1. Technical Field
The invention relates to a fixing device for heating and pressurizing a toner image, which is formed by selectively depositing toner on a latent image based on an electrostatic potential difference and transferred onto a recording medium, so as to form a fixed image and an image forming apparatus using the fixing device.
2. Description of the Related Art
In an electrophotographic image forming apparatus, image light is applied to a charged surface of a photosensitive drum. Thereby, an electrostatic latent image is formed. Then, toner is electrostatically transferred to the electrostatic latent image. Thereby, a toner image is formed on the photosensitive drum. Then, the toner image is transferred directly or through an intermediate transfer body to a recording medium and is fixed onto the recording medium.
The following fixing device for fixing an unfixed toner image onto a recording medium has been widely used. That is, the fixing device includes a heating roller, which serves as a heating rotation body and has an endless peripheral surface moving circularly; and a pressurization roller, which serves as a pressurization member for pressing a toner image against the peripheral surface. In this fixing device, the heating roller and the pressurization roller are in pressure-contact with each other and a recording medium on which the toner image is carried is inserted into a pressure-contact portion (nip portion). Accordingly, the recording medium passes through the pressure-contact portion as the heating roller rotates and then, the unfixed toner image is heated and is fixed.
The heating roller for use in such a fixing device often has a hollow cored bar made of aluminum and a heater supported inside the cored bar. A surface of the heating roller is coated with a fluorocarbon resin to enhance releasability. The pressurization roller includes an elastic layer having heat resistance, such as silicone rubber, on a metal cored bar. Since toner transferred to the heating roller, that is, offset toner may be transferred to the back of the recording medium, which makes the back of a recording medium dirty. Therefore, it has been proposed that the pressurization roller is provided with a surface layer based on a fluorocarbon resin on which toner is hard to deposit. For example, the peripheral surface of the pressurization roller is covered with a PFA resin layer shaped like a thin tube.
In the fixing device with the surface of the pressurization roller thus covered with a fluorocarbon resin based material, the surface has high insulation properties and thus the surface of the pressurization roller is charged by friction when a recording medium on which an unfixed toner image is carried passes through the nip portion. Generally, the fluorocarbon resin is charged to the negative polarity by friction between the fluorocarbon resin and paper. When the negative potential on the surface of the pressurization roller becomes high, the negative polarity toner on the recording medium electrically repels between the recording medium and the surface of the pressurization roller. As a result, electrostatic offset, that is, transferring of the toner to the surface of the heating roller easily occurs.
According to an aspect of the invention, a fixing device includes a heating rotation body, a heat source and a pressurization member. The heating rotation body includes an endless peripheral surface that moves circularly. The heat source heats the heating rotation body. The pressurization member is in pressure-contact with the peripheral surface of the heating rotation body to press a recording medium, which passes through a nip between the pressurization member and the heating rotation body, against the peripheral surface of the heating rotation body. The pressurization member includes a base material and a plurality of layers deposited on the base material. A volume resistance of a surface layer forming a surface of the pressurization member is larger than that of a layer disposed just below the surface layer. The layer disposed just below the surface layer is grounded.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention will be described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
Referring now to the accompanying drawings, exemplary embodiments of the invention will be described.
The image forming apparatus also includes a paper tray 7, a transport passage 8, a registration roller 9, a fixing device 10 and a paper discharge roller 11. The paper tray 7 stores record media to which a toner image is to be transferred. The transport passage 8 transports the record media, which are fed one by one from the paper tray 7, to a transfer section 5a. In the transfer section 5a, the photosensitive drum 1 and the transfer roller 5 face each other. The registration roller 9 feeds the transported recording medium into the transfer section 5a at a predetermined timing. The fixing device 10 clamps the toner image transferred onto the recording medium in a fixing nip portion 10a in which a heating roller 21 and a pressurization roller 22 are in pressure-contact with each other, so as to heat and pressurize the toner image. The paper discharge roller 11 transports the recording medium to a paper discharge tray 12.
The photosensitive drum 1 is provided with a metal drum and a photosensitive layer formed on the surface of the metal drum. The photosensitive layer may be made of various inorganic photosensitive materials, organic photosensitive materials, amorphous selenium based photosensitive material and amorphous silicon based photosensitive material, such as Se, a-Si, a-SiC and Cds.
