This patent application is based on and claims priority pursuant to 35 U.S.C. §119 to Japanese Patent Application Nos. 2015-025271, filed on Feb. 12, 2015, and 2015-245000, filed on Dec. 16, 2015, in the Japanese Patent Office, the entire disclosure of each of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Technical Field
Exemplary aspects of the present disclosure relate to a fixing device and an image forming apparatus, and more particularly, to a fixing device for fixing a toner image on a recording medium and an image forming apparatus incorporating the fixing device.
Description of the Background
Related-art image forming apparatuses, such as copiers, facsimile machines, printers, or multifunction printers having two or more of copying, printing, scanning, facsimile, plotter, and other functions, typically form an image on a recording medium according to image data. Thus, for example, a charger uniformly charges a surface of a photoconductor; an optical writer emits a light beam onto the charged surface of the photoconductor to form an electrostatic latent image on the photoconductor according to the image data; a developing device supplies toner to the electrostatic latent image formed on the photoconductor to render the electrostatic latent image visible as a toner image; the toner image is directly transferred from the photoconductor onto a recording medium or is indirectly transferred from the photoconductor onto a recording medium via an intermediate transfer belt; finally, a fixing device applies heat and pressure to the recording medium bearing the toner image to fix the toner image on the recording medium, thus forming the image on the recording medium.
Such fixing device may include a fixing rotator, such as a fixing roller, a fixing belt, and a fixing film, heated by a heater and a pressure rotator, such as a pressure roller and a pressure belt, pressed against the fixing rotator to form a fixing nip therebetween through which a recording medium bearing a toner image is conveyed. As the recording medium bearing the toner image is conveyed through the fixing nip, the fixing rotator and the pressure rotator apply heat and pressure to the recording medium, melting and fixing the toner image on the recording medium.
This specification describes below an improved fixing device. In one exemplary embodiment, the fixing device includes a fixing rotator rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation and a pressure rotator disposed opposite the fixing rotator to form a fixing nip therebetween, through which a recording medium bearing a toner image is conveyed. A first heater is disposed inside the fixing rotator to generate an increased amount of heat to heat the fixing rotator. The first heater includes a first heat generator having a first heating span in a longitudinal direction of the first heater. A second heater is disposed inside the fixing rotator to generate a decreased amount of heat to heat the fixing rotator. The second heater includes a second heat generator having a second heating span in a longitudinal direction of the second heater. A partition is interposed between the first heater and the second heater to define a first compartment having an increased size and accommodating the first heater and a second compartment having a decreased size and accommodating the second heater.
This specification further describes an improved image forming apparatus. In one exemplary embodiment, the image forming apparatus includes an image bearer to bear a toner image and a fixing device disposed downstream from the image bearer in a recording medium conveyance direction to fix the toner image on a recording medium. The fixing device includes a fixing rotator rotatable in a predetermined direction of rotation and a pressure rotator disposed opposite the fixing rotator to form a fixing nip therebetween, through which the recording medium bearing the toner image is conveyed. A first heater is disposed inside the fixing rotator to generate an increased amount of heat to heat the fixing rotator. The first heater includes a first heat generator having a first heating span in a longitudinal direction of the first heater. A second heater is disposed inside the fixing rotator to generate a decreased amount of heat to heat the fixing rotator. The second heater includes a second heat generator having a second heating span in a longitudinal direction of the second heater. A partition is interposed between the first heater and the second heater to define a first compartment having an increased size and accommodating the first heater and a second compartment having a decreased size and accommodating the second heater.
A more complete appreciation of the disclosure and the many attendant advantages thereof will be readily 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 exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology is employed for the sake of clarity. However, the disclosure of this specification is not intended to be limited to the specific terminology so selected and it is to be understood that each specific element includes all technical equivalents that operate in a similar manner and achieve a similar result.
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate identical or corresponding parts throughout the several views, in particular to
It is to be noted that, in the drawings for explaining exemplary embodiments of this disclosure, identical reference numerals are assigned, as long as discrimination is possible, to components such as members and component parts having an identical function or shape, thus omitting description thereof once it is provided.
With reference to
The image forming apparatus 100 is a color printer employing a tandem system in which a plurality of image forming devices for forming toner images in a plurality of colors, respectively, is aligned in a rotation direction of a transfer belt. Alternatively, the image forming apparatus 100 may employ other systems.
The image forming apparatus 100 employs a tandem structure in which four photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K serving as image bearers that bear yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images in separation colors, respectively, are aligned.
The yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images formed on the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K, respectively, are primarily transferred successively onto an endless transfer belt 11 serving as an intermediate transferor disposed opposite the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K as the transfer belt 11 rotates in a rotation direction A1 such that the yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images are superimposed on a same position on the transfer belt 11 in a primary transfer process. Thereafter, the yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images superimposed on the transfer belt 11 are secondarily transferred onto a recording medium S (e.g., a recording sheet) collectively in a secondary transfer process.
Each of the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K is surrounded by image forming components that form the yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images on the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K as they rotate clockwise in
As the transfer belt 11 rotates in the rotation direction A1, the yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images formed on the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K, respectively, are primarily transferred successively onto the transfer belt 11, thus being superimposed on the same position on the transfer belt 11. In the primary transfer process, the primary transfer rollers 12Y, 12C, 12M, and 12K disposed opposite the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K via the transfer belt 11, respectively, apply a primary transfer bias to the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K successively from the upstream photoconductive drum 20Y to the downstream photoconductive drum 20K in the rotation direction A1 of the transfer belt 11.
The photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K are aligned in this order in the rotation direction A1 of the transfer belt 11. The photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K are located in four image forming stations that form the yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images, respectively.
The image forming apparatus 100 includes the four image forming stations, a transfer belt unit 10, a secondary transfer roller 5, a belt cleaner 13, and the optical writing device 8. The transfer belt unit 10 is situated above and disposed opposite the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K. The transfer belt unit 10 incorporates the transfer belt 11 and the primary transfer rollers 12Y, 12C, 12M, and 12K. The secondary transfer roller 5 is disposed opposite the transfer belt 11 and driven and rotated in accordance with rotation of the transfer belt 11. The belt cleaner 13 is disposed opposite the transfer belt 11 to clean the transfer belt 11. The optical writing device 8 is situated below and disposed opposite the four image forming stations.
The optical writing device 8 includes a semiconductor laser serving as a light source, a coupling lens, an fθ lens, a troidal lens, a deflection mirror, and a rotatable polygon mirror serving as a deflector. The optical writing device 8 emits light beams Lb corresponding to the yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images to be formed on the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K thereto, forming electrostatic latent images on the photoconductive drums 20Y, 20C, 20M, and 20K, respectively.
The image forming apparatus 100 further includes a sheet feeder 61 and a registration roller pair 4. The sheet feeder 61 incorporates a paper tray that loads a plurality of recording media S to be conveyed to a secondary transfer nip formed between the transfer belt 11 and the secondary transfer roller 5. The registration roller pair 4 conveys a recording medium S conveyed from the sheet feeder 61 to the secondary transfer nip formed between the transfer belt 11 and the secondary transfer roller 5 at a predetermined time when the yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images superimposed on the transfer belt 11 reach the secondary transfer nip. The image forming apparatus 100 further includes a sensor that detects a leading edge of the recording medium S as it reaches the registration roller pair 4.
The image forming apparatus 100 further includes a fixing device 200, an output roller pair 7, an output tray 17, and toner bottles 9Y, 9C, 9M, and 9K. The fixing device 200, serving as a fusing unit employing a belt fixing system, fixes a color toner image formed by the yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toner images secondarily transferred from the transfer belt 11 onto the recording medium S thereon. The output roller pair 7 ejects the recording medium S bearing the fixed toner image onto an outside of the image forming apparatus 100, that is, the output tray 17. The output tray 17 is disposed atop the image forming apparatus 100 and stacks the recording medium S ejected by the output roller pair 7. The toner bottles 9Y, 9C, 9M, and 9K are situated below the output tray 17 and replenished with fresh yellow, cyan, magenta, and black toners, respectively.
The transfer belt unit 10 includes a driving roller 72 and a driven roller 73 over which the transfer belt 11 is looped, in addition to the transfer belt 11 and the primary transfer rollers 12Y, 12C, 12M, and 12K.
