1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to fixing devices and image forming apparatuses, and specifically to a fixing device using a foam-like fixer that fixes resin-containing particles to a recording medium.
2. Description of the Related Art
Image forming apparatuses such as printers, facsimile machines, and copiers form images including characters and symbols based on image information on recording media such as papers, fabrics, and OHP sheets. Particularly, electrophotographic image forming apparatuses have been widely used in offices because they can form a high-definition image on plain paper at high speed. Such electrophotographic image forming apparatuses generally employ a thermal fixing method that includes heating and melting toner on a recording medium and applying a pressure to the melted toner so as to be fixed to the recording medium. Since this thermal fixing method can provide high fixing speed, high fixing-image quality, etc., this method is preferably used.
However, such electrophotographic image forming apparatuses consume about half or more of their total power when heating toner with the thermal heating method. On the other hand, low-power-consumption (energy saving) fixing devices are recently demanded from the viewpoint of environmental issues. In other words, it is desired to have a fixing method that extremely reduces a heating temperature to fix toner or one that does not require heating toner at all. Particularly, a nonthermal fixing method that does not require heating toner at all when fixing the toner to a recording medium is ideal from the viewpoint of low power consumption.
As the nonthermal fixing method, a wet fixing method is known. The wet fixing method uses an oil-in-water drop type fixing agent in which an organic compound that is capable of dissolving or swelling toner and insoluble or hardly soluble in water is dispersed and mixed with water. The wet fixing method includes spraying or dropping the oil-in-water drop type fixing agent onto unfixed toner placed at a predetermined position at the front surface of an object substance, dissolving and swelling the toner, and drying the object substance.
As an example of the wet fixing method, Patent Document 1 proposes a method for bringing a coating roller where a fixer is coated into contact with a recording medium on which unfixed toner has been placed. With this method, however, if the thickness of a fixer layer on the coating roller is thinner than that of an unfixed toner layer so as to coat the recording medium with a slight amount of the fixer, the unfixed toner is attracted by the surface tension due to the liquid film of the fixer at the front surface of the coating roller at the position where the coating roller is separated from the recording medium, which in turn causes the offset of toner particles to the front surface of the coating roller. As a result, an image on the recording medium is remarkably degraded.
Conversely, if the thickness of the fixer layer on the coating roller is substantially thicker than that of the unfixed toner layer, the surface tension due to the liquid film at the front surface of the coating roller hardly acts on the toner particles directly at the position where the coating roller is separated from the recording medium (because the fixer is abundant), which in turn does not cause the offset of the toner particles to the front surface of the coating roller. However, since a large amount of the fixer is coated on the sheet, the toner particles are flowed due to the excessive fixer. As a result, image quality is degraded and a long drying time is required, which causes a problem in fixing response. In addition, a significant residual liquid feeling (wet feeling obtained when an operator touches the sheet with his/her hand) occurs in the sheet. Moreover, when the fixer contains water, or when a large amount of the fixer is coated on a medium containing cellulose such as a sheet, the medium may significantly curl up, which possibly causes the jam of the sheet when the sheet is conveyed inside the image forming apparatus.
Accordingly, when the fixer is coated using a roller, it is really difficult to achieve both the slight coating of the fixer to the toner layer on the sheet so as to improve fixing response, reduce a residual liquid feeling, and prevent the curling of the sheet, and the prevention of toner offset to the fixing roller.
In order to address this problem, Patent Document 2 proposes a technique for performing the same process using a foam-like fixer to remarkably reduce the shift of toner to obtain an excellent image. This technique pays attention to the fact that the foam-like liquid containing a large amount of foam has an extremely low bulk density. Further, a thick fixer layer on a coating roller is required when coating is performed using a roller serving as a contact coating unit so as not to cause an offset to the roller. This means that the fixer at the front surface of the coating roller should have a certain level of volume when uniform coating is performed so as not to cause the offset of resin particles.
On the other hand, an amount of the fixer on the resin particle layer after coating is preferably small in terms of fixing response and residual liquid feeling. This means that the weight of the fixer is desirably low. In order to achieve both a large volume of the fixer at coating and a low weight of the fixer on a medium after coating, the density of the fixer should be low. Thus, the weight of the fixer to be coated can be substantially reduced even if the volume of the fixer is large at the coating. In other words, if the fixer having a low bulk density (value obtained by dividing the weight of the fixer by the volume thereof) is used, it is possible to achieve both the slight coating of the fixer and the prevention of toner offset to the fixing roller.
Further, Patent Document 3 proposes a method for generating small foams having a low bulk density. The method of Patent Document 3 includes a first foam generation step of blowing and stirring air in liquid and generating foam-like liquid having a foam diameter greater than a desired foam diameter. Further, the method also includes a second foam generation step of applying a shearing force to the foam-like liquid having the foam diameter greater than the desired foam diameter generated in the first foam generation step and generating the foam-like liquid having the desired foam diameter.
However, when the foam-like fixer is used as in Patent Documents 2 and 3, another problem arises. That is, when the foams generated by a foam generation unit are supplied under pressure to the coating roller through a tube, a large pressure is required due to the fluid resistance of the foams. The diameter of the foams is required to be smaller than the film thickness of the foams so that the foams are uniformly coated. However, the fluid resistance of the foams increases as the foam diameter becomes smaller. Further, a bulk density is required to be lowered so as to reduce the weight of the fixer on a medium. However, the foams having a low bulk density and a small foam diameter have extremely high fluid resistance. Therefore, a large pressure is required when the foams are supplied under pressure from the foam generation unit to the coating roller through the tube. As a result, a high-capacity pump is required for generating the large pressure.
The foams generated by the foam generation unit are repeatedly broken with time, and the diameter of the foams becomes gradually larger. When the foams, which have not been fixed for a certain period of time, are supplied under pressure from the foam generation unit to the coating roller through the tube, the foams cannot be used for fixing because they do not have desired properties. Therefore, the foams must be discharged and wasted outside a system. Further, when the foam-like fixer is coated on the entire surface of the coating roller, the foam-like fixer, which is coated on areas outside a recording medium where unfixed toner is placed (i.e., areas other than those corresponding to the width of the medium, parts between the mediums), is not used for fixing. The foams attached to the coating roller after fixing are required to be cleaned up. However, the volume of the foam-like fixer is extremely large (i.e., several tens of times as large as the liquid fixer), and thus the collected foams are required to be turned into liquid form immediately. If a large amount of the unnecessary foam-like fixer not used for the fixing exists, cleaning load extremely increases. To this end, a foam generation unit provided inside a film-thickness-controlling and coating unit generates the foam-like fixer, which in turn makes it possible to reduce a distance for supplying the foams under pressure. As a result, the fluid resistance required for supplying the foams under pressure can be reduced. Moreover, for example, if fixing is not performed for a long period of time to thereby change the properties of the foams, an amount of the foam-like fixer that must be discharged outside the system can be reduced. However, when the film-thickness-controlling and coating unit generates foams having a low bulk density and a small diameter, it requires a step of applying a shearing force to the foams and reducing the diameter of the foams in addition to the foam generation step of blowing air into the fixer. As a result, the configuration of the film-thickness-controlling and coating unit becomes complicated. Further, when the fixer is coated on the coating roller toward the width direction of a medium with the configuration of a slit having high fluid resistance and a manifold having low fluid resistance, some of the foams are broken. As a result, the diameter of the foams and the bulk density are increased.
In order to solve the above problems, it is required to arrange the foam generation unit having a small volume near the film-thickness-controlling and coating unit and coat the coating roller with foams immediately after the foams are generated. Thus, the distance for supplying the foams under pressure can be reduced. As a result, the fluid resistance required for supplying the foams under pressure can be reduced. Moreover, if fixing is not performed for a long period of time to thereby change the properties of the foams, an amount of the foam-like fixer that must be discharged outside the system can be reduced.
