1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a copier, printer, facsimile apparatus or similar image forming apparatus, a process cartridge and a cleaningless system.
2. Description of the Background Art
One of conventional image forming apparatuses is configured to form an electric field for image transfer between a photoconductive element and an image transfer medium moving in contact with the photoconductive element to thereby transfer a toner image from the photoconductive element to the image transfer medium. In such an electrostatic image transfer type of image forming apparatus, residual toner is often left on the surface of the photoconductive element after the transfer of the toner image. Should the surface portion of the photoconductive element where the residual toner exists be subject to the next image forming cycle, irregular charging or similar defective charging would occur at the above surface portion, degrading image quality. To solve this problem, it has been customary to remove the residual toner with a cleaning device located at a position where it faces the photoconductive element between an image transferring zone and a charging zone.
However, the problem with the cleaning device described above is that it needs spaces for accommodating a waste toner tank for storing the residual toner collected from the photoconductive element, a conduit for reusing the collected toner and so forth, increasing the overall size of the image forming apparatus. This is particularly true with a tandem image forming apparatus in which the cleaning device must be assigned to each of a plurality of photoconductive elements.
In light of the above, Japanese Patent No. 3091323, for example, discloses an image forming apparatus of the type causing a developing device to collect residual toner from the surface of a photoconductive element. This type of toner collecting system causes the developing device to play the role of cleaning device at the same time and therefore does not need a cleaning device independent of the developing device. Further, spaces for accommodating the conduit for the conveyance of the collected residual toner and so forth are not necessary. Therefore, this type of toner collecting system contributes a great deal to the size reduction of an image forming apparatus.
Recently, however, the diameter of a developing roller and that of a photoconductive element are decreasing in parallel with the size reduction of an image forming apparatus. This brings about a problem that a developing zone where the photoconductive element and developing roller are closest to each other is narrowed and lowers the collection ratio of the residual toner from the photoconductive element. Consequently, the residual toner not collected accumulates on the photoconductive element, resulting in background contamination and other image defects and toner scattering and other mechanical troubles.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an image forming apparatus of the type collecting residual toner with a developing device and capable of collecting residual toner more efficiency than a conventional image forming apparatus of the type described, and a process cartridge removably mounted to the image forming apparatus.
An image forming apparatus of the present invention includes an image carrier. After a charging device has uniformly charged the surface of the image carrier, a latent image forming device forms a latent image on the surface of the image carrier uniformly charged by the charging device. Subsequently, a developing device develops the latent image to thereby produce a corresponding toner image. The developing device includes a stationary magnetic field generating member disposed thereinside and rotatable with a two-ingredient type developer made up of magnetic carrier grains and toner grains deposited on the surface thereof. An image transferring device transfers the toner image from the image carrier to an image transfer medium. The developing device bifunctions as a cleaning device for collecting residual toner grains left on the image carrier after the transfer of the toner image to the image transfer medium. In the event of collection of the residual toner grains, a DC voltage is applied to the image carrier and developer carrier to thereby form an electric field in a direction in which the residual toner grains move from the image carrier toward the developer carrier. The magnetic field generating device generates, at a position where the developer carrier faces the image carrier, a magnetic field whose magnetic force in a direction normal to the surface of the developer carrier is between 100 mT and 200 mT.
A process cartridge removably mounted to the image forming apparatus having the above configuration is also disclosed.
The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description taken with the accompanying drawings in which:
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
The image forming means 1M through 1BK respectively include image carrier units, which respectively include photoconductive drums or image carriers 11M through 11BK, and respective developing units. The image forming means 1M through 1BK are arranged such that the axes of the photoconductive drums (simply drums hereinafter) 11M through 11BK extend horizontally and at a preselected pitch in the direction A.
The printer further includes an optical writing unit or latent image forming means 2 and sheet cassettes 3 and 4. An image transferring unit 6 includes an endless belt or image transfer belt 60 for conveying the paper sheet 100 via consecutive image transfer stations where the belt 60 faces the drums 11. A pair of registration rollers 5 cooperate to top the paper sheet 100 and then drive it toward the belt 60 at preselected timing. A fixing unit 7, including a fixing belt, a print tray 8, a turning unit 9 and so forth are arranged downstream of the belt 60 in the direction A. Further, the illustrative embodiment includes a manual feed tray, toner containers, waste toner bottles, a power supply unit and so forth, although not shown specifically.