Since the driven roller 73 also serves as a tension applicator that applies tension to the transfer belt 11, a biasing member (e.g., a spring) biases the driven roller 73 against the transfer belt 11. The transfer belt unit 10, the primary transfer rollers 12Y, 12C, 12M, and 12K, the secondary transfer roller 5, and the belt cleaner 13 constitute a transfer device 71.
The sheet feeder 61 is situated in a lower portion of the image forming apparatus 100 and includes a feed roller 3 that contacts an upper side of an uppermost recording medium S of the plurality of recording media S loaded on the paper tray of the sheet feeder 61. As the feed roller 3 is driven and rotated counterclockwise in
The belt cleaner 13 of the transfer device 71 includes a cleaning brush and a cleaning blade disposed opposite and contacting the transfer belt 11. The cleaning brush and the cleaning blade scrape a foreign substance such as residual toner particles off the transfer belt 11, removing the foreign substance from the transfer belt 11 and thereby cleaning the transfer belt 11.
The belt cleaner 13 further includes a waste toner conveyer that conveys the residual toner particles removed from the transfer belt 11.
With reference to
As shown in
A detailed description is now given of a construction of the fixing belt 201.
The fixing belt 201 is an endless belt or film made of metal such as nickel and SUS stainless steel or resin such as polyimide. The fixing belt 201 is constructed of a base layer and a release layer. The release layer constituting an outer surface layer is made of tetrafluoroethylene-perfluoroalkylvinylether copolymer (PFA), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), or the like to facilitate separation of toner of the toner image T on the recording medium S from the fixing belt 201. An elastic layer may be sandwiched between the base layer and the release layer and made of silicone rubber or the like. If the fixing belt 201 does not incorporate the elastic layer, the fixing belt 201 has a decreased thermal capacity that improves fixing property of being heated quickly to a desired fixing temperature at which the toner image T is fixed on the recording medium S. However, as the pressure roller 203 and the fixing belt 201 sandwich and press the unfixed toner image T on the recording medium S passing through the fixing nip N, slight surface asperities of the fixing belt 201 may be transferred onto the toner image T on the recording medium S, resulting in variation in gloss of the solid toner image T that may appear as an orange peel image on the recording medium S. To address this circumstance, the elastic layer made of silicone rubber has a thickness not smaller than about 100 micrometers. As the elastic layer deforms, the elastic layer absorbs slight surface asperities of the fixing belt 201, preventing formation of the faulty orange peel image.
A detailed description is now given of a configuration of the stay 207.
The stay 207 serving as a support that supports the nip formation pad 206 to form the fixing nip N is situated inside the loop formed by the fixing belt 201. As the nip formation pad 206 receives pressure from the pressure roller 203, the stay 207 supports the nip formation pad 206 to prevent bending of the nip formation pad 206 and produce an even nip length in the recording medium conveyance direction DS throughout the entire width of the fixing belt 201 in an axial direction thereof. The stay 207 is mounted on and held by flanges serving as a holder at both lateral ends of the stay 207 in a longitudinal direction thereof parallel to the axial direction of the fixing belt 201, respectively, thus being positioned inside the fixing device 200. The reflector 209 interposed between the halogen heaters 202A and 202B and the stay 207 reflects light radiated from the halogen heaters 202A and 202B to the reflector 209 toward the fixing belt 201, preventing the stay 207 from being heated by the halogen heaters 202A and 202B with radiation heat and the like and thereby reducing waste of energy. Alternatively, instead of the reflector 209, an opposed face of the stay 207 disposed opposite the halogen heaters 202A and 202B may be treated with insulation or mirror finish to reflect light radiated from the halogen heaters 202A and 202B to the stay 207 toward the fixing belt 201.
A detailed description is now given of a construction of the pressure roller 203.
The pressure roller 203 is constructed of a cored bar 205, an elastic rubber layer 204 coating the cored bar 205, and a surface release layer coating the elastic rubber layer 204 and made of PFA or PTFE to facilitate separation of the recording medium S from the pressure roller 203. As a driving force generated by a driver (e.g., a motor) situated inside the image forming apparatus 100 depicted in
As the pressure roller 203 rotates in the rotation direction D203, the fixing belt 201 rotates in the rotation direction D201 in accordance with rotation of the pressure roller 203 by friction therebetween. According to this exemplary embodiment, as the driver drives and rotates the pressure roller 203, a driving force of the driver is transmitted from the pressure roller 203 to the fixing belt 201 at the fixing nip N, thus rotating the fixing belt 201 by friction between the pressure roller 203 and the fixing belt 201. At the fixing nip N, the fixing belt 201 rotates as it is sandwiched between the pressure roller 203 and the nip formation pad 206; at a circumferential span of the fixing belt 20 other than the fixing nip N, the fixing belt 201 rotates as it is guided by the flange at each lateral end of the fixing belt 201 in the axial direction thereof.
