This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the corresponding Japanese Patent Application No. 2014-187477 filed on Sep. 16, 2014, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to a developing device which supplies toner to an image carrier by using a toner carrier, and also relates to an electrophotographic image forming apparatus including such a developing device.
An electrophotographic image forming apparatus forms an electrostatic latent image by irradiating a circumferential surface of an image carrier (photosensitive drum) with light based on image information read from an original image or image information obtained, by transmission and so on, from an external device such as a computer. The image forming apparatus supplies toner from the developing device to the electrostatic latent image and forms a toner image, and then transfers the toner image onto a sheet. After the transfer processing, fixing processing is performed on the toner image, and then the sheet is ejected out of the image forming apparatus.
In recent years, more and more image forming apparatuses have come to be equipped with a color printing function and capable of high-speed processing. This progress has naturally caused image forming apparatuses to be configured increasingly more intricate, and further, higher-speed processing requires higher-speed rotation of a toner stirring member inside a developing device, and such high-speed rotation causes the developing device to tend to have positive internal pressure, which is higher than the ambient pressure. When toner is supplied to a photosensitive drum from a developing device having positive internal pressure, part of the toner leaks out of the developing device as scattered toner through an opening (a toner supply port) thereof which faces the photosensitive drum, and stains the interior of the image forming apparatus.
In particular, with a developing system that uses a two-component developer containing a magnetic carrier and a toner, and that also uses a magnetic roller (a developer carrier) for carrying the developer and a developing roller (a toner carrier) for carrying only the toner, toner that has not been used in the development is stripped off from the developing roller by a magnetic brush formed on the magnetic roller at a developing roller-magnetic roller opposing portion at which the developing roller and the magnetic roller face each other. This causes the toner to be likely to float in the vicinity of the developing roller-magnetic roller opposing portion, and the floating toner leaks out as scattered toner. Moreover, such floating toner accumulates in the interior of the developing device and forms lumps of toner, which fall down onto the developing roller, disrupting the thin layer of toner formed on the developing roller. This makes defects such as “dropping toner” more likely to occur, in which toner is not supplied to a portion where toner should be adhering on a circumferential surface of the photosensitive drum.
To overcome such defects as described above, some known developing devices prevent leakage of toner floating therein through an opening thereof by forcefully sucking in air into a duct disposed in an upper portion of a developing device through an air outlet port formed in an upper end portion of the developing device disposed to face a toner carrier
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a developing device includes a developing container, a toner carrier, and a plurality of air outlet ports. The developing container is configured to hold therein a developer containing a toner. The toner carrier has part of an outer circumferential surface thereof exposed through an opening in the developing container, whereby the toner carrier is arranged so as to face an image carrier, the toner carrier being configured to supply toner to the image carrier. The plurality of air outlet ports are formed in such part of a wall of the developing container as faces the toner carrier, along a longitudinal direction of the developing container, and the plurality of air outlet ports communicate with an interior of a duct disposed next to the developing container. The toner carrier has a coat layer formed on the outer circumferential surface thereof. The coat layer is formed by means of a dipping method of dipping the toner carrier into a resin coating liquid with one end of the toner carrier in the longitudinal direction thereof first, the one end being a lower end of during the dipping, and then lifting the toner carrier out of the resin coating liquid with another end of the toner carrier in the longitudinal direction thereof first. The toner carrier is arranged such that the lower end of during the dipping is disposed on an upstream side with respect to an airflow direction in the duct.
Still other objects and specific advantages of the present disclosure will become apparent from the following descriptions of preferred embodiments.
Hereinafter, embodiments of the present disclosure will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Toward the photosensitive drum 5 on which the toner image has been formed in this way, a sheet is transported from a sheet feed mechanism 10 via a sheet transport path 11 and a registration roller pair 12 to the image forming portion 3, where the toner image on the photosensitive drum 5 is transferred onto the sheet by a transfer roller 13 (image transfer portion). Then, the sheet having the toner image transferred thereon is separated from the photosensitive drum 5 and transported to a fixing portion 14 having a fixing roller pair 14a, where the toner image is fixed. The sheet that has passed through the fixing portion 14 is sent to a sheet transport path 15 that diverges in a plurality of directions, then the transport direction of the sheet is sorted by path switching mechanisms 21 and 22 which are provided at a plurality of diverging points in the sheet transport path 15 and have a plurality of path switching guides, and then the sheet is discharged as it is (or after being sent to a sheet transport path 16 for duplex copying) onto a sheet discharge portion which includes a first discharge tray 17a and a second discharge tray 17b.
Moreover, a diselectrifying device (unillustrated), which removes residual electrostatic charge from the surface of the photosensitive drum 5, is arranged on the downstream side of a cleaning device 18. Furthermore, the sheet feed mechanism 10 includes a plurality of sheet feed cassettes 10a and 10b for stacking sheets therein, which are detachably attached to the multifunction peripheral main body 2, and a stack bypass (a manual sheet feed tray) 10c disposed above the sheet feed cassettes 10a and 10b. These are connected via the sheet transport path 11 to the image forming portion 3 which includes the photosensitive drum 5, the developing device 8, etc.
The image reading device 6 is disposed at an upper portion of the multifunction peripheral main body 2. The image reading device 6 has a function of reading image information of a document. To make the image reading device 6 read documents manually placed one by one, a document transport device 27 is opened and documents are placed one by one on a contact glass 6a disposed on a top surface of the apparatus main body. To make the image reading device 6 automatically read a batch of documents one by one, the batch of documents are placed on a sheet feed tray 27a of the document transport device 27 in a closed state. When a batch of documents are placed on the paper feed tray 27a, documents from the batch are automatically sent onto the contact glass 6a one by one. In whichever case, a document located on the contact glass 6a is irradiated with light from an unillustrated exposure lamp, and light reflected from the document is directed as image light to a photo-electric conversion portion (CCD) via an unillustrated optical system including a reflection mirror, an image forming lens, etc., which are not shown.
The sheet transport path 15 is, specifically, first diverges into two, right and left paths on a downstream side of the fixing roller pair 14a. Of the two paths, one path (the rightward path in
In the developing container 30, which extends obliquely right upward in
In the stir transport chamber 31, a toner concentration sensor (unillustrated) is disposed so as to face the first stir transport screw 35a, and based on the result of detection by the toner concentration sensor, the toner is replenished from the toner container 9 to the stir transport chamber 31 via a toner replenishment port (unillustrated). Used as the toner concentration sensor is, for example, a magnetic permeability sensor which detects the magnetic permeability of the two-component developer composed of the toner and the magnetic carrier in the developing container 30.
The magnetic roller 40 includes a cylindrical non-magnetic rotation sleeve that rotates in a clockwise direction in
Moreover, a regulating blade 37 is attached to the developing container 30 so as to extend along the longitudinal direction (the direction perpendicular to the sheet surface of
A direct current voltage (hereinafter, referred to as “Vslv (DC)”) and an alternating current voltage (hereinafter, referred to as “Vslv (AC)”) are applied to the developing roller 41, whereas a direct current voltage (hereinafter, referred to as “Vmag (DC)”) and an alternating current voltage (hereinafter, referred to as “Vmag (AC)”) are applied to the magnetic roller 40. These DC and AC voltages are applied from a developing bias power supply through a bias control circuit (neither are shown) to the developing roller 41 and the magnetic roller 40.
As for the operation of the developing device 8, the developer is transported in the axial direction (the direction perpendicular to the sheet surface of
The thickness of the toner layer formed on the developing roller 41 depends on factors such as the resistance of the developer and difference in rotational speed between the magnetic roller 40 and the developing roller 41, but the thickness can be controlled by means of ΔV. The toner layer on the developing roller 41 becomes thicker when ΔV increases, and thinner when ΔV decreases. An appropriate range of ΔV during the developing is generally about 100 V to 350 V.
The thin toner layer formed on the developing roller 41 by the magnetic brush is transported by the rotation of the developing roller 41 to an opposing portion between the photosensitive drum 5 and the developing roller 41 where the photosensitive drum 5 and the developing roller 41 face each other. Since Vslv (DC) and Vslv (AC) are applied to the developing roller 41, the toner is caused to fly toward the photosensitive drum 5 by the difference in potential between the photosensitive drum 5 and the developing roller 41, and thereby an electrostatic latent image formed on the photosensitive drum 5 is developed.
The toner remaining without being used for the development is transported back to the opposing portion between the developing roller 41 and the magnetic roller 40, to be collected by the magnetic brush formed on the magnetic roller 40. The magnetic brush is then stripped off from the magnetic roller 40 at a homopolar portion of the fixed magnet body, and thereafter, the magnetic brush falls down into the supply transport chamber 33. The developer within the collection transport chamber 33 is transported in the axial direction by the collection transport screw 35c, and joins with the developer existing within the supply transport chamber 32 through a communication portion (unillustrated) formed at one end of the partition wall 30b. That is, a circulating passage of the developer is formed, within the developing container 30, with the stir transport chamber 31, the supply transport chamber 32, the collection transport chamber 33, the developer passages, and the communication portion.
Then, based on the result of detection by the toner concentration sensor (unillustrated), a predetermined amount of toner is replenished via the toner replenishment port (unillustrated) to be circulated through the supply transport chamber 32 and the stir transport chamber 31, as a result of which the developer is regenerated as a uniformly charged two-component developer with a proper toner concentration. This developer is supplied back to the magnetic roller 40 by the supply transport screw 35b to form a magnetic brush, and is then transported to the regulating blade 37.
A duct cover 43 is attached to an outside of a side wall (the right side wall in
Next, a description will be given of the developing roller 41 used in the developing device 8 of the present disclosure.
Next, a description will be given of a method for producing the developing roller 41. First, an aluminum or aluminum-alloy cylinder is cut and polished, for example, into a developing sleeve 41a having a predetermined outer diameter. Then, the developing sleeve 41a is subjected to an anodizing treatment in an acid aqueous solution to thereby form an anodized aluminum layer 60 on the surface of the developing sleeve 41a. The anodized aluminum layer 60 is an assembly of a plurality of hexagonal prism cells each having a micropore in the center, and the bottom of the micropore forms an interface (a barrier layer) with respect to the aluminum base. The anodized aluminum layer 60 prevents leakage from being caused when a developing bias is applied to the developing roller 41.
A too large thickness of the anodized aluminum layer 60 increases the resistance of the developing roller 41 as a whole, and it becomes necessary to apply a high-voltage developing bias. On the other hand, with a too small thickness, the anodized aluminum layer 60 cannot be formed as a uniform layer, and this may gives rise to a risk of leakage. Thus, the preferable range of thickness of the anodized aluminum layer 60 is 10 μm to 20 μm.
Thereafter, the surface of the anodized aluminum layer 60 is subjected to heat treatment. This heat treatment is performed for the purpose of making a crack in the anodized aluminum layer 60 before a later-described drying process is performed on the coat layer 61, to thereby prevent generation of cracks in the anodized aluminum layer 60 and the coat layer 61 during the drying process. The heat treatment is determined to be performed for a predetermined time equal to or longer than the time necessary to complete the drying process (for example, 10 minutes or longer, at 120° C.), for example, during which generally a constant amount of cracks are generated with respect to each developing sleeve 41a.
After the heat treatment, the coat layer 61 is formed on the surface of the anodized aluminum layer 60. The coat layer 61 reduces the adherence of the toner supplied onto the developing sleeve 41a to the anodized aluminum layer 60. Furthermore, the coat layer 61 gives less mechanical stress to the developer than a metal surface would, and this helps achieve compatibility between improvement in performance of toner collection from the developing roller 41 and prevention of degradation of developer, when the amount of developer transported is increased.
