CLEANING BLADE, IMAGE FORMING APPARATUS AND PROCESS CARTRIDGE

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20160004207
  • Publication Number
    20160004207
  • Date Filed
    June 18, 2015
    9 years ago
  • Date Published
    January 07, 2016
    8 years ago
Abstract
A cleaning blade cleaning the surface of an object includes a rigid holder; and a strip-shaped elastic body fixed on the holder, having a tip ridgeline to contact the surface of the object. The elastic body has a Martens hardness M1 in the range of from 0.9 to 10.0 N/mm2 at a position 300 μm from the ridgeline on an undersurface of the elastic body including the ridgeline, a Martens hardness M2 at a position 1,000 μm therefrom and a Martens hardness M3 at a position 2,000 μm therefrom, and M1, M2 and M3 satisfy the following relationship:
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This patent application is based on and claims priority pursuant to 35 U.S.C. §119 to Japanese Patent Application No. 2014-138442, filed on Jul. 4, 2014, in the Japan Patent Office, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.


BACKGROUND

1. Technical Field


The present invention relates to a cleaning blade, and an image forming apparatus and a process cartridge using the cleaning blade.


2. Description of the Related Art


An electrophotographic image forming apparatus typically forms an image by the following process. Namely, first, an image bearer such as a photoconductor uniformly charged by a charger is scanned with light to form an electrostatic latent image thereon, and the electrostatic latent image is developed by an image developer. Next, a toner image formed on the image bearer by the development is directly or through an intermediate transferer on a recording sheet. An untransferred toner adhering to the surface of the image bearer is removed by a cleaning blade.


A cleaning blade using a strip-shaped elastic body is well known because of having simple constitution and good cleanability. The elastic blade is formed of an elastic body such as polyurethane rubbers. A base end of the elastic blade is fixed on a rigid holder and a tip ridgeline thereof is pressed against a circumferential surface of an image bearer such as photoreceptors to dam and scrape off a toner remaining on the image bearer.


However, when a spherical toner is used to produce high-quality images, it enters a slight gap between the cleaning blade formed of only a conventional rubber and the photoreceptor drum, and soon scrapes off from the gap, occasionally resulting in poor cleaning.


A contact pressure between the image bearer and the cleaning blade needs increasing to prevent the toner from scraping from the gap. However, when the contact pressure is increased, a friction between an image bearer 3 and a cleaning blade 62 in FIG. 5A increases, the cleaning blade 62 is drawn in a travel direction of the image bearer, and a tip ridgeline 62c of the cleaning blade 62 turns over. The cleaning blade 62 turned over occasionally makes noises when restored to its original state, resisting turning over. Further, when the cleaning continues while the tip ridgeline 62c of the cleaning blade 62 is turned over, a local abrasion is made a few μm from the tip ridgeline 62c of an edge surface 62a of the cleaning blade 62 as shown in FIG. 5B. When the cleaning continues further, the local abrasion becomes large and finally the tip ridgeline 62c is chipped as shown in FIG. 5C. When the tip ridgeline 62c lacks, a toner cannot normally be removed, resulting in poor cleaning.


In order to prevent the tip ridgeline 62c of the cleaning blade contacting the surface of the photoconductor drum from turning over, trials of hardening the edge to be difficult to deform are made. For example, a surface layer including an UV curing resin is formed on the tip ridgeline 62c of the cleaning blade or the elastic member such that the tip ridgeline 62c is hardened to prevent the tip ridgeline 62c from turning over.


Japanese published unexamined application No. JP-2010-152295-A discloses a cleaning blade which is an elastic blade formed of a urethane rubber or the like and a surface layer harder than the elastic blade, which covers a tip ridgeline part thereof contacting an image bearer. This claims the blade removes a downsized and spheroidized polymerization toner well, and prevents the blade from turning over the tip ridgeline, making a noise and being abraded to have stable cleanability for long periods.


However, the cleaning blade disclosed in Japanese published unexamined application No. JP-2010-152295-A has lower followability to fine oscillation of the image bearer to cause poor cleaning due to its tip ridgeline having high hardness. Recently, needs for image forming apparatus with electrophotographic process at higher speed have been increasing. The higher image forming speed, not less than a linear speed of 60 mm/sec, causes an axis of the image bearer rotating at high speed to finely oscillate. Therefore, the cleaning blade disclosed in Japanese published unexamined application No. JP-2010-152295-A is not sufficiently suitable for the higher speed image forming apparatus.


When the blade is hardened against turn over and abrasion, the blade deteriorates in followability. When softened to increase followability, the blade tends to turn over and easily abrade. This is a trade-off relation, and a cleaning blade preventing turn over and abrasion and having followability is required, particularly in a high-speed image forming apparatus rotating a photoreceptor drum at a high speed.


SUMMARY

Accordingly, one object of the present invention is to provide a cleaning blade having high followability and preventing its tip ridgeline from turning over, itself from making a noise and being abraded to have stable cleanability even in high speed printing.


Another object of the present invention is to provide an image forming apparatus using the cleaning blade.


A further object of the present invention is to provide a process cartridge using the cleaning blade.


These objects and other objects of the present invention, either individually or collectively, have been satisfied by the discovery of a cleaning blade cleaning the surface of an object, including a rigid holder; and a strip-shaped elastic body fixed on the holder, having a tip ridgeline configured to contact the surface of the object, wherein the elastic body has a Martens hardness M1 in the range of from 0.9 to 10.0 N/mm2 at a position 300 μm from the ridgeline on an undersurface of the elastic body including the ridgeline, a Martens hardness M2 at a position 1,000 μm therefrom and a Martens hardness M3 at a position 2,000 μm therefrom, and M1, M2 and M3 satisfy the following relationship:





M1>M2>M3.


These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon consideration of the following description of the preferred embodiments of the present invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Various other objects, features and attendant advantages of the present invention will be more fully appreciated as the same becomes better understood from the detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings in which like reference characters designate like corresponding parts throughout and wherein:



FIG. 1 is a schematic view illustrating an embodiment of the image forming apparatus of the present invention;



FIG. 2 is a sectional view illustrating an imaging area of the image forming apparatus in FIG. 1;



FIG. 3 is a perspective view illustrating an embodiment of the cleaning blade of the present invention;



FIG. 4 is an amplified sectional view illustrating the cleaning blade;



FIGS. 5A to 5C are schematic views for explaining how a cleaning blade is damaged;



FIG. 6 is an amplified sectional view illustrating a cleaning blade including a surface layer;



FIG. 7 is an amplified sectional view illustrating a cleaning blade including an impregnated part and surface layer; and



FIG. 8 is a schematic view illustrating a coating method of forming a surface layer.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present invention provides a cleaning blade having high followability and preventing its tip ridgeline from turning over, itself from making a noise and being abraded to have stable cleanability even in high speed printing.


More particularly, the present invention relates to a cleaning blade cleaning the surface of an object, including a rigid holder; and a strip-shaped elastic body fixed on the holder, including a tip ridgeline configured to contact the surface of the object, wherein the cleaning blade has a Martens hardness M1 of from 0.9 to 10.0 N/mm2 at a position 300 μm from the ridgeline on an undersurface of the blade including the ridgeline, a Martens hardness M2 at a position 1,000 μm therefrom and a Martens hardness M3 at a position 2,000 μm therefrom, and M1, M2 and M3 satisfy the following relationship:





M1>M2>M3.


Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are described in detail below with reference to accompanying drawings. In describing exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology is employed for the sake of clarity. However, the disclosure of this patent specification is not intended to be limited to the specific terminology so selected, and it is to be understood that each specific element includes all technical equivalents that operate in a similar manner and achieve a similar result.


Next, the cleaning blade of the present invention is explained.



FIG. 3 is a perspective view illustrating an embodiment of the cleaning blade of the present invention. FIG. 4 is an amplified sectional view illustrating the cleaning blade.


A cleaning blade 62 includes a strip-shaped holder 621 which is made of a rigid material such as metals and hard plastics, and a strip-shaped elastic blade 622. The holder 621 may be formed of any materials if it is capable of fixing the elastic blade 622. The elastic blade 622 is preferably a material having high impact resilience coefficient such as polyurethane.


Specifically, in the blade in FIGS. 3 and 4, on an undersurface 62b which is one of two surfaces including a ridgeline contacting an object to be cleaned of the cleaning blade, facing downstream in travel direction of an object to be cleaned, the blade has a has a Martens hardness M1 of from 0.9 to 10.0 N/mm2 at a position 300 μm from the ridgeline 62c, a Martens hardness M2 at a position 1,000 μm therefrom and a Martens hardness M3 at a position 2,000 μm therefrom, and M1, M2 and M3 satisfy the following relationship:





M1>M2>M3.


This prevents the tip ridgeline 62c from tuning over and deforming to keep high cleanability. The hardness at a position 300 μm from the ridgeline 62c is selectively high. The farther, i.e., 1,000 μm and 2,000 μm from the ridgeline 62c, the lower the hardness, i.e., the blade has higher flexibility. Namely, the blade has high followability to the surface of an image bearer and high cleanability even in high-speed printing.


M3 is preferably from 0.3 to 0.7 N/mm2 to increase followability. M1 is more preferably from 0.9 to 5.0 N/mm2 to prevent abrasion of the cleaning blade.


The above profile of Martens hardness is obtained by forming a surface layer on the elastic blade 622 formed of, e.g., polyurethane with a hardening resin monomer to be highly hardened.


Specifically, dipping the elastic blade 622 or spraying a liquid thereto so as to have a desired hardness profile.


For example, when spraying, a nozzle, a distance from a spray gun to the elastic blade 622, positions thereof in coating, a solvent and an atomization pressure vary the hardness profile.


A two-fluid nozzle is more preferably used than a one-fluid nozzle as a spray nozzle to precisely control hardness profile. The one-fluid nozzle has large atomization particle diameter and coating in a small amount is difficult, and dripping of the coating liquid is a problem. Atomization at high pressure blows out the center by air and coating amount thereof decreases, resulting in difficulty of controlling coating in a small amount. The two-fluid nozzle can downsize the atomization particle diameter at low pressure, and controlling coating in a small amount is easy. In addition, after the coating liquid lands wet, it is not blown out by air. A desired film is easy to form on a desired place. Nozzles having various spray patterns are marketed, and those having circle patterns are preferably used.


A distance from the spray gun to the elastic blade 622 is important as well. When too close to each other, spray efficiency improves, but dripping tends to occur, resulting in difficulty of forming a uniform film some μm thick. When too far, spray efficiency lowers, coated width widens, and it is difficult for the blade to have the hardness profile of the present invention at a position 2,000 μm from the ridgeline. The distance from the spray gun to the elastic blade 622 is studied to realize the hardness profile of the present invention.


To make the film thicker toward the ridgeline and thinner apart therefrom, the spray gun and the elastic blade 622 need precise setting in consideration of coating pattern of the nozzle.


For example, as FIG. 8 shows, when a nozzle circularly spraying and coating the center of the circle most, the ridgeline of the cleaning blade is set to the center of the circle and the spray gun is moved in a longitudinal direction of the cleaning blade.


An edge surface 62a which is one of two surfaces including a ridgeline contacting an object to be cleaned of the cleaning blade, facing upstream in travel direction of an object to be cleaned is not specified in hardness profile as the undersurface 62b, but preferably coated with an acrylic curing resin as the undersurface 62b.


The elastic blade 622 is preferably formed of, but is not limited to, polyurethane rubber, and preferably has a Martens hardness not greater than 0.7 N/mm2. Polyurethane rubber more preferably has a Martens hardness of from 0.3 to 0.7 N/mm2.


Known UV curing resins and thermosetting resins can be used as curable resin monomers. However, the UV curing resins are preferably used because the elastic blade 622, and an adhesive fixing the holder 621 and the elastic blade 622 are possibly denatured with heat.


Typical UV curing resins such as modified acrylate can be used, but the followings are preferably used to fully exert cleanability. Namely, when a surface layer is formed on the surface of the elastic blade by spray coating of a coating liquid including UV curing resin monomers, (meth)acrylate compounds having a functional group equivalent molecular weight not greater than 350 and 3 to 6 functional groups such as pentaerythritoltriacrylate and dipentaerythritolhexaacrylate are preferably used.


Fluorine acrylic monomers are preferably used because of decreasing roughness of the coated surface to prevent toner adherence and levelling the surface.


Before, spray coating, the ridgeline of the blade may be impregnated with acrylic monomers to improve the surface thereof (FIG. 7). When the elastic blade 622 is impregnated, (meth)acrylate compounds having a tricyclodecane structure such as tricyclodecane methanol dimethacrylate are preferably used. These acrylates very effectively increase hardness of the elastic blade.


In the coating liquid in spraying and dipping, a polymerization initiator, a polymerization inhibitor, a diluted solvent, etc. besides the hardening resin monomers may be mixed. These are not particularly limited, and marketed products can be used.


The Martens hardness is measured by a microscopic hardness meter HM-2000 from Fischer Instruments is used, in which Vickers indenter is pushed into an object at 1.0 mN for 10 sec, held for 5 sec, and drawn at 1.0 mN for 10 sec.


Next, the image forming apparatus and the process cartridge of the present invention are explained.


The image forming apparatus of the present invention includes an image bearer and a cleaning member contacting the surface of the image bearer to remove unnecessary adherents adhering thereto, and finally transfer an image formed on the image bearer onto a recording medium. The cleaning member is the cleaning blade of the present invention.


The process cartridge detachable from image forming apparatus of the present invention includes an image bearer and a cleaning member contacting the surface of the image bearer to remove unnecessary adherents adhering thereto. The cleaning member is the cleaning blade of the present invention.



FIG. 1 is a schematic view illustrating an embodiment of the image forming apparatus of the present invention.


As illustrated in FIG. 1, an image forming apparatus (full-color copier) 1 includes an imaging area forming a toner image. The imaging area includes an irradiating (writing) unit 2 emitting a laser beam based on image information. The image forming apparatus further process cartridges 20Y, 20M, 20C and 20BK for yellow, magenta, cyan and black, developing units 23Y, 23M, 23C and 23BK, toner supply units 32Y, 32M, 32C and 32BK, etc.


Each of the process cartridges 20Y, 20M, 20C and 20BK includes a photoconductive drum 21 as an image bearer, a charger 22 charging the surface of the photoconductive drum 21 and a cleaning unit 25 collecting an untransferred toner on the photoconductive drum 21. The irradiating (writing) unit 2 optically scans the uniformly-charged surface of each of the process cartridges 20Y, 20M, 20C and 20BK to form an electrostatic latent image on the surface of each of the photoconductive drums 21. Each of the developing units 23Y, 23M, 23C and 23BK develops the electrostatic latent image on each of the photoconductive drums 21. Each of the toner supply units 32Y, 32M, 32C and 32BK supplies each color toner to each of the developing units 23Y, 23M, 23C and 23BK.


Below the imaging area, an intermediate transfer belt 27 on which plural toner images are overlappingly transferred is provided. A transfer bias roller 24 transferring a toner image formed on the photoconductive drum 21 onto to the intermediate transfer belt 27 is provided opposite to the photoconductive drum 21 through the intermediate transfer belt 27. Further, the image forming apparatus 1 includes a second transfer bias roller 28 transferring a toner image on the intermediate transfer belt 27 onto a recording medium P and an intermediate transfer belt cleaning unit 29 collecting an untransferred toner on the intermediate transfer belt 27. Further, the image forming apparatus 1 includes a paper feed unit 61 containing recording media P such a transfer paper, a transfer belt 30 transferring the recoding medium P on which a 4-color toner image is transferred, and a fixing unit 66 fixing an unfixed image on the recoding medium P.


Above the image forming apparatus, a document reader 55 reading image information on a document D and a document feeder 51 feeding the document D to the document reader 55 are provided.


Hereafter, typical color image formation in the image forming apparatus is explained.


First, the document D placed on a document tray of the document feeder 51 is transported in a direction shown by an arrow F in FIG. 1 with transport rollers, and placed on a contact glass 53 of the document reader 55 to optically read image information of the document D by the document reader 55.


Specifically, the document reader 55 emits light, generated with a light source (not illustrated), to an image on the document D placed on a contact glass 53. Light reflected from the document D is focused onto a color sensor (not illustrated) via mirrors and lenses. The color sensor reads color image information of the document D as RGB (i.e., red, green, and blue) information, and then converts RGB information to electric signals. Based on the electric signals for RGB information, an image processor (not illustrated) conducts various processes such as color converting process, color correction process, and spatial frequency correction process to obtain color image information of yellow, magenta, cyan, and black.


The color image information of yellow, magenta, cyan, and black are then transmitted to the irradiating unit 2. The irradiating unit 2 emits a laser beam corresponding to the color image information of yellow, magenta, cyan, and black, to the respective photoconductive drum 21 in the process cartridges 20Y, 20M, 20C and 20BK.


The photoconductive drum 21 is rotated in a clockwise direction in FIG. 1. The charger 22 uniformly charges the surface of the photoconductive drum 21 to form a charge potential about −700 V on the photoconductive drum 21.


When the charged surface of photoconductive drum 21 comes to an irradiation position, the irradiating unit 2 emits a laser beam corresponding to each color of yellow, magenta, cyan, and black. As illustrated in FIG. 1, the laser beam reflected at a polygon mirror 3 passes lenses 4 and 5, and then follows a separate light path for each color of yellow, magenta, cyan, and black (irradiating process).


A laser beam for yellow component, reflected on mirrors 6 to 8, irradiates the surface of the photoconductive drum 21 in the process cartridge 20Y as illustrated in FIG. 1. Such laser beam for yellow component is scanned in a main scanning direction of the photoconductive drum 21 with a rotation of the polygon mirror 3, rotating at a high speed. With such laser beam scanning, an electrostatic latent image for yellow component is formed on the photoconductive drum 21.


In a similar way, a laser beam for magenta component, reflected on mirrors 9 to 11, irradiates the surface of the photoconductive drum 21 in the process cartridge 20M as illustrated in FIG. 1, and an electrostatic latent image for magenta component is formed on the photoconductive drum 21. In a similar way, a laser beam for cyan component, reflected on mirrors 12 to 14, irradiates a surface of the photoconductive drum 21 in the process cartridge 20C as illustrated in FIG. 1, and an electrostatic latent image for cyan component is formed on the photoconductive drum 21. In a similar way, a laser beam for black component reflected on a mirror 15 irradiates a surface of the photoconductive drum 21 in the process cartridge 20BK as illustrated in FIG. 1, and an electrostatic latent image for black is formed on the photoconductive drum 21.


Then, each of the electrostatic latent images on the respective photoconductive drum 21 comes to a position facing each of the developing units 23Y, 23M, 23C, and 23BK. Each of the developing units 23Y, 23M, 23C, and 23BK supplies respective color toner (i.e., yellow, magenta, cyan, and black) to the respective photoconductive drum 21 to develop respective toner image on the respective photoconductive drum 21 (developing process).


After such developing process, the photoconductive drum 21 comes to a position facing the intermediate transfer belt 27. As illustrated in FIG. 1, four transfer bias rollers 24, provided at inner face of the intermediate transfer belt 27, face the respective photoconductive drum 21 via the intermediate transfer belt 27. Such four transfer bias rollers 24 are used to transfer toner images on the respective photoconductive drum 21 to the intermediate transfer belt 27 by superimposing toner images on the intermediate transfer belt 27 (first transfer process).


Then, the photoconductive drum 21 comes to a position facing the cleaning unit 25. The cleaning unit 25 recovers toners remained on the photoconductive drum 21 after developing process (cleaning process). Then, a discharger (not illustrated) discharges the photoconductive drum 21 to prepare the photoconductive drum 21 for a next image forming operation on the photoconductive drum 21.


The intermediate transfer belt 27 having toner images thereon travels in a direction shown by an arrow L in FIG. 1, and comes to a position of the second transfer bias roller 28. At the second transfer bias roller 28, the toner images are secondly transferred from the intermediate transfer belt 27 to the recording medium P (second transfer process).


Then, the intermediate transfer belt 27 comes to a position facing the belt cleaning unit 29, which is used to recover toners remained on the intermediate transfer belt 27, by which a transfer process for intermediate transfer belt 27 is completed.


During such image forming process, the recording medium P is transported to the position of the second transfer bias roller 28 from the paper feed unit 61 via a transport guide 63 and a registration roller 64.


Specifically, the recording medium P in the paper feed unit 61 is fed to the transport guide 63, and further fed to the registration roller 64. Such registration roller 64 feeds the recording medium P to the position of the second transfer bias roller 28 by synchronizing a feed timing with toner-image formation timing on the intermediate transfer belt 27.


Then, the recording medium P having the toner images thereon is transported to the fixing unit 66 by the transport belt 30. The fixing unit 66 includes a heat roller 67 and a pressure roller 68 as illustrated in FIG. 1. The fixing unit 66 fixes the toner images on the recording medium P at a fixing nip between the heat roller 67 and the pressure roller 68. After fixing the toner images on the recording medium P, the recording medium P is ejected from the image forming apparatus 1 by an ejection roller 69, by which an image forming process for one cycle is completed.



FIG. 2 is a sectional view illustrating an imaging area of the image forming apparatus in FIG. 1.


The image forming apparatus 1 includes four image forming sections for image forming process. Because the four image forming sections have a similar configuration one to another except a color of toner T, reference characters of Y, M, C, and K for process cartridges, developing units, and toner supply units or other parts are omitted from FIG. 2.


As illustrated in FIG. 2, the process cartridge 20 includes the photoconductive drum 21 as an image bearer, the charger 22, the cleaning unit 25 and a lubricant supplier 45 in a case 26. The process cartridge is exchanged at a predetermined cycle from the image forming apparatus 1. In a similar way, the developing unit 23 is exchanged at a predetermined cycle from the image forming apparatus 1.


(Image Bearer)

The photoconductive drum 21 as an image bearer is typically a negatively-chargeable organic photoconductor. The photoconductor may have a single-layered or multi-layered photosensitive layer. The photoconductor may have an intermediate layer between its substrate and photosensitive layer, and a surface layer on its outermost surface. The photoconductor of the present invention preferably has a surface layer including an acrylic cured resin. The surface layer may include a charge transport material and a particulate metal oxide besides the acrylic cured resin. The acrylic cured resin is obtained by curing a marketed acrylic monomer with UV light. In the present invention, the photoconductive drum 21 rotates at a high linear speed not less than 600 mm/sec for high-speed printing.


(Charger)

A corona wire is extended at the center of a U-shaped metal plate in the charger 22. A predetermined voltage is supplied from an unillustrated power source to the corona wire of the charger 22 so as to uniformly charge the surfaces of the photoconductor drum 21. Further, a metal grid panel may be provided on an opposing surface of the charger 22 that faces the photoconductor drum 21.


(Developing Means)

The developing unit 23 includes a developing roller 23a provided opposite the photoconductor 21, a first conveyance screw 23b provided opposite the developing roller 23a, a second conveyance screw 23c provided opposite the first conveyance screw 23b with a wall 23e interposed therebetween, and a doctor blade 23d provided opposite the developing roller 23a, away from the first conveyance screw 23b. The developing roller 23a is constructed of a magnet fixed therewithin to form magnetic poles around a surface of the developing roller 23a and a sleeve rotated around the magnet. Multiple magnetic poles are formed on the developing roller 23a by the magnet so that the developing roller 23a carries a developer G thereon.


The developer G, which in this case is a two-component developer including a carrier C and toner T, is stored in the developing unit 23.


Specifically, the toner T is a spherical toner having a circularity of not less than 0.98. A flow-type particle image analyzer FPIA-2000 manufactured by Sysmex Corporation was used to measure an average circularity of the toner T. Measurements were performed in the following manner. From 0.1 ml to 0.5 ml of surfactant (preferably alkylbenzene sulfonate) serving as a dispersant and from 0.1 g to 0.5 g of a sample, that is, toner, were added to from 100 ml to 150 ml of water, from which impurities were removed in advance. Subsequently, the mixture in which the toner is dispersed was dispersed using an ultrasonic dispersing machine for from 1 to 3 minutes to prepare a sample solution including 3,000 to 10,000 particles/μl. The sample solution thus prepared was then set to the flow-type particle image analyzer FPIA-2000 to measure the shape and particle size distribution of the toner T.


The spherical toner is formed by heating a deformed pulverization toner to be spheric and a polymerization method.


The toner supply unit 32 provided to the image forming apparatus 1 is constructed of a replaceable toner bottle 33 and a toner hopper 34 that holds and rotatably drives the toner bottle 33 as well as supplies a new toner T to the developing unit 23. The toner bottle 33 stores the new toner T of the specified color and has a spiral protrusion on an inner surface thereof.


It is to be noted that the new toner T is appropriately supplied from the toner bottle 33 into the developing unit 23 through a toner supply opening 23f in accordance with consumption of the toner T stored in the developing unit 23. A reflective-type photosensor 41 provided opposite the photoconductor 21 and a magnetic sensor 40 provided below the second conveyance screw 23c directly or indirectly detect consumption of the toner T in the developing unit 23.


A toner concentration (TC) in the developing unit 23 is controlled to be in a predetermined range. Specifically, the new toner T is appropriately supplied from the toner supply unit 32 to the developing unit 23 via the toner supply opening 23f provided to the developing unit 23 such that detected values output from the magnetic sensor 40 and the reflective-type photosensor 41 have the predetermined value.


The lubricant supplier 45 includes a lubricant supply roller 45b (lubricant supply brush roller) scraping the photoconductor drum 21 with a brush formed around the roller 45b to supply a lubricant to photoconductor drum 21 and a solid lubricant 45c contacting the lubricant supply roller 45b. The lubricant supplier 45 further includes a compression spring 45d biasing the solid lubricant 45c to the lubricant supply roller 45b and a thinning blade 45a (coating blade) contacting the photoconductor drum 21 to thin a lubricant supplied thereon. The lubricant supplier 45 is located at downstream side in the rotational direction of the photoconductor drum 21 relative to the cleaning unit 25 (cleaning blade 62) and upstream side thereof relative to the charger 22.


The lubricant supply roller 45b includes a core bar and a brush wound around an outer circumference of the core bar, and rotates anticlockwise while the brush contacts the surface of the photoconductor drum 21 in FIG. 2. Thus, a lubricant is supplied from the solid lubricant 45c onto the photoconductor drum 21 through the lubricant supply roller 45b.


The lubricant supplier 45 applies a lubricant to the surface of the photoconductor drum 21 and improves releasability (removability) of a toner to prevent poor cleaning.


The solid lubricant 45c is preferably zinc stearate. Specific examples of the solid lubricant 45c include, besides zinc stearate, stearate groups such as barium stearate, iron stearate, nickel stearate, cobalt stearate, copper stearate, strontium stearate, and calcium stearate; fatty acid groups such as zinc oleate, barium oleate, lead oleate, copper oleate, zinc palmitate, barium palmitate, lead palmitate, and copper palmitate. A caprylic acid group, a linolenic acid group, and a co-linolenic acid group can be used as the fatty acid groups. Yet further alternatively, waxes such as candelilla wax, carnauba wax, rice wax, haze wax, jojoba wax, bees wax, and lanoline can be used for the solid lubricant 45c. An organic solid lubricant compatible with toner is easily formed from the above-described materials.


The thinning blade 45a is a blade-shaped member formed of a rubber material such as polyurethane rubber and contacts the surface of the photoconductor drum 21 at a predetermined angle and a predetermined pressure. The thinning blade 45a is located at a downstream side in the rotational direction of the photoconductor drum 21 relative to the cleaning blade 62. The lubricant provided on the photoconductor drum 21 by the lubricant supply roller 45b is uniformly thinned thereon by the thinning blade 45a in a suitable amount.


When the solid lubricant 45c is applied to the surface of the photoconductor drum 21 through the lubricant supply roller 45b, the lubricant having the shape of a powder is applied thereto. However, since the lubricant does not exert its lubricity enough in the form of a powder, the thinning blade 45a works as a member thinning and uniforming the lubricant. The thinning blade 45a forms a film of the lubricant on the photoconductor drum 21 such that the lubricant sufficiently exerts its lubricity.


(Cleaner)

The cleaning unit 25 is formed of the cleaning blade 62 contacting the photoconductor drum 21 to cleaning the surface thereof, the cleaning roller 25b (cleaning brush) a brush scraping the photoconductor drum 21 is formed around, etc. The cleaning blade 62 contacts the surface of the photoconductor drum 21 at a predetermined angle and a predetermined pressure. Thus, adhering materials adhering to the photoconductor drum 21 are mechanically scraped off and collected in the cleaning unit 25.


The cleaning blade 62 is the cleaning blade of the present invention.


EXAMPLES

Having generally described this invention, further understanding can be obtained by reference to certain specific examples which are provided herein for the purpose of illustration only and are not intended to be limiting. In the descriptions in the following examples, the numbers represent weight ratios in parts, unless otherwise specified.


(Preparation of Coating Liquid)












<Coating Liquid 1>
















Resin 1: A-DCP from Shin-Nakamura Chemical Co., Ltd.
100


Resin 2: OPTOOL DAC-HP from DAIKIN INDUSTRIES, Ltd.
2.5


Polymerization initiator: Irgacure 184 from BASF
10


Solvent: Cyclohexanone
400





Resin 1 A-DCP from Shin-Nakamura Chemical Co., Ltd. is tricyclodecane methanol dimethacrylate having two functional groups, a functional group equivalent molecular weight of 152 and the following formula.




embedded image


















<Coating Liquid 2>
















Resin 1: DPHA from Daicel-cytech Company, Ltd.
100


Resin 2: OPTOOL DAC-HP from DAIKIN INDUSTRIES, Ltd.
2.5


Polymerization initiator: Irgacure 184 from BASF
1.5


Solvent: Cyclohexanone
900





Resin 1 DPHA from Daicel-Cytec Company, Ltd. is pentaerythritol hexaacrylate having six functional groups, a functional group equivalent molecular weight of 96 and the following formula.




embedded image








(Preparation of Cleaning Blade)
Example 1
Preparation of Cleaning Blade 1

A strip-shaped polyurethane rubber having a length of 360 mm, a width of 2 mm and a Martens hardness of from 0.6 to 0.8 N/mm2 was used as the elastic blade.


The Martens hardness of the polyurethane rubber was measured by a microscopic hardness meter HM-2000 from Fischer Instruments is used, in which Vickers indenter is pushed into an object at 1.0 mN for 10 sec, held for 5 sec, and drawn at 1.0 mN for 10 sec.


The polyurethane rubber was fixed on the holder 621 formed of a metal plate with an adhesive so as to have a projected length L of 8 mm from the holder 621 as shown in FIG. 3.


The elastic blade 622 was highly hardened as follows. Namely, first, 3 mm from the ridgeline was dipped in the coating liquid 1 and kept therein for 60 sec to form an impregnated part 62d as shown by a shaded area in FIG. 4. Then, a residue was wiped off with a BEMCOT soaked with methyl ethyl ketone from Asahi Kasei Fibers Corp.


Then, the coating liquid 2 was sprayed on the edge surface 62a of the blade in FIG. 7 to form a surface layer 623 thereon. A spray gun SV-91 from SAN-EI TECH Ltd. was used. The spray gun was fixed such that the tip thereof was at the middle of a short axis of the edge surface, the cleaning blade was horizontal in the longitudinal direction and the edge surface 62a of the blade in FIG. 6 was vertical. A distance from the tip of the pray gun to the urethane rubber was 60 mm. The coating liquid discharge speed was 0.06 cc/min, the atomizing pressure was 0.05 Mpa, and the spray gun reciprocated once at 5 mm/sec in the longitudinal direction of the cleaning blade.


Next, the coating liquid 2 was sprayed on an under surface 62b of the blade in FIG. 7 to form a surface layer 623 thereon as well. The spray gun was fixed such that the tip thereof had the same height of the tip ridgeline 62c, the cleaning blade was horizontal in the longitudinal direction and the under surface 62b of the blade was vertical. A distance from the tip of the pray gun to the polyurethane rubber was 60 mm. The coating liquid discharge speed was 0.06 cc/min, the atomizing pressure was 0.05 Mpa, and the spray gun reciprocated once at 5 mm/sec in the longitudinal direction of the cleaning blade. Then, the cleaning blade was dried to touch for 3 min, and irradiated with UV light (140 W/cm×5 m/min×5 passes) and dried at 100° C. for 30 min to obtain a [cleaning blade 1].


Example 2
Cleaning Blade 2

The procedure for preparation of the cleaning blade 1 in Example 1 was repeated to prepare a cleaning blade 2 except for changing the discharge speed when spray coating the under surface 62b from 0.06 to 0.12 cc/min.


Example 3
Cleaning Blade 3

The procedure for preparation of the cleaning blade 1 in Example 1 was repeated to prepare a cleaning blade 3 except for reciprocating the spray gun twice instead of once when spray coating the under surface 62b.


Example 4
Cleaning Blade 4

The procedure for preparation of the cleaning blade 1 in Example 1 was repeated to prepare a cleaning blade 4 except for replacing the urethane rubber with a urethane rubber having a Martens hardness of from 0.3 to 0.4 N/mm2.


Example 5
Cleaning Blade 5

The procedure for preparation of the cleaning blade 1 in Example 1 was repeated to prepare a cleaning blade 5 except for omitting impregnation with the coating liquid 1.


Comparative Example 1
Cleaning Blade 6

The procedure for preparation of the cleaning blade 1 in Example 1 was repeated to prepare a cleaning blade 6 except for fixing the center of the coating circle sprayed from the spray gun 3 mm far from the tip ridgeline 62c of the polyurethane rubber in a direction of the holder 621 formed of a metal plate when spray coating the under surface 62b.


Comparative Example 2
Cleaning Blade 7

The procedure for preparation of the cleaning blade 1 in Example 1 was repeated to prepare a cleaning blade 6 except for fixing the center of the coating circle sprayed from the spray gun 1 mm far from the tip ridgeline 62c of the polyurethane rubber in a direction of the holder 621 formed of a metal plate and changing the atomizing pressure into 0.1 Mpa when spray coating the under surface 62b.


Comparative Example 3
Cleaning Blade 8

The procedure for preparation of the cleaning blade 6 in Comparative Example 1 was repeated to prepare a cleaning blade 8 except for changing the discharge speed when spray coating the under surface 62b from 0.06 to 0.12 cc/min.


The Martens hardnesses of 3 points 300, 1,000 and 2,000 μm far from the ridgeline 62c on the undersurface 62b of the blade including the ridgeline of each of the cleaning blades 1 to 8 were measured near the middle of the blade in a longitudinal direction.


The Marten's hardness was measured by a microscopic hardness meter HM-2000 from Fischer Instruments, the Vickers indenter of which was pushed into an object at 1.0 mN for 10 sec, held for 5 sec, and drawn at 1.0 mN for 10 sec.










TABLE 1








Martens Hardness [N/mm2]











M1
M2
M3



(300 um)
(1000 um)
(2000 um)














Example 1
Cleaning Blade 1
2.1
1.1
0.7


Example 2
Cleaning Blade 2
5.2
1.2
0.6


Example 3
Cleaning Blade 3
10.0
3.5
1.5


Example 4
Cleaning Blade 4
0.9
0.4
0.3


Example 5
Cleaning Blade 5
2.0
1.1
0.6


Comparative
Cleaning Blade 6
2.1
2.5
3.2


Example 1






Comparative
Cleaning Blade 7
3.5
1.1
2.1


Example 2






Comparative
Cleaning Blade 8
5.6
5.8
5.7










Example 3












Next, each of the cleaning blades 1 to 8 was installed in modified Ricoh Pro C751 which is the same apparatus in FIG. 2. A part of the photoreceptor was replaced with an internally produced pressure measurer (weight measurer), and the cleaning blade was set to contact the measurer as it contacts the photoreceptor. A contact pressure (weight per unit length) measured by the measurer was 25 g/cm. When the cleaning blade contacted the photoreceptor, an angle between a tangent passing a contact point on the circumference of the photoreceptor and the surface of 62a was 80°. A spherical toner was used.


After 50,000 images and 100,000 images were produced at a rotational linear speed of 600 mm/sec of the photoreceptor, whether a toner scraped off from a gap between the blade and the photoreceptor is present on the image or the photoreceptor was visually observed.


Good: Toner was not visually observed on an image nor on the photoreceptor


Fair: No toner was not visually observed on an image but toner was visually observed on the photoreceptor


Poor: Toner was visually observed on both of an image and the photoreceptor


The results are shown in Table 2.













TABLE 2











Evaluation Result














After
After





50,000
50,000




Cleaning
images
images




Blade
were
were




No.
produced
produced







Example 1
Cleaning Blade 1
Good
Good



Example 2
Cleaning Blade 2
Good
Good



Example 3
Cleaning Blade 3
Good
Fair



Example 4
Cleaning Blade 4
Good
Good



Example 5
Cleaning Blade 5
Good
Good



Comparative
Cleaning Blade 6
Fair
Poor



Example 1






Comparative
Cleaning Blade 7
Fair
Poor



Example 2






Comparative
Cleaning Blade 8
Poor
Poor



Example 3










Having now fully described the invention, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that many changes and modifications can be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth therein.

Claims
  • 1. A cleaning blade cleaning the surface of an object, comprising: a rigid holder; anda strip-shaped elastic body fixed on the holder, having a tip ridgeline configured to contact the surface of the object,wherein the elastic body has a Martens hardness M1 in the range of from 0.9 to 10.0 N/mm2 at a position 300 μm from the ridgeline on an undersurface of the elastic body including the ridgeline, a Martens hardness M2 at a position 1,000 μm therefrom and a Martens hardness M3 at a position 2,000 μm therefrom, and M1, M2 and M3 satisfy the following relationship: M1>M2>M3.
  • 2. The cleaning blade of claim 1, wherein the Martens hardness M3 is from 0.3 to 0.7 N/mm2.
  • 3. The cleaning blade of claim 1, wherein the elastic body comprises a polyurethane rubber and an acrylic curing resin.
  • 4. The cleaning blade of claim 1, wherein the elastic body comprises an acrylic curing resin film on the undersurface thereof including the ridgeline.
  • 5. An image forming apparatus, comprising: an image bearer;a transferer configured to transfer an image formed on the image bearer onto a recording medium; anda cleaning member configured to contact the surface of the image bearer to remove adherents adhering thereto,wherein the cleaning member is the cleaning blade according to claim 1.
  • 6. A process cartridge detachably mountable on image forming apparatus, comprising: an image bearer;a transferer configured to transfer an image formed on the image bearer onto a recording medium; anda cleaning member configured to contact the surface of the image bearer to remove adherents adhering thereto,wherein the cleaning member is the cleaning blade according to claim 1.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
2014-138442 Jul 2014 JP national