The present invention relates to a fixing device which fixes an image on a recording medium, and an image forming apparatus including the fixing device.
A variety of image forming apparatuses, such as copiers, printers, facsimile machines, and multifunction machines combining several of the functions of these apparatuses, use a fixing device which includes a relatively thin fixing belt constructed, for example, of a metal substrate and an elastic rubber surface layer. With such a relatively thin fixing belt, the energy required to heat the fixing belt is substantially reduced, and a reduction in warm-up time and first-print time is achieved. The warm-up time refers to the time taken to raise the temperature of the fixing belt from a normal temperature to a predetermined reload temperature allowing printing when, for example, power is turned on. The first-print time refers to the time from the reception of a print request to the completion of a sheet discharging operation followed by a print preparatory operation and a printing operation.
As illustrated in
To achieve further energy conservation and reduction in first-print time, the fixing device may be configured to directly heat the endless belt 100 without using the metal heat conductor 200. In the example illustrated in
The fixing device may also be configured to include deformation preventing ribs for preventing the endless belt 100 from being pressed and deformed radially inward by, for example, a plurality of sheets fed in an overlapped manner.
In the fixing device including the above-described endless belt 100, at a position upstream of the nip portion N in the sheet feeding direction indicated by the arrows, the rotated endless belt 100 is pulled toward the nip portion N, and thereby tension is generated. In the configuration which guides the endless belt 100 by using the nip forming member 500, therefore, the rotated endless belt 100 comes into relatively hard contact with an upstream edge of the nip forming member 500, and thus may be damaged or broken.
Such damage or breakage of the endless belt is more likely to occur particularly in a fixing device which uses an endless belt further reduced in thickness to meet demand in recent years for energy conservation and reduction in first-print time and thus reduced in strength.
The present invention provides a novel fixing device that, in one example, fixes an image on a recording medium and includes an endless fixing rotary member, an opposed rotary member, a nip forming member, a support member, and a heating source. The fixing rotary member is formed into a loop and configured to come into contact with the image carried on the recording medium. The opposed rotary member is configured to be in contact with the fixing rotary member. The nip forming member is provided inside the loop formed by the fixing rotary member to be in contact with the opposed rotary member via the fixing rotary member to form, between the fixing rotary member and the opposed rotary member, a nip portion to which the recording medium is fed in a feeding direction. The nip forming member includes a downstream portion extending downstream in the feeding direction from a center of the nip portion, and an upstream portion extending upstream in the feeding direction from the center of the nip portion and longer than the downstream portion. The support member is configured to support the nip forming member. The heating source is configured to heat the fixing rotary member.
The present invention further provides a novel image forming apparatus that, in one example, includes an image forming unit configured to form an image on a recording medium and the above-described fixing device configured to fix the image on the recording medium.
A more complete appreciation of the invention and many of the advantages thereof are obtained as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In describing the embodiments illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology is adopted for the purpose of clarity. However, the disclosure of the present invention is not intended to be limited to the specific terminology so used, and it is to be understood that substitutions for each specific element can include any technical equivalents that operate in a similar manner and achieve a similar result.
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate members or components having the same function or shape throughout the several views, embodiments of the present invention will be described. In the following, redundant description of members or components once described will be omitted.
With reference to
An image forming apparatus 1 illustrated in
Specifically, each of the image forming units 4Y, 4M, 4C, and 4K includes a drum-shaped photoconductor 5 serving as a latent image carrier, a charging device 6 which charges the outer circumferential surface of the photoconductor 5, a development device 7 which supplies toner to the outer circumferential surface of the photoconductor 5, and a cleaning device 8 which cleans the outer circumferential surface of the photoconductor 5. In
Below the image forming units 4Y, 4M, 4C, and 4K, an exposure device 9 is provided which exposes the respective outer circumferential surfaces of the photoconductors 5. The exposure device 9, which includes light sources, a polygon mirror, f-θ lenses, and reflecting mirrors, selectively irradiates the outer circumferential surfaces of the photoconductors 5 with beams of laser light on the basis of image data.