The optical writing unit 2 includes lasers or light sources, polygonal mirrors, f-θ lenses, mirrors and so forth, as illustrated. The optical writing unit 2 scans the surfaces of the drums 11M through 11BK with laser beams in accordance with image data of respective colors.
In
The image forming means 1M through 1BK are identical in configuration with each other except for the color of toner to use. Therefore, the following description will concentrate on the magenta image forming means 1M by way of example.
As shown in
In the image carrier unit 10M with the above configuration, the charge roller 15M, applied with a preselected voltage, uniformly charges the surface of the drum 11M. More specifically, a DC voltage of −600 V is applied to the core of the charge roller 15M for thereby uniformly charging the surface of the drum 111M to −400 V. The optical writing unit 2 scans the thus charged surface of the drum 11M with a laser beam modulated in accordance with image data to thereby form a latent image on the drum 1M. Subsequently, the developing unit or developing means 20M, which will be described more specifically later, develops the latent image on the drum 11M for thereby producing a magenta toner image. The magenta toner image is transferred from the drum 11M to the paper sheet 100, which is being conveyed by the belt 60, at an image transfer position Pt by a primary image transfer roller or image transferring means 14M.
The developing unit 20M stores a two-ingredient type developer made up of magnetic carrier grains and toner grains charged to negative polarity as a developer 28M for developing the latent image formed on the drum 1M. The toner grains may be implemented by pulverized toner grains, polymerized toner grains or similar conventional toner grains. A sleeve or developer carrier 22M, formed of a nonmagnetic material, is disposed in a casing 21M while being partly exposed to the outside via an opening formed in the casing 21M and adjoining the drum 1M. A magnet roller or magnetic field forming means, not shown, is disposed inside the sleeve 22M. The developing unit 20M further includes screws 23M and 24M for conveying the developer 28M, a doctor or metering member 25M, a permeability sensor 26M responsive to the permeability of the developer 28M, and a developer cartridge 27M. Labeled 29M is a main-pole magnet included in the magnet roller as magnetic field forming means that forms a magnet brush in a developing zone. During image formation, a negative DC voltage or DC component is applied from a bias power supply or development electric field forming means, not shown, to the sleeve 22M, biasing the sleeve 22M to a preselected voltage relative to a metallic base layer included in the drum 1M.
In
The toner content of the developer 28M stored in the casing 21 and decreases due to repeated image formation is determined on the basis of the area of an image and the output of the permeability sensor 26M. Fresh toner grains are replenished from the developer cartridge 27M to the casing 21 in accordance with the output (Vt) of the permeability sensor 26M, maintaining the toner content of the developer 28M substantially constant. More specifically, assume that the target toner content of the developer 28M is Vref. Then, if a difference ΔT (=Vref−Vt) is positive, then the toner content is determined to be sufficiently high and does not need replenishment. If the difference ΔT is negative, then fresh toner grains are replenished in an amount proportional to |ΔT| so as to bring Vt closer to Vref. Also, process control is executed once for ten paper sheets (ranging from about five to 200 paper sheets) in order to set Vref, charge potential and quantity of light. The process control may be implemented as a mode in which the amounts of toner deposited on a plurality of halftone and solid patterns formed on the drum 11M are sensed in order to set up a target amount of deposition. A controller, not shown, executes such toner content control with a CPU (Central Processing Unit), a ROM (Read Only Memory), a RAM (Random Access Memory) or storing means, an I/O (Input/Output Interface) and so forth.
In the illustrative embodiment, only the drum 11BK positioned at the most downstream side is constantly held in contact with the belt 60 while the other drums 11M, 1C and 11Y are movable into or out of contact with the belt 60, as needed.
The image forming means 1M through 1BK each are constructed into a process cartridge removable from the apparatus body along guide members not shown. For example, the image carrier unit 10M and developing unit 20M are constructed into a single process cartridge 1M. When some member included in the process cartridge 1M must be replaced, the process cartridge 1M should only be bodily removed from the apparatus body, implementing easy replacement. Alternatively, considering a life particular to each member, only the drum unit 10M may be implemented as a process cartridge, in which case the developing unit 20M and process cartridge 10M will be configured to be removable from the apparatus body independently of each other.
