image is from a scanner.
  • RIP raster image processor
  • a halftoning system 54 is necessary. Suitable types of halftoning are based on dispersed dot ordered dither or error diffusion. Variations of these, commonly known as stochastic screening or frequency modulation screening are suitable.
  • the halftoning system commonly used for offset printing - clustered dot ordered dither - is not recommended, as effective image resolution is unnecessarily wasted using this technique.
  • the output of the halftoning system is a binary monochrome or color image at the resolution of the printing system according to the present invention.
  • the binary image is processed by a data phasing circuit 55 (which may be inco ⁇ orated in a Head Control ASIC 400 as shown in figure 4) which provides the pixel data in the co ⁇ ect sequence to the data shift registers 56. Data sequencing is required to compensate for the nozzle a ⁇ angement and the movement of the paper.
  • the driver circuits 57 When the data has been loaded into the shift registers 56, it is presented in parallel to the heater driver circuits 57. At the correct time, the driver circuits 57 will electronically connect the co ⁇ esponding heaters 58 with the voltage pulse generated by the pulse shaper circuit 61 and the voltage regulator 62. The heaters 58 heat the tip of the nozzles 59, affecting the physical characteristics of the ink.
  • Ink drops 60 escape from the nozzles in a pattern which co ⁇ esponds to the digital impulses which have been applied to the heater driver circuits.
  • the pressure of the ink in the ink reservoir 64 is regulated by the pressure regulator 63.
  • Selected drops of ink drops 60 are separated from the body of ink by the chosen drop separation means, and contact the recording medium 51.
  • the recording medium 51 is continually moved relative to the print head 50 by the paper transport system 65. If the print head 50 is the full width of the print region of the recording medium 51 , it is only necessary to move the recording medium 51 in one direction, and the print head 50 can remain fixed. If a smaller print head 50 is used, it is necessary to implement a raster scan system. This is typically achieved by scanning the print head 50 along the short dimension of the recording medium 51, while moving the recording medium 51 along its long dimension.
  • Figure 6 shows a typical digital office or home printing system in use at the time of writing.
  • the two major components of the system are a personal computer system 1000 and a desktop printer 1010.
  • the information to be printed is usually created by one or more application programs.
  • application programs There are many application programs in common use, which fall into several categories, such as page layout programs, drawing programs, word processing programs, database programs, spreadsheet programs, CAD programs, image processing programs, and so on, most of which have differing internal representations (native formats) of the document to be printed. Most of these programs can use items imported from other applications 1001, and digital typefaces or fonts 1002.
  • Many application programs 1004 on desktop computers can also import photographic images. In practice, the use of photographic images is usually limited to low resolution images 1003 with less than approximately one million pixels.
  • the internal native format is typically converted to a page description language (PDL) such as Adobe 'PostscriptTM', Adobe 'Postscript Level 2TM', or Hewlett- Packard 'PCL5TM'.
  • PDL page description language
  • the internal representation may be converted to a series of procedure calls to a graphics library, such as Microsoft 'GDITM' or Apple Computer 'QuickdrawTM' or 'Quickdraw GXTM'.
  • Microsoft 'GDITM' or Apple Computer 'QuickdrawTM' or 'Quickdraw GXTM' are trademarks of the co ⁇ esponding companies preceding the product name.
  • the document description is provided to the operating system 1005 of the personal computer 1000, which may spool the document to the disk drive 1006.
  • the operating system 1005 despools the description of the next page from the disk drive.
  • the page information is then transfe ⁇ ed to the desktop printer 1010 via a direct serial or parallel connection, or a local area network.
  • the desktop printer 1010 may contain a PDL inte ⁇ reter 1012, which converts the page description to a bitmap page representation using digital fonts 1011.
  • the bitmap page representation is stored in a page memory 1013 and printed by the print engine 1014.
  • the page memory 1013 is typically only large enough to store one page image, though in some desktop printers the page memory can store two page images to allow one page to be printed while a subsequent page is being calculated. In most cases, documents are not stored on the printer, so both the personal computer 1000 and the desktop printer 1010 are required to calculate and print any document, even if there has been no change to the document since the last time it was printed.
  • Figure 7 shows a typical commercial printing system in use at the time of writing.
  • Three major components are used, typically at three separate sites. These are the personal computer systems 1000 used for desktop publishing, a prepress service 1030, which converts the electronic page descriptions produced using the personal computer systems 1000 into color separations, and the printer 1040, which makes printing plates using the color separations, and prints the documents typically using an offset press, a color offset press 1041, or, for very high volume printing, a gravure press.
  • Figure 7 specifically shows the systems typically used for color document printing when between 2,000 and 100,000 copies of each document are required. There are many variations in the specific use of equipment, and figure 7 is intended as an approximate guide only.
  • the information to be printed is usually created by one or more application programs.
  • application programs which may be used to create parts of the final docximent, such as drawing programs, word processing programs, database programs, spreadsheet programs, CAD programs, image processing programs, and so on.
  • the final document is usually composed using a page layout apphcation program 1004, such as Quark 'ExpressTM' or Aldus
  • Page layout programs can use items imported from other applications 1001, digital typefaces or fonts 1002, and color images. Due to the memory, disk space and processing power constraints in desktop computers, high resolution photographic images are typically not used directly in the application programs 1004. Instead, low resolution images are used to mark the position that high resolution images are to take in the final document. These low resolution images 1003 may be imported into the application program 1004 using various means, including desktop scanners 1006 used to digitize film transparencies.
  • the document description is normally stored in the native format for the apphcation via the operating system 1005 to a removable storage medium.
  • the removable medium is typically a removable hard disk, an optical disk, or magnetic tape.
  • the document description is usually stored in the native format for the apphcation instead of a page description language to make it easier to make minor changes (such as co ⁇ ecting typographical e ⁇ ors) before the document is printed.
  • the removable media, plus the original transparencies, are then physically taken to the pre-press service company 1030.
  • the transparencies are re- scanned at high resolution, typically using a drum scanner 1033.
  • the native document description files are converted to Adobe 'Postscript' page description language, and combined with the high resolution scans to produce the final page layout. This page layout may be printed by a digital proof printer 1034 to obtain customer approval to proceed with the print run.
  • the page layout in Postscript format is sent to a Postscript imagesetter 1032, which produces a set of color separation films.
  • a Postscript imagesetter 1032 which produces a set of color separation films.
  • the color separation films are usually produced at a resolution between 1,800 dpi and 3,600 dpi (inclusive) and usually use clustered dot ordered dithering as the method of halftoning.
  • the high resolution of the color separations is necessary to prevent color banding when using simple clustered dot ordered dithering.
  • Electronic collation requires the digital storage images of all of the pages in the document
  • the page images can be stored in a variety of formats, such as full bitmaps, compressed bitmaps, or in a page description language (PDL).
  • PDL page description language
  • Storage of the pages in PDL format has the significant disadvantage that each page must be rasterized each time it is printed. For many pages (especially those containing images or complex graphics) rasterization takes much longer than the one second or so required to print the page. Therefore, storing page images in PDL format for electronic collation will typically make the printer operate at much less than full speed. Storing the page images as uncompressed bitmaps creates problems with storage capacities and data rates.
  • an A4 page at 800 dpi with six bits per pixel reqmres approximately 46 MBytes per page.
  • To print one duplex page per second requires a data rate of approximately 92 MBytes per second.
  • Electronic storage of 1,000 pages requires 46 GBytes of data storage. While both the storage requirements and the data rate are technically achievable, the cost of such equipment using cu ⁇ ently available semiconductor memories and disk drives is well in excess of the targeted US $10,000 retail price of the entire printer system.
  • FIG 8 is a schematic block diagram of a digital office color printing system using compressed bitmap electronic collation and page storage.
  • the two major components of the system are a personal computer system 1000 and a high speed digital color printer 1050.
  • the document to be printed is created using apphcation programs 1004, which may inco ⁇ orate fonts 1002, digital images 1007 from various sources, items imported from other applications 1001, and low resolution images 1003 from a desktop scanner 1006.
  • Apphcation programs are becoming available which can manipulate low resolution images, and then automatically apply the same manipulations to a high resolution version of the same image.
  • the low resolution images are often called proxy images.
  • the document description may be in the form of a Page Description Language (PDL), which may be spooled by the operating system 1005 onto a disk drive 1009. As the printer 1050 becomes ready to accept each page representation, it is despooled from the disk drive 1009, and transfe ⁇ ed to the printer via a network or direct connection.
  • PDL Page Description Language
  • a PDL inte ⁇ reter 1051 in the printer 1050 rasterizes the page descriptions using fonts 1052.
  • a band memory 1053 can be used instead of a page memory.
  • the use of a band memory has a significant advantage in saving cost, as a full page memory for A4 CC'MM'YK printing at 800 dpi requires 46 MBytes of page memory. For rendering efficiency this would need to be implemented in semiconductor memory. This amount of semiconductor memory is cu ⁇ ently expensive relative to the target price of the printer.
  • the use of a band rendering PDL such as some versions of PostscriptTM, or Canon 'OpenPageTM', can reduce the memory requirement significantly.
  • a 48 line band of an A4 CC'MM'YK page at 800 dpi requires only 240 KBytes of memory. This is a reduction of nearly 200 times the amount of memory required.
  • each band is rendered by the PDL inte ⁇ reter, it is compressed by the compression system 1054 and saved to the disk drive 1055.
  • the disk drive 1055 contains a complete compressed page image. The page may be printed at this time, but it will often be preferable to rasterize and compress the entire document before printing any pages.
  • the compressed page image is read from the disk drive 1055 and expanded in real time by the expansion system 1056.
  • Expanded page image data is stored in a band memory 1057 and printed on the print engine 1058.
  • Electronic collation is the printing of pages in an order which is convenient for the user, rather than simple for the computer system.
  • most cu ⁇ ent desktop systems print documents in uncollated order: if multiple copies of a multi-page document are to be printed, then the print order is typically all copies of the first page, followed by all copies of the second page, and so forth. This requires that the user manually collate the documents after printing.
  • electronic collation each entire document is printed in the co ⁇ ect page order, ehminating the requirement for manual collation.
  • Print on demand for rarely changing documents is another significant apphcation of a high capacity digital page storage system located in a printer.
  • a fifty page full color document printed in this manner would typically take significantly more than an hour, and 'tie up' the computer, significant network bandwidth, and the printer for most of this time.
  • This process will typically take only a few minutes for a fifty page full color document.
  • the required time and convenience is comparable to collecting a pre-printed document from a storeroom.
  • Documents can be kept much more up-to-date, and can be changed simply and frequently.
  • the compression scheme described herein is a specific example of page compression, based on certain constants. These constants can easily be parameterized to generalize the compression to be applicable to a wide range of circumstances.
  • the specific constants assumed herein are:
  • Page size is 210 mm x 293 mm (A4). This can be parameterized to accommodate different page sizes.
  • Print area same as page size. This allows full bleed printing, but with no tolerance for paper misalignment. The print area can be parameterized to accommodate non-printing margins, and/or alignment e ⁇ or for full bleed printing.
  • the resolution is 800 dpi in both axes. This can be parameterized to match the printing resolution of the printer.
  • the resolution in the scan direction need not be the same as the resolution in the non-scan direction.
  • the color space used is CMYK.
  • the use of other color spaces such as RGB or device independent color spaces can be accommodated with obvious modifications to the compression scheme.
  • the contone color resolution supported is 266.6 dpi (800 dpi divided by three). This is the maximum color resolution supported by offset printing using a 133 line screen, and is generally considered to be 'magazine quality'. Greater or less color resolution can be supported, though it is convenient if the printer resolution is an integral multiple (in this case, 3) of the contone resolution.
  • the compression scheme is described in relation to these specific parameters to simplify description and to allow easy comparison with 800 dpi A4 color printing which does not use compression.