Above the image forming units 4Y, 4M, 4C, and 4K, a transfer device 3 is provided which includes an intermediate transfer belt 30 serving as a transfer member, four primary transfer rollers 31 serving as primary transfer devices, a secondary transfer roller 36 serving as a secondary transfer device, a secondary transfer backup roller 32, a cleaning backup roller 33, a tension roller 34, and a belt cleaning device 35.
The intermediate transfer belt 30 is an endless belt stretched around the secondary transfer backup roller 32, the cleaning backup roller 33, and the tension roller 34. In the present embodiment, the secondary transfer backup roller 32 is driven to rotate, and causes the intermediate transfer belt 30 to rotate in the direction indicated by arrow A in
The four primary transfer rollers 31 and the photoconductors 5 hold the intermediate transfer belt 30 therebetween to form primary transfer nips. Each of the primary transfer rollers 31 is connected to a not-illustrated power supply, and is supplied with a predetermined direct-current (DC) voltage and/or a predetermined alternating-current (AC) voltage.
The secondary transfer roller 36 and the secondary transfer backup roller 32 hold the intermediate transfer belt 30 therebetween to form a secondary transfer nip. Similarly to the primary transfer rollers 31, the secondary transfer roller 36 is connected to a not-illustrated power supply, and is supplied with a predetermined DC voltage and/or a predetermined AC voltage.
The belt cleaning device 35 includes a cleaning brush and a cleaning blade, which are disposed to be in contact with the intermediate transfer belt 30. A not-illustrated waste toner transport tube extending from the belt cleaning device 35 is connected to an inlet of a not-illustrated waste toner container.
In an upper portion of the body of the image forming apparatus 1, a bottle housing unit 2 is provided. Four toner bottles 2Y, 2M, 2C, and 2K each containing refill toner are installed in the bottle housing unit 2 to be attachable thereto and detachable therefrom. Not-illustrated refill paths are provided between the toner bottles 2Y, 2M, 2C, and 2K and the development devices 7 to allow the development devices 7 to be refilled with the toners from the toner bottles 2Y, 2M, 2C, and 2K via the refill paths.
Meanwhile, in a lower portion of the body of the image forming apparatus 1, a sheet feeding tray 10 and a sheet feed roller 11 are provided. The sheet feeding tray 10 stores a sheet P serving as a recording medium, and the sheet feed roller 11 feeds the sheet P from the sheet feeding tray 10. Herein, the recording medium includes, as well as plain paper, cardboard, a postcard, an envelope, thin paper, coated paper, art paper, tracing paper, and an overhead projector (OHP) sheet, for example. Optionally, the image forming apparatus 1 may also include a manual sheet feeding mechanism, which for simplicity is not illustrated herein.
In the body of the image forming apparatus 1, a feed path R is provided to allow the sheet P fed from the sheet feeding tray 10 to pass through the secondary transfer nip and be discharged outside the image forming apparatus 1. On the upstream side of the secondary transfer roller 36 in the sheet feeding direction, the feed path R is provided with a registration roller pair 12 serving as a feeding device which feeds the sheet P to the secondary transfer nip.
On the downstream side of the secondary transfer roller 36 in the sheet feeding direction, the feed path R is provided with a fixing device 20 that fixes an unfixed image transferred to the sheet P. On the downstream side of the fixing device 20 in the sheet feeding direction, the feed path R is provided with a sheet discharge roller pair 13 which portion of the body of the image forming apparatus 1 forms a sheet discharge tray 14 onto which the sheet P is discharged outside the image forming apparatus 1.
With reference to
Further, when the image forming operation starts, the secondary transfer backup roller 32 is driven to rotate counterclockwise in
Thereafter, in accordance with the rotation of the photoconductors 5, the toner images of the respective colors on the photoconductors 5 reach the respective primary transfer nips, and are sequentially superimposed and transferred onto the intermediate transfer belt 30 by the transfer electric fields generated in the primary transfer nips. Thereby, a full-color toner image is carried by the outer circumferential surface of the intermediate transfer belt 30. Residual toners having failed to be transferred to the intermediate transfer belt 30 and remaining on the photoconductors 5 are removed by the cleaning devices 8. Thereafter, the outer circumferential surfaces of the photoconductors 5 are discharged by not-illustrated discharging devices, and respective surface potentials of the photoconductors 5 are initialized.
In a lower portion of the image forming apparatus 1, the sheet feed roller 11 starts to be driven to rotate, and feeds the sheet P to the feed path R from the sheet feeding tray 10. The sheet P fed to the feed path R is fed into the secondary transfer nip between the secondary transfer roller 36 and the secondary transfer backup roller 32 with appropriate timing by the registration roller pair 12. In this process, the secondary transfer roller 36 is supplied with a transfer voltage having a polarity opposite that of the toners of the toner images on the intermediate transfer belt 30 to generate a transfer electric field in the secondary transfer nip.
Thereafter, in accordance with the rotation of the intermediate transfer belt 30, the toner images on the intermediate transfer belt 30 reach the secondary transfer nip, and are transferred at the same time onto the sheet P by the transfer electric field generated in the secondary transfer nip. Residual toners having failed to be transferred to the sheet P and remaining on the intermediate transfer belt 30 are removed by the belt cleaning device 35 and transported to the not-illustrated waste toner container.
Thereafter, the sheet P is fed to the fixing device 20, and the toner images on the sheet P are fixed on the sheet P by the fixing device 20. Then, the sheet P is discharged outside the image forming apparatus 1 by the sheet discharge roller pair 13, and is placed onto the sheet discharge tray 14.
Although the above description has been given of the image forming operation of forming a full-color image on the sheet P, the image forming apparatus 1 is also capable of forming a monochromatic image by using only one of the four image forming units 4Y, 4M, 4C, and 4K, and forming an image of two or three colors by using two or three of the image forming units 4Y, 4M, 4C, and 4K.
The configuration of the fixing device 20 will now be described with reference to
The fixing belt 21 is a relatively thin, flexible endless belt or film. Specifically, the fixing belt 21 includes a substrate on the inner circumferential side and a release layer on the outer circumferential side. The substrate is made of a metal material, such as nickel or stainless steel (SUS), or a resin material, such as polyimide (PT). The release layer is made of, for example, tetrafluoroethylene-perfluoroalkyl vinyl ether copolymer (PFA) or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE). An elastic layer made of a rubber material, such as a silicone rubber, a foamed silicone rubber, or a fluororubber, may be provided between the substrate and the release layer.
The pressure roller 22 includes a core bar 22a, an elastic layer 22b, and a release layer 22c. The elastic layer 22b is made of a foamed silicone rubber, a silicone rubber, or a fluororubber, for example, and provided on the outer circumferential surface of the core bar 22a. The release layer 22c is made of PFA or PTFE, for example, and provided on the outer circumferential surface of the elastic layer 22b. The pressure roller 22 is biased toward the fixing belt 21 by the not-illustrated biasing member to be in contact with the nip forming member 24 via the fixing belt 21. In the area of pressure contact between the pressure roller 22 and the fixing belt 21, the elastic layer 22b of the pressure roller 22 deforms to form a nip portion N having a predetermined width along the sheet feeding direction. Further, the pressure roller 22 is configured to be driven to rotate by a not-illustrated drive source, such as a motor, provided to the body of the image forming apparatus 1. When the pressure roller 22 is driven to rotate, drive force of the pressure roller 22 is transmitted to the fixing belt 21 in the nip portion N, and thereby the fixing belt 21 is driven to rotate.
Although the pressure roller 22 of the present embodiment is a solid roller, alternatively the pressure roller 22 may be a hollow roller. In that case, a heating source, such as a halogen heater, may be provided inside the pressure roller 22. Further, if the elastic layer 22b is absent, the heat capacity is reduced, and the fixing performance is improved. In the process of pressing and fixing the unfixed toner on the sheet P, however, minute irregularities of the outer circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21 may be transferred to the image and cause uneven glossiness in a solid portion of the image. To prevent such a phenomenon, it is preferable to provide an elastic layer having a thickness of approximately 100 μm or more. If an elastic layer having a thickness of approximately 100 μm or more is provided, the above-described minute irregularities are absorbed by the elastically deformed elastic layer, and thus the uneven glossiness is prevented. The elastic layer 22b may be made of solid rubber. If there is no heating source inside the pressure roller 22, the elastic layer 22b may be made of sponge rubber, in that sponge rubber improves heat insulation and suppresses heat loss of the fixing belt 21 better than solid rubber does. Further, the configuration of the fixing belt 21 serving as the fixing rotary member and the 15 pressure roller 22 serving as the opposed rotary member is not limited to the configuration in which the fixing belt 21 and the pressure roller 22 press against each other. For example, the fixing belt 21 and the pressure roller 22 may be configured to simply be in contact with each other, with no pressure applied thereto.