Referring again to
While the belt 60 conveys the paper sheet 100 electrostatically adhering thereto, a magenta, a cyan, a yellow and a black toner image respectively formed on the drums 11M through 11BK are sequentially transferred to the paper sheet 100 one above the other, completing a full-color image on the paper sheet 100. The full-color toner image thus formed on the paper sheet 100 is then fixed by the fixing unit 7.
On the other hand, in a monochromatic image forming mode, i.e., a black image forming mode also available with the illustrative embodiment, the drums 11Y, 11C and 11M are released from the belt 60 while the BK drum 11BK is held in contact with the belt 60 alone. In this condition, ablack toner image formed on the BK drum 11BK is transferred to the sheet 100 brought to a nip between the drum 11BK and the belt 60. The black toner image is fixed on the paper sheet 100 in the same manner as the full-color toner image.
Hereinafter will be described cleaning of the drum 11, i.e. removal of residual toner grains left on the drum 11 after image transfer.
The residual toner grains, containing the toner grains of opposite or positive polarity, deposit on the surface of the drum 11M and then pass the charge brush 12M. A negative bias is applied from a power supply, not shown, to the charge brush 12M, inverting the polarity of the toner grains of positive polarity deposited on the drum 11M to negative polarity. Consequently, the residual toner grains on the drum 11M passed the charge brush 12M are uniformly charged to negative polarity. The bias applied to the charge brush 12M is sufficient to invert the polarity of the toner grains to the polarity of the bias on the basis of a difference in potential between the bias and the surface of the drum 1M.
The toner grains present on the drum 11M and passed the charge brush 12M are held by the blade 13M for a moment. The blade 13M is movable into or out of contact with the drum 11M and is released from the drum 11M at preselected timing. More specifically, the blade 13M is positioned upstream of the charge roller 15M in the direction of rotation of the drum 1M. If desired, the blade 13M, capable of temporarily holding the residual toner grains, may be positioned between the charge roller 15M and the latent image forming zone so as to prevent the residual toner grains from passing through the latent image forming zone during the formation of a latent image. This prevents, in an image forming apparatus of development and cleaning type, toner grains from depositing on a drum during latent image formation and obstructing faithful formation of a latent image. Particularly, in a configuration in which the dot size of a latent image is decreasing for higher image quality and image quality is highly susceptible toner present in an exposing portion, there can be obviated spot-like omission of an image.
Further, the blade 13M is located at a position where the toner grains held thereby do not drop due to their own weight. More specifically, as shown in
However, if the blade 13M is positioned between the charge roller 15M and the latent image forming zone, then the distance the surface of the drum 11M moves from the charging position to the developing position increases. This is apt to cause the potential on the surface of the drum 11M to vary in accordance with the above distance and lower image quality. Furthermore, if the blade 13M is located downstream of the charge roller 15M in the direction of rotation of the drum 1M, then it is likely that the residual toner grains exist on the drum 11M at the time of charging and hide part of the drum surface to thereby obstruct uniform charging.
As shown in
When the residual toner grains held by the blade 13M contain both of grains of expected polarity and gains of opposite polarity, the two kinds of grains are likely to be electrostatically connected while being held by the blade 13M. If such residual toner grains are again returned to the surface of the drum 11M at preselected timing, then the residual toner grains are apt to fail to pass through the gap between the charge roller 15M and the drum 1M, resulting in defective charging and therefore low image quality. In accordance with the present invention, the residual toner grains are uniformly charged to negative polarity by the charge brush 12M before temporarily held by the blade 13M and therefore prevented from being connected together while being held by the blade 13M. It follows that the toner grains returned from the blade 13M to the surface of the drum 11M smoothly pass through the gap between the drum 11M and the charge roller 15M, obviating defective charging and other defects.
When the drum 11M is rotated a preselected number of times (more than one time inclusive), the cleaning mode is ended. Then, the number of prints n is reset (step S6). On the other hand, when the desired number of prints are output (Yes, step S7), the printing operation is ended. If the number of prints output is short of the desired number (No, step S7), then the procedure returns to the step S2. If the number prints output is short of the preselected number A (No, step S4) and short of the desired number (No, step S7), then the procedure also returns to the step S2. If the answer of the step S7 is Yes, then the printing operation is ended.
The residual toner grains returned from the blade 13M to the drum 11M at the timing stated above are uniformly charged to the expected polarity by the charge brush 12M and therefore pass the charge roller 15M without electostatically depositing thereon. Such toner are then conveyed via the latent image forming zone to the developing zone where the drum 11M faces the sleeve 22M when a latent image is not being formed.
How the developing device 20M collects the residual toner conveyed thereto by the drum 11M will be described hereinafter. A bias opposite in polarity to the bias for development, i.e., a positive bias is applied to the sleeve 22M. Because the residual toner grains conveyed to the developing zone by the drum 11M, as stated above, have been entirely charged to negative polarity by the charge brush 12M, they electrostatically adhere to the carrier grains present on the sleeve 22M, which is biased to positive polarity. As a result, the residual toner grains deposited on the carrier grains are collected in the developing device 20M by the sleeve 22M.
The main-pole magnet 29M included in the magnet roller, not shown, is positioned at the developing zone where the sleeve 22M and drum 11M are closest to each other and generates a magnetic force of between 100 mT and 200 mT as measured in the direction normal to the surface of the sleeve 22M. The main-pole magnet 29M promote the collection of the residual toner grains in the developing device 20M.
More specifically, the magnetic force as strong as 100 mT or above in the direction normal to the surface of the sleeve 22M strengthens the force with which the sleeve 22M attracts a magnet brush formed thereon by the magnetic carrier grains of the developer, increasing the density of the magnet brush. At this instant, voids in the magnet brush and therefore the electric resistance of the magnet brush decreases, so that the toner grains in the developing zone can faithfully move in an electric field formed between the sleeve 122M and the drum 1M. This is also true when the residual toner is collected. Further, the strong magnetic force of the sleeve 22M makes the magnet brush hard for thereby increasing the force with which the magnet brush rubs the drum 11M, so that the residual toner can be collected more effectively in the developing device 20M.
However, if the rubbing force of the magnet brush is excessively strong, then it scrapes off a toner image during development and renders the resulting image defective due to fine white stripes, or voids, ascribable to the brush. To obviate this image defect, it is necessary to make the magnetic force in the normal direction 200 mT or below. Further, the bias for development and toner collection should preferably be a DC voltage because an AC voltage would cause the toner to again deposit on the drum 11M.
The following experiments were conducted to estimate the collection of the residual toner grains by varying the magnetic force of the main-pole magnet.
[Experiment 1]
Experiment 1 was conducted under the following conditions:
An amount of toner grains measured beforehand was deposited on the drum, and the amount of toner grains left on the drum after collection at the developing position was measured by a suck-in method. The result of Experiment 1 is listed in
In
[Experiment 2]
Experiment 1 was repeated except that the magnetic force of the magnet was increased in order to determine whether or not the fine stripe-like image omission ascribable to the magnet brush occurred. The result of Experiment 2 is shown in
It will therefore be seen that when the magnetic force in the direction normal to the surface of the sleeve 22M is between 100 mT and 200 mT, there can be achieved desirable toner collection and obviation of stripe-like traces.
In Experiment 1, the ratio of the surface speed Vs of the sleeve 22M to the surface speed Vp of the drum 11M, i.e., Vs/Vp was selected to be 2. The higher the ratio Vs/Vp, the greater the number of times the magnet brush contacts the drum 11M and therefore the higher the collection ratio is. Further, in Experiment 1, use was made of carrier grains with a grain size of as small as 35 μm. Carrier grains with such a small grain size have a greater total area than conventional carrier grains sized 50 μm to 60 μm and therefore contact toner grains over a greater total area. This is also true with the residual toner grains and therefore enhances the cleaning ability. Further, the carrier grains with a small size make the individual brush chains of the magnet brush thin to thereby promote faithful reproduction of dots of an image.
[Experiment 3]
In Experiment 1, the gap for development, i.e., the shortest distance between the sleeve 22M and the drum 11M was selected to be 0.3 mm. The gap would, if excessively small, cause the developer to stop the above gap and would cohere due to frictional heat or would, if excessively great, lower the developing ability and render an image granular with low density. Experiment 3 was identical with Experiment 1 except that the gap for development was varied. The Experiment showed that the gap caused the developer to cohere if smaller than 0.2 mm or rendered an image granular if greater than 0.5 mm.
[Experiment 4]
In Experiment 1, the doctor gap, i.e., the shortest distance between the sleeve 22M and the doctor 25M was selected to be 0.3 mm. The doctor gap prevented, if excessively small, the developer from being scooped up and therefore reduced image density or made, if excessively great, the amount of the developer scooped up irregular in the axial direction of the sleeve 22M and therefore made image density irregular.
Experiment 4 is identical with Experiment 1 except that the doctor gap was varied. The doctor gap made, if smaller than 0.2 mm, the scoop-up of the developer defective and made image density low or caused, if greater than 0.5 mm, image density to be irregular.
Now, if the doctor gap Gd is excessively great relative to the development gap Gp, then it is likely that a great amount of developer passed through the doctor portion stops the development gap and causes toner grains to cohere. This problem did not occur if a relation of Gd≦Gp+0.3 mm was satisfied, as determined by experiments. So long as the gaps Gp and Gd both are between 0.2 mm and 0.4 mm, they satisfy the above relation and therefore obviate the cohesion of toner ascribable to the balance between Gd and Gp.
Further, if the doctor gap Gd is excessively small relative to the development gap Gp, then only the amount of developer to pass through the doctor portion is small and therefore sparse in the development gap Gp, resulting in inefficient development and low image density. It was experimentally found that if a relation of Gd≧Gp−0.3 mm was satisfied, image density was prevented from being lowered. So long as the gaps Gp and Gd both are between 0.2 mm and 0.5 mm, they satisfy the above relation for thereby preventing image density from being lowered due to a balance between Gd and Gp.
In Experiment 1, the main-pole magnet was positioned at an angle of 6° upstream of the center in the event of residual toner collection. Reference will be made to
By contrast, in the event of development, the frictional force mentioned above should preferably be weak. For this purpose, the angle of the main-pole magnet 29M should preferably be 0°, as shown in
Even when the main-pole magnet 29M is inclined by 6° toward the downstream side, the magnetic force tangential to the drum 11M in the developing zone is the same as when the magnet 29M is inclined toward the upstream side. However, the tip of the brush chain contacts the drum 11M while rising from a bent position. Presumably, therefore, a frictional force as strong as one obtainable when the magnet 29M is inclined toward the upstream side is not achievable.
[Experiment 5]
Experiment 1 was repeated except that the angle of the main-pole magnet 29 was varied from 0° to 8° in the direction in which the surface of the sleeve 22M moved for the purpose of estimating the collection ratio.
It will be seen that the collection ratio increases with an increase in the angle of the main-pole magnet up to 6°, but sharply decreases when the above angle is increased to 8°. Why the collection ratio sharply decreases at the angle of 8° is that if the main-pole magnet 29M is excessively inclined, then the magnet brush cannot contact the drum 11M or, if successfully contacts it, cannot execute a sufficient frictional force.
Although the optimum angle of the main pole is 6° in Experiment 5, it depends on, e.g., the development gap or the linear velocity ratio between the sleeve 22M and the drum 1M. This, however, does not overturn the fact that by inclining the main-pole magnet 29M toward the upstream side in the event of residual toner collection, it is possible to enhance efficient collection.
While in the illustrative embodiment the charge brush 12M uniformly charges the residual toner grains to negative or expected polarity, the former may alternatively charge the latter to positive or opposite polarity. In such an alternative case, the bias applied to the charge roller 15M is turned off during cleaning mode operation, so that the toner grains of opposite polarity do not deposit on the charge roller 15M. Also, a negative bias may be applied to the sleeve 22M in order to electrostatically collect the residual toner grains from the drum 11M.
Although the charge brush 12M is shown as being located upstream of the blade 13M in the direction of rotation of the drum 1M, the former may be positioned downstream of the latter, if desired.
The blade 13M may bifunction as an auxiliary charging member in place of the charge brush 12M in order to reduce the number of constituent parts.
