The present invention relates to seals which may be used in an image forming apparatus. The seals may prevent the leakage of image forming materials, e.g., as between components and a housing in the image forming device. The image forming apparatus may include an electrophotographic device, ink printer, copier, fax, all-in-one device or multi-functional device
An image forming device, such as an electrophotographic device, ink printer, copier, fax, all-in-one device or multi-functional device may use developing agents such as toner or ink, which are stored in a cartridge and may be disposed on media to form an image. The developing agent, such as toner, may be fixed to the media using an image fixing apparatus, which may apply heat and/or pressure to the toner. Leakage of the toner from the cartridge may occur as it may be difficult to seal gaps between a rotating roll, a cleaning or doctor blade and the housing of the cartridge. Seals may be provided to effectively close the gaps and prevent toner leakage. Positioning of the roll against the seal and tolerance stack-up of the various mating components may create uneven stress and a non-uniform temperature profile. At higher printing speeds, heat may be generated due to the compression of the seal against the rotating roll causing the toner to melt. Design of the seal may therefore be an important factor in cartridge life.
In a first exemplary embodiment, the present invention is directed at a sealing member for sealing between printer components. The sealing member includes a first surface to be engaged with one of the components and a second surface capable of biasing the first surface to engage with the component. The biasing may result in the development of a contact pressure as between the first surface of the seal and the component and the contact pressure may also be substantially uniform as between the first surface of the seal and the component.
In a second exemplary embodiment the present invention is directed at a sealing member for sealing between printer components. The seal includes a first surface to be engaged with one of the components and a second surface capable of biasing the first surface to frictionally engage with the printer component thereby developing a temperature wherein the temperature between the first surface of the seal and the printer component may be substantially uniform.
In a third exemplary embodiment the present invention is directed at a sealing member for sealing between printer components. The seal includes a first surface capable of engaging with a surface of one of the printer components wherein the first surface includes one or a plurality of grooves. The grooves may include a wall component that is capable of forming an angle greater than 45 degrees and less than 135 degrees when engaged with the surface of the printer component.
The detailed description below may be better understood with reference to the accompanying figures which are provided for illustrative purposes and are not to be considered as limiting any aspect of the invention.
The present invention relates to seals which may be used between component surfaces, such as component surfaces in an image forming apparatus. The seals may prevent the leakage of image forming materials, e.g. as between a blade and a housing or between a roll and a housing in the image forming apparatus. The blade may be a “doctor blade” which may control the thickness of image forming material on a given surface, such as a roll surface. The roll may specifically include a developer roll which supplies image forming material (toner) to a photosensitive drum.
With reference first to
The interference of the roll or blade to the seal may be determined by the position of the roll and blade, respectively. Depending on the amount of interference, which may be due primarily to the positioning and/or to the tolerance stack-up of various components, higher speeds of printing may result in high temperatures and melting of the toner. This build-up of heat may be further exacerbated by the composition of the roll surface and seal, often both relatively soft elastomers. Melted toner may then wedge between the doctor blade and developer roll which may lead to printer malfunction or failure.
As can be seen, the seal may include a rotary seal portion 26 which may seal the space formed between the housing 12 and rotary member or developer roller 18. The sealing face of the rotary seal portion which is adjacent to the surface of the rotary member is shown in
The seal 10 also may includes a blade seal portion 30 for sealing the space formed between the frame member or cartridge housing 12 and the blade member 20 in an image forming apparatus. The blade seal portion 30 of the seal 10 may be generally formed such that it is held in place between the blade member and the frame member when positioned in use.
The seal 10 herein may include a biasing feature 32 which may run along all or a portion of the back surface 24. Such biasing, when experienced between the housing 12 and roll 18 and/or as between the housing 12 and blade 20 may therefore bias the seal 10 toward and against such exemplary components. As can be seen in
Accordingly, biasing feature 32 may specifically include a pair of rib structures that extend from all or the entirety of the length of back surface 24 of the seal 10 (see
It is also worth noting that the biasing feature of the present invention may implicate other useful performance attributes. This may be illustrated by a finite element analysis of the seal 10 as presented in
With attention first directed to
Accordingly,
It can now be appreciated that the seal of the present invention may therefore provide a more uniform temperature distribution as between, e.g., the developer roller 18 and seal 10, particularly at relatively high printing speeds. More precisely, by controlling and providing substantially uniform contact pressure along the sealing surface as between the seal 10 and developer roller 18, encroachment upon temperatures that would be sufficient to initiate melting or some level of flow of any one or more of the constituents of the toner (e.g., polymer resin, colorant, wax, inorganic salts) may be avoided. Attention is therefore directed to
Finally, attention is directed to
Although the seals of the present invention have been illustrated using the specific embodiments described herein, the present invention is intended to encompass the seals as broadly described herein, including all equivalent structures of those specifically described in the present application. However, it should be apparent that changes and modifications may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070140729 A1 | Jun 2007 | US |