With the construction described above, the fixing device 200 attaining quick warm-up is manufactured at reduced costs.
A description is provided of configurations of comparative fixing devices, each of which includes a plurality of heaters, for example, two or three halogen heaters.
The comparative fixing devices are requested to shorten a warm-up time taken to heat a fixing belt to a predetermined fixing temperature, that is, a reload temperature, appropriate for fixing a toner image on a sheet from an ambient temperature after an image forming apparatus incorporating the comparative fixing device is powered on and a first print time taken to output the sheet bearing the fixed toner image upon receipt of a print job through preparation for a print operation and the subsequent print operation.
The comparative fixing devices include the plurality of halogen heaters having different heating spans to achieve different heat or light distributions so as to fix toner images on recording media of various sizes, respectively. For example, the comparative fixing devices may include a first heater having a heat distribution corresponding to a width of an A4 size sheet in portrait orientation (e.g., 210 mm) and a second heater having a heat distribution corresponding to a width of an A4 size sheet in portrait orientation and a width of an A3 size sheet in portrait orientation (e.g., 210 mm to 297 mm).
As the comparative fixing devices are downsized, an endless belt incorporated therein is downsized to have a decreased loop diameter that reduces an interval between the first heater and the second heater disposed inside the loop formed by the endless belt. Accordingly, if the first heater is parallel to the second heater, one of the first heater and the second heater may heat another one of the first heater and the second heater with radiation heat, degrading heating efficiency of the first heater and the second heater.
A detailed description is now given of constructions of the plurality of comparative fixing devices, that is, first to fourth comparative fixing devices.
The first comparative fixing device includes three halogen heaters situated inside a stay collectively. When the three halogen heaters are energized, glass tubes of the halogen heaters heat each other, decreasing an amount of light that irradiates a fixing belt directly and therefore degrading heating efficiency of the halogen heaters. Additionally, the three halogen heaters are substantially surrounded by a reflector that may decrease a radiation amount of light that irradiates the fixing belt and narrow an irradiation angle of light that irradiates the fixing belt, degrading heating efficiency of the halogen heaters.
The second comparative fixing device includes two halogen heaters situated below a stay collectively. When the two halogen heaters are energized, glass tubes of the halogen heaters heat each other, reducing an amount of light that irradiates a fixing belt directly and therefore degrading heating efficiency of the halogen heaters.
The fourth comparative fixing device includes two halogen heaters. For example, the fourth comparative fixing device includes a fixing belt, two fixing heaters (e.g., the halogen heaters), a pressure roller, and a reflector. The reflector includes a support extending substantially vertically, an abutment pressing against the pressure roller via the fixing belt, and an irradiation restrictor that changes an irradiation time of light radiated from the fixing heaters to the fixing belt in an axial direction thereof. The reflector divides an interior of the fixing belt into two compartments evenly where the two fixing heaters are situated, respectively. Accordingly, when the fixing heaters are energized, the fixing heaters do not heat glass tubes thereof each other, preventing degradation in heating efficiency of the fixing heaters. Additionally, the two fixing heaters are situated in the two compartments having an identical size and symmetrical with respect to the reflector. Accordingly, the two fixing heaters have an identical irradiation angle of light that is radiated from the fixing heaters and irradiates the fixing belt directly. However, the fourth comparative fixing device may have room for improvement in heating efficiency.