The non-contact type charge roller 15M, serving as charging means in the illustrative embodiment, may be replaced with a contact type charge roller or non-contact charger type of charging means. However, the problem with the charger type of charging means is that ozone, nitrogen oxides and other toxic discharge products, undesirable from the environmental aspect, are generated in a great amount because a great amount of discharge is necessary for charging the drum surface to a preselected potential. By contrast, the contact or the adjoining type of charging system produces only a smaller amount of toxic compounds because of a small amount of discharge.
In the illustrative embodiment, the drum 11M and sleeve 22M are rotated such that their surfaces move in the same direction as each other. Alternatively, the drum 11M and sleeve 22M may be rotated in the same direction with their surfaces moving in opposite directions at the facing position. In this case, although the linear velocity ratio of the sleeve 22M to the drum 1M, Vs/Vp, may be smaller than 2, the tips of the brush chains are apt to more strongly contact the drum 11M when the above surfaces move in opposite directions to thereby make image quality lower than when the two surfaces move in the same direction.
As stated above, the illustrative embodiment, pertaining to an image forming apparatus of the type causing residual toner grains to be collected by a developing device, has various unprecedented advantages, as will be described hereinafter. A DC voltage is applied for the collection of residual toner gains to thereby form an electric field that causes the toner grains to move from the drum 11M toward the sleeve 22M. An AC voltage is undesirable because it is apt to cause toner grains, which are adhered to a magnet brush formed on the sleeve 22M by rubbing and electric field, to again deposit on the drum 11M due to the variation of electric field. By contrast, the illustrative embodiment uses a DC voltage for allowing a minimum amount of residual toner grains deposited on the magnet brush 12M to again deposit on the drum 1M.
In the illustrative embodiment, use is made of a magnet whose force in the direction normal to the surface of the sleeve 22M is as strong as 100 mT or above. Such a magnet increases a force that causes the sleeve 22M to attract the magnet brush formed by the carrier grains, thereby making the magnet brush dense, i.e., reducing voids in the magnet brush. Consequently, the electric resistance of the magnet brush is lowered to allow the toner in the developing zone to more faithfully move in the electric field between the sleeve 22M and the drum 1M. This is true not only during development but also during residual toner collection.
The force on the sleeve 22M is strong enough to make the magnet brush hard, so that the magnet brush contacts the drum 11M with a stronger rubbing force. This promotes effective collection of the residual toner grains from the drum 11M. However, if the rubbing force is excessively strong, then the magnet brush scrapes off a toner image to leave fine white stripes ascribable to the magnet brush in the resulting image. To solve this problem, the illustrative embodiment limits the magnetic force in the normal direction to 200 mT or below.
The blade or toner holding means 13M is positioned between the image transfer position Pt and the position where the drum 11M is charged by the charge roller 15M, and is brought into contact with the drum 11M in the event of development, preventing the residual toner grains from existing in the image forming zone or the charging zone at the time of development. This successfully obviates an occurrence that toner grains deposit on the drum 11M during latent image formation and prevent a latent image from being faithfully formed on the drum 11M. Further, because toner grains are absent on the drum 11 at the time of charging, the charge roller 15M can uniformly charge the toner grains. In addition, the distance the drum 11M moves from the charging position to the developing position is minimized, reducing the variation of the potential on the drum surface.
Between consecutive developing steps and after image formation, the blade 13M is released from the drum 11M to allow the residual toner grains temporarily held thereby to be returned to the drum 11M and then collected by the developing unit 20M.
The charge brush or auxiliary charging member 12M again charges part of the residual toner grains charged to positive or opposite polarity to negative polarity, thereby charging the entire residual toner to negative polarity. This further promotes the movement of the toner from the drum 11M to the sleeve 22M at the time of collection.
The shortest distance between the drum 11M and the sleeve 22M is selected to be 0.2 mm or above in order to prevent the developer from stopping an excessively narrow development gap and generating heat due to friction, preventing the developer from cohering. Further, the development gap is selected to be 0.5 mm or below in order to prevent the developing ability from being lowered due to an excessively broad development gap, obviating granular images with low density.
