This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the corresponding Japanese Patent Application No. 2018-153859 filed on Aug. 20, 2018, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to a cleaning device that removes toner left unused on the surface of an image carrying member by use of a cleaning member, and to an image forming apparatus incorporating such a cleaning device.
Conventionally, there is known an image forming apparatus of an intermediate transferring type that includes an endless intermediate transfer belt rotated in a predetermined direction and a plurality of image forming portions arranged along the intermediate transfer belt and that, after primary transferring by sequentially superimposing toner images of different colors to the intermediate transfer belt by the image forming portions, secondarily transfers them to a recording medium.
In such an image forming apparatus of the intermediate transferring type, a belt cleaning device is provided which removes toner left unused on the intermediate transfer belt after secondary transferring. If the intermediate transfer belt has no elastic layer, a blade type construction is used in which toner is scraped off while a cleaning blade is pressed onto the surface of the intermediate transfer belt.
On the other hand, if the intermediate transfer belt has an elastic layer, a cleaning device is frequently used which includes, in a housing, a cleaning blush that collects toner left unused on the surface of the intermediate transfer belt mechanically and electrically, a collection roller that collects toner from the cleaning brush, a blade that scrapes off toner from the surface of the collection roller, and a conveying spiral that conveys toner scraped off the surface of the collection roller to a waste toner container.
For example, there is known a belt cleaning device having a sheet member that divides the interior of a housing into a cleaning brush side and a conveying spiral side. The sheet member keeps its tip-end part in contact with the collection roller on the upstream side of a blade that scrapes off toner from the surface of the collection roller, and thereby guides toner scraped off the surface of the collection roller by the blade to the conveying spiral side so as not to return the toner to the cleaning brush side (outside the housing).
In this belt cleaning device, the intermediate transfer belt and the collection roller are so configured that, during their initial use, their surface roughness degreases through great secular change. This helps archive both toner scraping performance of the blade from the collection roller and paper particle conveying performance of the collection roller.
There is also known a cleaning device including a collection roller of which the surface roughness in both end parts in the axial direction is higher than the surface roughness in the middle part in the axial direction. In this cleaning device, the collection roller is given a low surface roughness in a region (a middle part in the axial direction) where it frequently scrapes off toner and a high surface roughness in other regions (both end parts in the axial direction). As a result, it is possible to satisfactorily collect toner from the cleaning member with the collection roller and to reduce adhesion between the blade and the collection roller over the entire range in the axial direction.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a cleaning device includes a housing, a cleaning member, a collection roller, a blade, a sheet member, and a sealing member, and removes toner left unused on the surface of an image carrying member. The housing has formed in it an opening that faces the image carrying member carrying a toner image and a toner storage portion that stores toner removed from the surface of the image carrying member. The cleaning member is arranged at a position opposite the image carrying member. The collection roller collects toner attached to the cleaning member. The blade scraps off toner attached to the collection roller while in contact with the collection roller on the downstream side of the cleaning member with respect to the rotation direction of the collection roller. The sheet member is arranged over the entire range of the collection roller in its longitudinal direction on the downstream side of the cleaning member and on the upstream side of the blade with respect to the rotation direction of the collection roller so as to divide between the toner storage portion and the opening. The sealing member is arranged so as to be in contact with the housing and both end parts of the circumferential surface of the collection roller in the axial direction, and prevents toner from leaking out of a gap between the housing and the collection roller. A first region having a predetermined surface roughness is formed in a middle part of the circumferential surface of the collection roller in the axial direction, and a second region having a lower surface roughness than the first region is formed next to both end parts of the first region in the axial direction.
Further features and advantages of the present disclosure will become apparent from the description of embodiments given below.
Hereinafter, with reference to the accompanying drawings, an embodiment of the present disclosure will be described.
The image forming apparatus 100 shown in
In these image forming portions Pa to Pd, there are respectively arranged photosensitive drums 1a, 1b, 1c, and 1d that carry visible images (toner images) of the different colors, and an intermediate transfer belt 8 that rotates in the clockwise direction in
Transfer sheets P to which toner images are to be transferred are stored in a sheet feed cassette 16 arranged in a lower part of the main body of the image forming apparatus 100 and are conveyed via a sheet feed roller 12a and a registration roller pair 12b to the secondary transfer roller 9. As the intermediate transfer belt 8, a belt having no seam (seamless belt) is mainly used.