  • Figure 9 shows a data representation of the compression scheme.
  • the A4 page 1100 is divided into a rectangular matrix of 276 cells by 390 cells 1101.
  • Each cell 1101 is an a ⁇ ay of 24 x 24 pixels (576 pixels) at the printer resolution (800 dpi).
  • the size of each cell when printing at 800 dpi is 0.76 mm (0.03").
  • each cell 1101 requires 288 bytes if halftoned to CMYK, or 432 bytes if halftoned to CC'MM'YK.
  • Each cell 1101 has a two bit cell type field 1102 associated with it.
  • the two bits of a cell type field 1102 define four states of a cell 1101 : 1) White: all pixels in the cell 1101 are white. No further information is required.
  • Black on white all pixels in the cell 1101 are either black or white. The pattern of black and white pixels is defined by further information. This occurs frequently in text.
  • Contone color all other conditions of the cell 1101 are considered to be continuous tone (contone) color.
  • Contone color cells are subsampled and JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) compressed. To prevent degradation of the edges of black text over contone images, black pixels are extracted before subsampling and JPEG compression, and are processed in a similar way to black on white cells.
  • JPEG Joint Photographic Experts Group
  • black pixels are extracted before subsampling and JPEG compression, and are processed in a similar way to black on white cells.
  • the page image is expanded, the expanded black image is superimposed on the expanded JPEG contone image.
  • the contone images are JPEG compressed at a compression ratio of approximately 20:1.
  • 266 dpi contone images are expanded after JPEG compression at a 20: 1 compression ratio, image degradation is usually not noticeable.
  • the cell type field 1102 can be a rectangular a ⁇ ay of two bit values, which may be packed into bytes or words.
  • a simple a ⁇ ay data structure simplifies the design of hardware which may be required in some applications to achieve real ⁇ time expansion of the compressed page images.
  • Cells 1101 in which the cell type field 1102 is 'black and white' are divided into a 3 x 3 a ⁇ ay of 8 pixel x 8 pixel subcells 1103.
  • Each subcell 1103 has a two bit subcell type field 1105.
  • the two bits of a subcell type field 1105 define four states of a subcell 1103: 1) White: all pixels in the subcell 1103 are white. No further information is required. All white cells will occur frequently in borders, whitespace, space between hnes, etc.
  • the lossless compression ratio for this data type is 173:1 for the CC'MM'YK color model.
  • Black or solid color all pixels in the subcell 1103 are black. No further information is required. This occurs frequently inside the strokes of text characters. The width of the strokes of even body text (typically 10 point) is usually large enough to contain subcells which are all black. The lossless compression ratio for this data type is 173:1 for the CC'MM'YK color model.
  • Pattern this occurs if the pattern of black pixels in a subcell is one of the common patterns shown in figure 10.
  • the pattern is identified by an 8 bit pattern ID 1106, allowing up to 256 common patterns.
  • the lossless compression ratio for this data type is 37.5:1 for the CC'MM'YK color model.
  • Cells 1101 in which the cell type field 1102 is 'one color on white' have a color specification 1104 of the one color (the selected color) associated with them.
  • the color specification 1104 is preferably in the same color space as the remainder of the image, as may be expressed using 8 bits per color component, for a total of 32 bits if the color space is CMYK, or 24 bits if the color space is RGB.
  • the cells are also divided into a 3 x 3 a ⁇ ay of 8 pixel x 8 pixel subcells 1103.
  • Each subcell 1103 has a two bit subcell type field 1105.
  • the two bits of a subcell type field 1105 define four states of a subcell 1103: 1) White: all pixels in the subcell 1103 are white. No further information is required.
  • the lossless compression ratio for this data type is 66.5:1 for the CC'MM'YK color model. 2) Black or solid color: all pixels in the subcell 1103 are the selected color. No further information is required. This occurs frequently inside the strokes of colored text characters.
  • the lossless compression ratio for this data type is
  • Pattern this occurs if the pattern of selected color in a subcell is one of the common patterns shown in figure 10.
  • the pattern is identified by an 8 bit pattern ID 1106, allowing up to 256 common patterns.
  • the lossless compression ratio for this data type is 27.9:1 for the CC'MM'YK color model.
  • Cells 1101 in which the cell type field 1102 is 'contone color' are further divided into two categories: those cells 1101 which contain black and those cells 1101 which do not contain black.
  • the black component is compressed losslessly, and the color component is reduced to a lower resolution and JPEG compressed.
  • the reason for this is to preserve the readability of black text on colored or photographic backgrounds. Only black text is treated in this manner, as the use of colored text on colored background is rarely used, and when it is used, the text is usually in large point sizes.
  • This aspect of the compression scheme matches expectations which derive from viewing color offset printed material, which reproduces black text on colored backgrounds well. Small point size colored text is typically not used in offset printing because it will usually be screened, and become difficult to read due to screening artifacts.
  • All pixels in the cell 1101 which are black are marked in a 24 x 24 bitmap. This bitmap is then compressed in the same manner as cells 1101 where the cell type field is 'black on white'.
  • the black pixels in the cell 1101 are then replaced with a color which is representative of the color which that pixel would be if it were not covered with black text
  • the method of determining this color is not especially important. For example, it may be the average color of all non-black pixels in the cell, or it may be the color of the nearest non-black pixel found when following a search pattern, or it may be the average of the colors of neighboring non-black pixels, weighted by the inverse of the distance between the black pixel and the particular non-black pixel.
  • the reason for replacing black pixels with a color which is closer to non-black colors in the cell is to reduce 'mosquito noise' that occurs when JPEG compressing high frequency patterns with a high luminance or chrominance difference.
  • This mosquito noise affects the colors of other pixels in the cell.
  • the exact choice of color is not important, as it is replaced with black when the cell is expanded. After black pixels have been replaced, the cell 1101 is reduced to a resolution of 266.6 dpi. This can be achieved decimating the cell by a factor of 3
  • each pixel of the 8 x 8 JPEG cell 1109 equals to the average color of each co ⁇ esponding 3 x 3 square of pixels in the 24 x 24 pixel cell 1101.