To address those circumstances of the comparative fixing devices, the fixing device 200 according to this exemplary embodiment has a configuration described below. As shown in
As shown in
Compared to the fourth comparative fixing device having the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt, the fixing device 200 allows the halogen heater 202A transferred with the increased amount of electric power to generate the increased amount of heat to have an increased irradiation angle α, thus increasing heating efficiency of the halogen heater 202A. Conversely, the fixing device 200 allows the halogen heater 202B transferred with the decreased amount of electric power to generate the decreased amount of heat to have a decreased irradiation angle β, thus decreasing heating efficiency of the halogen heater 202B. Accordingly, the fixing device 200 as a whole improves heating efficiency of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B compared to the fourth comparative fixing device having the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt. Since the second compartment 212 accommodating the halogen heater 202B that generates the deceased amount of heat is smaller in size than the first compartment 211, the second compartment 212 renders the halogen heater 202B to have the decreased irradiation angle β defined by light being radiated from the halogen heater 202B and irradiating the fixing belt 201, thus decreasing heating efficiency of the halogen heater 202B. However, the fixing device 200 as a whole enhances heating efficiency for heating the fixing belt 201.
In other words, since the stay 207 blocks light radiated from the two halogen heaters 202A and 202B disposed opposite each other via the stay 207, the fixing belt 201 is divided into an irradiation span where light from the halogen heaters 202A and 202B irradiates the fixing belt 201 and a non-irradiation span where light from the halogen heaters 202A and 202b does not irradiate the fixing belt 201 in a circumferential direction of the fixing belt 201. The irradiation span is divided into a first irradiation span where light from the halogen heater 202A disposed in the greater first compartment 211 irradiates the fixing belt 201 and a second irradiation span where light from the halogen heater 202B disposed in the smaller second compartment 212 irradiates the fixing belt 201. The first irradiation span is greater than the second irradiation span in the circumferential direction of the fixing belt 201. To address this circumstance, the halogen heater 202A that generates the increased amount of heat and is transferred with the increased amount of electric power is situated in the greater first compartment 211, enhancing overall heating efficiency of the fixing device 200 incorporating the two halogen heaters 202A and 202B.
Alternatively, the fixing device 200 may incorporate an additional component other than the stay 207 that is interposed between the halogen heaters 202A and 202B and the fixing belt 201 to screen the fixing belt 201 from the halogen heaters 202A and 202B. In this case also, the fixing device 200, incorporating the stay 207 designed by considering at least the non-irradiation span of the fixing belt 201 produced by the stay 207 so as to enhance heating efficiency of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B, increases flexibility in designing the shape and the position of the additional component disposed inside the loop formed by the fixing belt 201.
The fixing belt 201 may deform as the fixing belt 201 rotates or halts, for example. However, if the fixing device 200 achieves the configuration described above at least when the halogen heaters 202A and 202B are energized, the fixing device 200 attains the advantages described above. For example, the halogen heaters 202A and 202B include heat generators having different heating spans or different heat distributions in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B, respectively. The halogen heaters 202A and 202B are disposed in different compartments defined by the stay 207, that is, the first compartment 211 and the second compartment 212, respectively. The halogen heater 202A to generate the increased amount of heat is situated in the greater first compartment 211. Conversely, the halogen heater 202B to generate the decreased amount of heat is situated in the smaller second compartment 212.
As shown in
As shown in
The heat generator 202c of the halogen heater 202A and the heat generator 202d of the halogen heater 202B have different heating spans or different heat distributions in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B, respectively. For example, the heat generator 202d of the halogen heater 202B is outboard from the heat generator 202c of the halogen heater 202A in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B. That is, the heat generator 202d of the halogen heater 202B does not overlap the heat generator 202c of the halogen heater 202A in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B.
As shown in
For example, the heat generator 202c has a length of 217 mm in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heater 202A. The halogen heater 202A is transferred with an amount of electric power of 770 W. Each of the two heat generators 202d has a length of 63 mm in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heater 202B to produce a combined length of the two heat generators 202d of 126 mm. The halogen heater 202B is transferred with an amount of electric power of 440 W. In a print job for printing on a recording medium S of an A4 size sheet in landscape orientation or an A3 size sheet in portrait orientation that has a width of 297 mm in the axial direction of the fixing belt 201, the halogen heaters 202A and 202B are powered on.
The amount of heat generated by the center halogen heater 202A and the amount of electric power transferred to the center halogen heater 202A are greater than the amount of heat generated by the lateral end halogen heater 202B and the amount of electric power transferred to the lateral end halogen heater 202B. However, the amount of heat generated by each of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B and the amount of electric power transferred to the halogen heaters 202A and 202B per unit length in the longitudinal direction thereof are 3.5 W/mm, for example. It is to achieve a constant amount of heat conducted to the recording medium S and the toner image T on the recording medium S so as to retain a predetermined fixing property to fix the toner image T on the recording medium S properly and glossiness of the toner image T on the recording medium S.
