Patent · US Expired

Inking for color-inkjet printers, using non-integral drop averages, media varying inking, or more than two drops per pixel

US5485180A · kind A · utility

13Cited by
6References
24Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateApr 30, 1993
Grant dateJan 16, 1996
Priority date
Expiry dateApr 30, 2013

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC G)Physics
  • CPC primaryG06K2215/0071
  • WIPO fieldAudio-visual technology
  • WIPO sectorElectrical engineering

Abstract

At least one certain primary or secondary color is established that receives special treatment for at least one printing medium. Such treatment may include (1) using more than two drops of primaries per pixel for binary printing of a particular secondary; or (2) binary-printing the chromatic primary or secondary--but not other hues--after rendition, by use of a "superpixel"; or (3) application of, in effect, a nonintegral number, greater than one, of ink drops per pixel; or (4) combinations of these treatments. As an example of the first of these treatments--using inks optimized for plain paper at one drop of ink for primaries and two (one of each of two primaries) for secondaries--red is printed on transparency film as one drop of yellow ink and two of magenta in each pixel. As to the second treatment, the superpixel is preferably a group of pixels (e.g., a two-by-two array) including the target pixel, in which group each pixel is inked and at least one pixel receives at least two drops of ink.

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.