The charging device 2 includes a conductive metal roller coated with a high-resistance material. The conductive metal roller may be made of stainless steel or aluminum. The charging device 2 is in contact with the photosensitive drum 1 so as to rotate while following rotation of the photosensitive drum 1. When a predetermined voltage is applied to the charging device 2, the charging device 2 continuously discharges in a minute gap in the vicinity of a contact portion between the conductive metal roller and the photosensitive drum 1. As a result, the charging device 2 charges the surface of the photosensitive drum 1 almost uniformly.
The exposure device 3 emits a laser beam, which blinks for each pixel, based on an image signal. The exposure device 3 exposes and scans the peripheral surface of the photosensitive drum 1 to the light beam with using a polygon mirror. Accordingly, the potential of the exposed part attenuates on the peripheral surface of the photosensitive drum 1, and the latent image is formed based on the electrostatic potential difference.
The developing device 4 has a developing roller 4a so that the developing roller 4a faces and is located in the vicinity of the photosensitive drum 1. A developing bias voltage is applied between the developing roller 4a and the photosensitive drum 1. Toner is carried on the peripheral surface of the developing roller 4a and is transported to a portion facing the photosensitive drum 1. Then, the toner carried on the peripheral surface is transferred to the latent image in the electric field so as to form a visible image.
The transfer roller 5 includes a metal shaft and a semiconductive rubber layer on an outer peripheral surface of the metal shaft. The semiconductive rubber layer has a about several millimeters in thickness. The transfer roller 5 abuts against the peripheral surface of the photosensitive drum 1 and rotates while following the rotation of the photosensitive drum 1. A recording medium transported to a portion between the transfer roller 5 and the photosensitive drum 1 abuts against the toner image on the photosensitive drum 1. Then, the toner having charges is transferred onto the recording medium by action of the electric field formed between the transfer roller 5 and the photosensitive drum 1.
The fixing device 10 has a heating roller 21 and a pressurization roller 22 as shown in
A separation claw 24 is disposed on the downstream side of the fixing nip portion 10a where the heating roller 21 and the pressurization roller 22 are in pressure-contact with each other. The separation claw 24 prevents a recording medium P from winding around the heating roller 21. A thermistor 25 serving as a temperature detection device is disposed on the peripheral surface of the heating roller 21. Turning on/off of the halogen lamp 23 is controlled based on the detection temperature of the thermister 25. Accordingly, the surface temperature of the heating roller 21 is controlled so as to be at about 180° C.
The heating roller 21 includes a hollow cylindrical cored bar 21a and a surface release layer 21b. The cored bar 21a may have 350 mm in length and 65 mm in diameter, and may be made of aluminum having 5 mm in thickness. The surface release layer 21b is formed on the outer peripheral surface of the cored bar 21a. The surface release layer 21b is formed by baking a PFA resin so as to have 30 μm in thickness. 10 wt % silicon carbide having 5 μm in average particle diameter is mixed into the PFA resin forming the surface release layer 21b as a abrasion-resistant filler. The mixed silicon carbide prevents the surface of the heating roller 21 from being worn by friction with the transported recording media. As the abrasion-resistant filler, metal particles such as alumina particles may also be used.
On the other hand, the pressurization roller 22 has a cored bar 22a, which is a metal cylindrical member, and an elastic layer 22b (layer disposed just below a surface layer 22c) made of sponge or rubber, and the surface layer 22c. The elastic layer 22b is formed on the surface of the cored bar 22a. The surface layer 22c is made of a PFA resin. In this exemplary embodiment, the cored bar 22a includes a steel member, which has 350 mm in length and 41 mm in diameter. The steel member is plated. The elastic layer 22b (layer disposed just below the surface layer 22c) is made of porous silicone rubber having 12 mm in thickness and 60 degrees (JIS-A) in rubber hardness. A conductive filler is dispersed in and mixed in the elastic layer 22b (layer disposed just below the surface layer 22c) so that volume resistance of the elastic layer 22b is equal to about 106Ω. The cored bar 22a is electrically grounded.
The surface layer 22c is formed by coating the elastic layer 22b (layer disposed just below the surface layer 22c) with a tube-like PFA resin having 100 μm in thickness. A conductive filler such as carbon particles is dispersed in the surface layer 22c so that volume resistance of the surface layer 22c is equal to about 109Ω.
In this exemplary embodiment, the volume resistance of the elastic layer 22b and the volume resistance of the surface layer 22c are adjusted as mentioned above. However the resistance value of the surface layer 22c may be selected from a range of 107Ω to 1014Ω appropriately. Also, the resistance value of the layer disposed just below the surface layer (e.g., the elastic layer 22b) may be selected from a range less than 107Ω appropriately.
When the volume resistance of the surface layer is in a range of 107Ω to 1014Ω and the volume resistance of the layer disposed just below the surface layer is less than 107Ω, charges produced by frictional electrification on the surface are easily eliminated to ground and occurrence of inductive charges, on the surface, having the opposite polarity to that of the recording medium is suppressed effectively.
The “volume resistance of the surface layer” refers to the resistance value possessed by the surface layer when a current flows into ground from the pressure-contact portion between the heating rotation body and the pressurization member. Also, the “volume resistance of the layer disposed just below the surface layer” refers to the resistance value possessed by the layer disposed just below the surface layer when a current flows into ground from the pressure-contact portion. This definitions of those terms will be applied to other portions of this specification.
In this exemplary embodiment, the thickness of the surface layer 22c made of a PFA resin is equal to 100 μm. However, the surface layer 22c needs only to have a thickness of about 10 μm or more. Therefore, the thickness of the surface layer 22c may be set appropriately so long as the volume resistance of the surface layer 22c is in the above described range when current flows into the cylindrical cored bar 22a from the pressure-contact portion between the pressurization roller 22 and the heating roller 21.
The above-described image forming apparatus operates as follows.
The charging device 2 charges the photosensitive drum 1 almost uniform to have minus polarity. The exposure device 3 applies the image light to the charged peripheral surface of the photosensitive drum 1 based on the image data. The charge potential attenuates in the exposed portion of the surface of the photosensitive drum 1, so that a latent image is formed based on the potential difference between the exposed portion and a non-exposed portion. The developing device 4 carries a thin layer of toner having minus charges on the peripheral surface of the developing roller 4a and transports the toner to a position facing the peripheral surface of the photosensitive drum 1. An electric field is formed by a developing bias voltage, which is applied to a portion between the developing roller 4a and the photosensitive drum 1. The toner having the minus charges is transferred to the exposed portion. The photosensitive drum 1 rotates to transport the toner image thus formed to a transfer nip 5a where the transfer roller 5 is in pressure-contact with the photosensitive drum 1.
On the other hand, the registration roller 9 temporarily holds a recording medium fed one by one from the paper tray 7 and then transports the recording medium to the transfer nip 5a at such a timing that the recording medium will be in contact with the toner image carried on the photosensitive drum 1. The recording medium comes in contact with the surface of the photosensitive drum 1 on the upstream portion of the transfer nip 5a and passes through the transfer nip 5a while be in close contact with the surface of the photosensitive drum 1.
An electric field is formed in the transfer nip 5a and in the vicinity of the transfer nip 5a by the developing bias voltage. The toner image is transferred to the recording medium within this electric field.
Then, discharge occurs when the recording medium carrying the toner image thereon is peeled off from the transfer roller 5. This discharge gives plus charges to the recording medium. The recording medium is transported to the fixing device 10 with the toner image held on the recording medium. In the fixing device 10, the recording medium P carrying the toner image thereon is clamped in the fixing nip portion 10a between the heating roller 21 and the pressurization roller 22. The toner brought into pressure-contact with the heating roller 21 is heated and fused. As a result, the toner is fixed onto the recording medium P. The recording medium P passing through the fixing nip portion 10a is peeled off from the heating roller 21 or the pressurization roller 22, and is transported to the paper discharge roller 11.
As described above, in the step of fixing the toner image, the minus-charged toner passes through the nip portion in a state where the toner is attracted to the recording medium P having the plus charges. The volume resistance of the surface layer 22c of the pressurization roller 22 is adjusted to have 109Ω and the volume resistance of the layer 22b just below the surface is adjusted to have 106Ω. Therefore, the surface layer 22c is hardly charged by friction with the recording medium P. Even if charges occur, electricity is removed by grounding through the layer 22b disposed just below the surface layer 22c having high electric conductivity.
Further, the surface layer 22c of the pressurization roller 22 has 109Ω in the volume resistance set to a slightly high value and has 10 μm or more in thickness. Thus, inductive charges do not occur on the surface of the pressurization roller 22 by the charges possessed by the recording medium P.
Next, experiment conducted using the above-described image forming apparatus to confirm advantages of the first exemplary embodiment will be described.
Table 1 shows a result of comparing offset occurrence state when toner images are fixed using the fixing device 10 according to the first exemplary embodiment and a fixing device of a comparative example.