The halogen heater 23 has opposed end portions fixed to not-illustrated side plates of the fixing device 20. The halogen heater 23 is configured to generate heat under output control by a not-illustrated power supply unit provided to the body of the image forming apparatus 1. The output control is performed on the basis of the result of detection of the surface temperature of the fixing belt 21 by the temperature sensor 27. With this output control of the halogen heater 23, the temperature of the fixing belt 21, i.e., the fixing temperature is adjustable to a desired temperature. Further, the heating source for heating the fixing belt 21 is not limited to a halogen heater, and alternatively may be an induction heater (1H), a resistance heater, or a carbon heater, for example.
The nip forming member 24 includes a base pad 241 and a sliding sheet 240 which is a low-friction sheet provided on at least a surface of the base pad 241 facing the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21. The base pad 241 continuously extending in the axial direction of the fixing belt 21, i.e., the axial direction of the pressure roller 22, is subjected to pressure applied by the pressure roller 22, and determines the shape of the nip portion N. Further, the base pad 241 is fixedly supported by the stay 25. This configuration prevents the nip forming member 24 from being bent by the pressure applied by the pressure roller 22, and maintains a uniform nip width in the axial direction of the pressure roller 22. To prevent bending of the nip forming member 24, it is preferable to use a metal material having relatively high mechanical strength, such as stainless steel or iron, to form the stay 25. It is also preferable to use a relatively hard material to form the base pad 241 to secure the strength thereof. A resin such as liquid crystal polymer (LCP), a metal, or a ceramic, for example, may be used as the material forming the base pad 241.
Further, the base pad 241 is a heat-resistant member capable of withstanding temperatures of approximately 200 degrees Celsius or higher. Accordingly, deformation of the nip forming member 24 due to heat is prevented in a toner fixing temperature range, and a stable state of the nip portion N is secured to provide consistently good quality of the output image. The base pad 241 may be made of a commonly used heat-resistant resin, such as polyether sulfone (PES), polyphenylene sulfide (PPS), liquid crystal polymer (LCP), polyether nitrile (PEN), polyamide-imide (PAI), or polyether ether ketone (PEEK).
As noted above, the sliding sheet 240 is provided on at least a surface of the base pad 241 facing the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21. With this configuration, the rotated fixing belt 21 slides over the low-friction sliding sheet 240. Thereby, drive torque generated in the fixing belt 21 is reduced, and a load on the fixing belt 21 due to friction is reduced. Alternatively, the nip forming member 24 may be configured without the sliding sheet 240.
The reflector 26 is provided between the stay 25 and the halogen heater 23. In the present embodiment, the reflector 26 is fixed to the stay 25. The reflector 26 may be made of a material such as aluminum or stainless steel, for example. With the thus-provided reflector 26, the light radiated from the halogen heater 23 toward the stay 25 is reflected to the fixing belt 21. Thereby, the amount of energy applied to the fixing belt 21 is increased, and the fixing belt 21 is efficiently heated. Further, the transfer of radiant heat from the halogen heater 23 to components such as the stay 25 is minimized. Accordingly, energy conservation is achieved.
