Submitting Institution
University of CambridgeUnit of Assessment
Mathematical SciencesSummary Impact Type
TechnologicalResearch Subject Area(s)
Engineering: Interdisciplinary Engineering
Summary of the impact
Research carried out by Professors Hinch and Rallison at the University
of Cambridge determined
how ink jet printer fluids behave when emitted from the printer head. The
research findings have
been used by industry to optimise the design of the printer. Xaar, the
world-leading independent
supplier of industrial inkjet printheads which uses a drop-on-demand mode,
has used the results of
this research to improve the design and operation of its ink-jet printers
to its own commercial
benefit and to the benefit of the users of its printers.
Underpinning research
Professor E.J. Hinch (Lecturer 1975-1994, Reader 1994-1998, Professor
1998-date), and his
research group including Professor J.M. Rallison (Lecturer 1985-1998,
Reader 1998-2007,
Professor 2007-date), at the University of Cambridge Department of Applied
Mathematics and
Theoretical Physics (DAMTP) have conducted fundamental research on the
behaviour of visco-
elastic fluids; the microstructural origin of their rheology (20 papers),
the flow dynamics resulting
from that rheology (20 papers), and how to compute such flows (6 papers).
Hinch has also been
interested in how jets break up into drops (3 papers).
Polymers are added to printing inks to inhibit undesirable splattering
when a drop hits the paper.
Adding too much polymer, however, can stop a jet breaking up into drops.
The essential
mechanism is that the polymers alter the surface tension forces that
influence the way a
continuous jet breaks into drops. The way that polymers affect the
capillary forces squeezing a jet
was investigated by Hinch in [Ref 3] in 1997.
In order to provide useful results accurate computational models are
needed. Computing
viscoelastic flows has a long history of failures. The problem lies in a
proper mathematical
treatment of the hyperbolic equation governing the evolution of the
elastic part of the stress tensor.
From 1995 to 1997 Hinch and Rallison developed an appropriate method to
compute these flows
in a simplified axisymmetric geometry [Refs 4 and 5] and later extended
the axisymmetric code to
a fully three-dimensional code to account for variations associated with
nozzle geometries. That
research led to the discovery by numerical simulations of a drop-on-demand
printer of a very
curious way in which drops are formed as a jet breaks up [Ref 1]. The
predictions have been
recently confirmed by experiments performed [Ref 2].
The viscoelastic codes developed by Rallison were for applications where
inertia is negligible. The
ink jet printing application, however, has significant inertia. The
effects of inertia were added to
Rallison's code by O.G. Harlen and N. Morrison, former students of
Rallison and Hinch, working
together at the University of Leeds. This work was independently verified
by Hinch with J. Etienne
(Research Associate at DAMTP from 2005 to 2007) who added viscoelastic
effects to a pre-
existing inertial code [Ref 6].
This research was supported through a major collaboration with the
ink-jet printing industry, with 3
EPSRC grants involving 5 UK university departments and 8 UK companies. The
aim of the
collaboration was to understand scientific issues in ink-jet-printing and
to improve the design,
operation and performance of ink-jet printers.
References to the research
1*. Day, Richard F., Hinch, E. John & Lister, John R. 1998
Self-similar capillary pinchoff of an
inviscid fluid. Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 704-707, DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.80.704. (98 cites)
2*. Castrejon-Pita, J.R., Castrejon-Pita, A.A., Hinch, E.J., Lister, J.R.
and Hutchings, I.M. (2012)
Self-similar Breakup of Nearly-inviscid Fluids. Phys. Rev. E. 86,
015301, DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.86.015301.
3*. Entov, V.M. & Hinch, E.J. 1997 The effect of a spectrum of
relaxation times on the capillary
thinning of a filament of elastic liquid J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 72,
31-54, DOI:
10.1016/S0377-0257(97)00022-0. (107 cites)
4. Harlen, O.G., Rallison, J.M. & Szabo, P. (1995) A split
Lagrangain-Eulerian method for
simulating transient viscoeasltic flows. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 60,
81-104, DOI:
10.1016/0377-0257(95)01381-5.
5. Szabo, P., Rallison, J.M. & Hinch, E.J. 1997 Start-up of flow of a
FENE-fluid through a $:1:4
constriction in a tube. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 72, 73-86,
DOI: 10.1016/S0377-
0257(97)00023-2.
6. Etienne, J., Hinch, E.J. & Li, J. 2006 A Lagrangian-Eulerian
approach for the numerical
simulation of free-surface flow of a viscoelastic material. J.
Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 136, 157-
166, DOI: 10.1016/j.jnnfm.2006.04.003.
*Research references which best reflect the quality of the underpinning
research.
Details of the impact
The major impact of this research has been its use by one of the
companies in the EPSRC
consortium. Xaar is the world-leading independent supplier of industrial
inkjet printheads and uses
a drop-on-demand mode. As a direct result of the research described above
the company was
provided with new understandings of the ways in which the inks they use
behave when they are
emitted from nozzles and impact on paper. It was also provided with new
validated numerical
codes that allow it to predict quantitatively the behaviour of the ink
depending on its viscoelastic
properties. Consequently, Xaar is able to make informed design decisions
based on validated
models of the ink behaviour, which have the capability to improve the
design and performance of
the printers.
Xaar has used the understanding of visco-elasticity to develop new
combinations of printer heads
and inks, and to identify rogue inks that underperform. While it is
difficult to place a quantitative
economic benefit to these developments, it is clear that the development
of new printer heads and
inks has both given the company a competitive advantage and provided a
better performance to its
customers. For example, Xaar provides an `ink optimisation process' to
design inks for specific
applications based on Professor Hinch's research. Former Technical
Director of Xaar and
consultant during the impact period writes:
"these activities have been quite remarkably successful, and are
founded on the understanding
and development of rheological theory by Professor John Hinch who
supervised Jocelyn Etienne,
Oliver Harlen and Neil Morrison (the latter two now at Leeds University
- part of the consortium)
who have developed simulations of ink jetting for the consortium. As
well as this, Professor Hinch
has advised on all aspects of understanding of rheology and surface
tension effects during the
course of the two projects. Two instrumentation techniques have emerged
from this as well as the
successful simulation of jetting."
He further adds that
"The Ink Jet Research Centre [of which Professor Hinch is a member] at
the Institute for
Manufacturing was set up to address these problems and has formed a
consortium of academic
institutions and commercial partners. The commercial partners together
represent more than £1B
of annual business for the UK (much of it based in the Cambridge area)."
[1]
Xaar's products sell worldwide and they currently have a turnover of 86M
and invest between 8% -
10% in R&D. [2]
Sources to corroborate the impact
[1] Statement from former Technical Director of Xaar
[2] Xaar annual report 2012