The fixing device of the comparative example used in the experiment includes the same heating roller as the fixing device 10 according to the first exemplary embodiment. On the other hand, a pressurization roller of the fixing device of the comparative example has a cylindrical cored bar; a heat-resistant elastic layer made of silicon rubber on the cylindrical cored bar; and a surface layer made of a conductive PFA resin having volume resistance adjusted to 105Ω on the elastic layer. The surface layer is electrically grounded.
Predetermined number of sheets of paper each formed with an image shown in
As the results of the experiment, offset occurs in the fixing device of the comparative example after continuous copy of 10,000 sheets of paper. Whereas, toner offset does not occur in the fixing device 10 according to the first exemplary embodiment even after continuous copy of 100,000 sheets of paper or more, as shown in Table 1. In the heating roller 21 after copy of 100,000 sheets of paper or more, abrasion of the surface release layer 21b is 10 μm or less and a good condition is kept.
Therefore, the fixing device 10 according to the first exemplary embodiment can suppress toner offset and decrease abrasion of the surface of the heating roller.
Next, an image forming apparatus according top a second exemplary embodiment of the invention will be described.
The image forming apparatus includes a fixing device 30 shown in
The fixing device 30 includes a heating roller 31 and a pressurization roller 32 as shown in
The heating roller 31 has the same configuration as that of the fixing device 10 shown in
The pressurization roller 32 has a cored bar 32a, which is a metal cylindrical member. An elastic layer 32b (layer disposed just below a surface layer 32c) and a surface layer 32c made of a PFA resin are disposed on the surface of the cored bar 32a. The diameter of the cored bar 32a (41 mm), the thickness (12 mm) and the rubber hardness (60 degrees) and the thickness of the surface layer 32c (100 μm) are the same as those of the fixing device 10 shown in
The surface layer 32c of the pressurization roller 32 used in the fixing device 30 is formed of a tube-like PFA resin having 100 μm in thickness. However, unlike that in the fixing device 10 shown in
The static elimination roller 36 includes a conductive metal roller 36a and a surface layer 36b. The conductive metal roller 36a may be made of stainless steel or aluminum. The surface layer 36b is made of a PFA resin having 50 μm in thickness and is formed on the outer peripheral surface of a metal roller 36a. The metal roller 36a has 350 mm in length and 10 mm in diameter. Carbon particles are mixed into the PFA resin of the surface layer 36b so as to adjust volume resistance of the surface layer 36b to 105Ω. An AC voltage having peak voltage 250 V is applied to the metal roller 36a from a power supply 37 so as to adjust the surface potential of the pressurization roller 32 to almost 0 volt.
In the fixing device 30, the surface layer 32c of the pressurization roller 32 is strongly charged to the negative polarity by friction between a recording medium P and the surface layer 32c of the pressurization roller 32. However, the static elimination roller 36 eliminates charges and therefore, the surface potential of the pressurization roller 32 is maintained at almost 0 volt. As a result, minus-charged toner carried on the recording medium P is attracted to the recording medium P having plus charges and passes through the pressure-contact portion (nip portion) without receiving the effect of the charges possessed by the pressurization roller 32. Paper dust existing detachably on the back of the recording medium P has plus charges like the recording medium P. However, the surface of the pressurization roller 32 is subjected to static elimination and thus does not attract the paper power of the plus polarity. Further, the surface layer 32c of the pressurization roller 32 has a large resistance value. When the recording medium P having plus charges passes through the pressure-contact portion between the heating roller 31 and the pressurization roller 32, minus charges caused by electrostatic induction do not occur in the vicinity of the surface of the pressurization roller 32.
A similar experiment to that using the fixing device 10 shown in
Next, an image forming apparatus according to a third exemplary embodiment of the invention will be described.
The image forming apparatus uses a fixing device 40 shown in
The fixing device 40 used in this image forming apparatus has the same configuration as that of the fixing device 10 shown in
A heating roller 41 is the same as that of the fixing device 10 shown in
A similar experiment to that using the fixing device shown in
The foregoing description of the exemplary embodiments of the present invention has been provided for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Obviously, many modifications and variations will be apparent to practitioners skilled in the art. The exemplary embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical applications, thereby enabling others skilled in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments and with the various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
P2005-339274 | Nov 2005 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5331385 | Ohtsuka et al. | Jul 1994 | A |
5420679 | Goto et al. | May 1995 | A |
20020006297 | Ando | Jan 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
6-318005 | Nov 1994 | JP |
9-222816 | Aug 1997 | JP |
2001-265144 | Sep 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070116501 A1 | May 2007 | US |