The present invention relates to an image forming method and an image forming apparatus such as a copying machine, printer and facsimile, and in particular to an image forming apparatus configured in such a way that the photoconductor surface is exposed at the time of transfer of a toner image.
One of the well-known image forming apparatuses performs a method that comprises steps of: forming an electrostatic latent image on a uniformly charged photoconductor surface by exposure means; forming the electrostatic latent image into a toner image using development means with toner carried thereon; transferring the toner image onto a transfer material fed to a transfer area, from the photoconductor by transfer means; separating the transfer material from the photoconductor using separation means; feeding the transfer material to a fixing apparatus; fixing the toner image by application of heat and pressure; and ejecting the transfer material to a tray installed outside the apparatus by ejecting means.
It is also known that exposure is performed before or concurrently with transfer in order to improve transfer efficiency and separation performances when the toner image is transferred on the transfer material.
For example, a technique is disclosed, where light is applied from a light source provided inside a transfer electrode simultaneously with application of an electric field, and transfer is carried out while removing electric charges on a photoconductor (Patent Document 1).
However, the simultaneous transfer-exposure lamp disclosed in Patent Document 1 is arranged in such a way as to apply light to a range beyond the area where the electric discharge extends by the application of a voltage to the transfer electrode (hereinafter referred to as “transfer area”), namely, to the range outside the area close to the transfer electrode where an attraction force effectively acts on toner. Because of this configuration, due to reduction of potential, the toner absorbed on the surface of the photoconductor by electrostatic adsorption is put in an easily movable state, with the result that so-called scattering is likely to occur. (
What is called scattering here refers to the condition where the transfer material and photoconductor are not brought into close contact with each other, and when the photoconductor is exposed through the transfer material and electric charge is eliminated during action of the transfer electrode, part of the toner is transferred from the photoconductor to a position where transfer should not be performed, with the result that disturbance (scattering) has occurred to the final image.
A method for avoiding the aforementioned scattering is found in the disclosed technology related to the image forming apparatus equipped with illumination range limiting means for ensuring that the exposed light of the simultaneous transfer-exposure apparatus where light is applied simultaneously with transfer will not be applied to the photoconductor before the transfer material is brought into contact with the photoconductor (Patent Document 2). The overview of Patent Document 2 is shown below:
(1) Provide illumination range limiting means for ensuring that the exposed light of the simultaneous transfer-exposure apparatus will not be applied to the photoconductor before the transfer material is brought into contact with the photoconductor.
(2) Provide alternating current charging means for ensuring that alternating current charging is applied to the photoconductor and toner prior to transfer.
However, according to the aforementioned art (1), a lightproof plate 61 is provided to ensure that light of the simultaneous transfer-exposure lamp 6 will not be applied to the transparent photoconductor belt 1a before the transfer material P comes into contact with the transparent photoconductor belt 1a. After the transfer material P has come into contact with the transparent photoconductor belt 1a, the transparent photoconductor belt 1a is exposed before transfer discharge by a transfer apparatus 5 is applied to the transfer material P. Accordingly, electric charge is eliminated from the transparent photoconductor belt 1a during this time. This leads to toner scattering around the image.
According to the aforementioned art (2), electric charge on the transparent photoconductor belt 1a is removed by alternating current charging before transfer. Accordingly, scattering of toner to the surrounding area occurs, similarly to the case of the aforementioned art (1).
To reduce the scattering of toner, it is effective to reduce the amount of light of the simultaneous transfer-exposure lamp 6 and the amount of alternating current electrical charge before transfer. In this case, however, originally intended improvement of the transfer efficiency or separation performance cannot be achieved.
Especially when copying on the back side where transfer is performed on the transfer material corrugated by heat and pressure after passing through a fixing apparatus, or when it is comparatively difficult to get a close contact with the photoconductor as in the last end portion of the material and there is a large-scale corrugation of the transfer material, there are such problems as conspicuous scattering of toner at the time of transfer and bleeding of characters.
In a copying machine or printer of digital exposure type based on a laser and LED rapidly coming into widespread use in recent years, halftone images are often reproduced using a dot-based image. When toner has scattered around the dot forming a grid of dots, the image density appears high and this will lead to occurrence of uneven density in the halftone image.
When a toner image is formed on the back side after a toner image is formed on the front side of the transfer material, and a halftone image is formed by dots on the back side, toner scatters in the portion without toner on the front surface. Whereas the amount of light reaching the photoconductor is reduced in the portion with toner on the front surface and this results in reduced scattering of toner. And this portion appears pale, and a faulty image such as a so-called ghost will be produced.
[Patent Document 1]
Official Gazette of Jikkosho 1965-17412 (FIG. 3 on Page 1)
[Patent Document 2]
Official Gazette of Tokkaihei 1994-175440 (FIG. 1, paragraph 0016)
The object of the present invention is to solve the aforementioned problems and to provide an image forming method and an image forming apparatus, characterized by excellent transfer efficiency and separation performance, capable of preventing scattering of toner from occurring at the time of transfer and capable of getting a high-quality image, free from bleeding of characters or irregularity of density on the halftone image formed by dots, or ghost on the back side caused by the presence or absence of a toner image on the front side surface.