As shown in
For example, if the irradiation angle α of the halogen heater 202A increases by 5 percent and therefore the irradiation angle β of the halogen heater 202B decreases by 5 percent, amounts of electric power PA, PB, and PC based on an amount of electric power of the fourth comparative fixing device having the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt are calculated theoretically by formulas (1), (2), and (3) as below.
PA=770 W×1.05=808.5 W (1)
In the formula (1), PA represents an amount of electric power of the halogen heater 202A.
PB=440 W×0.95=418.0 W (2)
In the formula (2), PB represents an amount of electric power of the halogen heater 202B.
PC=808.5 W+418.0 W=1226.5 W (3)
In the formula (3), PC represents a combined amount of electric power of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B.
Conversely, if the halogen heaters 202A and 202B are situated in the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt 201, respectively, and have an identical irradiation angle, the amounts of electric power PA, PB, and PC based on the amount of electric power of the fourth comparative fixing device having the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt are calculated by formulas (4), (5), and (6) as below.
PA=770 W (4)
PB=440 W (5)
PC=770 W+440 W=1210 W (6)
As described above, increase in heating efficiency of the halogen heater 202A having the wide heat generator 202c is greater than decrease in heating efficiency of the halogen heater 202B. Accordingly, the combined heating efficiency of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B of the fixing device 200 improves compared to heating efficiency of the fourth comparative fixing device having the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt.
A description is provided of a configuration of a fixing device 200S according to a second exemplary embodiment.
Like the fixing device 200 depicted in
The size of the first compartment 211S accommodating the halogen heater 202A and the second compartment 212S accommodating the halogen heater 202B varies depending on the length of the heat generators 202c and 202d in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B. For example, a part of the first compartment 211S where the heat generator 202c of the halogen heater 202A is disposed increases in accordance with the length of the heat generator 202c in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heater 202A. Similarly, a part of the second compartment 212S where the heat generator 202d of the halogen heater 202B is disposed increases in accordance with the length of the heat generator 202d in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heater 202B. Accordingly, the shape of the stay 207S varies in a longitudinal direction thereof.
For example, the stay 207S includes a first partition 207cS and a second partition 207eS. Each of the first partition 207cS and the second partition 207eS includes a center partition portion 207h serving as a first partition portion disposed opposite the heat generator 202c of the halogen heater 202A and a lateral end partition portion 207g serving as a second partition portion disposed opposite the heat generator 202d of the halogen heater 202B.
As shown in
As shown in
The irradiation angle β of the halogen heater 202B increases by 5 percent, for example, at the lateral end of the fixing device 200S in the longitudinal direction thereof shown in
For example, the heat generator 202c has a length of 217 mm in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heater 202A. The halogen heater 202A is transferred with an amount of electric power of 770 W. Each of the two heat generators 202d has a length of 63 mm in the longitudinal direction of the halogen heater 202B to produce a combined length of the two heat generators 202d of 126 mm. The halogen heater 202B is transferred with an amount of electric power of 440 W.
However, the amount of heat generated by each of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B and the amount of electric power transferred to the halogen heaters 202A and 202B per unit length in the longitudinal direction thereof are 3.5 W/mm, for example. It is to achieve the constant amount of heat conducted to the recording medium S and the toner image T on the recording medium S so as to retain the predetermined fixing property to fix the toner image T on the recording medium S properly and glossiness of the toner image T on the recording medium S.
For example, if the irradiation angle α of the halogen heater 202A and the irradiation angle β of the halogen heater 202B increase by 5 percent, the amounts of electric power PA, PB, and PC based on the amount of electric power of the fourth comparative fixing device having the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt are calculated theoretically by formulas (7), (8), and (9) as below.
PA=770 W×1.05=808.5 W (7)
PB=440 W×1.05=462.0 W (8)
PC=808.5 W+462.0 W=1270.5 W (9)
Thus, according to the second exemplary embodiment, the irradiation angles α and β of the heat generators 202c and 202d of the two halogen heaters 202A and 202B, respectively, increase, enhancing heating efficiency of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B compared to the first exemplary embodiment described above.
A description is provided of a configuration of a fixing device 200T according to a third exemplary embodiment.
As described above with reference to the fixing device 200 according to the first exemplary embodiment shown in
As shown in
In this case, the amounts of electric power PA, PB, and PC based on the amount of electric power of the fourth comparative fixing device having the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt are calculated theoretically by formulas (10), (11), and (12) as below.
PA=770 W×1.05=808.5 W (10)
PB=440 W×1.00=440.0 W (11)
PC=808.5 W+440.0 W=1248.5 W (12)
Thus, according to the third exemplary embodiment, the irradiation angle α of the halogen heater 202A that generates the increased amount of heat and is transferred with the increased amount of electric power increases, enhancing heating efficiency of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B compared to the first exemplary embodiment described above.
A description is provided of a configuration of a fixing device 200U according to a fourth exemplary embodiment.
Like the fixing device 200 depicted in
The stay 207 of the fixing device 200U is equivalent to the stay 207 of the fixing device 200 shown in
Overall, the first compartment 211 is greater in size than the second compartment 212 inside the loop formed by the fixing belt 201. Since the halogen heater 202A that generates the increased amount of heat and is transferred with the increased amount of electric power attains the increased irradiation angle α and therefore increases heating efficiency, the halogen heater 202B that generates the decreased amount of heat and is transferred with the decreased amount of electric power attains the decreased irradiation angle β, decreasing heating efficiency. Accordingly, the fixing device 200U as a whole improves heating efficiency of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B compared to the fourth comparative fixing device having the two even compartments inside the loop formed by the fixing belt.
As described above, a compartment accommodating the halogen heater 202A that generates the increased amount of heat (e.g., the first compartments 211, 211S, and 211T) is greater in size than another compartment accommodating the halogen heater 202B that generates the decreased amount of heat (e.g., the second compartments 212, 212S, and 212T) to render the irradiation angle α defined by light being radiated from the halogen heater 202A and irradiating the fixing belt 201 to be greater than the irradiation angle β defined by light being radiated from the halogen heater 202B and irradiating the fixing belt 201, thus increasing heating efficiency of the halogen heaters 202A and 202B.
Each of the fixing devices 200, 200S, 200T, and 200U includes two heaters, that is, the halogen heaters 202A and 202B. However, the number of the heaters is not limited to two. For example, each of the fixing devices 200, 200S, 200T, and 200U may incorporate three heaters including heat generators spanning different heating spans or having different heat distributions, respectively, in a longitudinal direction of the heaters. The three heaters may be situated in three different compartments defined by a support (e.g., a stay), respectively. The amount of heat generated by the three heaters is proportional to the size of the three compartments accommodating the three heaters, respectively.
As shown in
A description is provided of advantages of the fixing devices 200, 200S, 200T, and 200U.
As shown in
As shown in
Accordingly, even if the fixing device employs the plurality of heaters that has different heating spans or different heat distributions in the longitudinal direction thereof, respectively, one of the heaters does not heat another one of the heaters with radiation heat, preventing degradation in heating efficiency of the heaters. The support does not define the first compartment and the second compartment evenly to merely locate the first heater and the second heater via the support, thus further improving heating efficiency of the heaters.
The fixing device employing the plurality of heaters that has the different heating spans or the different irradiation spans in the longitudinal direction thereof, respectively, improves heating efficiency of the heaters, shortening the first print time and enhancing fixing property of fixing the toner image on the recording medium properly.
According to the exemplary embodiments described above, the fixing belt 201 serves as a fixing rotator. Alternatively, a fixing roller, a fixing film, a fixing sleeve, or the like may be used as a fixing rotator. Further, the pressure roller 203 serves as a pressure rotator. Alternatively, a pressure belt or the like may be used as a pressure rotator.
The present disclosure has been described above with reference to specific exemplary embodiments. Note that the present disclosure is not limited to the details of the embodiments described above, but various modifications and enhancements are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. It is therefore to be understood that the present disclosure may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein. For example, elements and/or features of different illustrative exemplary embodiments may be combined with each other and/or substituted for each other within the scope of the present disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2015-025271 | Feb 2015 | JP | national |
2015-245000 | Dec 2015 | JP | national |
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