Embodiments described herein relate to a fuser and an image-forming apparatus.
Conventionally, fusers used in image-forming apparatus have a heating roller and a belt looped around a section of the heating roller. Heating rollers are also referred to as fixing rollers. Generally, such a belt has multiple rollers arranged inside the loop formed by the belt. In addition to these rollers, one or more pads are disposed on the region facing the heating roller and come into contact with the belt. These pads are of a softer material than the belt material and are in a configuration that inclines away from the direction of sheet conveyance. In addition, such pads are pressed perpendicularly against the belt.
Nevertheless, after a long period of use, the pads wear down, and the distance between the downstream edge of the pad and the heating roller widens. As the gap between the pads and rollers widens, sheets may flutter and cause image distortion.
In one embodiment, the fuser of the present disclosure is equipped with a heating roller, fixing belt, pressure roller, pad, and spring. The heating roller is positioned on the downstream side of the fixing belt, with respect to the sheet conveyance direction, and as the heating roller rotates and comes into contact with the toner side of a sheet, the heating roller heats up the sheet. The fixing belt contacts the side of the sheet opposite the toner side of the sheet. The pressure roller exerts a force on the heating roller by pressing against the fixing belt. The pad is of a softer material than the fixing belt, and in addition to pressing the fixing belt against the heating roller via the fixing belt, the pad is inclined from the pressure roller. The spring biases the pad toward the pressure roller and the heating roller.
The embodiment will be described in conjunction with
The printer unit 2 is equipped with a paper-feeding unit 10, a laser optics unit 20, an image-forming unit 50, a fixing apparatus 70, and a conveyor unit 80.
The paper-feeding unit 10 includes multiple paper-feeding cassettes 11, which each house stacked sheets, and a pickup roller 12, which feeds sheets of recording medium from the top of those housed in cassette 11 to the image-forming unit 50.
The image-forming unit 50 is equipped with a central transcription belt 51, which transcribes the toner image formed by four pairs of image-forming stations 60Y, 60M, 60C, and 60K of Y (yellow), M (magenta), C (cyan) and K (black) and a drive roller 54 for driving the central transcription belt 51 and multiple rollers 52 to provide prescribed elasticity to the central transcription belt 51. In addition, the image-forming unit 50 is equipped with a transcription roller 55, which is a transcription vessel. The central transcription belt 51 is fed between the drive roller 54 and the transcription roller 55.
The conveyor unit 80 includes a resist roller 81, which initiates conveyance of sheet reeled out from the pickup roller 12 to the image-forming unit 50 at prescribed timing, and multiple conveyor rollers 82, which transports sheet P reeled out from the resist roller. In addition, the conveyor unit 80 has a paper discharger roller 83 disposed on the upper surface of the printer unit 2 and proximate the point at which sheet P is discharged to the outside of the printer unit 2 and into a catch tray 84, which receives sheet P ejected from a discharger roller 83.
The following is an explanation that corresponds with the closeup view of one of the image-forming stations 60 (i.e., image-forming stations 60Y, 60M, 60C, and 60K in
An image-forming station 60 is equipped with a photoreceptor 61, which is irradiated with light emitted from the laser optics unit 20 (shown in
The following is an explanation of an image-forming operation that maybe used in conjunction with embodiments of the invention.
The charging vessel 62 provides a unified electrical charge to the photoreceptor 61. The photoreceptor 60, which has been provided with the unified charge, has a latent image formed through light emitted from the laser optics unit 20. The development vessel 63 provides toner to the photoreceptor 61 and forms a toner image on the photoreceptor 61. The toner image formed on the photoreceptor 61 through the development vessel 63 is transcribed via the central transcription roller 64 onto the central transcription belt 51.
In addition, the sheet P reeled out through the pickup roller 12 from the paper feed cassette 11 is sent out by the plural conveyor rollers 82. The toner image formed on the central transcription belt 51 is transcribed onto sheet P when the sheet comes to the transcription roller 55. The sheet P, onto which the image has been transcribed, is conveyed to a fuser 70, which fixes the transcribes image onto the sheet P, and is ejected onto a catch tray 84.
The following explains the fuser 70 in detail using
The fuser 70 is equipped with a heating roller 71, a pressure element 72, a pad 73, a spring 74, a stopper 75, and the like. The heating roller 71 is equipped with a hollow cylinder pipe 71a, which is made of aluminum, a rubber roller 71b, which is formed of heat-resistant elastic material placed on the circumference of the hollow cylinder pipe 71a, and two heating lamps 71c that are set parallel in an axial direction of the hollow cylinder pipe 71a inside hollow cylinder pipe 71a. The heating roller 71 receives power from the drive source (not shown) and rotates counterclockwise in
The pressure element 72 is equipped with a first pressure roller 72a, a second pressure roller 72b, and a fixing belt 72c. The fixing belt 72c is a continuous belt and has the first pressure roller 72a and the second pressure roller 72b situated within it. The first pressure roller 72a and the second pressure roller 72b are placed on each side of the heating roller 71 and give elasticity to the fixing belt 72c. That is to say, the outer peripheral surfaces of the first pressure roller 72a and the second pressure roller 72b are in contact with the inner peripheral surface of the fixing belt 72c. The first pressure roller 72a forms a nip via the fixing belt 72c. Namely, the nip is formed by the outer peripheral surface of the heating roller 71 and the outer peripheral surface region of the fixing belt 72c, where the latter corresponds to the region of the fixing belt 72c that contacts both the outer periphery of the first pressure roller 72a and the outer peripheral surface of the heating roller 71. The first pressure roller 72a may have a structure of a silicon rubber elastic body wrapped around a core metal. The elastic body may be a sponge and is not limited to silicon rubber. The first pressure roller 72a presses against the heating roller 71 via the fixing belt 72c.
The second pressure roller 72b is equipped with a heat lamp 72d internally and provides a prescribed heat quantity to the fixing belt 72c. With respect to the sheet conveyance direction, the second pressure roller 72b is placed upstream from the first pressure roller 72a, namely on the side of the transcription roller 55 (shown in
The fixing belt 72c may be formed from heat-resistant polyimide resin. The fixing belt 72c receives a prescribed heat quantity from the heating roller 71. In some embodiments, the fixing belt 72c receives a heat quantity from the heating roller 71 larger than that receiving from the second pressure roller 72b. The fixing belt 72c presses against a prescribed area of the heating roller 71 between the first pressure roller 72a and the second pressure roller 72b. The rigidity of the fixing belt 72c is softer than that of the heating roller 71. As such, the fixing belt 72c conforms to the shape of the outer peripheral surface of the heating roller 71 when the fixing belt 72c exerts a force against the heating roller 71.
The pad 73 also presses against the inner periphery of the fixing belt 72c. The pad 73 is made from a softer material than the fixing belt 72c. For example, it is an elastic body made from silicon rubber and sponge. In addition, the pad 73 exerts a force against the heating roller 71 via the fixing belt 72c.
A parallel direction to the rotational axis direction of the heating roller 71 is a longitudinal direction and the pad 73 has approximately the same length in this direction, which is orthogonal to the rotational direction of fixing belt 72c (i.e., out of the page in
The fourth side 73d is not parallel to fixing belt 72c and is inclined toward the upstream side (with respect to sheet conveyance direction) of the pad 73 and toward second pressure roller 72b. That is, the distance from the fourth side to the fixing belt 72c is longer on the downstream side of pad 73 than the upstream side of the pad 73. The spring 74 also exerts a force partially in the direction of sheet conveyance because of this. In this way, the spring 74 biases the pad 73 toward the first pressure roller 72a side. The pressing surface is defined as the surface formed by the longitudinal axis of the pad 73 (i.e., out of the page) and the fourth side 73d. Numerous identical springs 74 are established on this pressing surface and push the pressing surface with a constant pressure. They may be elements of bias functions such as leaf-springs and are all defined here in this specification sheet as “spring” without being limited to the spring 74.
The pad 73 may be covered with a protective sheet to enhance slippage and also coated against the surface corresponding to the second side. In this case, the pad 73 having a protective sheet or coating is also defined as the pad 73, and even with the protective sheet or coating, the pad 73 is of a softer material than the fixing belt 72c.
A rectangular slot 73e is established along the first side inside the pad 73. A slot 73e has a longitudinal direction edge lined up with the first side 73a. A shaft 73f is disposed in the rectangular slot 73e. The shaft 73f has the same longitudinal direction as that of the pad 73 and is longer than the longitudinal direction of the pad 73. The diameter of the shaft 73f has about the same traverse direction length as the rectangular slot 73e and as such guides the pad 73 movement. The shaft 73f is iron and harder than the pad 73. The shaft 73f may be of a harder material than the pad 73, such as resin, but is not limited to iron. Protruding parts have been displsed on the outside of pad 73 at both terminals of the shaft 73 so as not to been broken off from the pad 73.
A stopper 75 is located at the intersection of the first side 73a and the second side 73b. In other words, the stopper 75 is placed between the pad 73 and the first pressure roller 72a and inside the fixing belt 72c. The stopper 75 prevents the pad 73 from moving too much along the sheet conveyance direction toward the first pressure roller 72a. Moreover, the stopper 75 is made of harder material than the pad 73. The stopper 75 borders the fixing belt 72c lightly. The stopper 75 may be adjacent to or separate from the fixing belt 72c. With regard to stopper 75 abrasion, having the stopper 75 somewhat separated from the fixing belt 72c is desirable. However, if the stopper 75 is placed too far from the pad 73, the stopper 75 will lose stopper functions for the pad 73. The stopper 75 may be established entirely in the longitudinal direction, or many stoppers 75s may be configured in that direction.
In some embodiments, the position where the pressure roller 72a forms the nip between the heating roller and the fixing belt 72c is positioned closer to the heating roller and further from a position where the pad 73 is in contact with the fixing belt 72c. In other words, the first pressure roller 72a has the effect of pushing the fixing belt 72c toward the heating roller 71 more than the pad 73 pushes the fixing belt 72c toward the heating roller 71.
The spring 74 may push in the direction of the stopper 75 by itself without using the rectangular slot 73e and the shaft 73f. The spring 74 has the effect of urging the pad toward the stopper 75. If the direction of urging of the spring 74 is substantially aligned with the guiding direction of the shaft 73f, the spring 74 may push in the direction of the stopper 75 more efficiently.
The following is an explanation of the pressing behavior of the spring 74 on the pad 73.
The spring 74 pushes the pad 73 from the fourth side 73d of the pad 73. The pressing direction is in the sheet conveyance direction, and therefore is always toward the stopper 75. Even if the pad 73 is worn due to abrasion with the fixing belt 72c, the pad 73 moves to downstream side along the sheet conveyance direction due to the pressing force. The intersection of the first side 73a and the second side 73b, as such, is in contact with the stopper 75. Therefore, the distance between the pad 73 and the first pressure roller 72a is kept constant.
By biasing the spring 74 toward the stopper 75 through a long period of use, even if the soft material of the pad 73 wears and is removed, there is substantially no variation in the position of the pad 73 on the downstream side of the sheet conveyance direction, and the gap between the pad 73 and the first pressure roller 72a remains substantially constant. Contact between the fixing belt 72c and the heating roller is maintained by the pad 73, and so the phenomena of sheets fluttering and images being distorted may be prevented.
In addition, if the first side 73a has a concave configuration and the pad 73 does not move toward stopper 75 as pad 73 experiences wear, the distance between the pad 73 and the first pressure roller 72a grows wider than when the first side 73a is a straight line. In the present embodiment that includes movement of pad 75 toward stopper 75 as wear of pad 73 occurs, such an effect is even greater when first side 73a has a concave configuration.
Moreover, in this embodiment, since the pad 73 forms the nip between the heating roller 71 and and the fixing belt 72c, nip depth may be maintained across a longer portion of the sheet conveyance path than when a rotational roller is used instead of the pad 73. Consequently, heat can be applied for a longer period of time to the sheets to increase the efficiency of the fixing.
In the present embodiment, an explanation has been given that takes into account the case in which sheets in the fuser move from down to up, but without limiting to this case, even in the case in which sheets are transported in the horizontal direction, the same effect may be realized for fuser parts.
While certain embodiments have been described, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the inventions. Indeed, the novel embodiments described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the embodiments described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of the inventions. The accompanying claims and their equivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as would fall within the scope and spirit of the inventions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012-133417 | Jun 2012 | JP | national |
This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Patent Application No. 61/528,056, filed on Aug. 26, 2011, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. This application is also based upon and claims the benefit of priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-133417, filed on Jun. 13, 2012, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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