Hitachi Industrial Equipment & Solutions America, LLC

Principles

Principles

Hitachi industrial continuous inkjet printers provide proven, state-of-the-art technology with over 35 years of experience. Hitachi inkjet printers are suitable for a variety of marking and coding in packaging applications, right from high-speed, micro to large character printing.

The following diagram illustrates the principle on which Hitachi industrial continuous inkjet printers work. To print a character on the product, individual drops of ink are electronically controlled to the correct positions.

Diagram illustrates the principle on which Hitachi industrial continuous inkjet printers work

Diagram illustrates the principle on which Hitachi industrial continuous inkjet printers work

Point 1: Ink Supply Pump

Ink is pressured by the Ink Supply Pump and flows from the Main Ink Bottle to the Nozzle parts.

Point 2: Ultrasonic Vibration

The Nozzle uses ultrasonic vibration to separate a solid pressurized ink stream into small ink droplets as it exits the Nozzle orifice.

Point 3: Character Signal

The droplets ejected from the Nozzle orifice pass through the Charge Electrode tunnel, and then between the Deflection Electrodes.

Point 4: Deflection Voltage

Each droplet passing through the Charge Electrode receives a Deflection Voltage charge where Deflection Voltage varies between droplets. These charged droplets deflect in a predetermined array pattern depending on the Deflection Voltage charge.

Point 5: Deflection Electrodes

After the droplets pass through the Deflection Electrodes, they continue to travel in their predetermined array pattern out of the Printhead and onto the substrate.

Point 6: Gutter

Droplets that aren't required for printing are retrieved by the Gutter and recycled back into the Main Ink Bottle for reuse..