Examples of the material of the coat layer 41 include nylon resin, urethane resin, acrylic resin, melamine resin, silicon resin, and fluororesin, among which alcohol-soluble nylon resin is preferable for its similarity in electrostatic property to the resin material of the positive-charge toner and its high toner removability, and also because alcohol-soluble nylon resin allows coating by means of the dipping method, which will be described later.
Here, the coat layer 61 is formed by containing, as a resistance adjusting agent, an electroconductive material of which the dielectric constant is 10 or more, and thereby, the volume resistance value of the coat layer 61 is adjusted and unevenness in resistance is reduced. Examples of the resistance adjusting agent include carbon black, titanium oxide, and fibrous potassium titanate. Thereby, it is possible to stabilize the charged state of the toner layer and improve the removability in toner collection. A preferable range of the volume resistance value of the coat layer 61 is about 104 to 108Ω, which allows the residual electrostatic charge to properly stay on the surface of the developing roller 41.
In the present disclosure, the coat layer 61 is formed by means of a dipping method. Specifically, the developing sleeve 41a, on which the anodized aluminum layer 60 has been formed, is dipped into a coating liquid with one end thereof first, the one end being a lower end of during the dipping, and is then lifted out of the coating liquid with the other end thereof first. Then, the developing sleeve 41a coated with the coating liquid is subjected to a drying process performed at a predetermined temperature for a predetermined time (for 10 minutes at 130° C., for example), as a result of which the coat layer 61 is formed with a thickness of about 2 to 11 μm.
When the coat layer 61 of the developing roller 41 is formed by means of the above-described dipping method, the coat layer 61 tends to be thicker at the lower end of during the dipping (the left end in
An exhaust fan 51 is disposed in the waste collector 50, and a filter 53 is provided between the exhaust fan 51 and the second duct 47. When the exhaust fan 51 is operated, airflow is generated to flow at a predetermined flow rate in the first duct 45 and the second duct 47, and thereby, toner particles floating inside the developing container 30 are sucked out of the developing container 30 into the first duct 45 through the air outlet ports 45a. The toner particles sucked into the first duct 45 pass through the second duct 47, to be caught by the filter 53. The air from which the toner particles have been removed by the filter 53 is discharged to the outside of the image forming apparatus 100 through an exhaust port 55.
In the configuration as has been described above, during the suction of air around the developing roller 41 together with the floating toner particles into the first duct 45, since the developing device 8 has an elongated shape, difference is caused in the flow rate of the airflow directed from the air outlet ports 45a to the first duct 45 in the longitudinal direction (the right-left direction of
Thus, when the flow rate of the airflow directed from the air outlet ports 45a to the first duct 45 is adjusted to an appropriate flow rate on the linking portion 43a side, the flow rate is not high enough at the end portion on the opposite side (left side in
With this in mind, in the present disclosure, as shown in
With this arrangement, gap D1 between the photosensitive drum 5 and the developing roller 41 (hereinafter referred to as “between D and S”) on the side where the flow rate of the airflow is low (left end in
Moreover, gap D3 between the magnetic roller 40 and the developing roller 41 (hereinafter referred to as “between M and 5”) on the side where the flow rate of the air flow is low (left end in
The difference between D1 and D2 serves to offset the difference in the flow rate, and thus the flow rate of the airflow flowing in the first duct 45 becomes substantially uniform over the whole area in the longitudinal direction of the first duct 45, and the difference in the flow rate of the airflow in the longitudinal direction of the first duct 45 is dissolved.
Furthermore, on the side where the flow rate is low, the narrow gap between M and S makes it easier for scattered toner, which is caused when toner on the developing roller 41 is collected by the magnetic brush formed on the magnetic roller 40, to go back to the magnetic roller 40. This makes it possible to reduce the generation of scattered toner compared with on the side of the high flow rate.
Thus, on the side where the flow rate of the airflow directed to the first duct 45 is low, it is possible to reduce the leakage of toner through the opening of the developing container 30 caused by the low flow rate. Moreover, on the side where the flow rate of the airflow directed to the first duct 45 is high, it is possible to prevent suction of too much toner into the first duct 45 caused by the excessively high flow rate.
With this in mind, the photosensitive drum 5 is arranged such that its end portion (left end in
It should be understood that the present disclosure is not limited to the above embodiments, and various modifications are possible within the scope of the present disclosure. For example, the shapes, sizes, and other features of the first duct 45 and the second duct 47 are appropriately settable in accordance with the amount of toner particles floating in the developing container 30, the shape condition of the air passage, the output of the exhaust fan 51, and other factors, and these features are not particularly limited.
Moreover, the present disclosure is applicable, not only to developing devices like the one shown in
Anodizing treatment was performed to the outer circumferential surface of a developing sleeve 25a made of an aluminum base tube having a diameter of 20 mm, to form an anodized aluminum layer 60 having a thickness of 10 μm, and then the surface of the anodized aluminum layer 60 was subjected to heat treatment at 120° C., for longer than 10 minutes. On the other hand, a coating liquid was prepared by mixing and dispersing the following materials using a ball mill (with zirconia beads having a diameter of 1 mm) for 48 hours: 100 parts by weight of an alcohol-soluble nylon resin (CM8000, a product of Toray Industries Inc.) as a binding resin; 100 parts by weight of a titanium oxide (ET-300W, a product of Ishihara Sangyo Kaisha, Ltd.) as an electroconductive material; and 800 parts by weight of methanol as a dispersion medium. Subsequently, the anodized developing sleeve 25a was dipped (soaked) into the coating liquid with one end thereof first, the one end being a lower end of during the dipping, and then pulled out of the coating liquid with the other end thereof first, with the axial direction of the cylindrical shape thereof kept parallel to the vertical direction all the while. Thereafter, the anodized developing sleeve 25a was dried at 130° C. for 10 minutes. Thereby, a coat layer 61 having a thickness of about 2 to 11 μm was formed on the surface of the anodized layer 60.
The developing device 8 of the present disclosure was fabricated in which the developing roller 41 produced in Example 1 was installed such that the lower end of during the dipping was located on the upstream side of the first duct 45. Moreover, as a comparative example, another developing device 8 was fabricated in which was installed another developing roller 41 provided with a developing sleeve 25a having a coat layer 61 formed on an anodized layer 40 by spray coating (the thickness of the coat layer 61 is substantially uniform in the longitudinal direction). These developing devices 8 were each mounted in the testing apparatus shown in
As is clear from
By mounting the developing device 8 of the present disclosure and that of the comparative example each in the testing apparatus shown in
As is clear from
The descriptions herein have been focused on the effects when the present disclosure is applied to a developing device 8 of a non-contact developing system where only toner is moved from a magnetic roller to a developing roller, from which the toner is made to fly to a photosensitive drum. However, the same effects have been confirmed in the case where the present disclosure is applied to a developing device that does not use a magnetic roller and develops an electrostatic latent image formed on a photosensitive drum by using a magnetic brush formed on a developing roller.
The present disclosure can be used in developing devices that supply toer to an image carrier by using a toner carrier. Through the use of the present disclosure, it is possible to provide a developing device and an image forming apparatus where the air suction force is uniformed in the longitudinal direction of a developing container to thereby effectively prevent leakage of toner from the developing device and accumulation of toner in the vicinity of a regulating blade.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2014-187477 | Sep 2014 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5175586 | Goseki | Dec 1992 | A |
20130108310 | Hirakawa | May 2013 | A1 |
20130236213 | Yamauchi | Sep 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2013-97217 | May 2013 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160077464 A1 | Mar 2016 | US |