  • the cell 1101 can be low-pass filtered before decimation.
  • the very small improvement in image quahty afforded by low pass filtering over simple averaging is unlikely to wa ⁇ ant the significant additional computational expense.
  • JPEG Joint Photographic Experts Group
  • JPEG compression of 20:1 at 266.6 dpi results in a lossy compression ratio of 42:1 over a CC'MM'YK bitmap, and a compression ratio of 225:1 over a contone image at 800 dpi. This is achieved with an image degradation which is usually not visible to the naked eye as the image quahty benefits considerably from the removal of black text before compression.
  • Figure 10 shows a set of common patterns that may be encoded by the pattern ID 1106.
  • the use of pure frequency encoding is impractical, as the table would need to contain all of these states.
  • pure black or white patterns encode to two bits
  • a set of up to 256 common patterns encodes to 10 bits
  • all other patterns encode to 66 bits.
  • an easily implemented system where the encoding can be defined by simple algorithms without requiring time consuming table comparisons and large tables is chosen.
  • each 8 x 8 pattern of pixels represents an area of only a quarter of a millimeter squared (0.01" x 0.01").
  • Times font at normal line spacing covers an average area equal to approximately 100 of these patterns.
  • Pattern 1200 is white, and is encoded in two bits as the white state of the subcell field type. Pattern 1201 occurs when each pixel is the selected color or black.
  • Patterns 1202 and 1203 are two patterns which may occur when a 50% density is represented. Some programs produce this representation instead of specifying a 50% tone. Patterns 1204 to 1259 are all of the patterns produced by a vertical stripe of any width in either the selected color or white. The main occu ⁇ ence of these patterns is on the vertical edges of text characters. Patterns 1260 to 1315 are all of the patterns produced by a horizontal stripe of any width in either the selected color or white. The main occu ⁇ ence of these patterns is on the horizontal edges of text characters. Patterns 1316 to 1371 are patterns resulting from a diagonal division between the selected color and white. Patterns 1372 to 1451 are patterns resulting from a division between the selected color and white which occurs at a slope of 2.
  • High compression ratios for text can be achieved by allowing small variations from the patterns shown in figure 10 to be encoded to those patterns. This reduces the incidence of the 'Explicit Pattern' subcell type, which has a low compression ratio. Variations of a few pixels on the black to white edges of the patterns will normally not be detected with the naked eye when printed at 800 dpi.
  • cell types 1102, subcell types 1105 and text overlay flags 1108 which result in different 'encoding types'.
  • the table "Compression ratio for a 'typical' page by encoding type" shows compression ratios for the different encoding types supported by this compression scheme. Also shown is the average portion of a page which may be expected to be compressed to each encoding type. The average portion of a page for each encoding type will vary based upon the type of documents that are printed.
  • the portions shown in the 'Average portion of page' column of the table are derived from measurements of a number of full color monthly magazines, where each page is printed using a four color process. In these magazines, there is no additional cost in the inclusion of more color area on a page. It is assumed that when there is no penalty (in either printing cost or time) for printing in color that the amotmt of color used in office pubhcations will eventually approach the use of color in full color magazines.
  • the average compression ratio for a 'typical' page is 92.4:1 compared to a CC'MM'YK full bleed 800 dpi bitmap, and 493:1 compared to a CMYK full bleed 800 dpi contone image.
  • the sustained data rate required from disk is approximately 1 MByte/second for a print speed of 120 ppm (one two sided A4 page per second). This can be achieved using low cost SCSI disk drives.
  • the maximum commonly encountered data rate will be for full page contone images. These will compress to approximately 1.1 MBytes each.
  • the image to be compressed is in the form of a 32 bit per pixel CMYK contone image.
  • Other forms are possible, such as an RGB contone image, images in different color spaces, and images with different color resolution.
  • the page to be printed be created in bands that are 24 lines wide so that an entire contone page memory is not required.
  • An A4 full bleed 800 dpi 32 bit per pixel contone page memory would require 247 MBytes of memory.
  • a 24 line band of such an image requires 635 KBytes of memory. If the compression process can proceed simultaneously (or as a separate thread) then it is preferable to double-buffer the bands, so that two band buffers are required, for a total of 1.27 MBytes.
  • the following is an algorithm in pseudocode for encoding to the compression scheme disclosed herein:
  • Band_width 276
  • Page_length 390
  • Cell 24 x 24 array of 32 bit CMYK colors
  • Bitmap_cell 24 x 24 array of Booleans
  • JPEG_Cell 8 x 8 array of CMYK colors
  • Other_color 32 bit CMYK color specification
  • White_cell 2 bit binary 00
  • Blac _and_white_cell 2 bit binary 01
  • Color_and_white_cell 2 bit binary 10
  • Contone_cell 2 bit binary 11
  • False 1 bit binary 0
  • True 1 bit binary 1
  • Append hite_cell to Compressed_data All pixels in Cell are either white or black
  • JPEG encode[JPEG_cel1,JPEG_encoded_output] JPEG encoding subroutines are prior art and available in the public domain and are therefore omitted from this specification.
  • the 8 x 8 block of CMYK pixels can be JPEG compressed in CMYK format or can be converted to an 8 x 8 block of RGB or CMY pixels. Such conversion is assumed in the calculation of compression ratios.
  • the JPEG encoded data is placed in a separate compressed data stream.) Append JPEG_encoded_output to JPEG_compressed_data End Case Next Cell_in_band Next Band End
  • Number_of_patterns 250
  • hite_subcell 2 bit binary 00
  • Pattern_subcell 2 bit binary 10
  • Subcell_pattern an set of 8 x 8 bitmap patterns (an example set of patterns is shown in figure 10)
  • Pattern_number as a byte
  • Append Black_subcell to Compressed_data Subcell matches Subcell_pattern(Pattern_number) , a specific member of the set of Subcell patterns (There are many efficient methods of coding this comparison which rely upon coherence in the set of patterns which are obvious to skilled programmers. A direct comparison of all patterns is very inefficient and is not recommended.
  • the pattern match preferably allows a tolerance of mismatched elements, such as a maximum of three pixel 'e ⁇ ors' which must be contiguous to elements of the same sense in the reference pattern. The use of a tolerance on the match allows more matches and therefore greater compression ratios.) Append Pattern_subcell to Compressed_data Append Pattern_number to Compressed_data
  • the output of the algorithm is two sets of compressed data: Compressed_data and JPEG_compressed_data.
  • the two data sets are separate to allow the use of existing JPEG hardware codecs.
  • the compression algorithm does not need to operate in real-time
  • Cell_type Color_and_white_cell Input
  • Other_color from Compressed_data Call subroutine Bitmap_decode [Compressed_data, Bitmap_cell ]
  • JPEG decode [ JPEG_encoded_data, JPEG_cell]
  • JPEG decoding subroutines are prior art and available in the public domain and are therefore omitted from this specification.
  • JPEG expansion hardware devices such as C-Cube CL550 and other chips may be used for high performance systems)
  • For (n,m) (0,0) to (7,7)
  • For (i,j) (0,0) to (2,2)
  • Set Cell(3n+i,3m+j) JPEG_cell (n,m)
  • Halftone the Cell (The halftoning of the Band is preferably performed using a dispersed dot ordered dither without perceptible repeating patterns and with good distribution of the cell 'energy' to high frequencies.
  • a halftone cell size of 64 x 64 is adequate for most pu ⁇ oses.
  • the cyan, magenta, yellow and black components of the image can be halftoned using the same halftoning cell.
  • the halftone cell can be generated using stochastic algorithms such as
  • Subcell_type Pattern_subcell Input Pattern_number from Compress ed_data Set
  • Subcell Subcell_pattern (Pattern_number) Else Input Subcell from Compressed_data
  • a multiprocessor system inco ⁇ orating four Texas Instruments TMS320C80 Multimedia Video Processors may have adequate processing power to perform the expansion and halftoning in real time, if the software is efficiently coded and the algorithm is modified to suit the architecture of the MVP.
  • the UltraSparc processor from Sun Microsystems may also be sufficient when used in a multiprocessor cluster of four processors.
  • the disadvantage of a multiprocessing system using a ⁇ ays of general pu ⁇ ose processors is high cost At present, it is not economically viable to produce a 120 ppm real-time expansion system using general pmpose processors if the printer is to have a retail price of under $10,000.
  • Low cost real-time operation can be achieved with the combination of a general pu ⁇ ose processor, a special pu ⁇ ose processor such as a JPEG expansion chip, and an apphcation specific integrated circuit (ASIC) for compressed bitmap expansion, contone pixel replication, bitmap and contone pixel combining, and halftoning.
  • ASIC apphcation specific integrated circuit
  • the ASICs required should be able to be fabricated using commonly available gate a ⁇ ay or standard cell processes, and preferably operate with a clock speed lower than 70 MHz.
  • FIG 11 is a block schematic diagram for a controller system for a high speed color printer with a compressed document store, which can simultaneously expand two compressed page images for real time duplex printing.
  • the processor 1500 is preferably a 32 bit or 64 bit processor with a performance in excess of 100 RISC MIPS. Many choices of such processors are cu ⁇ ently available, including IBM and Motorola PowerPCTM devices, MIPS R4000TM series devices, DEC AlphaTM series devices, Intel PentiumTM, Hewlett-Packard PA-RISCTM devices, and Sun Microsystems SparcTM devices.
  • the processor is not required to perform the expansion algorithm, as this requires high speed real-time operations.
  • the processor 1500 is connected to the processor address, data, and control buses 1507 via an optional second level cache 1501.
  • the main programs are preferably stored on the disk drive 1055. Also stored on the disk drive 1055 are the compressed page images for printing, and data used by the PDL, such as outline fonts.
  • the disk drive 1055 should preferably have a capacity of 1 GByte or more, and a sustained data access rate of 2 MBytes per second.
  • Adequate data rate connections to the processor bus 1507 can be provided using SCSI 2 interface standard, with a SCSI 2 controller 1506.
  • Other disk drive interfaces such as IPI can also be used.
  • the printer system may be connected to an Ethernet network 1502 via an Ethernet interface 1503.
  • Other interfaces, such as serial, parallel, other LAN formats, or external SCSI interfaces may be provided.
  • the printer system has a main memory 1505.
  • the main memory 1505 stores the programs for the processor 1500, fonts cache, compressed data cache from disk, JPEG compressed data, page descriptions in the PDL, rendering bands, and other data.
  • the amount of memory required depends upon the choice of PDL, size of disk and font caches, operating system, processor, and other factors. Eight MBytes of DRAM will be adequate for the main memory 1505 in many circumstances.
  • Two sets of expansion hardware are provided. This is the front side printing system 1530 and the reverse side printing system 1531.
  • a single system with twice the processing capability and twice the memory capacity could be provided instead of a separate system for the front and back sides of a sheet.
  • there is little cost advantage in providing a single system and it has the disadvantage of increased design costs and reduced flexibility.
  • the compressed pages can be printed in any order.
  • the compressed page data should be separate for each page. Having a separate printing system for each page that is to be printed simultaneously avoids problems with switching the context of the JPEG data stream for each band of the two page set from the JPEG compressed image of one page to that of the other page.
  • a JPEG codec 1510 (such as the C-Cube CL550 or other devices manufactured by LSI Logic and other companies) is provided with a JPEG compressed data stream on bus connection 1526.
  • the maximum average data rate on this connection is 1.5 MBytes per second, so an eight bit bus multiplexed from the processor data bus 1507 is adequate.
  • the address for the JPEG compressed data is generated by DMA controller 1511, and placed on the processor bus 1507 via address bus 1520.
  • Contone pixel data generated by the JPEG Codec 1510 is buffered in a contone buffer memory 1512, which contains up to two bands (16 lines) of CMYK pixel data at 266.6 dpi.
