This application claims the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 10-2005-0039715, filed on May 12, 2005, in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a fixing unit and an image-forming apparatus having the same. More particularly, the present invention relates to a fixing unit having pressure rollers and an image-forming apparatus having the same.
2. Description of the Related Art
Generally, an image-forming apparatus is a device that prints an image on paper, which is a printing medium. An electrophotographic image-forming apparatus, which is a type of image-forming apparatus, includes a light-scanning unit that scans an optical signal that corresponds to an image desired to be printed on a photosensitive medium, a developing unit that supplies toner to an electrostatic latent image formed on the photosensitive medium to develop the latent image into a visual image, and a fixing unit that fixes the visual image on paper. An inkjet image-forming apparatus, which is another kind of image-forming apparatus, also tends to have a fixing unit that quickly fixes ejected ink on paper.
Referring to
Referring to
Accordingly, a need exists for an image forming apparatus having an improved fixing unit that increases the reliability of paper transfer through the fixing unit by substantially preventing the occurrence of paper jams.
Embodiments of the present invention provides a fixing unit having a plurality of pressure rollers capable of improving paper-transfer reliability and an image-forming apparatus having the same.
According to an aspect of the present invention, a fixing unit includes a heat roller having a heat source therein and pressure rollers facing the heat roller to form fixing nips therebetween. A bracket rotatably supports the pressure rollers and is also adapted to pivot. Springs elastically pressurize the bracket to closely attach the pressure rollers on the heat roller. A paper guide guides paper so that a jam does not occur between the pressure rollers.
The pressure rollers may include a pair of pressure rollers.
The paper guide may have a substantially Z-shaped cross-section and includes a support supported by the bracket, an extension part extending toward the heat roller, and a guide part guiding a paper.
The support of the paper guide may be mounted on the bracket by pressurizing the support using the spring to closely attach the support to the bracket.
The paper guide may contact the pressure roller disposed in a preceding position so that a jam does not occur between the pressure rollers.
The bracket may be grounded and static electricity charged on the pressure rollers and the paper guide may be discharged through the grounded bracket.
The paper guide may be closely attached to the heat roller so as to form a fixing nip between the paper guide and the heat roller.
The paper guide may be formed of a metal plate having a thickness of about 0.5 mm or less.
The bracket may have a boss supporting the spring. The support of the paper guide may have a hole in which the boss is fitted. The hole may have an inner diameter greater than a diameter of the boss to substantially prevent warp of the paper guide due to thermal expansion thereof.
The springs may include a pair of springs pressurizing both ends of the bracket in the lengthwise direction of the bracket and a ratio of pressurizing force of the pressure rollers changes depending on a pressurizing position of the springs.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a fixing unit in an image-forming apparatus has an image-forming unit forming an image on a paper and a fixing unit fixing the image on the paper. The fixing unit includes a heat roller having a heat source therein, and pressure rollers facing the heat roller to form fixing nips. A bracket rotatably supports the pressure rollers and is adapted to pivot itself. Springs elastically pressurize the bracket to closely attach the pressure rollers on the heat roller. A paper guide guides a paper so that a jam does not occur between the pressure rollers.
The pressure rollers may include a pair of pressure rollers.
The paper guide may have a substantially Z-shaped cross-section and include a support supported by the bracket, an extension part extending toward the heat roller, and a guide part guiding a paper.
The support of the paper guide may be mounted on the bracket by pressurizing the support using the springs to closely attach the support to the bracket.
The paper guide may contact the pressure roller disposed in a preceding position so that a jam does not occur between the pressure rollers.
The bracket may be grounded and static electricity charged on the pressure rollers and the paper guide may be discharged through the grounded bracket.
The paper guide may be closely attached to the heat roller to form a fixing nip between the paper guide and the heat roller.
The paper guide may be formed of a metal plate having a thickness of about 0.5 mm or less.
The bracket may have a boss supporting the spring. The support of the paper guide may have a hole in which the boss is fitted. The hole may have an inner diameter greater than a diameter of the boss to prevent warp of the paper guide due to thermal expansion thereof.
The springs may include a pair of springs pressurizing both ends of the bracket in the lengthwise direction of the bracket and a ratio of pressurizing force of the pressure rollers may change depending on a pressurizing position of the springs.
Other objects, advantages, and salient features of the invention will become apparent from the detailed description, which, taken in conjunction with the annexed drawings, discloses preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention.
The above and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent by describing in detail exemplary embodiments thereof with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
Throughout the drawings, like reference numerals will be understood to refer to like parts, components and structures.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The developing unit 110 includes a housing 111 receiving a toner, which is a developing agent, a photosensitive medium 115 forming an electrostatic latent image by a light-scanning, a charging roller 113 charging the photosensitive medium 115, a waste toner cleaner 114 removing waste toner remaining on the photosensitive medium, a developing roller 117, a doctor blade 118 adjusting the thickness of the toner adhering on the surface of the developing roller 117, and a supply-roller 119 supplying toner to the developing roller 117. The developing roller 117 supplies toner to the electrostatic latent image formed on the outer periphery of the photosensitive medium 115 to develop a visual image on the outer periphery of the photosensitive medium 115. An agitator 121 agitates toner so that the toner is not hardened and is disposed inside of the housing 111. The developing unit 110 is provided in the form of a cartridge. When the developing agent inside of the developing unit 110 is completely exhausted, the developing unit 110 is preferably replaced by a new developing unit.
The transfer roller 120 is disposed to face and contact the photosensitive medium 115 and pressurizes a paper to the side of the photosensitive medium 115 so that the visual image developed on the outer periphery of the photosensitive medium 115 may be transferred to the paper passing between the transfer roller 120 and the photosensitive medium 115.
The light-scanning unit 122 scans an optical signal that corresponds to an image to be printed on the photosensitive medium 115 and may be a laser-scanning unit (LSU) having a laser diode (LD) for a light source.
The fixing unit 140 includes a heat roller 141 and a pair of pressure rollers 151 and 153 disposed to face the heat roller 141. When a visual image-transferred paper passes between the heat roller 141 and the pressure rollers 151 and 153, the visual image is fixed on the paper by thermal compression using heat and pressure.
Also, the image-forming apparatus 100 further includes a paper aligner 125 feeding the paper picked up by the pickup roller 127 to the image-forming unit and orderly aligning the paper so that a visual image may be transferred on the desired portion of the paper. The image-forming apparatus 100 further includes a discharge roller 128 discharging an image-printed paper to an output tray 102 outside of the case 101.
The photosensitive medium 115 is charged to a predetermined electric potential through the charging roller 113 and an electrostatic latent image that corresponds to an image to be printed is formed on the outer periphery of the photosensitive medium 115 in response to an optical signal L scanned from the light-scanning unit 122. The toner inside of the housing 111 of the developing unit is supplied to the photosensitive medium 115 on which the electrostatic latent image is formed through the supply roller 119 and the developing roller 117, so that a visual image is developed on the outer periphery of the photosensitive medium 115. Paper loaded on the paper-feeding cassette 130 is picked up by the pickup roller 127 and fed and aligned by the paper aligner 125 and then passes through between the photosensitive medium 115 and the transfer roller 120. At this point, the visual image that has been developed on the outer periphery of the photosensitive medium 115 is transferred to a surface of a paper faced by the photosensitive medium 115. The image transferred to the paper passes through the fixing unit 114, where the paper is fixed on the paper using heat and pressure, and is transferred and loaded on the output tray 102 by the discharge roller 135.
Referring to
The heat roller 141 has a heat source 142, such as a halogen lamp, a heat coil, or an induction heater, disposed therein to apply heat on a toner-transferred paper. Also, a rubber layer 143 may be disposed on the outer periphery of the heat roller 141 to secure sufficient fixing nips.
The bracket 160 includes a pair of bracket bodies 163 disposed on both ends of a pair of pressure rollers 151 and 153, and a connection bar 164 connecting the pair of bracket bodies 163. The bracket body 163 includes the first and second seat grooves 161 and 162 rotatably supporting shafts 152 and 154 of the first and second pressure rollers 151 and 153. Also, the bracket body 163 further includes a coupling protuberance 168 protruding in the extension direction of the pressure rollers 151 and 153. Through the coupling protuberance 168, the bracket 160 is rotatably mounted in a predetermined frame (not shown) disposed inside of the case 101 and the coupling protuberance 168 serves as a pivot of the bracket 160.
The bracket 160 is elastically pressurized by an elastic member, such as a spring 180. A boss 166 is provided on the backsides of one pair of bracket bodies 163, respectively, and a pair of springs 180 are fitted on the bosses 166 to pressurize the bracket 160 to the side of the heat roller 141. Accordingly, the pair of pressure rollers 151 and 153 supported by the bracket 160 are closely attached on the heat roller 141 to form the fixing nips N1 and N2. Because the intensity of force applied to both ends of the pressure rollers 151 and 153 should be substantially uniform, the pair of springs 180 are the same and the positions of the bosses 166 are determined such that substantially the same positions of the bracket bodies 163 may be pressurized.
When the pressurizing position of the spring 180 changes, the pressurizing force ratio of the first pressure roller 151 to the second pressure roller 153 changes. That is, to apply substantially the same pressurizing force to the first and second pressure rollers 151 and 153, the boss 166 is formed on the center of the bracket body 163 so that the spring 180 may pressurize the center of the bracket body 163. When the boss 166 is formed at a lower portion of the bracket body 163 so that the spring 180 may pressurize the lower portion of the bracket body 163, the pressure applied to the first pressure roller 151 is greater than the pressure applied to the second pressure roller 153. When the boss 166 is formed at an upper portion of the bracket body 163 so that the spring 180 may pressurize the upper portion of the bush body 163, the pressure applied to the first pressure roller 151 is smaller than the pressure applied to the second pressure roller 153. Therefore, the conventional fixing unit 20 illustrated in
Referring to
Referring to
The extension part 174 extends toward the heat roller 141 from the support 171 through a space between the first pressure roller 151 and the second pressure roller 153. The guide part 177 extends to enclose the outer periphery of the heat roller 141 disposed between the first and second fixing nips N1 and N2. The front end of the paper that has passed through the first fixing nip N1 is guided to the second fixing nip N2 without transferring to the second pressure roller 153 by the guide part 177 and thus the occurrence of a paper jam is suppressed.
Referring to
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To remove static electricity generated in the fixing unit 140, the bracket 160 is grounded and the pressure rollers 151 and 153 have a conduction layer, such as a conductive teflon tube, formed on the outer periphery thereof. The paper guide 170 and the bracket 160 may be formed of a conductive material, such as metal. With such a structure, the fixing unit 140 discharges static electricity through the path of paper guide 170 to the pressure rollers 151 and 153 and to the bracket 160, even though static electricity is charged on the pressure rollers 151 and 153 and the paper guide 170 due to friction during the fixing process, so that electrostatic offset of the fixing unit 140 is substantially prevented. The structure removing static electricity of the fixing unit 140 is not limited to the structure illustrated in the drawing and the metal paper guide may be grounded without the bracket.
The visual image-transferred paper transferring to the fixing unit 140 during the printing process passes through the first fixing nip N1 and is guided to the second fixing nip N2 with a paper jam suppressed by the guide part 177 of the paper guide 170. The paper guided to the second fixing nip N2 passes through the second fixing nip N2 and is outputted from the fixing unit 140. Since the bracket 160 is pressurized to the side of the heat roller 141 by the spring 180 and pivots on the coupling protuberance 168, the pressure rollers 151 and 153 pressurize the heat roller 141 using constant pressurizing force despite the eccentricity or deformation of the heat roller 141, so that the fixing nips N1 and N2 may be substantially constantly maintained. Also, since the support 171 of the paper guide 170 is fixed on the bush 160, the heat roller 141 and the guide part 177 maintain a substantially constant distance, so that an abrupt collision is prevented. Therefore, the fixing performance improves and the occurrence of a paper jam is suppressed.
The fixing unit improves fixing performance by applying the plurality of pressure rollers to increase the area of the fixing nips and a small-sized fixing unit may be realized. Also, the paper guide is provided to prevent a paper jam during the fixing process.
According to exemplary embodiments of the present invention, only a pair of springs is used even when a plurality of pressure rollers are used, so that the number of parts is reduced, thereby reducing manufacturing costs.
Though the two pressure rollers are illustrated in the drawing, three or more pressure rollers may be applied.
While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2005-0039715 | May 2005 | KR | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060257179 A1 | Nov 2006 | US |