This invention relates, generally, to image-forming machines and methods and, more specifically, to the fusing systems in an electrophotographic reproduction machine.
Electrophotographic image-forming machines are used to transfer images onto paper or other medium in both printing and facsimile systems. Generally, a photoconductor is selectively charged and optically exposed to form an electrostatic latent image on the surface. Toner is deposited onto the charged photoconductor surface. The toner has a charge, thus it will adhere to the photoconductor surface in areas corresponding to the electrostatic latent image. The toner image is transferred to the paper or other medium. The toned paper is heated by a fuser roller system for the toner to fuse to the paper. The photoconductor is then refreshed—cleaned to remove any residual toner and charge—to make it ready for another image. The imaged paper is then passed to a document output collection area or tray where the user collects the finished, permanently imaged paper or documents.
The fuser roll used in this fuser roller system eventually becomes contaminated with a film or debris containing by-products of toner and others, including silicone contaminants and metal salts. This contamination usually takes the form of a hard film which eventually builds up and adversely affects the performance of the fuser roll.
While this fuser roll contamination can occur in any electrophotographic printer or copier, it causes more image quality defects in color or multi-function copiers. Generally, the fuser roll becomes contaminated, as earlier noted, with by-products of fuser chemical reactions which eventually cause early failure of the fusing system and fuser roll. Sometimes, this problem is solved with modifications of the fuser material set (fuser release fluids, toner, etc.). These modifications can be complicated, are not always successful and typically have a long cycle time to become effective and to implement. Other times, there is no practical solution to this fuser roll contamination due to competing effects of control factors.
Problems with debris on the fuser roller can eventually affect the pressure roll and the quality and clarity of the imaged paper in contact with the fuser roller. Also, the life of the relatively expensive fuser roll can be substantially shortened if this contamination problem is not addressed.
In a high speed printer fuser system, the fuser roll is usually contacted by two external heat rolls which have, as their primary object, the transfer of heat to the fuser roll. At one location, these external heat rolls are in contact with the fuser roll and, at a different location, they are in contact with a web that cleans these external heat rolls.
This web usually is made from NOMEX (a trademark of DuPont Corporation). In some instances, the contamination of the fuser roll is eventually transferred to the cleaning web and could lessen its intended purpose or effectiveness. The fuser rolls are usually made from a fluro-elastomer coated with VITON (a trademark of DuPont Corporation). The external heat rolls, generally, have an aluminum anodized surface which contacts substantially the entire width fuser roll surface during the fusing operation or step.
The fusing system in an embodiment comprises, in operative relationship, a fuser roll, at least one external heat roll and a pressure roll. The fuser roll is in operative contact with the external heat roll(s) during the fusing step. The external heat roll(s) has a predetermined surface roughness which will clean any surface contamination film or debris from the surface of the fuser roll when in contact therewith in a cleaning step and/or during the fusing step. This roughness on the surface of the heat roll is a random roughness like sandpaper or is a designed or patterned roughness. This pattern roughness can be created on the surface of the heat roll by etching, laser, mechanical designing or any other suitable method. When the roughness is random, this random roughness is equivalent to from about a two (2) to about a fifteen (15) micron R. A. (Roughness Average) as determined by industry standards. Both the random and patterned roughness will remove surface contamination from the fuser roll and will improve the print quality of the imaged paper or receiving medium. Also, it will extend the life of the relatively expensive fuser roll. The roughened external heat rolls will also use its relative motion or creep against the fuser roll to enhance the cleaning process.
The debris or film removed from the fuser roll can later be collected in the system for disposal. It is important that the surface roughness on the heating rolls be predetermined to be enough to remove the debris and yet not unduly abrade the surface of the fuser roll. The fuser roll should be substantially the same length as the external heat roll(s) for a maximum cleaning function on all parts of the fuser roll surface.
The fusing roll at a first location is in operative contact with the pressure roll and is in operative contact at a second location with the external heat roll or rolls. The patterned roughness can be of any suitable pattern including grooves, projections, pits, indentations, holes, sinusoidal waves, scrapers and mixtures thereof.
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The preferred and optimally preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described herein and shown in the accompanying drawings to illustrate the underlying principles of the invention, but it is to be understood that numerous modifications and ramifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention.