1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a copier, facsimile apparatus, printer or similar image forming apparatus and more particularly to a device for removing substances that disfigure an image and an image forming apparatus using the same.
2. Description of the Background Art
Generally, an image forming apparatus includes a charging device for charging an image carrier by discharge during image formation. Products resulting from the discharge deposit on the surface of the image carrier. When the amount of the products increases, the products absorb water in the air in a humid environment and decreases in resistance to thereby lower the resistance of the surface of the image carrier. As a result, an image formed on the image carrier is sometimes blurred, partly lost or otherwise disfigured. This problem will be solved if the image carrier is provided with a surface easy to wear and if a cleaning blade or similar member is pressed against the image carrier for shaving off the surface by a relatively great amount together with the disfiguring products deposited thereon. Such a scheme, however, reduces the life of the image carrier.
A device for removing the disfiguring substances from the image carrier while maintaining the expected life of the image carrier has been proposed in various forms in the past. Japanese Patent Laid-Open Publication No. 60-49352, for example, discloses a disfiguring substance removing device including a water applying member for applying water to the surface of the image carrier and a water removing member for removing the former from the latter. This device is configured to effectively remove disfiguring substances by paying attention to the fact that the substances are water-soluble.
However, the surface of the image carrier is generally hydrophobic and causes water applied thereto to form scattered drops. It follows that even if the disfiguring substances dissolve in water on the surface of the image carrier, the aqueous solution containing the substances sparsely deposit on the surface in the form of drops. When such drops sparsely distributed on the surface of the image carrier are wiped off, the removing effect differs from portions where the drops are present to portions where they are absent. The resulting surface characteristic of the image carrier is apt to be irregular.
Technologies relating to the present invention are also disclosed in, e.g., Japanese Patent Laid-Open Publication Nos. 8-248820, 9-305083 and 2001-22140.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a disfiguring substance removing device capable of obviating or reducing defective images while solving the problem of the conventional device, and an image forming apparatus using the same.
In accordance with the present invention, a device for removing a substance that disfigures an image includes an adsorbent support supporting an adsorbent. The absorbent has a molecular structure including voids that have a diameter great enough to pass molecules of the disfiguring substance, which is deposited on the surface of an image carrier, therethrough and contain water therein.
An image forming apparatus using the above-described device is also disclosed.
The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description taken with the accompanying drawings in which:
To better understand the present invention, reference will be made to some different image forming apparatuses to which the present invention is applicable.
The drum 1 may be replaced with an endless photoconductive belt passed over a plurality of rollers or with a dielectric image carrier. In any case, the image carrier is supported such that its surface is movable.
A laser writing unit 5, which is a specific form of latent image forming means, scans the charged surface of the drum 1 with a laser beam L in accordance with image data, thereby forming a latent image on the drum 1. More specifically, the surface potential of the drum 1 varies from −900 V to, e.g., −150 V in the portions scanned by the laser beam L, forming the latent image. The other portions of the drum 1 not scanned by the laser beam L maintain the potential of substantially −900 V, forming a background. The laser writing unit 5 may be replaced with an LED (Light Emitting Diode) array, if desired.
A developing unit 6 develops the latent image conveyed thereto by the drum 1. Specifically, the developing unit 6 includes a casing 7 storing a dry, two-ingredient type developer, i.e., a toner and carrier mixture D. A developing roller 8 is rotatable while facing the drum 1. Screws 9 and 10 are rotatable to agitate the developer D. Toner is charged to preselected polarity, e.g., negative polarity by friction acting between it and carrier. The developer D including the charged toner deposits on the developing roller 8. The developing roller 8 in rotation conveys the developer D to a developing position between it and the drum 1. A preselected bias for development, e.g., −600 V is applied to the developing roller 8. As a result, the toner of the developer forming a magnet brush on the developing roller 8 is electrically transferred from the roller 8 to the latent image carried on the drum 1, developing the latent image to thereby produce a toner image. The toner and carrier mixture may be replaced with toner only or a developing liquid.
An image transfer roller, which is a specific form of an image transferring device, is rotatable counterclockwise, as viewed in
A peeler 13 peels the sheet P off the drum 1. The sheet P is then conveyed to a fixing unit not shown. The fixing unit fixes the toner image on the sheet P with heat and pressure. Finally, the sheet or print P is driven out of the apparatus body. The image transfer roller 11 may be replaced with a charger, a brush, a blade or a combination of any of them and a belt.
The sheet P is implemented as, e.g., a paper sheet, a resin sheet or a resin film. The apparatus may additionally include an intermediate image transfer body in the form of an endless belt or a drum. In such a case, the toner image will be transferred to the intermediate image transfer body (primary transfer) and then to the sheet P (secondary transfer).
A cleaning unit 14 removes the toner left on the drum 1 after the image transfer. The cleaning unit 14 includes a casing 16, a cleaning blade 17, and a screw 18. The cleaning blade 17 has a base portion supported by the casing 16 and an edge formed of rubber or similar elastic material and pressed against the drum 1. The cleaning blade 17 scrapes off the toner left on the drum 1. The screw 18 conveys the toner removed by the cleaning blade 17 to the outside of the casing 16. The cleaning blade 17 is a specific form of cleaning means.
In
The charger 3 with the corona wire 4 is spaced from the surface of the drum 1. The charger 3 may be replaced with any other suitable charging device, e.g., a charge roller, a charge blade, a charge brush or even a charging device that injects charge in the image carrier.
The various cleaning means described above may be used in combination, if desired.
As stated above, the essential features of an image forming apparatus to which the present invention is applicable are as follows:
In the apparatus shown in
We conducted a series of researches and experiments to find that ammonium nitrate was the major disfiguring substance to deposit on the image carrier. Presumably, ammonium nitrate is produced by the following mechanism. First, NO2 and water (H2O) react with each other to produce nitric acid (NHO3). Subsequently, NHO3 reacts with ammonia gas (NH3) present in the air to produce ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3). Such reaction steps are formulated as:
4NO2+O2+2H2O→4HNO3
NH3+NHO3→NH4NO3
Presumably, most of ammonium nitrate or disfiguring substance is generated in the air in the form of minute particles, and then ammonium nitrate produced in the vicinity of the image carrier deposits on the image carrier. The disfiguring substance on the image carrier, which is water-soluble, absorbs water in the air in a humid environment and thereby lowers the resistance of the surface of the image carrier. It follows that when the disfiguring substance extends over the latent image and background in a great amount and is not removed, it blurs an image or causes it to be partly lost in a humid environment.
If the cleaning blade is so configured as to wear the surface of the image carrier surface by a relatively great amount, then the disfiguring substance will also be removed from the above surface, obviating defective images. This, however, reduces the life of the image carrier. More specifically, to extend the life of the image carrier, it is necessary to provide the image carrier with a hard surface or to lower pressure to act between the cleaning blade and the image carrier to one that does not excessively reduce the toner removing efficiency. Such a scheme, however, prevents the disfiguring substance deposited on the image carrier from being fully removed and therefore results in defective images. This is also true with the brush 21,
The disfiguring substance removing device 15 embodying the present invention removes the disfiguring substance from the image carrier while reducing the wear of the image carrier or reduces defective images even when the image carrier is so configured as not to be shaved.
As for molecular structure, the adsorbent applicable to the illustrative embodiment has voids having a diameter great enough for the molecules of the disfiguring substance to pass and containing water therein. Use may be made of zeolite by way of example. Generally, in a zeolite crystal, the large voids of condensed anions having the three-dimensional frame structure of aminosilicate contain cations interchangeable with water. A zeolite crystal has various structures, depending on the kind and number of cations. Zeolite therefore has a molecular sieving function and a reversible ion exchanging function derived from the ring structure of voids formed by oxygen. In addition, zeolight has a function of adsorbing and separating dipole, tetrapole, unsaturated bond substances and highly polarizable substances. Further, zeolight allows a substance to migrate in an electronic potential energy field formed in the void constituting a crystal (dispersion in void). Even 3A type zeolite whose void diameter is about 3 Å, which is smallest at the present stage of development, can adsorb water (drying function) and can adsorb hydrogen and methanol. Molecular Sieve (trade name), which is one type of zeolite, has cations in a crystal and exhibits affinity to polar molecules derived from the electrostatic attraction of the cations more than to activated alumina or silica gel (ion affinity). Moreover, Molecular Sieve has a catalytic function that causes various chemical reactions to occur.
Zeolite having the functions described above is supported by a brush, paper, cloth, felt, plastics or rubber and then configured as a roller, a sheet, a plate, a stick or a honeycomb. By holding such a member with zeolite in contact with the surface of an image carrier, it is possible to effective remove the disfiguring substance that brings about defective images.
Why zeolite is effective to remove the disfiguring substance is presumably as follows. Typical of molecular formula of zeolite is:
(MI,MII0.5)m(AlmSinO2(m+1)).xH2O
Zeolite has traditionally been used as a desiccant. The desiccant, however adsorbs water in the voids of zeolite from which water has been removed beforehand. By contrast, the disfiguring substance removing device of the present invention positively uses water present in the voids of zeolite and causes it to adsorb the disfiguring substance for thereby holding the substance in the voids. As shown in
Further, as shown in
Substances other than ammonium nitrate may also bring about defective images, so that the absorbent should preferably have a void diameter great enough to pass the molecules of such substances as well. However, because ammonium nitrate presumably is the major disfiguring substance, the adsorbent capable of passing ammonium nitrate molecule through its voids can efficiently remove the disfiguring substance from the image carrier. Zeolite has three, four, five, six, eight, ten, twelve or eighteen oxygen rings and can be used as the adsorbent without regard to the number of oxygen rings. Zeolite having eight or more oxygen rings is particularly desirable because of a large void diameter.
The adsorbent support may support the adsorbent in any desired manner. For example, the adsorbent may be adhered to the adsorbent support. Alternatively, the adsorbent may be implemented as grains and releasably deposited on the adsorbent support. Further, such configurations may be used in combination.
The disfiguring substance removing device 15 can remove the entire or part of the disfiguring substance deposited on the drum or image carrier 1. This successfully obviates or reduces defective images and thereby insures high image quality. Furthermore, water that is apt to make the surface characteristic of the drum 1 irregular after the removal, as stated earlier, does not have to be applied to the drum 1.
The adsorbent support may be implemented as a sheet, a roller, a plate or a stick by way of example. In
In the condition described above, the elastic body 23 contacts the surface of the drum 1 over a certain width N in the circumferential direction. The adsorbent support 19 therefore contacts the drum 1 uniformly over a broad area and can uniformly remove the disfiguring substance. The elastic body 23 should preferably be formed of a soft material, e.g., rubber, soft resin or foam thereof, e.g., foam polyurethane.
The above modification achieves the following advantage in addition to the advantages described with reference to
While the adsorbent support 19 shown in any one of
Conversely, assume that a drive source, not shown, causes the absorbent support 19 to rotate. Then, the linear velocity of the adsorbent support 19 and that of the drum 1 should preferably be different from each other in order to enhance friction between the drum 1 and the support 19. This promotes more efficient removal of the disfiguring substance from the drum 1.
The adsorbent may be removably deposited on the adsorbent support 19 in the form of grains, as will be described hereinafter.
The configurations shown in
The disfiguring substance removing device 15, which includes at least the adsorbent support 19, may be removably mounted to the apparatus of an image forming apparatus. If desired, the image carrier, disfiguring substance removing device and at least one of the charging device, developing device, image transferring device and cleaning device may be constructed into a single process cartridge, which is removably mounted to the apparatus body.
We found by extended researches and experiments that the nitrate compound deposited on the surface of the image carrier increased the coefficient of friction of the surface and further reduced the life of the image carrier. This fact worth notice will be described more specifically to facilitate an understanding of the present invention.
In
As the curve a indicates, when no disfiguring substance deposits on the image carrier, the coefficient of friction of the image carrier remains substantially constant without regard to the number of sheets passed. By contrast, as the curves b, c and d indicate, the disfiguring substance deposited on the image carrier due to discharge increases the coefficient of friction in the order of charge roller 3, charge roller (DC) 20, and charge roller (AC+DC) 20.
As stated above, the disfiguring substance deposited on the image carrier further reduces the life of the image carrier. Stated another way, the life of the image carrier can be extended if the disfiguring substance is removed from the image carrier.
The image forming apparatus described above includes the disfiguring substance removing device and image carrier to contact the adsorbent carried on the adsorbent support. The adsorbent support 19 may be located at any desired position. However, the adsorbent support 19 should preferably be located at a position downstream, in the direction of rotation of the image carrier, of the position where the cleaning means contacts the image carrier for removing residual toner, but upstream of a position where the latent image forming means (laser writing unit 5) writs a latent image on the image carrier. This applies to all the configurations shown in
More preferably, the adsorbent support 19 should be located at a position downstream of a position where the charging device charges the image carrier, but upstream of the position where the latent image writing means writes a latent image on the image carrier. In this condition, part of the image carrier on which the disfiguring substance is present immediately arrives at the adsorbent support 19 and adsorbed thereby. This obviates defective images more positively.
Further, without regard to the position of the adsorbent support 19, the cleaning means contacts part of the image carrier whose coefficient of friction has been lowered due to the removal of the disfiguring substance. The cleaning means therefore causes the image carrier to wear little. Consequently, not only defective images are obviated, but also the wear of the image carrier is reduced.
Moreover, assume that the image carrier is formed of an amorphous silicon photoconductor. Then, the surface of the image carrier achieves hardness high enough to extend the life of the image carrier. In addition, the adsorbent removes the disfiguring substance from the image carrier to thereby obviate defective images. This is also true when the image carrier is implemented by a photoconductor having on its surface a layer in which, e.g., alumina powder of 0.1 μm or less is dispersed as a filer.
Further experimental results will be described hereinafter in order to prove the fact that the adsorbent support with zeolite effectively removes the disfiguring material from the image carrier.
In the arrangement shown in
The arrangements shown in
The arrangement shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The experimental results described with reference to
The present invention is applicable to various image forming apparatuses including one that exposes a charged image carrier imagewise and deposits toner on a latent image higher in the absolute value of charge than a background, and one that forms a color image.
In summary, it will be seen that the present invention provides a disfiguring substance removing device capable of obviating or effectively reducing defective images ascribable to a disfiguring substance.
Various modifications will become possible for those skilled in the art after receiving the teachings of the present disclosure without departing from the scope thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2000-403395 | Dec 2000 | JP | national |
2001-376440 | Dec 2001 | JP | national |
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