The fixing device 20 according to the present embodiment has various features for achieving further energy conservation and reduction in first-print time. Specifically, a portion of the fixing belt 21 other than a portion of the fixing belt 21 corresponding to the nip portion N is directly heated by the halogen heater 23, i.e., heated by a direct heating method. In the present embodiment, the space between the halogen heater 23 and a left portion of the fixing belt 21 in
Further, to reduce the heat capacity of the fixing belt 21, the fixing belt 21 is reduced in thickness and diameter. Specifically, the respective thicknesses of the substrate, the elastic layer, and the release layer forming the fixing belt 21 are set to a range of from approximately 20 μm to approximately 50 μm, a range of from approximately 100 μm to approximately 300 μm, and a range of from approximately 10 μm to approximately 50 μm, respectively, and the overall thickness of the fixing belt 21 is set to approximately 1 mm or less. Further, the diameter of the fixing belt 21 in its deployed looped configuration is set to a range of from approximately 20 mm to approximately 40 mm. To achieve a further reduction in heat capacity, it is preferable to set the overall thickness of the fixing belt 21 to approximately 0.2 mm or less, more preferably approximately 0.16 mm or less, and to set the diameter of the fixing belt 21 in its deployed looped configuration to approximately 30 mm or less.
In the present embodiment, the diameter of the pressure roller 22 in its deployed looped configuration is set to a range of from approximately 20 mm to approximately 40 mm, i.e., the fixing belt 21 and the pressure roller 22 are configured to have a substantially equal diameter. The configuration of the fixing belt 21 and the pressure roller 22, however, is not limited to the above. For example, the fixing belt 21 and the pressure roller 22 may be configured such that the fixing belt 21 is smaller in diameter in its deployed looped configuration than the pressure roller 22. In that case, the curvature of the fixing belt 21 is greater than the curvature of the pressure roller 22 in the nip portion N, and thus the sheet P fed out of the nip portion N is more easily separated from the fixing belt 21.
The above-described reduction in diameter of the fixing belt 21 results in a reduction of the space inside the fixing belt 21. Accordingly, the stay 25 is bent at opposite ends thereof to be formed into a recessed shape, and the halogen heater 23 is housed inside the recessed stay 25. Accordingly, the reduced space is still capable of housing both the stay 25 and the halogen heater 23.
Further, to increase the size of the stay 25 as much as possible in the reduced space, the size of the nip forming member 24 is conversely reduced. Specifically, the width of the base pad 241 in the sheet feeding direction is set to be less than the width of the stay 25 in the sheet feeding direction. Further, in
Further, to reinforce the stay 25, the stay 25 of the present embodiment is configured to include a base portion 25a and arms 25b substantially perpendicular to the base portion 25a. The base portion 25a is in contact with the nip forming member 24, and extends in the sheet feeding direction, i.e., the vertical direction in
Further, if the arms 25b are increased in length in the contact direction of the pressure roller 22, the strength of the stay 25 is increased. Therefore, it is preferable that respective leading ends of the arms 25b are as close as possible to the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21. During the rotation of the fixing belt 21, however, some deflection, i.e., disturbance in behavior occurs in the fixing belt 21. If the leading ends of the arms 25b are too close to the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21, therefore, the fixing belt 21 may come into contact with the leading ends of the arms 25b. Particularly in the configuration using the relatively thin fixing belt 21, as in the present embodiment, the range of deflection of the fixing belt 21 is relatively large. Therefore, positioning of the leading ends of the arms 25b requires attention.
Specifically, in the present embodiment, it is preferable to set a distance d between each of the leading ends of the arms 25b and the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21 in the contact direction of the pressure roller 22 to at least approximately 2.0 mm, more preferably approximately 3.0 mm or more. Conversely, if the fixing belt 21 is thick enough to have little deflection, the distance d may be set to approximately 0.02 mm. if the reflector 26 is attached to the leading ends of the arms 25b, as in the present embodiment, the distance d is set such that the reflector 26 will not come into contact with the fixing belt 21. With the leading ends of the arms 25b thus disposed to be as close as possible to the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21, the arms 25b are increased in length in the contact direction of the pressure roller 22. Accordingly, the mechanical strength of the stay 25 is increased even in the configuration using the fixing belt 21 having the reduced diameter.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
Although not illustrated, blocking members for blocking the heat from the halogen heater 23 are provided to the end portions in the axial direction of the fixing belt 21 between the fixing belt 21 and the halogen heater 23. This configuration suppresses an excessive increase in temperature in sheet non-passing areas of the fixing belt 21 particularly in continuous sheet feeding, and thereby prevents degradation of or damage to the fixing belt 21 due to heat.
With reference to
Thereafter, the sheet P carrying an unfixed toner image T formed by the foregoing image forming process is fed in the direction of arrow A1 in
The sheet P having the toner image T fixed thereon is fed out of the nip portion N in the direction of arrow A2 in
Further, as illustrated in
The configuration of the nip forming member 24 will now be described in detail with reference to
Further, in the present embodiment, a surface of the base pad 241 on the side of the pressure roller 22 includes a contact portion 50, an extended portion 51, and a curved portion 52. The contact portion 50 is formed into a substantially flat surface in contact with the pressure roller 22 via the fixing belt 21. The extended portion 51 extends upstream in the sheet feeding direction from the contact portion 50, and is not in contact with the pressure roller 22 via the fixing belt 21. Further, the extended portion 51 is formed into a substantially flat surface on the same plane as the contact portion 50. The fixing belt 21 rotates in the direction of arrow C in
The contact portion 50 and the extended portion 51 may each be formed into a recessed curved surface recessed radially inward from the fixing belt 21 or any other shape, as well as the substantially flat surface. Particularly in a case where the contact portion 50 and the extended portion 51 are each formed into a recessed curved surface, the leading end of the sheet P having passed the nip portion N is discharged toward the pressure roller 22. Accordingly, the present configuration is advantageous in improving the separability of the sheet P from the fixing belt 21 and suppressing a feeding failure, such as a sheet jam.
The curved portion 52 continues upstream in the sheet feeding direction from the extended portion 51. The curved portion 52 is formed to project radially outward from the fixing belt 21. At a boundary B between the curved portion 52 and the extended portion 51, the curved portion 52 is formed to smoothly continue from the extended portion 51 such that no edge is formed at the boundary B.
The base pad 241 thus includes the contact portion 50 in contact with the pressure roller 22, the extended portion 51 extending upstream in the sheet feeding direction from the contact portion 50, and the curved portion 52 provided to smoothly continue upstream in the sheet feeding direction from the extended portion 51. Further, the sliding sheet 240 is provided in accordance with the shape of the base pad 241. Similarly to the base pad 241, therefore, the sliding sheet 240 includes a substantially flat contact portion 60, a substantially flat extended portion 61, and a curved portion 62, which respectively correspond to the contact portion 50, the extended portion 51, and the curved portion 52 of the base pad 241.
The fixing belt 21 is configured not to be in contact with the curved portion 62 of the sliding sheet 240 when not rotated. Further, the curved portion 62 of the sliding sheet 240 is disposed not to be in contact with an ideal rotation locus of the fixing belt 21, i.e., a rotation locus of the fixing belt 21 obtained when there is no disturbance in behavior of the fixing belt 21. Basically, therefore, there is no continuous contact between the fixing belt 21 and the curved portion 62 of the sliding sheet 240 during the rotation of the fixing belt 21. It is, however, assumed that there is some disturbance in behavior of the fixing belt 21 during actual rotation of the fixing belt 21, and thus the fixing belt 21 may come into incidental contact with the curved portion 62 of the sliding sheet 240, depending on the disturbance in behavior thereof. Even in such a case, the sliding sheet 240 has the curved portion 62 smoothly continuing from the extended portion 61 in accordance with the shape of the base pad 241, and therefore abrasion of the fixing belt 21 is effectively suppressed. Further, the base pad 241 has the curved portion 52 smoothly continuing from the extended portion 51, and therefore abrasion of the sliding sheet 240 due to the contact of the sliding sheet 240 with the base pad 241 is also effectively suppressed.
To further reduce a friction load on the fixing belt 21 due to the contact between the fixing belt 21 and the curved portion 62 of the sliding sheet 240, it is preferable to form the curved portion 52 of the base pad 241 to be close to the ideal rotation locus of the fixing belt 21.
Also in the present embodiment, therefore, the nip forming member 24 is configured such that the length L1 of the upstream portion extending upstream in the sheet feeding direction from the center O of the nip portion N is greater than the length L2 of the downstream portion extending downstream in the sheet feeding direction from the center O of the nip portion N, as illustrated in
Further, although not illustrated, the nip forming member 24 of the present configuration is also disposed at a position spaced inward from the fixing belt 21 in a state in which the fixing belt 21 is not in contact with the pressure roller 22, similarly as in the configuration described above with reference to
As described above, according to the embodiments of the present invention, the nip forming member 24 guides the fixing belt 21 entering the nip portion N. Therefore, the behavior of the fixing belt 21 before entering the nip portion N is controlled, thereby allowing the fixing belt 21 to stably and smoothly enter the nip portion N. According to the embodiments having the nip forming member 24 thus guiding the fixing belt 21, therefore, the fixing belt 21 is stably and smoothly rotated even in the configuration in which a portion of the fixing belt 21 other than the opposed end portions (i.e., lateral end portions) thereof is not provided with any other guide member than the nip forming member 24. Accordingly, the load placed on the fixing belt 21 during the rotation thereof is reduced, and abrasion of the fixing belt 21 is suppressed. Consequently, damage or breakage of the fixing belt 21 is prevented, and device reliability is improved. Particularly in the configuration using the fixing belt 21 reduced in thickness to reduce the heat capacity, as in the embodiments, the strength of the fixing belt 21 is reduced. Therefore, the configuration of the embodiments of the present invention is expected to be substantially effective, when applied to such a fixing device.
Further, according to the embodiments of the present invention, the nip forming member 24 is capable of guiding the fixing belt 21, and thus the configuration of the fixing device is simplified and reduced in size. Accordingly, a further reduction in heat capacity of the fixing device is achieved, and the improvement of energy conservation and the reduction in first-print time are achieved.
Further, with the nip forming member 24 functioning as a guide member, there is no need to provide a separate guide member. Therefore, the fixing device is configured such that no component is present between the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21 and the upstream and downstream end portions of the stay 25 in the sheet feeding direction, i.e., such that the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21 and the upstream and downstream end portions of the stay 25 directly face each other. Accordingly, the stay 25 is disposed with the upstream and downstream end portions thereof in the sheet feeding direction located relatively close to the inner circumferential surface of the fixing belt 21, and the size of the stay 25 is increased as much as possible in the limited space inside the fixing belt 21. As a result, the strength of the stay 25 is secured even in the configuration in which the fixing belt 21 is reduced in diameter to reduce the heat capacity, as in the embodiments. Consequently, the nip forming member 24 is prevented from being bent by the pressure roller 22, and the fixing performance is improved.
Further, in the embodiments of the present invention, the nip forming member 24 is disposed at a position spaced inward from the fixing belt 21 in a state in which the fixing belt 21 is not in contact with the pressure roller 22. Thereby, the fixing belt 21 is barely pressed against the nip forming member 24 on the upstream and downstream sides of the nip portion N in the sheet feeding direction. Accordingly, the friction load on the fixing belt 21 and the abrasion of the fixing belt 21 due to the contact between the fixing belt 21 and the nip forming member 24 are reduced. Further, the force with which the fixing belt 21 comes into contact with the nip forming member 24 is reduced, and thereby a desirable entry route of the fixing belt 21 entering the nip portion N is obtained.
Further, the base pad 241 includes the substantially flat extended portion 51 which guides the fixing belt 21, and thus the fixing belt 21 is stably and smoothly rotated. Further, even if the fixing belt 21 comes into contact with the curved portion 52 of the base pad 241 via the sliding sheet 240, the curved portion 52 smoothly continues from the extended portion 51, and thus the abrasion of the fixing belt 21 and the sliding sheet 240 is effectively suppressed.
The application of a fixing device according to an embodiment of the present invention is not limited to the color laser printer illustrated in
The above-described embodiments are illustrative and do not limit the present invention. Thus, numerous additional modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings. For example, elements or features of different illustrative and embodiments herein may be combined with or substituted for each other within the scope of this disclosure and the appended claims. Further, features of components of the embodiments, such as number, position, and shape, are not limited to those of the disclosed embodiments and thus may be set as preferred. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the disclosure of the present invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012-005184 | Jan 2012 | JP | national |
This patent application is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/716,929, filed Dec. 17, 2012, which is based on and claims priority pursuant to 35 U.S.C. §119 to Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-005184, filed on Jan. 13, 2012, in the Japan Patent Office, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13716929 | Dec 2012 | US |
Child | 15634652 | US |