1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a transfer technique for transferring a toner image formed on an image bearing member onto a recording material using an electrophotographic technique used in a copying machine or a laser beam printer.
2. Description of the Related Art
Conventionally, an image forming apparatus has been used which includes a transfer portion in which a toner image formed on an image bearing member such as a photosensitive drum is transferred onto an intermediate transfer belt in an endless belt shape stretched by a plurality of rollers and then the toner image formed on the intermediate transfer belt is transferred onto a recording material. The transfer portion further includes the following configuration. A separation roller provided on an inner side of the intermediate transfer belt and a transfer counter roller provided on the inner side of the intermediate transfer belt and located on the more upstream than the separation roller in a rotation direction of the intermediate transfer belt are provided on an inside of a transfer belt. Further, a transfer roller is provided which contacts an outside surface of the intermediate transfer belt and presses the separation roller and the transfer counter roller via the intermediate transfer belt. The transfer portion includes an area in which the transfer roller contacts the intermediate transfer belt.
According to the above described configuration, a width of the transfer portion can be increased to allow suppressing an applied voltage and improving an image quality.
Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2004-029054 discusses a configuration in which an outer diameter of a separation roller is made smaller than that of a transfer roller to improve separation. In the configuration, the separation roller has the same diameter as a transfer counter roller.
If the transfer counter roller has the same outer diameter as the transfer roller or the transfer counter roller is smaller in an outer diameter than the transfer roller, the following problem occurs.
If the transfer counter roller has the same outer diameter as the transfer roller or the transfer counter roller is smaller in the outer diameter than the transfer roller, a gap between the transfer counter roller in front of the transfer portion and a recording material is widened because of curvature. If the gap between the transfer counter roller in front of the transfer portion and the recording material is wide, behavior of a rear end of the recording material being a free end may cause an electrical discharge phenomenon at the gap between the transfer counter roller and the recording material. The electrical discharge phenomenon may affect a toner image on the intermediate transfer belt.
According to an aspect of the present invention, an apparatus includes a bearing member, a belt in an endless belt shape configured to carry a toner image transferred from the bearing member, a counter roller configured to stretch the belt, a separation roller configured to stretch the belt at a position downstream of the counter roller in a rotation direction of the belt and separate a recording material from the intermediate transfer belt, and a transfer roller configured to press the counter roller and the separation roller via the belt to transfer the toner image on the belt to the recording material between the counter roller and the separation roller, wherein an outer diameter of the separation roller is smaller than an outer diameter of the transfer roller and an outer diameter of the counter roller is larger than the outer diameter of the transfer roller.
Further features and aspects of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate exemplary embodiments, features, and aspects of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
Various exemplary embodiments, features, and aspects of the invention will be described in detail below with reference to the drawings.
A configuration and a operation of an image forming apparatus according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention are described below with reference to
The image forming apparatus illustrated in
Image forming units 1Y, 1M, 1C, and 1K are described below. The present exemplary embodiment includes four color image forming units, that are the image forming unit 1Y for forming an image using a yellow toner, the image forming unit 1M for forming an image using a magenta toner, the image forming unit 1C for forming an image using a cyan toner, and the image forming unit 1K for forming an image using a black toner. Each color image forming unit is described. In the present exemplary embodiment, each toner has a negative polarity in a normal frictional charging polarity.
Photosensitive drums 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2d as image bearing members are rotatable in a direction indicated by an arrow B. Charging devices 3a, 3b, 3c, and 3d charge the photosensitive drums 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2d respectively. An exposure device 7 performs image exposure of each photosensitive drum based on input image information. Development devices 4a, 4b, 4c, and 4d form toner images on the photosensitive drums 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2d respectively. Cleaning devices 6a, 6b, 6c, and 6d remove toners remaining on the photosensitive drums 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2d respectively after a transfer process.
The toner images formed on the respective photosensitive drums are transferred onto the intermediate transfer belt 8 by primary transfer rollers 5a, 5b, 5c, and 5d which form a primary transfer portion in which the toner images are transferred onto the intermediate transfer belt 8. In the above configuration, four color toner images are superimposed on each other, transferred onto the intermediate transfer belt 8, and conveyed to a secondary transfer portion 34.
The intermediate transfer belt 8 in an endless belt shape is stretched by a stretch roller 11, a drive roller 13, a transfer counter roller 10a, and a separation roller 10b and rotated in a direction indicated by an arrow A. The stretch roller 11 provides tension for the intermediate transfer belt 8 to maintain the tension of the intermediate transfer belt 8 constant. The drive roller 13 transmits a driving force to the intermediate transfer belt 8.
The configuration of the secondary transfer portion 34 which transfers the toner image formed on the intermediate transfer belt 8 onto a recording material P is described below. The transfer counter roller 10a and the separation roller 10b press a transfer roller 12 via the intermediate transfer belt 8 and form the secondary transfer portion 34 between the transfer counter roller 10a and the separation roller 10b. The separation roller 10b separates the recording material P from the intermediate transfer belt 8. In the present exemplary embodiment, the secondary transfer portion 34 corresponds to a section between a point 34a where the transfer counter roller 10a starts to press the transfer roller 12 via the intermediate transfer belt 8 and a point 34b where the separation roller 10b finishes pressing the transfer roller 12 via the intermediate transfer belt 8.
The recording material P conveyed from a sheet cassette is conveyed to the secondary transfer portion 34 by a registration roller pair 19. In the present exemplary embodiment, in the secondary transfer portion 34, an electric current of 100 μA is applied to the transfer roller 12 from a power supply 17 by constant current control to transfer the toner image onto the recording material P. In the present exemplary embodiment, although the constant current control is adopted, constant voltage control may be used.
The toner image formed on the intermediate transfer belt 8 is sent from the registration roller pair 19 to the secondary transfer portion 34 at a preset timing and secondarily transferred onto the recording material P conveyed to the secondary transfer portion 34.
The recording material P onto which the toner image is transferred is conveyed to a fixing device 16. The fixing device 16 includes a fixing roller 16a and a pressure roller 16b. The fixing roller 16a and the pressure roller 16b apply a predetermined pressure force and heat to the toner image to melt and fix the toner image on the recording material P, so that an image is formed on the recording material P.
The configuration of the secondary transfer portion 34 which is the characteristic of the present exemplary embodiment is described below.
The secondary transfer portion 34 corresponds to an area of the intermediate transfer belt 8 between an upstream portion 34a of the secondary transfer portion, that is a starting point where the transfer counter roller 10a starts to press the transfer roller 12 via the intermediate transfer belt 8 and a downstream portion 34b of the secondary transfer portion, that is an end point where the separation roller 10b finishes pressing the transfer roller 12 via the intermediate transfer belt 8. In other words, in the present exemplary embodiment, the secondary transfer portion 34 is an area where the transfer roller 12 which comes in contact with an outer surface of the intermediate transfer belt 8 contacts the intermediate transfer belt 8.
According to the present invention, for a relationship between an outer diameter of the transfer roller 12 and that of the transfer counter roller 10a at the secondary transfer portion 34, the transfer counter roller 10a is larger in outer diameter than the transfer roller 12. For the relationship between the outer diameter of the transfer roller 12 and that of the separation roller 10b, the separation roller 10b is smaller in outer diameter than the transfer roller 12. In the present exemplary embodiment, the transfer counter roller 10a, the separation roller 10b, and the transfer roller 12 are straight in shape. If a roller which is different in outer diameters between the center and end portions is used, the outer diameter of the center portion of the roller which the recording material P passes is compared irrespective of a size of the recording material P. In the present exemplary embodiment, the recording material P is conveyed along the center of the transfer roller 12.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the transfer roller 12 has a diameter of 20 mm (a 12 mm diameter core and a 4 mm thick ion conductive urethane sponge layer). The transfer counter roller 10a with a diameter of 30 mm (a 26 mm diameter core and 2 mm thick ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM) rubber layer) and the separation roller 10b with a diameter of 16 mm (a 12 mm diameter core and 2 mm EPDM layer) are arranged to face the transfer roller 12.
The EPDM used in the transfer counter roller 10a and the separation roller 10b is equivalent to each other. Each of the transfer counter roller 10a and the separation roller 10b has a resistance of 1×104 to 1×105Ω.
Such a configuration is determined in consideration of scattering of thick paper and separation of thin paper at the secondary transfer portion 34 of the image forming apparatus.
The scattering and the separation of thin paper related to the transfer roller 12, the transfer counter roller 10a, and the separation roller 10b are described below.
The relationship between the transfer roller 12 and the transfer counter roller 10a is described in association with the scattering.
The scattering is attributed to a transfer of the toner on the intermediate transfer belt 8 to the recording material because an electric field on the upstream side of the secondary transfer portion 34 becomes greater than an electric field at the secondary transfer portion 34 in a conveyance direction of the recording material P before the recording material P reaches the secondary transfer portion 34. Therefore, the scattering can be prevented from occurring by setting an electric field in the area upstream in the conveyance direction of the recording material P smaller than an electric field in the area of the secondary transfer portion 34.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the outer diameter of the transfer roller 12 is thus made smaller than that of the transfer counter roller 10a so that the transfer counter roller 10a does not face the transfer roller 12 in the area upstream than the area where the secondary transfer portion 34 is located in the conveyance direction of the recording material P.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the transfer roller 12 and the transfer counter roller 10a are arranged so that a center point 100b of the transfer roller 12 is positioned more downstream than a center point 100a of the transfer counter roller 10a in the conveyance direction of the recording material P.
The relationship between the transfer roller 12 and the separation roller 10b is described in association with the separation of the recording material P. The greater the outer diameter of the separation roller 10b becomes, the smaller the curvature of a separation portion at the rear end of the secondary transfer portion becomes. As a result, the recording material tends to wind around the intermediate transfer belt 8 and the separation is decreased. Thus, if the outer diameter of the separation roller 10b is reduced, the curvature of the separation portion can be increased and the separation can be improved.
According to the configuration described above, the scattering of thick paper and the poor separation of thin paper occurred at the secondary transfer portion 34 can be suppressed.
Suppression of the scattering and the poor separation of thin paper relates to hardness of the rollers. The relationship between the suppression of the scattering and the poor separation of thin paper and the hardness of the rollers is described below.
As illustrated in
Thus, the recording material P is brought into closer contact with the intermediate transfer belt 8 to allow suppressing electric discharge, so that the scattering can be reduced.
As illustrated in
This configuration can improve the separation of thin paper.
Thus, the transfer counter roller 10a is made higher in hardness than the transfer roller 12 in the secondary transfer portion and the transfer roller 12 is made higher in hardness than the separation roller 10b in the secondary transfer portion 34b to realize suppression of the scattering phenomenon and separation of thin paper.
A configuration and a operation of an image forming apparatus according to a second exemplary embodiment of the present invention are described below with reference to
The configuration and the operation of a secondary transfer portion 340 different from the one of the first exemplary embodiment are described.
The configuration around the secondary transfer portion 340 is described below.
The secondary transfer portion 340 refers to a nip portion for nipping and conveying a recording material. The secondary transfer portion 340 corresponds to a section where a transfer belt 350 stretched by a first transfer roller 12a and a second transfer roller 12b is brought into contact with the intermediate transfer belt 8. The first and second transfer rollers 12a and 12b are similar in configuration to the transfer roller 12 in the first exemplary embodiment.
The intermediate transfer belt 8 in an endless belt shape is stretched by the stretch roller 11, the drive roller 13, the transfer counter roller 10a, and the separation roller 10b and rotated in the direction indicated by an arrow A. The stretch roller 11 provides tension for the intermediate transfer belt 8 to maintain the tension of the intermediate transfer belt 8 constant. The drive roller 13 transmits a driving force to the intermediate transfer belt 8. The transfer counter roller 10a presses the first transfer roller 12a via the intermediate transfer belt 8 and the transfer belt 350. The separation roller 10b presses the second transfer roller 12b via the intermediate transfer belt 8 and the transfer belt 350.
The recording material P conveyed from a sheet cassette is conveyed to the secondary transfer portion 340 by a registration roller pair 19. In the secondary transfer portion 340, an electric current of 100 μA is applied to the first and second transfer rollers 12a and 12b from power supplies 17a and 17b by constant current control respectively to transfer the toner image onto the recording material P. The present invention can be implemented by constant voltage control.
In that case, the toner image formed on the intermediate transfer belt 8 is sent from the registration roller pair 19 to the secondary transfer portion 340 at a preset timing and secondarily transferred onto the recording material P conveyed to the secondary transfer portion 340.
Then, the recording material P is conveyed to the fixing device 16. The fixing device 16 includes a fixing roller 16a and a pressure roller 16b. The fixing roller 16a and the pressure roller 16b apply a predetermined pressure force and heat to the toner image to melt and fix the toner image on the recording material P, so that an image is formed on the recording material P.
The configuration of the secondary transfer portion 340 which is the characteristic of the present exemplary embodiment is described below.
The secondary transfer portion 340 corresponds to an area of the intermediate transfer belt 8 between an upstream portion 340a of the secondary transfer portion, that is a starting point where the transfer counter roller 10a starts to press the first transfer roller 12a via the intermediate transfer belt 8 and the transfer belt 350 and a downstream portion 340b of the secondary transfer portion, that is an end point where the separation roller 10b finishes pressing the second transfer roller 12b via the intermediate transfer belt 8 and the transfer belt 350.
According to the present invention, for a relationship between an outer diameter of the first transfer roller 12a and that of the transfer counter roller 10a, the transfer counter roller 10a is larger in outer diameter than the first transfer roller 12a. For a relationship between the outer diameter of the second transfer roller 12a and that of the separation roller 10b, the separation roller 10b is smaller in outer diameter than the second transfer roller 12b. The transfer counter roller 10a is larger in outer diameter than the separation roller 10b.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the first transfer roller 12a has a diameter of 20 mm (a 12 mm diameter core and a 4 mm thick ion conductive urethane sponge layer). The transfer counter roller 10a with a diameter of 30 mm (a 26 mm diameter core and 2 mm thick ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM) rubber layer) is arranged to face the first transfer roller 12a. The separation roller 10b with a diameter of 16 mm (a 12 mm diameter core and 2 mm thick EPDM layer) is arranged to face the second transfer roller 12b with a diameter of 20 mm (a 12 mm diameter and a 6 mm thick ion conductive urethane sponge layer).
The EPDM used in the transfer counter roller 10a and the separation roller 10b is equivalent to each other. Each of the transfer counter roller 10a and the separation roller 10b has a resistance of 1×104 to 1×105Ω.
Such a configuration is determined in consideration of scattering of thick paper and separation of thin paper at the secondary transfer portion 340 of the image forming apparatus.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the following relationship is satisfied for the outer diameter of each roller, the transfer counter roller 10a>the first transfer roller 12a and the second transfer roller 12b>the separation roller 10b.
According to the configuration described above, the scattering of thick paper and the poor separation of thin paper occurred at the secondary transfer portion 340 can be suppressed.
In addition, the suppression of the scattering of thick paper and the poor separation of thin paper relates to the hardness of the rollers.
According to the present invention, for the relationship between the transfer counter roller 10a and the first transfer roller 12a, the transfer counter roller 10a is higher in hardness than the first transfer roller 12a. For the relationship between the separation roller 10b and the second transfer roller 12b, the second transfer roller 12b is higher in hardness than the separation roller 10b.
Further in the present exemplary embodiment, the first transfer roller 12a is similar to the second transfer roller 12b in hardness. However, even if the first transfer roller 12a is different from the second transfer roller 12b in hardness, the configuration satisfying the above relationship can suppress the scattering phenomenon and improve the separation of thin paper.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the center point 100a of the transfer counter roller 10a and the center point 100c of the transfer roller 12a are arranged substantially at the same position in the conveyance direction of the recording material. However, it is desirable to reduce an electric field between the transfer counter roller 10a and the transfer roller 12a which are located more upstream than the secondary transfer portion 340 in the conveyance direction of the recording material. Therefore, the center point 100c of the transfer roller 12a is located more downstream than the center point 100a of the transfer counter roller 10a in the conveyance direction of the recording material, which is more effective for the scattering phenomenon.
As described above, the exemplary embodiments of the present invention can improve the separation of a recording material which passes through the transfer portion while an influence of behavior of a rear end of the recording material on the toner image on the intermediate transfer belt is being reduced.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all modifications, equivalent structures, and functions.
This application claims priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-013239 filed Jan. 25, 2010, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-013239 | Jan 2010 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5995794 | Osada et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6078773 | Shimojo et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
6697595 | Kawagoe | Feb 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2002-82543 | Mar 2002 | JP |
2004-029054 | Jan 2004 | JP |
2005017368 | Jan 2005 | JP |
2009-36941 | Feb 2009 | JP |
Entry |
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Computer translation of JP2005-017368A to Somiya, Jan. 2005. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110182630 A1 | Jul 2011 | US |