The aforementioned object can be achieved by the features of the present invention described in the followings:
(1) An image forming apparatus comprising: a photoconductor being movable for carrying a toner image; a transfer device, provided with a discharge wire, for transferring the toner image onto a transfer material through discharge from the discharge wire in a transfer area, after a transfer material is superposed with the photoconductor; a transfer-exposure device for carrying out light exposure of a surface of the photoconductor superposed with the transfer material, from the back of the transfer material in the transfer area, the transfer area being an area where discharge from the discharge wire is applied onto the surface of the photoconductor; a separator for separating the transfer material from the photoconductor after the toner image is transferred; and a controller for controlling the operation of the image forming apparatus;
Wherein, the controller controls such that light from the transfer-exposure device is applied to the photoconductor surface for the first time when the photoconductor surface superposed with the transfer material has reached the transfer area.
(2) An image forming apparatus comprising: a photoconductor being movable for carrying a toner image; a transfer device, provided with a discharge wire, for transferring the toner image onto a transfer material through discharge from the discharge wire in a transfer area, after a transfer material is superposed with the photoconductor; a transfer-exposure device for carrying out light exposure of a surface of the photoconductor superposed with the transfer material from the back of the transfer material in the transfer area, the transfer area being an area where discharge from the discharge wire is applied onto the surface of the photoconductor; a separator for separating the transfer material from the photoconductor after the toner image is transferred; and a controller for controlling the operation of the image forming apparatus;
wherein, distribution of an amount of light on the photoconductor surface from the transfer-exposure device, when the photoconductor surface superposed with the transfer material has reached the transfer area, is arranged such that an integrated value of an amount of exposed light upstream of the point where the photoconductor surface is closest to the discharge wire, in a direction of movement of the photoconductor, is 10 through 30% of a total amount of exposed light from the transfer-exposure device, and the end of the exposed light in the upstream side on the photoconductor is within the transfer area.
(3) The image forming apparatus according to (1) or (2), further comprising a light blocking member, provided between the transfer-exposure device and the photoconductor, for blocking a part of light from the transfer-exposure device.
(4) An image forming method comprising the steps of: forming a toner image on a photoconductor being movable; superposing a transfer material with the photoconductor; transferring the toner image onto the transfer material by discharging from a discharge wire in a transfer area, exposing, with light from a transfer-exposure device, a surface of the photoconductor superposed with the transfer material, from the back of the transfer material in the transfer area, the transfer area being an area where discharge from the discharge wire is applied onto the surface of the photoconductor; and separating the transfer material from the photoconductor after transferring the toner image;
wherein, light from the transfer-exposure device is applied to the surface of the photoconductor for the first time when the surface of the photoconductor superposed with the transfer material has reached the transfer area.
(5) The image forming method according to (4), wherein distribution of an amount of light on the surface of the photoconductor from the transfer-exposure device, when the surface of the photoconductor superposed with the transfer material has reached the transfer area, is arranged such that an integrated value of an amount of exposed light upstream of the point where the surface of the photoconductor is closest to the discharge wire, in the direction of movement of the photoconductor, is 10 through 30% of a total amount of exposed light from the transfer-exposure device, and the end of the exposed light on the upstream side is within the transfer area.
The following describes the preferred embodiments of the present invention with reference to the drawings:
a charging apparatus 2 for uniformly charging the surface of the photoconductor 1 sequentially in the rotary direction of the photoconductor 1;
exposure means 3 for forming an electrostatic latent image by applying light in conformity to image data on the charged photoconductor 1;
a development apparatus 4 for forming a toner image by supplying toner to the electrostatic latent image formed on the photoconductor 1;
a transfer material P in contact with the photoconductor 1;
a transfer apparatus 5 for transferring the toner image on the photoconductor 1 onto the transfer material P;
a transfer-exposure apparatus 6, arranged on the back surface of the transfer apparatus 5, for applying light to the surface of the photoconductor 1;
a separator apparatus 7 for separating the transfer material P subsequent to transfer;
a cleaning apparatus 8 for removing toner remaining on the surface of the photoconductor 1 after transfer; and
a pre-charging exposure lamp 9 (hereinafter referred to as “PCL”) for removing residual potential from the surface of the photoconductor 1.
The following describes the operation of the image forming apparatus of the present embodiment:
The control means (not illustrated) incorporated in the image forming apparatus receives an image formation start signal by means of such an input signal as the ON signal of a copy switch (not illustrated) and sends an electric signal to the drive means of a photoconductor drive motor not illustrated, thereby driving the photoconductor 1. At the same time, it causes a pre-charging exposure lamp (PCL) 9 to light up in order to remove the influence of the potential on the surface of a front image formed on the photoconductor 1. Then the surface of the photoconductor 1 is charged by the charging apparatus 2. The charging apparatus 2 is a scorotron or corotron charging device equipped with a discharge wire, and is provided with a high voltage power supply (not illustrated) for applying voltage to the charging device. The high voltage power supply output voltage is controlled by the aforementioned control means in such a way that the surface of the photoconductor 1 is uniformly charged.
While continuing rotation, the photoconductor 1 whose surface is charged by the charging apparatus 2 is exposed image-wise by the exposure means 3, thereby forming an electrostatic latent image. The exposure means 3 is provided by a laser exposure system and a scanning method according to the LED-based exposure method.
The photoconductor 1 with latent image formed thereon continues further rotation and reaches the development apparatus 4. The aforementioned electrostatic latent image is developed into a toner image by the development apparatus 4. The development apparatus 4 contains a developer carrier (not illustrated) that holds a two-component developer composed of toner and carrier and feeds the developer by rotation, and a development bias power supply (not illustrated) that applies high voltage to the developer carrier, the output voltage ranging from 0 through −1,000 volts.
The photoconductor 1 with a toner image formed thereon by the development apparatus 4 continues a further rotation to reach the transfer area. A toner image on the transfer material P is transferred through the functions of the transfer apparatus 5 and transfer-exposure apparatus 6. The transfer material P subsequent to transfer is separated from the photoconductor 1 by the separator apparatus 7, and is ejected to an ejection tray after having been heated and fixed by a fixing apparatus (not illustrated). The remaining toner on the photoconductor 1 separated from the transfer material P is removed by the cleaning apparatus 8.
In
In
The following describes the positional relationship between the transfer-exposure apparatus 6 and transfer apparatus 5 in the first embodiment with reference to
In
Similarly to the case of the first embodiment, let us assume that the positional relationship between transfer-exposure apparatus 6 and transfer apparatus 5 in the second embodiment is the same as that in the first embodiment, except for the lightproof plate 61. Also assume that the lightproof plate 61 determines the position of the light on the end portion R2 on the upstream side, “R2” represents the upstream side end of light applied to the surface of the photoconductor 1 from the transfer-exposure apparatus 6, and “L2” represents the downstream side end. Based on this assumption, the total amount of light in the range from the upstream side end R2 on the surface of the photoconductor 1 to the downstream side end L2 is represented in terms of the value (light amount) M2 obtained by integrating the light amount distribution curve “b” from the downstream side end L2 to the upstream side end R2, and the positions of the transfer-exposure apparatus 6 and transfer apparatus 5 and the opening width of the opening slit 52 are set in such a way that the integral value (light amount) from the aforementioned closest point S to the upstream side end R2 will be ( 10/100) M2. Similarly to the case of the first embodiment, the position of the upstream side end R2 must be within the transfer range.
In
In
Table 1 shows the result of experiments conducted on the first and second embodiment of the present invention, and the first and second comparative examples.
(1) Image Forming Conditions
Photoconductor: Organic photoconductor drum using a titanylphthalocyan pigment having a diameter of 100 mm
Photoconductor linear velocity: 420 mm/sec.
Photoconductor potential: Unexposed portion −750 volts; exposed portion −100 volts
Development bias: −600 volts (reverse development)
Transfer current: 60 μA (current flowing to the photoconductor at the time of transfer discharge)
Alternating current for separation: 220 μA (current flowing to the photoconductor at the time of discharge by separation)
Direct current for separation: −50 μA (current flowing to the photoconductor at the time of discharge by separation)
(2) Evaluation Procedure
Irregular dot density: Visually check a 50%-dot halftone image to see if the irregular dot density is present or not.
Bleeding of character: Visually check a 5.5-point letter (alphabet) to see if bleeding is present or not.
Ghost on the back: Visually check the image to see if a ghost appears on the back or not when a 50%-dot halftone image is formed on the entire back surface after a 72-point letter has been printed on the front surface of a transfer material.
Transfer efficiency: Measure the mass of the toner transferred on the transfer material and the toner remaining after transfer on the photoconductor, and represent the mass of the toner transferred on the transfer material relative to the total mass of the toner in terms of percentage (%) to make comparison.
Separation performance: Check the separation performance using the bond paper having a basis weight of 64 g/m3.
(3) Result
Satisfactory results were obtained in the first and second embodiments.
In the first comparative example, irregular dot density, character bleeding and back side ghost occurred due to the scattering of toner at the time of transfer.
In the second comparative example, the transfer efficiency was as low as 86%, and the transfer material was separated by nearly winding around the photoconductor. Separation performance was unstable (insufficient).
The aforementioned experiments have demonstrated that, if the aforementioned amount of light applied on the upstream side relative to the width of the light applied to the surface of the photoconductor 1 from the transfer-exposure apparatus 6 is 10 through 30 percent of the total amount of the light applied, there is no problem with scattering of the image, transfer efficiency and separation performance.
Use of an image forming apparatus according to the present invention, which keeps exposure by the transfer-exposure apparatus within the range (transfer range) for effective working of the toner attraction force by the discharge from the discharge wire of a transfer apparatus, ensures excellent transfer efficiency and separation performance, prevents scattering of toner from occurring at the time of transfer and provides a high-quality image, free from bleeding of characters or irregularity of density on the halftone image formed by dots or ghost on the back side caused by the presence or absence of a toner image on the front surface of the transfer material.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003-004321 | Jan 2003 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4785324 | Yamazaki et al. | Nov 1988 | A |
5347353 | Fletcher | Sep 1994 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040136756 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |