Cross reference is made to the following concurrently filed application, the disclosure of which is totally incorporated by reference herein: U.S. application Ser. No. 12/184,116, filed Jul. 31, 2008, now published as U.S. Publication No 2010-0028054-A1, and entitled “Powdered Toner Direct Marking Apparatus.”
The following U.S. patents are specifically incorporated by reference herein: U.S. Pat. No. 7,217,901; U.S. Pat. No. 7,293,862; and U.S. Pat. No. 7,304,258.
The subject disclosure is generally directed to a direct marking apparatus, such as a printer or other hardcopy apparatus, that uses powdered toner as a marking component.
Conventional marking apparatus that use powdered toner as a marking component commonly employ electrostatographic techniques wherein an electrostatic latent image is lightwise formed on a photoconductive imaging surface and then developed by deposition of suitably electrically charged powdered toner on the photoconductive imaging surface. The developed image is transferred to an output medium (e.g., paper or other substrate), for example via a suitable transfer member such as a transfer belt or roll. After the transfer of the developed image to the output medium, the developed image is fixed, for example by application of pressure and/or heat.
Known powdered toner marking apparatus can be complex.
As more particularly described herein, the feed mechanism 30, the marking mechanism 40 and the recovery mechanism can comprise portions of a traveling wave grid that cooperate to transport a powdered toner cloud through the marking mechanism, and are configured to control the height or shape of the powdered toner cloud. The marking mechanism 40 is more particularly configured to selectively release and project patches of powdered toner (of controlled thickness, for example) to an output medium 81, wherein the patches of powdered toner generally comprise relatively small amounts of powdered toner. The propelled toner patches can also be called pixels for convenience. In that regard, the feed mechanism 30, the marking mechanism 40 and the recovery mechanism 50 can be more particularly configured to prevent the transported powdered toner from coming into contact with an output medium except as commanded by the print mechanism 40.
The traveling wave grid feed portion 130 includes electrodes or conductive traces 131 and spacers 132, the traveling wave grid marking portion 140 includes electrodes or conductive traces 141 and spacers 142, and the traveling wave grid extraction portion 150 includes electrodes or conductive traces 151 and spacers 152. The traveling wave grid circuit structure further includes a thin electrically insulating outer layer 14 that overlies the electrodes 131, 141, 151 and the spacers 132, 142, 152, and provides an electrically insulated transport surface 15.
The marking mechanism 40 further includes a receiver structure 80 that is adjacent the traveling wave grid marking portion 140 and separated therefrom by a gap 13. The receiver structure 60 suitably supports an output medium 81 such a receiver substrate generally oppositely the traveling wave grid portion 140. The output medium 81 can comprise a hardcopy substrate such as paper or film, or a transfer coating, for example.
The traveling wave circuit structure 60 is configured to transport a powdered toner cloud 111 along the transport surface 15 from the feed region 130 to the marking region 140 to the recovery region 150, generally along a transport direction D. The traveling wave grid circuit structure 60 is further configured to control the height of the powdered toner cloud such that it does not come into contact with the output medium 81 and produce unwanted development or marking. For example, the traveling wave grid marking portion 140 is configured to produce an electric field that is flatter than the electric fields produced by the grid regions 130, 150, so as to allow the toner cloud to “duck” as it passes through the narrow part of the gap 13 without contacting the output medium 81 (except as commanded by other components of the marking mechanism described further herein). This can be accomplished, for example, by appropriately selecting the pitch or spacing of the traces 141 of the traveling wave grid marking region 140 and/or selecting the material of the spacers 142 of the traveling wave grid marking region 140. For example, the pitch or spacing of the traces 141 of the traveling wave grid marking region 140 can be greater than the spacing of the traces 131, 151 of the traveling wave grid feed and extraction regions 130, 150. As a further example, the spacers 142 of the traveling wave grid marking region 140 can comprise a finite conductivity material (i.e., electrically resistive) such as carbon impregnated rubber while the spacers 132, 152 of the traveling wave grid feed and extraction regions 130, 150 can comprise dielectric material. The finitely conductive spacers 142 (which can be formed of resistive film, for example) function to conduct a surface current which allows for a linear lateral drop of the surface voltage. The electric field is flattened to lie on the surface of the finitely conductive spacers. Toner follows the field lines and therefore transit the gap in sliding contact with the transport surface 15 of the thin outer layer 14. The electric field generated by the traveling wave grid marking region 140 supports a few particle layers of toner that adhere to the transport surface by van der Waals adhesion. In other words, toner is transported over the traveling wave grid marking region 140 as a sheet or carpet of toner of controlled thickness.
By way of illustrative example, the traveling wave grid 60 can comprise conductive traces and intervening spacers of suitable composition deposited or printed on a non-conductive substrate such as a polyamide layer. The conductive traces and the spacers can be covered with a Tedlar or Kapton film that can form the electrically insulating outer layer 14.
By way of further illustrative examples, the traveling wave grid can be generally planar or arcuate (as schematically depicted in
The marking mechanism 40 further includes electric field concentrator and electric field generating components for releasing patches of powdered toner and projecting released toner patches onto the output medium 81. For example, the marking mechanism includes an array 90 of addressable insulated electrically conductive pins 91 that pass through one or more finitely conductive spacers 142 so as to extend to but not through the electrically insulating outer layer 14. The conductive pins 91 are electrically insulated from the associated finitely conductive spacer 142 by a suitable insulation layer 94, and are selectively addressably driven (e.g., pulsed) by a print drive circuit 93 to release or detach toner patches from the portion of the toner cloud or sheet adjacent the electrically conductive pins 91. The released toner patches are projected or accelerated to the output medium 81 by a projecting DC electric field generated by a circuit that includes a DC voltage source 17, the receiver structure 80, and the electrically conductive pins 91. For example, the voltage source 17 biases the portion of the receiver structure 80 adjacent the back of the output medium 81 with respect to the electrically conductive pins 91 using a voltage of opposite polarity to attract the released toner patches. The projecting electric field is constantly on and by itself is below the detachment threshold or insufficient to electrostatically detach toner from the relatively thin toner cloud sheet traveling over the traveling wave grid marking region 140. In this manner, the toner sheet is biased at a DC voltage level that is below the detachment voltage.
The electrically conductive pins 91 can be arranged in one or more rows oriented generally transverse to the toner transport direction D, as generally depicted in
By way of illustrative example, the electrically conductive pins have a cross section that is less than the desired pixel size and are driven in a manner that in the presence of the projecting electric field causes patches of toner to overcome van der Waals adhesion and be released or detached from the toner sheet and projected across the gap 13 by the projecting field.
Referring now to
Since the toner release area depends on radial voltage spread, the electrically conductive pins can be pulsed in such a manner as to control the volume or amount of toner in each of the toner patches that are released, and in this manner gray scale printing can be accomplished.
More particularly, the electrically conductive pins can be selectively driven in a time modulated (e.g., pulse width) and/or voltage (i.e., amplitude) modulated manner. The time modulation mode represented in
The finitely conductive spacer 142 that is associated with an insulated conductive pin 91 can more particularly be designed for the desired print speed, for example for an RC spread time that is shorter than the latency between printed pixels. The effective resistance R of a finitely conductive spacer is:
R=ρ(r−ao)2πrh, ao≦r≦a
wherein:
R is the resistance at radial distance r from the center of the conductive pin 91;
ρ is the resistivity of the finitely conductive spacer 142;
r is radial distance measured from the center of a conductive pin 91;
ao is the radius of a conductive pin 91;
a is the outer radius of the pixel; and
h is the thickness of the finely conductive spacer 142.
The claims, as originally presented and as they may be amended, encompass variations, alternatives, modifications, improvements, equivalents, and substantial equivalents of the embodiments and teachings disclosed herein, including those that are presently unforeseen or unappreciated, and that, for example, may arise from applicants/patentees and others. Unless specifically recited in a claim, steps or components of claims should not be implied or imported from the specification or any other claims as to any particular order, number, position, size, shape, angle, color, or material.
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6175707 | Eklund et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100028055 A1 | Feb 2010 | US |