Generally, the micro mixer serving as the foam generation unit shown in
In the nonthermal fixing method using the foam-like fixer, the diameter of foams is required to be smaller than at least a toner pile height (thickness of a toner layer). However, it is difficult to reliably generate foams having a substantially small diameter according to the method using the commercially-available micro mixer shown in
Patent Document 1: JP-A-2006-078537
Patent Document 2: JP-A-2007-219105
Patent Document 3: JP-A-2008-197188
The present invention has been made in light of the above problems and may provide a fixing device and an image forming apparatus capable of reducing the risk of clogging due to foreign matters and generating foams having a small particle diameter.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a fixing device including a liquid supply unit that supplies a liquid fixer containing a softening agent that dissolves or swells at least a part of a resin to soften the resin; an air supply unit that supplies air for foaming the liquid fixer; and a foam generation unit that mixes the liquid fixer supplied from the liquid supply unit with the air supplied from the air supply unit to generate foams. In the fixing device, the foam generation unit has an air channel in which the air supplied from the air supply unit flows, a liquid-fixer channel provided such that the liquid fixer supplied from the liquid supply unit flows from a direction opposite to a flowing direction of the air channel, and an air-and-liquid mixing part that mixes the air supplied from the air channel with the liquid fixer supplied from the liquid fixer channel in such a manner as to be opposite to each other, thereby generating a foam-like fixer.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an image forming apparatus including an image forming unit that performs an electrostatic recording process using a developing agent having resin fine particles containing a resin and a coloring agent and forms an unfixed toner image on a medium; and a fixing unit that fixes the unfixed toner image to the medium using the fixing device described above.
According to the fixing device of embodiments of the present invention, it is possible to reduce the risk of clogging due to foreign matter and generate foams having a small particle diameter.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
According to the first and second embodiments described above, the liquid-fixer channel 17-1a and the air channel 17-1b of the primary channel part 17-1 are configured to be directly in communication with the air-and-liquid mixing part 18 through the secondary channel part 17-2. Accordingly, if the number of the secondary channels in communication with the liquid-fixer channel 17-1a is the same as that of the secondary channels in communication with the air channel 17-1b, the width of the secondary channels of the foam generation unit according to the first and second embodiment can be more widened than the foam generation unit shown in
Generally, a micro mixer is often used for mixing and reacting two types of liquid with each other, but less used for mixing air and liquid with each other as in the embodiments. The foams used in the embodiments of the present invention have an average particle diameter of about 20 μm and a bulk density of 0.05 g/cm3 or less, preferably 0.02 g/cm3. That is, the foams having a volume extremely smaller than that of air, which are so-called dry foams, are used in the embodiments of the present invention. It is very difficult to foresee if such fine dry foams can be generated using the micro mixer based on knowledge. Therefore, an experiment was conducted using a commercially-available micro mixer (SSIMM-SS-Ni25 manufactured by IMM company).
In the case of the foam generation unit 17 shown in
Note that a description is made of a configuration in which a fixer is supplied to a liquid mixing unit from plural liquid supply units that supply plural constituent components of the fixer and then the mixed fixer is supplied to the foam generation unit to generate foams. In the fixer, components such as a softening agent, a foaming agent, and a foam increasing agent are mixed with each other. However, if all of these components are mixed with each other, the properties of the fixer are changed with time due, for example, to hydrolytic cleavage. As a result, a desired fixing property may not be obtained. In order to address this problem, the components are mixed with each other in the manner shown in
A recording sheet 104 serving as a recording medium is guided to a secondary transfer part by a pair of sheet feeding rollers 105. When a toner image is transferred onto the recording sheet 104, a secondary transfer belt 102 is pressed against the intermediate transfer belt 91. The recording sheet 104 onto which the toner image has been transferred is conveyed by the secondary transfer belt 102, and then the unfixed toner image transferred onto the recording sheet 104 is fixed by the fixing device 1 according to the embodiments of the present invention composed of the foam-like-fixer generation unit 10 having at least the foam generation unit 17 and the foam-like-fixer coating unit 20. In other words, the foam-like-fixer coating unit 20 coats the unfixed toner image, which has been transferred onto the recording sheet 104, with the foam-like fixer generated by the foam-like-fixer generation unit 10 having the foam generation unit of the fixing device 1 based on image information from the exposure units (not shown), for example, a color image or a black solid image. Then, the unfixed toner image is fixed to the recording sheet 104 by an agent (softening agent), which is contained in the foam-like fixer and dissolves or swells at least a part of a resin contained in the toner.
Next, the image forming units are described. As shown in
As described above, it is possible to provide the image forming apparatus capable of preventing clogging due to foreign matter and reliably achieving image formation with the provision of the fixing device according to the embodiments of the present invention. In addition, it is possible to provide the nonthermal-fixing-type image forming apparatus capable of coating a recording medium with the foam-like fixer without consuming a large energy, and capable of minimizing an amount of the foam-like fixer to be discharged outside the system because fixing is not performed for a certain period of time to change the properties of the foam-like fixer.
According to the embodiments of the present invention described above, the foam generation unit of the fixing device includes the air channel in which the air supplied from the air supply unit flows, the liquid-fixer channel provided such that the liquid fixer supplied from the liquid supply unit flows from the direction opposite to the flowing direction of the air channel, and the air-and-liquid mixing part that mixes the air supplied from the air channel with the liquid fixer supplied from the liquid fixer channel in such a manner as to be opposite to each other, thereby generating the foam-like fixer. Accordingly, it is possible to reduce the risk of clogging due to foreign matter and generate foams having a small particle diameter. Further, the air channel and the liquid-fixer channel are in communication with the air-and-liquid mixing part via the openings formed in the terminal ends of the air channel and the liquid-fixer channel.
Accordingly, it is possible to prevent the leakage of the air and the liquid between the air channel and the liquid-fixer channel and efficiently mix the air and the liquid with each other only in the air-and-liquid mixing part. Further, the opening of the air channel formed in the air-and-liquid mixing part faces the opening of the liquid-fixer channel formed in the air-and-liquid mixing part. Accordingly, even if the air channel and the liquid-fixer channel are constructed by a member having low rigidity, a problem due to lack of a sealing property hardly arises. Further, the opening of the air channel formed in the air-and-liquid mixing part does not face the opening of the liquid-fixer channel formed in the air-and-liquid mixing part. Accordingly, it is possible to turn the fixer having high viscosity into foams more effectively. Further, an image forming apparatus includes the image forming unit that performs an electrostatic recording process using a developing agent having resin fine particles containing a resin and a coloring agent and forms an unfixed toner image on a medium; and a fixing unit that fixes the unfixed toner image to the medium using the fixing device. Accordingly, it is possible to provide the environmental-friendly image forming apparatus that reduces a loss of the fixer and does not require a large fixing energy.
The present invention is not limited to the specifically disclosed embodiments, and variations and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
The present application is based on Japanese Priority Application Nos. 2009-114659 filed on May 11, 2009, and 2010-009689 filed on Jan. 20, 2010, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-114659 | May 2009 | JP | national |
2010-009689 | Jan 2010 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7599653 | Asakura et al. | Oct 2009 | B2 |
7655374 | Katano et al. | Feb 2010 | B2 |
7773932 | Katano et al. | Aug 2010 | B2 |
7813689 | Nakamura et al. | Oct 2010 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2006-78573 | Mar 2006 | JP |
2007-219105 | Aug 2007 | JP |
2008-197188 | Aug 2008 | JP |
2009-8967 | Jan 2009 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100284716 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |