Japanese Patent Application No. 2016-163631 filed on Aug. 24, 2016, including description, claims, drawings, and abstract the entire disclosure is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to an image forming apparatus and an image forming method.
An image forming apparatus such as an electrophotographic printer forms an image on paper through the processes of charging, exposing, developing, and transferring. In a usual transferring process, the toner image formed on a photosensitive drum is transferred onto an intermediate transfer belt in the primary transfer process and the toner image transferred onto the intermediate transfer belt is in turn transferred to a sheet of paper in the secondary transfer process.
In the secondary transfer process, a transfer voltage is applied between the intermediate transfer belt and a secondary transfer roller, and the toner image is transferred from the intermediate transfer belt to a sheet of paper as the sheet of paper goes through between the intermediate transfer belt and the secondary transfer roller. Inside the intermediate transfer belt, a secondary transfer counter roller is disposed in the opposite position to the secondary transfer roller, and the transfer voltage is applied only to the secondary transfer counter roller, with the secondary transfer roller electrically grounded (for example, see Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2005-010491).
In production printing and other fields, a high productivity is required. To achieve a high productivity, the paper conveyance speed needs to be increased, which entails the need for shortening transfer time by applying a higher transfer voltage in the secondary transfer process.
According to the technique disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2005-010491, however, transfer voltage is applied only to the secondary transfer counter roller, which is disadvantageous in that a higher transfer voltage would require a power source with a high voltage transformer and high voltage wiring and hence lead to a cost increase and an increase in the size of the power source. Besides, other requirements would arise such as ensuring insulation distance (clearance distance and creepage distance) and wiring arrangement for avoiding interference with the signal wires and would increase constraints on designing, which is not desirable.
The present invention has been made in view of the aforementioned disadvantages. Hence, an object of the present invention is to provide an image forming apparatus and an image forming method that allow transfer voltage in the secondary transfer process to be increased while imposing few constraints on designing and limiting a size increase of the power source and a cost increase.
To achieve at least one of the abovementioned objects, according to an aspect of the present invention, an image forming apparatus reflecting one aspect of the present invention includes: an image holder that holds a toner image; a transferer that is disposed opposite to the image holder so as to be in contact with the image holder and transfers the toner image from the image holder onto a recording sheet that is going through a contact part where the transferer contacts the image holder, by applying a transfer voltage between the transferer and the image holder; a first power source that applies a voltage of a first polarity to the image holder; and a second power source that applies a voltage of a second polarity, which is reverse to the first polarity, to the transferer.
To achieve at least one of the abovementioned objects, according to another aspect of the present invention, an image forming method reflecting another aspect of the present invention includes: conveying a recording sheet in a conveyance path; and applying a transfer voltage between an image holder that holds a toner image and a transferer that is disposed opposite to the image holder so as to be in contact with the image holder by applying a voltage of a first polarity supplied by a first power source to the image holder and applying a voltage of a second polarity supplied by a second power source to the transferer, the second polarity being reverse to the first polarity, to transfer the toner image from the image holder onto a recording sheet that is going through a contact part where the transferer contacts the image holder.
The objects, features, and characteristics of this invention other than those set forth above will become apparent from the description given herein below with reference to preferred embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
The advantages and features provided by one or more embodiments of the invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description given hereinbelow and the appended drawings which are given by way of illustration only, and thus are not intended as a definition of the limits of the present invention.
Hereinafter, one or more embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to the drawings. However, the scope of the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments.
As illustrated in
The controller 10 includes a central processing unit (CPU) and various memory devices and performs controls on the aforementioned units and performs arithmetic processing of various kinds in accordance with a program.
The operation panel 20 includes a touch panel, a numeric keypad, a start button, a stop button, and the like and is used for displaying various pieces of information and for inputting various instructions. The image reader 30 reads the image of a document and generates image data.
The image former 40 forms images based on various data on sheets of paper 100 by using an electrophotographic process. An intermediate transfer belt 41 is disposed in a central part of the image former 40. The intermediate transfer belt 41 is driven to rotate in the direction indicated by the arrow A, and the toner images formed on the surfaces of photosensitive drums (not shown) are transferred onto the intermediate transfer belt 41 in the primary transfer process. The toner images transferred to the intermediate transfer belt 41 in the primary transfer process are transferred to the sheets of paper 100 in the secondary transfer process.
Along the intermediate transfer belt 41, four imaging units 42Y, 42M, 42C, 42K (hereinafter abbreviated to 42) for yellow (Y), magenta (M), cyan (C), black (K) are disposed in this order from top to bottom. Each imaging unit 42 has a photosensitive drum. Near each photosensitive drum are provided a charger to uniformly charge the surface of the photosensitive drum, an exposure device to form an electrostatic latent image on the uniformly charged surface of the photosensitive drum in accordance with image data, and a developer to develop the electrostatic latent image into a toner image.
Primary transfer rollers 43Y, 43M, 43C, 43K (hereinafter abbreviated to 43) are respectively disposed opposite to the photosensitive drums, with the intermediate transfer belt 41 running between each pair of contraposed rollers. The primary transfer rollers 43 transfer the toner images formed on the surfaces of the photosensitive drums on to the intermediate transfer belt 41 by electrostatic attraction in the primary transfer process. A secondary transfer roller 44 is disposed beneath the intermediate transfer belt 41. The secondary transfer roller 44 transfers the toner image formed on the intermediate transfer belt 41 to a conveyed sheet of paper 100 in the secondary transfer process. The secondary transfer is performed by applying a transfer voltage between the intermediate transfer belt 41 and the secondary transfer roller 44 to transfer the toner image formed on the intermediate transfer belt 41 onto the sheet of paper 100 by electrostatic attraction. Details of a secondary transfer unit in which the secondary transfer is performed will be provided later.
The fixer 50 applies heat and pressure to the toner image transferred onto the sheet of paper 100 to fix the toner image on the sheet of paper 100.
The paper feeder 60 includes a plurality of paper trays 61, 62 and feeds sheets of paper 100 stored in the paper trays 61, 62 one by one to the downstream conveyance path.
The paper conveyer 70 includes a plurality of conveyance rollers to convey sheets of paper 100 and conveys sheets of paper 100 between the image former 40, the fixer 50, and the paper feeder 60.
The image forming apparatus 1 may include components other than the components described above. The image forming apparatus 1 need not include one or more of the components described above.
With reference to
As illustrated in
The secondary transfer counter roller 45 is connected with a first power source 48 having a negative polarity and the first power source 48 applies a negative voltage to the secondary transfer counter roller 45. The secondary transfer roller 44 is connected with a second power source 49 having a positive polarity and the second power source 49 applies a positive voltage to the secondary transfer roller 44. The potential difference between the output voltage of the first power source 48 and the output voltage of the second power source 49 provides transfer voltage. During the secondary transfer process, transfer voltage is applied between the secondary transfer roller 44 and the secondary transfer counter roller 45 and the toner image, which is negatively charged, is thereby transferred by electrostatic attraction onto the sheet of paper 100 that is passing through the nipping part 47.
As illustrated in
With reference to
The image forming apparatus 1 includes a total controller 11, a power source controller 12, an environment detector 13, a basis weight detector 14, a coverage detector 15, and a paper surface detector 16.
The total controller 11 controls the entire operations of the image forming apparatus 1. The power source controller 12 controls operations of the first and second power sources 48, 49. The environment detector 13 detects environment information (temperature, humidity) in the area in which the image forming apparatus 1 is installed. The basis weight detector 14 detects basis weight information of the sheet of paper 100 on which an image is formed. The coverage detector 15 detects coverage information, which is a ratio of the area of a toner image to the area of a sheet of paper 100. The paper surface detector 16 detects surface information indicating whether a toner image is to be transferred onto the first surface (front) or the second surface (back) of a sheet of paper 100. The CPU of the image forming apparatus 1 executes corresponding programs to cause the above-described units to perform their functions.
With reference to
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
The power source controller 12 switches between the first transfer operation and the second transfer operation every time a sheet of paper 100 is conveyed from the paper feeder 60 to the nipping part 47. The polarity of voltage at the nipping part 47 is thereby reversed for every sheet of paper 100, enabling the image forming apparatus 1 to alternately eject a sheet of paper 100 positively charged on its first surface 101 and a sheet of paper 100 negatively charged on its first surface 101. The sheets of paper 100 ejected from the image forming apparatus 1 are stacked in order in the stacker apparatus 2.
Note that in the above-described first and second transfer operations the voltage at the nipping part 47 may be changed in accordance with the basis weight of the paper 100 or the environment in which the image forming apparatus 1 is placed. Details will be described later of the operation for changing the voltage at the nipping part 47 in accordance with the basis weight of the paper 100 or the environment in which the image forming apparatus 1 is placed. The power source controller 12 controls the output voltages of the first and second power sources 48, 49 to keep the absolute values of the output voltages of the first and second power sources 48, 49 at equal to or less than a predetermined allowable value (for example, 6 kV).
With reference to
According to this configuration, repelling electrostatic force Fi applies to the sheets of paper 100 stacked adjacent to each other, and the sheets of paper 100 separate themselves from each other.
As described above, the image forming apparatus 1 according to the present embodiment reverses polarity of the voltage at the nipping part 47 between the secondary transfer roller 44 and the secondary transfer counter roller 45 for every sheet of paper 100 while maintaining the potential difference between the first power source 48 and the second power source 49 and the polarities of the first and second power sources 48, 49. This configuration allows toner images to be transferred from the intermediate transfer belt 41 to sheets of paper 100 while adjusting the state of electric charge of the sheets of paper 100 ejected from the image forming apparatus 1 and preventing the sheets of paper 100 from clinging to each other.
With reference to
As illustrated in
In contrast, as illustrated in
As described above, according to the image forming apparatus 1 according to the present embodiment, the transfer voltage is provided by the potential difference between the two power sources 48, 49 having opposite polarities, which allows the transfer voltage to be increased without raising the output voltages of the first and second power sources 48, 49. Therefore, the transfer voltage in the secondary transfer process can be increased while reducing constraints on designing and restraining increase in the size of the power source and cost increase.
With reference to
First, the image forming apparatus 1 recognizes the control current value and the electric resistance values (Step S101). More specifically, the power source controller 12 recognizes that the electric resistance values of the first and second resistances are both 10 MΩ and that the required control current value is 200 μA.
Next, the image forming apparatus 1 calculates the control voltage value (Step S102). More specifically, based on the control current value of 200 μA and the electric resistance values of 10 MΩ, the power source controller 12 calculates the control voltage values for the first and second power sources 48, 49, which are −2.0 kV and +2.0 kV, respectively.
Next, the image forming apparatus 1 acquires parameter values (Step S103). More specifically, the power source controller 12 analyzes the print job and acquires the basis weight information of the sheet of paper 100 on which an image is formed, the coverage information of the image, and the surface information of the sheet of paper 100. The power source controller 12 also acquires the environment information from the temperature and humidity sensors (not shown) provided for the image forming apparatus 1.
Next, the image forming apparatus 1 determines the voltage value at the nipping part 47 (Step S104). More specifically, the power source controller 12 determines the voltage value at the nipping part 47 by referring to the voltage value reference table 200. For example, when the basis weight is 128, the coverage is 200%, the surface is the first surface, and the environment is NN, a voltage value of 660 V is obtained by referring to the voltage value reference table 200. When the coverage is neither 0% nor 200%, the power source controller 12 calculates a voltage value corresponding to the coverage value by referring to the voltage value reference table 200. More specifically, when the coverage is 100%, the power source controller 12 calculates, for example, an average of the voltage value corresponding to the 0% coverage and the voltage value corresponding to the 200% coverage to obtain the voltage value at the nipping part 47.
Next, the image forming apparatus 1 determines whether or not the polarity of the immediately preceding sheet of paper 100 is repulsive to a positive polarity (Step S105). More specifically, the power source controller 12 determines whether or not the polarity of the first surface 101 of the immediately preceding sheet of paper 100 that just went through the nipping part 47 is repulsive to a positive polarity.
When it is determined that the polarity of the immediately preceding sheet of paper 100 is repulsive to a positive polarity (YES in Step S105), the image forming apparatus 1 calculates the output voltage value of the second power source 49 by adding the voltage value at the nipping part 47 to the control voltage value of the second power source 49 (Step S106). More specifically, the power source controller 12 adds 660 V to +2.0 kV to obtain +2660 V as the output voltage value of the second power source 49.
The image forming apparatus 1 then performs a constant current control on the first power source 48 at the control current value and performs a constant voltage control on the second power source 49 at the output voltage value (Step S107). More specifically, the power source controller 12 performs constant current control on the first power source 48 at 200 μA and performs a constant voltage control on the second power source 49 at +2660 V. As a result, the output voltage of the first power source 48 becomes −1340 V and the electric potential at the nipping part 47 becomes +660 V. Thus, the second surface 102 of the sheet of paper 100 that goes through the nipping part 47 is positively charged to repel the first surface 101 of the immediately preceding sheet of paper 100.
On the other hand, when it is determined in the process in Step S105 that the polarity of the immediately preceding sheet of paper 100 is not repulsive to a positive polarity (NO in Step S105), the image forming apparatus 1 calculates the output voltage value of the second power source 49 by subtracting the voltage value at the nipping part 47 from the control voltage value of the second power source 49 (Step S108). More specifically, the power source controller 12 subtracts 660 V from +2.0 kV to obtain +1340 V as the output voltage value of the second power source 49.
The image forming apparatus 1 then performs a constant current control on the first power source 48 at the control current value and performs a constant voltage control on the second power source 49 at the output voltage value (Step S109). More specifically, the power source controller 12 performs a constant current control on the first power source 48 at 200 μA and performs a constant voltage control on the second power source 49 at +1340 V. As a result, the output voltage of the first power source 48 becomes −2660 V and the electric potential at the nipping part 47 becomes −660 V. Thus, the second surface 102 of the sheet of paper 100 that goes through the nipping part 47 is negatively charged to repel the first surface 101 of the immediately preceding sheet of paper 100.
Next, the image forming apparatus 1 determines whether or not the job is finished (Step S110). When it is determined that the job is not finished (No in Step S110), the image forming apparatus 1 returns to the process in Step S103. The image forming apparatus 1 then repeats the process from Step S103 until the job is finished. On the other hand, when it is determined that the job is finished (YES in Step S110), the image forming apparatus 1 terminates the process.
As described above, according to the process illustrated in the flow chart in
In the above-described modified embodiment, four parameter values, i.e., basis weight information, coverage information, surface information, and environment information are used to determine the voltage value at the nipping part 47. The voltage value at the nipping part 47, however, may be determined using three or fewer of the four parameter values. In general, the greater the basis weight of the paper 100 is, the higher the voltage value at the nipping part 47 tends to be, and the greater the coverage is, the higher the voltage value at the nipping part 47 tends to be. The voltage value at the nipping part 47 tends to be higher when the toner image is transferred onto the second surface of a sheet of paper 100 than when it is transferred onto the first surface. The higher the humidity is, the lower the voltage value at the nipping part 47 tends to be.
The present invention is not limited to the above-described embodiments but may be modified in various ways within the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
For example, a constant current control is performed on the first power source 48 and a constant voltage control is performed on the second power source 49 in the above-described embodiment. The first and second power sources 48, 49, however, may be controlled in other ways and a constant voltage control may be performed on the first power source 48 and a constant current control may be performed on the second power source 49.
Further, the secondary transfer roller 44 contacts the intermediate transfer belt 41 with the secondary transfer belt 46 therebetween in the above-described embodiment. The secondary transfer roller 44, however, may directly contact the intermediate transfer belt 41 without the secondary transfer belt 46.
Further, the voltage value at the nipping part 47 between the secondary transfer roller 44 and the secondary transfer counter roller 45 is changed in accordance with the basis weight of the paper 100 or the like in the above-described embodiment. The voltage value at the nipping part 47, however, may be changed in accordance with the type of the paper 100 (glossy paper/normal paper). In this case, for example, the voltage value is set at a higher value when glossy paper is used than when normal paper is used.
The units and methods for executing the various processes in the image forming apparatus according to the above-described embodiment may be implemented by a dedicated hardware circuit or a programmed computer. The program may be provided by way of a non-transitory computer-readable recording medium such as compact disc read only memory (CD-ROM) or provided online through a network such as the Internet. In such a case, the program stored in the non-transitory computer-readable recording medium is usually transferred to a storage such as a hard disk and stored therein. The program may be provided as a separate piece of application software or may be treated as executing one of the functions of the image forming apparatus and incorporated into the software for the apparatus.
Although embodiments of the present invention have been described and illustrated in detail, it is clearly understood that the same is by way of illustration and example only and not limitation, the scope of the present invention should be interpreted by terms of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2016-163631 | Aug 2016 | JP | national |