Now, the image forming portions Pa to Pd will be described. Below, a detailed description will be given of the image forming portion Pa; the image forming portions Pb to Pd have basically a similar structure, and thus no overlapping description will be repeated. As shown in
Next, a procedure for image formation in the image forming apparatus 100 will be described. When an instruction to start image formation is fed in by a user, first the surfaces of the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d are electrostatically charged uniformly by charging devices 2a to 2d. Then, the surfaces of the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d are irradiated with beam light (laser light) emitted through light emitting windows 5a in an exposure unit 5, and thereby electrostatic latent images based on an image signal are formed on the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d, respectively. Developing devices 3a to 3d are charged with predetermined amounts of toner of different colors, namely cyan, magenta, yellow, and black, respectively. When the proportion of toner contained in the two-component developer stored in the developing devices 3a to 3d falls below a predetermined value through formation of toner images, which will be described later, toner is supplied from toner containers 4a to 4d to the developing devices 3a to 3d. The toner contained in the developer is fed from the developing devices 3a to 3d onto the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d, and electrostatically attaches to them, thereby forming toner images based on the electrostatic latent images formed by exposure to light from the exposure unit 5.
Then, an electric field with a predetermined transfer voltage is applied, by primary transfer rollers 6a to 6d, between the primary transfer rollers 6a to 6d and the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d, and thereby the cyan, magenta, yellow, and black toner images on the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d are primarily transferred to the intermediate transfer belt 8. These images of four colors are formed in a predetermined positional relationship previously determined to form a predetermined full-color image. Thereafter, in preparation for subsequent formation of new electrostatic latent images, toner remaining on the surfaces of the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d is removed by cleaning blades 32 and rubbing rollers 33 of cleaning devices 7a to 7d.
As a driving roller 10 rotates by the action of a belt driving motor (not illustrated), the intermediate transfer belt 8 starts to rotate in the clockwise direction; then, a transfer sheet P is conveyed with predetermined timing from the registration roller pair 12b to the secondary transfer roller 9 arranged next to the intermediate transfer belt 8 so that a full-color image is transferred to the transfer sheet P. The transfer sheet P having the toner images transferred to it is conveyed to the fixing portion 13. The toner remaining on the surface of the intermediate transfer belt 8 is removed by the belt cleaning unit 19.
The transfer sheet P conveyed to the fixing portion 13 is then heated and pressed by a fixing roller pair 13a so that the toner images are fixed to the surface of the transfer sheet P, thereby forming a predetermined full-color image. The transfer sheet P having the full-color image formed on it is distributed between different conveying directions by a branch portion 14 that branches into a plurality of directions. When an image is formed only on one side of a transfer sheet P, the transfer sheet P is discharged, as it is, onto a discharge tray 17 by a discharge roller pair 15.
On the other hand, when images are formed on both sides of a transfer sheet P, part of the transfer sheet P having passed through the fixing portion 13 is temporarily stuck out of the apparatus via the discharge roller pair 15. Thereafter, the discharge roller pair 15 is rotated in the reverse direction so that the transfer sheet P is distributed into a sheet conveying passage 18 by the branch portion 14; thus the transfer sheet P is, with the image side reversed, conveyed once again to the secondary transfer roller 9. Then, the next image formed on the intermediate transfer belt 8 is transferred by the secondary transfer roller 9 to the side of the transfer sheet P having no image formed on it. The transfer sheet P is conveyed to the fixing portion 13, where the toner image is fixed, and is then discharged onto the discharge tray 17 via the discharge roller pair 15.
The intermediate transfer unit 30 is provided with a roller contact-separation mechanism 60 that includes a pair of supporting members (not illustrated) supporting both end parts of the primary transfer rollers 6a to 6d and of a rotary shaft of the pressure switching roller 34 so as to be rotatable and movable perpendicularly (in
Specifically, the roller contact-separation mechanism 60 moves the pressure switching roller 34 upward so that the primary transfer rollers 6a to 6d move upward together with the intermediate transfer belt 8, and thereby the primary transfer rollers 6a to 6d move away from the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d. Here, the pressure switching roller 34 is arranged on the tension roller 11 side of the primary transfer roller 6a, and thus the bottom face (the contact face with the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d) of the intermediate transfer belt 8 swings up and down about the driving roller 10 side as a pivot. Thus, the distance between the intermediate transfer belt 8 and the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d is maximal on the photosensitive drum 1a side and is minimal on the photosensitive drum 1d side.
On the opening 40a side of the housing 40, the fur brush 41 is arranged opposite the tension roller 11 via the intermediate transfer belt 8. The fur brush 41 rotates in the counter direction (in
The collection roller 43 rotates in the opposite direction (in
The rotary shafts 41a and 43a of the fur brush 41 and the collection roller 43 are rotatably supported on the housing 40. The rotary shaft 41a of the fur brush 41 is biased in the upper rightward in
The blade 45 scrapes off the toner and the like collected by the collection roller 43 while in contact with the collection roller 43 on the downstream side of the fur brush 41 with respect to the rotation direction of the collection roller 43 and from the counter direction with respect to the movement direction of the surface of the collection roller 43 so that the collection roller 43 is cleaned. The conveying spiral 47 is arranged in a toner storage portion 40b in the housing 40 and conveys the toner and the like scraped off the collection roller 43 by the blade 45 to a waste toner container (not illustrated) outside the housing 40.
In the housing 40, a sheet member 50 is arranged over the entire range of the collection roller 43 in its longitudinal direction (the direction perpendicular to the plane of
Between both end parts of the collection roller 43 and the housing 40, sealing members 51 are arranged which are formed of an elastic material such as urethane foam or urethane sponge. As shown in
As described earlier, when paper particles that have attached to the intermediate transfer belt 8 attach to the sheet member 50 via the fur brush 41 and the collection roller 43, a gap is formed between the collection roller 43 and the sheet member 50; thus toner and the like in the toner storage portion 40b flow back toward the opening 40a side and accumulate on the sheet member 50 and on the bottom face 40c of the housing 40. Then, if the accumulated toner and the like attach back to the fur brush 41 and move onto the intermediate transfer belt 8, dropping of toner may inconveniently result. Paper particles can be prevented from clogging between the collection roller 43 and the sheet member 50 by giving the collection roller 43 a high surface roughness and thereby enhancing the paper particle conveying performance of the collection roller 43.
However, when the collection roller 43 is given a high surface roughness, the toner scraping performance of the blade 45 lowers, and some toner slips though the blade 45. At the end part of the collection roller 43, the toner that has slipped through the blade 45 is repeatedly acted on by a pressure from the sealing member 51 to become agglomerated toner. When the agglomerated toner clogs between the collection roller 43 and the sheet member 50, as in the case where paper particles clog, waste toner flows from the toner storage portion 40b side back to the opening 40a side, and this results in attachment of the waste toner to the fur brush 41 and dropping of toner.
Here, in the belt cleaning unit 19 according to the embodiment, to prevent both clogging of paper particles between the collection roller 43 and the sheet member 50 and toner agglomeration at the end part of the collection roller 43, the surface roughness of the collection roller 43 is adjusted in the axial direction.
Specifically, as shown in
If the surface roughness in the first region 61 is too high, toner is caught in concave parts, resulting in lower toner scraping performance of the blade 45. Since the collection roller 43 is not in direct contact with the intermediate transfer belt 8, even with lower toner scraping performance, no image defects occur immediately. However, if lower toner scraping performance persists, toner collecting performance from the fur brush 41 lowers; toner may then attach from the fur brush 41 back to the intermediate transfer belt 8. On the other end, if the surface roughness in the first region 61 is too low, paper particle conveying performance lowers; thus, paper particles are likely to clog the nip portion between the collection roller 43 and the sheet member 50.
As for the surface roughness in the first region 61, it is preferable that the ten-point average roughness Rz there be equal to or more than 4 μm but equal to or less than the average particle diameter of toner. With the surface roughness in the first region 61 within the above described range, it is possible to improve the effect of conveying paper particles in the middle part of the collection roller 43 in the axial direction and to minimize a drop in the toner scraping performance of the blade 45. In the present disclosure, the ten-point average roughness Rz is measured by the measurement method prescribed in JIS B0601 (1982).
Next to the both end parts of the first region 61 in the axial direction, a second region 63 is formed which has a lower surface roughness than the first region 61. The second region 63 is in direct contact with the sealing member 51 or is in contact with it via the sheet member 50. That is, the second region 63 is formed so as to overlap, in the axial direction (in
If the surface roughness in the second region 63 is too high, at the end part of the collection roller 43, as the collection roller 43 rotates, the toner that has slipped through the blade 45 passes through the sealing member 51 many times and thereby is repeatedly acted on by a pressure to become agglomerated toner. Thus, as for the surface roughness in the second region 63, it is preferable that the ten-point average roughness Rz there be equal to or less than 3 μm so that the toner attached to the surface of the collection roller 43 can be scraped off all at once by the blade 45.
With the above-described configuration, in the middle part of the collection roller 43 in the axial direction where a region of the intermediate transfer belt 8 to which paper particles have attached passes, the first region 61 is formed which has a high surface roughness and high paper particle conveying performance; it is thus possible to prevent paper particles from clogging the nip portion between the collection roller 43 and the sheet member 50. In the both end parts of the collection roller 43 in the axial direction which are acted on by a pressure from the sealing member 51, the second region 63 is formed which has a lower surface roughness than the first region 61 so as to be free from a drop in the toner scraping performance of the blade 45; it is thus possible to prevent toner agglomeration resulting from toner slipping.
The second region 63 is formed so as to overlap at least the contact part between the collection roller 43 and the sealing member 51, and this prevents the lowering of toner scraping performance in the both end parts of the collection roller 43 in the axial direction which are acted on by a pressure from the sealing member 51. It is thus possible to effectively prevent toner agglomeration in the both end parts of the collection roller 43 in the axial direction which are acted on by a pressure from the sealing member 51.
It is preferable that the second region 63 be formed outside the maximum width, in the axial direction, of the transfer sheet P passing through the secondary transfer nip portion N (see
The present disclosure may be implemented in any other manner than in the embodiments described above, and allows for many modification without departure from the spirit of the present disclosure. Although, for example, the above-described embodiment deal with, as an example, the belt cleaning unit 19 having the fur brush 41, the present disclosure is applicable equally to a configuration using a cleaning roller instead of the fur brush 41.
Although the above-described embodiment deal with, as an example, the belt cleaning unit 19 removing toner that remains on the surface of the intermediate transfer belt 8 by use of the fur brush 41 (cleaning member) and the collection roller 43, for example, in a configuration in which the cleaning devices 7a to 7d removing toner that remains on the surface of the photosensitive drums 1a to 1d (image carrying member) are provided with a collection roller collecting toner that is attached to the rubbing roller 33 (cleaning member), as in the present disclosure, by adjusting the surface roughness of the collection roller, an effect similar to that in the present disclosure can be expected.
Needless to say, the present disclosure is applicable, not only to a tandem-type color printer as shown in
Practical Examples: The relationship of the surface roughness of the collection roller 43 with paper particle clogging and cleaning performance was studied. As a test machine, a color multifunction peripheral (an altered version of the model TASKalfa2552ci manufactured by Kyocera Document Solutions Inc.) shown in
As developer, two-component developer were used which contained positively charging toner having an average particle diameter of 7 μm. Among the collection rollers 43, only for the one whose Rz was 3.0 μm, a roller made of SUM (sulfur composite free-cutting steel) and subjected to nickel plating treatment was used, and for the other, aluminum rollers subjected to alumite treatment were used.
In the tests, when 5000 sheets printed with a coverage rate 4% for each color were continuously printed, whether or not paper particle clogging or cleaning failure on images has occurred was visually checked. Table 1 shows the results of evaluation along with the ten-point average roughness Rz of the collection roller 43 used. Each ten-point average roughness Rz is an average value of the values measured at 12 points on the surface of the collection roller 43.
Table 1 reveals the following. When the ten-point average roughness Rz of the collection roller 43 was equal to or less than 3.0 μm, paper particles clogged between the collection roller 43 and the sheet member 50. The reason is considered to be that, when the ten-point average roughness Rz of the collection roller 43 is low, paper particle conveying performance is insufficient.
When the surface roughness Rz of the collection roller 43 was 7.9 μm, cleaning failure on the image occurred. The reason is considered to be as follows. When the surface roughness Rz of the collection roller 43 was higher than the average particle diameter of toner, toner was caught in concave parts on the surface of the collection roller 43 so that the toner scraping performance of the blade 45 lowered; thus, toner collecting performance from the fur brush 41 to the collection roller 43 lowered, and toner attached from the fur brush 41 back to the intermediate transfer belt 8.
The above results confirm the following. With the surface roughness in the first region 61 of the collection roller 43 equal to or more than 4 μm but equal to or less than the average particle diameter of toner, it is possible, while maintaining the toner scraping performance of the blade 45, to prevent paper particles from clogging.
The lower the surface roughness Rz of the collection roller 43, the higher the toner scraping performance of the blade 45, and thus, when the surface roughness Rz of the collection roller 43 is equal to or less than 3.0 μm, the toner attached to the end part of the collection roller 43 can be scraped off all at once by the blade 45. Thus, with the surface roughness Rz in the second region 63 of the collection roller 43 equal to or less than 3.0 μm, it is possible to effectively prevent toner agglomeration resulting from the toner that has slipped through the blade 45 passing through the sealing member 51 many times.
The present disclosure finds application in cleaning devices that remove toner left unused on the surface of an image carrying member by use of a cleaning member. Based on the present disclosure, it is possible to provide a cleaning device that prevents paper particles from clogging the nip portion between a collection roller collecting waste toner from a cleaning member and a sheet member and that can effectively prevent toner agglomeration at the end part of the collection roller.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2018-153859 | Aug 2018 | JP | national |