  • the memory 1512 may be composed of two 64K x 16 SRAMs such as Hitachi HM621664.
  • the maximum data rate writing to the contone buffer memory 1512 on the bus 1521 is 27 MBytes per second. Data must also be read out of the contone buffer memory 1512 at 27 MBytes per second to provide contone pixel information for the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600. Thus the total data rate on the bus 1521 is 54 MBytes per second.
  • An interleaved 32 bit bus operating at 74 ns (or less) cycle times which alternates access cycles between the JPEG codec 1510 and the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 is suitable.
  • the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 replicates each 266.6 dpi pixel from the JPEG codec 1510 to form a 3 x 3 a ⁇ ay of 800 dpi pixels.
  • the compressed data stream is acquired via the bus 1527 and expanded to form bitmaps of cells 1101 by circuitry within the expander and halftoner ASIC
  • the bitmaps of cells 1101 are combined with the pixel replicated contone image data to form reconstructed 800 dpi image data.
  • the reconstructed 800 dpi image data is then halftoned, also within the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600.
  • the halftoned data is stored to the halftone band memory 1513 as CC'MM'YK bi- level data.
  • Other color models such as CMYK or CMY may be used, though
  • CC'MM'YK gives superior image quahty.
  • the amount of memory required for the halftone band memory 1513 depends upon the distance between the first row of each color and last row of the last color of nozzles on the print head. Storage for an extra two bands (48 rows) of pixels is also required to provide double buffering for the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 output.
  • the halftone band memory 1513 should preferably be at least 6.9 MBits (844 KBytes). The total data rate into and out of this memory is 91.6 MBytes per second.
  • the memory 1513 may be composed of two 256K x 16 SRAMs with a maximum 35 ns cycle time.
  • An interleaved 32 bit bus 1522 operating at 43 ns (or less) cycle times which alternates access cycles between the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 and the head control ASIC 400 is suitable.
  • Halftoned data is read from the memory 1513 by the head control ASIC 400 and provided to the print head 50 via a bus 1523.
  • the print head 50 may be a monolithic pagewidth print head. Power to the print head 50 is provided by a programmable power supply which is controlled by a microcontroller 315. Print density data is provided to the microcontroller 315 by the head control ASIC 400.
  • JPEG codecs which can expand JPEG data without processor involvement are commercially available.
  • the compression scheme disclosed herein generates a separately compressed data stream for high resolution bitmap information. This information is expanded by the Expander and Halftoner ASIC
  • the Expander and Halftoner ASIC 400 provides the following functions on one integrated circuit: 1) pixel replication of the JPEG expanded contone data;
  • FIG. 12 shows a block schematic diagram of the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 in context in a printing system 1530 or 1531. Compressed data in JPEG format is expanded by the JPEG codec 1510 and temporarily stored in the contone buffer memory 1512.
  • the bus 1521 is time division multiplexed between the JPEG codec and the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600, and is used to read data from the contone buffer memory 1512 and store it temporarily in the contone buffer 1601.
  • the contone buffer 1601 stored two rows of 8 pixels, with each pixel being 32 bits, for a total of 512 bits. It is organized as a double buffer for a row of a single JPEG cell, and holds data for 3 x 3 pixel replication, to reduce the memory bandwidth required from the contone buffer memory 1512 by a factor of nine.
  • the read addressing required to replicate the pixels from the contone buffer 1601 is generated by the pixel address generator 1606.
  • the read address to the contone buffer memory 1512 and the write address to the contone buffer 1601 is generated by the contone memory address generator 1602. Read and write signals, memory timing, and arbitration of the bus 1521 is controlled by the memory interface 1603.
  • JPEG data is only included only in those cells where the cell type is 'Contone_cell' (see compression algorithm).
  • the JPEG codec operates intermittently, controlled by a wait signal generated by the JPEG wait module 1604.
  • the JPEG wait module 1604 generates a wait signal based upon the contents of the cell type latch 1670 and the contone memory address generator 1602. This allows the contone buffer memory 1512 to operate as a large off-chip FIFO.
  • the pixel replicated contone data is at the pixel rate (approx. 61 MHz for full bleed A4800 dpi printing at 60 ppm) and forms one data input to a color selector 1640.
  • the compressed data stream is input to the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 via the bus 1527, and enters a FIFO 1607.
  • the depth of the FIFO depends upon the bus availabihty characteristics of the processor bus 1507. A FIFO depth of 4 should be adequate for most circumstances.
  • the address for reading the compressed data from the processor bus is generated by a DMA controller 1511.
  • the DMA controller 1511 is shown as an external device, but could readily be inco ⁇ orated on the ASIC 1600. Once initialized, a new 32 bit word of compressed data is read from the processor bus 1507 and stored in the FIFO 1607 whenever the
  • FIFO is not full.
  • Compressed data from the FIFO 1607 goes to a decoder 1650, which decodes the compressed data stream according to the expansion algorithm described herein.
  • Three types of data are generated by the decoder 1650:
  • the color data selected by the color selector 1640 forms the contone data input to the halftoner 1620.
  • the halftoner 1620 is preferably a dithering system using a large (64 x 64 pixel) dispersed dot ordered dither cell, which is stored in the dither matrix ROM 1610.
  • a dispersed dot ordered dither cell of size approximately 64 x 64 or larger can be calculated so that no regular patterns are visible in the repeating cell.
  • a method for calculating high quality dispersed dot dither matrices using simulated annealing is disclosed in a patent apphcation: Silverbrook and Naylor PCT AU/9400515.
  • the dither cell data read from the dither matrix ROM forms the dither threshold input of the halftoner 1620.
  • the halftoner 1620 converts the contone data to bi-level data.
  • the bi-level data should match the color model used by the print head 50.
  • the halftoner 1620 may produce bi-level CMY data.
  • the halftoner 1620 may produce bi-level CMYK data.
  • the halftoner 1620 may produce bi-level CC'MM'YK data.
  • the production of CC'MM'YK halftone data is assumed herein. Other halftoning is simpler, and can readily be derived from the system disclosed herein.
  • the CC'MM'YK data is a 6 bit data stream at the pixel rate. This data is converted to 32 bit parallel words and latched by the output shift registers and latches 1630. For each 32 pixels, six 32 bit words of halftoned page image data are written to the halftone buffer memory 1513.
  • the bus 1522 is used to write data to the halftone buffer memory 1513.
  • the bus 1522 is time division multiplexed between the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 and the head control ASIC 400.
  • the write address to the halftone buffer memory 1513 is generated by the pixel address generator 1606. Read and write signals, memory timing, and arbitration of the bus 1522 is controlled by the memory interface 1605.
  • a clock circuit 1698 buffers an external clock, divides the clock frequency where appropriate, and distributes system clocks to those modules requiring them. Testing circuits are preferably inco ⁇ orated in the device. These testing circuits may have an external JTAG (Joint Test Action Group) interface 1699.
  • JTAG Joint Test Action Group
  • Figure 13 is a schematic block diagram of the compressed data decoding system of the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600.
  • the decoding system is controlled by the decoder state machine 1655, which operates according to the table "decoder state table”.
  • the most recent byte of the compressed data stream read from the FIFO 1607 is latched by latch 1651.
  • the output of the latch 1651 is latched by the latch 1652, providing the previous byte of the compressed data stream.
  • the outputs of latches 1651 and 1652 are combined to provide a 16 bit input to ba ⁇ el shifter 1654.
  • the ba ⁇ el shifter 1654 shifts the input data by an amount determined by the code position accumulator 1653 to provide an 8 bit output with the cu ⁇ ent code aligned to the output.
  • the code position accumulator 1653 accumulates a code length representing the number of bits in the cu ⁇ ent code, which is provided by the decoder state machine 1655.
  • the code position accumulator 1653 accumulates the code position modulo 8.
  • the ba ⁇ el shifter 1654 is latched by different latches according to clocks produced by the decoder state machine 1655 determined by the code type.
  • the different code types are latched as follows:
  • cell types are latched by the cell type latch 1661;
  • subcell types are latched by the subcell type latch 1662;
  • text overlay flags are latched by the text flag latch 1663;
  • pattern ID are latched by the pattern ID latch 1665;
  • magenta color specifications are latched by the magenta latch 1667; 8) yellow color specifications are latched by the yellow latch 1668; and
  • black color specifications are latched by the black latch 1669.
  • the outputs of the cell type latch 1661, subcell type latch 1662, and text flag latch 1663 form control inputs to the decoder state machine 1665.
  • the output of the cell type latch 1661 is latched by the cell type latch 1670 whenever the pixel address generator 1606 starts addressing a new cell (the "next cell” time).
  • the output of the cell type latch 1670 indicates the co ⁇ ect cell type for all of the 576 pixels in the 24 x 24 cell.
  • the output of the text flag latch 1663 is also latched by the text flag latch 1671 at the "next cell” time.
  • Subcell type data latched by the subcell type latch 1662 selects one of four 8 bit inputs to the subcell type selector 1656. These 8 bit inputs each represent 8 pixels with one bit per pixel. If the bit is off, the color is white (unless the cell type is contone, in which case the color is the contone color from JPEG expansion). If the bit is on, the color is black (unless the cell type is color_on_white, in which case the color is the color latched in the color latch 1660).
  • the four data inputs to the subcell type selector are:
  • pattern ROM 1657 is a 16 KBit ROM organized as 2K bytes.
  • the pattern ROM stores a set of patterns which is the same as that which were used for subcell comparisons in the encoding process.
  • An example set of patterns is shown in figure 10.
  • Eight bits of the address are provided by the pattern ID latch 1665, and select one pattern from the set of patterns.
  • the other three bits of the address are provided by the bitmap write address generator 1658, and select which of the eight lines of the selected pattern is to be read.
  • the output of the subcell type selector 1656 forms the write data input of the cell bitmap memory 1659.
  • the cell bitmap memory 1659 is a 1152 bit memory organized as a double buffer of a cell bitmap.
  • the cell bitmap is a 24 x 24 a ⁇ ay, with one bit per pixel.
  • the two cells are each organized as a 3 x 3 a ⁇ ay of subcells, each containing 8 x 8 one bit pixel values.
  • the cell bitmap memory 1659 is organized as a byte wide memory, with the 8 bits in a row of a subcell being written or read simultaneously.
  • the write address for the cell bitmap memory is provided by the bitmap write address generator 1658 which interacts with the decoder state machine 1655.
  • the read address for the cell bitmap memory is provided by the pixel address generator 1606, and co ⁇ esponds to the position of the cu ⁇ ent subcell row in the 24 x 24 cell.
  • the read data from the cell bitmap memory 1659 forms the data input of an 8:1 multiplexer which is the bitmap data selector 1672.
  • the bit of this data which co ⁇ esponds to the cu ⁇ ent pixel is selected by a three bit address provided by the pixel address generator 1606. This bit is combine in the combiner 1690 with the cell type information and the text overlay flag to form the select input to the color selector 1640.
  • Figure 14 is a schematic block diagram of the halftoning section of the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600.
  • the 32 bit CMYK color of the cu ⁇ ent pixel is provided by the output of the color selector 1640.
  • the minimum value of any color component is 0, and the maximum value is 255.
  • a higher value co ⁇ esponds to a higher average optical density of ink to be printed.
  • the cu ⁇ ent dither value (the entry of the 64 x 64 dither matrix co ⁇ esponding to cu ⁇ ent pixel) is provided by the dither matrix ROM 1610.
  • the color model used is CC'MM'YK, where two bits are provided for cyan and magenta, and one bit is provided for yellow and black, to provided 6 halftoned bits per pixel.
  • the eight bit cyan component of the cu ⁇ ent color is multiplied by three, modulo 256, by the adder 1611.
  • the output of the adder 1611 is compared to the cu ⁇ ent dither value by the comparator 1612.
  • the cyan component is compared to the constant 85 (one third of 255) by the comparator 1613.
  • the cyan component is compared to the constant 170 (two thirds of 255) by the comparator 1614.
  • the comparison outputs of the comparators 1612, 1613, and 1614 are combined by the logic 1615 to form the C and C components of the CC'MM'YK halftoned data.
  • a logical true value of the C component indicates that a cyan dot of 2/3 optical density is printed.
  • a logical true value of the C component indicates that a cyan dot of 1/3 optical density is printed.
  • the eight bit magenta component of the cu ⁇ ent color is multiplied by three, modulo 256, by the adder 1621.
  • the output of the adder 1621 is compared to the cu ⁇ ent dither value by the comparator 1622.
  • the magenta component is compared to the constant 85 (one third of 255) by the comparator
  • the magenta component is compared to the constant 170 (two thirds of 255) by the comparator 1624.
  • the comparison outputs of the comparators 1622, 1623, and 1624 are combined by the logic 1625 to form the M and M' components of the CC'MM'YK halftoned data.
  • a logical true value of the M component indicates that a magenta dot of 2/3 optical density is printed.
  • a logical true value of the M' component indicates that a magenta dot of 1/3 optical density is printed.
  • the eight bit yellow component of the current color is compared to the cu ⁇ ent dither value by the comparator 1626.
  • the comparison output of the comparator 1626 forms the Y component of the CC'MM'YK halftoned data.
  • a logical true value of the Y component indicates that a yellow dot of full optical density is printed.
  • the eight bit black component of the cu ⁇ ent color is compared to the cu ⁇ ent dither value by the comparator 1626.
  • the comparison output of the comparator 1627 forms the K component of the CC'MM'YK halftoned data.
  • a logical true value of the K component indicates that a black dot of full optical density is printed.
  • 1600 shows an approximate and implementation dependent number of gates, number of RAM bits, number of ROM bits, and number of pins for implementation of the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 as a single CMOS standard cell integrated circuit using cu ⁇ ently available integrated circuit design and fabrication processes such as those provided by LSI Logic Inc. Approximate gate count of Expander and Halftoner ASIC 1600
  • the reference numbers in the table "Approximate gate count of Expander and Halftoner ASIC 1600" are those of figures 12, 13, and 14. This table does not include the I/O buffers.
  • the numbers of gates are approximate, and are a guide intended for assessing implementation feasibility and die size in the standard cell technologies offered by numerous vendors. The actual number of gates consumed by any function will depend upon the design techniques and tools used, the efficiency of the design, the types of primitives available, and the specific ASIC technology chosen for implementation. Gate overheads from implementing serial readback circuits in latches and pipeline stages are included in the "JTAG and other test circuits" estimation.
  • the total number of ROM bits, RAM bits, random gates, and pins, in conjunction with the maximum clock frequency requirement of 61 MHz, indicates that the expander and halftoner ASIC 1600 can readily be implemented using cu ⁇ ently available standard cell processes from a variety of manufacturers.
  • the print head is fixed, and is the full width of the A4 paper.
  • Resolution is 800 dpi bi-level for high quality color output.
  • Page printing time 1.3 seconds Derived from scans, lines per page and dot printing rate
  • Chips per wafer - 22 From chip sac and recommended wafer size
  • Wafer cost per print head S31 Based on materials cost of $600 per wafer

Abstract

La présente invention concerne un équipement de grande capacité destiné au stockage d'images de documents comprimées pour système s d'impression en couleurs. Le système en question de stockage de documents comprimés comprend les éléments constitutifs principaux suivants: 1) un système de création d'images pouvant fonctionner sur une base bande par bande. 2) Une mémoire d'entrée qui stocke au moins une bande de l'image de page non comprimée. Il est préférable d'avoir deux bandes, ce qui permet le double tamponnement, de telle sorte que le RIP et les étapes de compression peuvent opérer simultanément. 3) Un système de compression d'images de pages qui peut fonctionner sur une base bande par bande. L'invention décrit une nouvelle procédure de compression d'images de pages qui réalise un taux de compression élevé et préserve une qualité élevée des images. 4) Un dispositif de stockage de grande capacité pour les images de pages comprimées. 5) Un système de décompression des images de pages en temps réel, qui décomprime les images au rythme requis par le moteur d'impression. 6) Une mémoire de sortie qui stocke au moins une bande de l'image de page décomprimée. Le minimum recommandé est le nombre de lignes de la première ligne du moteur d'impression à sa dernière ligne, plus deux bandes. 7) Une interface qui lit les données provenant de la mémoire de sortie et les fournit, au rythme correct, au moteur d'impression. L'invention décrit aussi une amélioration de la compression d'images JPEG quand elle est utilisée avec des segments en recouvrement, de texte ou de représentations graphiques.
PCT/US1996/004897 1995-04-12 1996-04-10 Stockage a grande capacite d'images de documents comprimees pour imprimantes couleurs numeriques WO1996032811A2 (fr)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP96912652A EP0770300A2 (fr) 1995-04-12 1996-04-10 Stockage a grande capacite d'images de documents comprimees pour imprimantes couleurs numeriques
US08/750,312 US6002847A (en) 1996-04-10 1996-04-10 High capacity compressed document image storage for digital color printers

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AUPN2344 1995-04-12
AUPN2341 1995-04-12
AUPN2340 1995-04-12
AUPN2342A AUPN234295A0 (en) 1995-04-12 1995-04-12 High capacity compressed document image storage for digital color printers
AUPN2343A AUPN234395A0 (en) 1995-04-12 1995-04-12 Improving jpeg compression in the presence of text
AUPN2340A AUPN234095A0 (en) 1995-04-12 1995-04-12 Compression system for page images
AUPN2342 1995-04-12
AUPN2343 1995-04-12
AUPN2341A AUPN234195A0 (en) 1995-04-12 1995-04-12 Real-time expansion apparatus for compressed page images
AUPN2344A AUPN234495A0 (en) 1995-04-12 1995-04-12 An expansion and halftoning device for compressed page images

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