The doctor gap, or shortest distance, between the sleeve 22M and the doctor 25M is also selected to be 0.2 mm or above. This obviates an occurrence that the doctor gap is so narrow, the amount of developer on the sleeve 22M becomes short and lowers image density. Also, the doctor gap is selected to be 0.5 mm or below so as to obviate irregular image density in the axial direction ascribable to an excessively broad doctor gap.
The main-pole magnet 29M, exerting a magnetic force in the developing zone, is directed to the upstream side by 6° in the event of residual toner collection than in the event of development. Therefore, at the shortest distance position, the carrier grains form a brush chain suitable in shape for collection to thereby increase the collection ratio.
The linear velocity ratio of the surface of the sleeve 22M to the surface of the drum 1M, Vs/Vp, is selected to be 2, increasing the number of times the magnet brush contacts the surface of the drum 1M. The greater the number of times the magnet brush contacts the drum 11M, the higher the collection ratio is.
Use is made of carrier grains, which form part of the two-ingredient type developer, having a grain size as small as 35 μm and therefore a broader total surface area than conventional carrier grains having a grain size ranging from 50 μm to 60 μm. This increases the area over which the carrier grains contact the toner grains also as the area over which the carrier grains contact the residual toner grains, thereby enhancing the collection of the residual toner grains. In addition, such small carrier grains make the chains of the magnet brush thin for thereby enhancing the faithful reproduction of dots of an image.
The charge roller, developing device and other process means are constructed into a single process cartridge. Therefore, when any part contained in the process cartridge reaches the end of life or needs maintenance, it suffices to replace the process cartridge.
Furthermore, with the cleaning system of the illustrative embodiment, it is possible to enhance the collection of residual toner grains in the case of cleaning of the type causing a developing unit to collect toner grains.
A modification of the illustrative embodiment will be described hereinafter. In the modification, different voltages are applied from a power supply, not shown, to the doctor 25M at the time of residual toner collection and development so as to enhance both of residual toner collection and development. Stated another way, the doctor 25M plays the role of electric field forming means for applying a particular electric field for each of development and residual toner collection also, as will be described hereinafter.
On the other hand, as shown in
Assume that the amount of charge Q deposited on the toner is negative and that the voltage applied to the doctor 25M is V1 at the time of residual toner collection or V2 at the time of development. Then, the voltages applied to the doctor 25M are so selected as to satisfy the following relations relative to a voltage Vb applied to the sleeve 22M:
(V1−Vb)≦0 and (V2−Vb)≧0
At the time of residual toner collection, the toner grains of negative polarity move toward the sleeve 22M because of the relation (V1−Vb)≦0. At the time of development, the toner grains of negative polarity move toward the doctor 25M because of the relation (V2−Vb)≧0. When the amount of charge deposited on the toner grains is positive, the voltages applied to the doctor 25M are so selected as to satisfy the following relations:
(V1−Vb)≧0 and (V2−Vb)≦0
As stated above, by forming electric fields between the doctor 25M and the sleeve 22M for causing the toner grains 28TM to move, it is possible to implement both of a cleaning system having a high collection ratio and a high-quality developing system insuring faithful development of a latent image.
[Experiment 6]
The voltage applied to the doctor 25M was varied under the same conditions as Experiment 1 in order to determine the variation of the collection ratio. The toner grains were charged to negative polarity while use was made of a magnet exerting a magnetic force of 100 mT for the developing roller.
Experiment 6 showed that the electric field applied between the doctor 25M and the sleeve 22M at the time of residual toner collection improved the collection ration of the residual toner.
As
It is known that carrier chains, forming a magnet brush on a sleeve, each have its tip portion bent or turns in such a manner that the tip and root replace with each other. Presumably, however, the individual carrier chain recently does not turn in such a manner than the tip and root thereof replace with each other, but simply turns such that the tip portion bends or such that only carrier grains deposited on the tip portion replace with each other because of the decreasing radius and increasing rotation speed of a sleeve. If toner grains deposited on each carrier chain are not sufficiently moved toward the root side and if carrier grains, turning as mentioned above, include carrier grains with high coverage, then the portion of the carrier chain with the high coverage contacts a drum and is apt to obstruct the collection of residual toner.
Further, Experiment 6 shows that even if a voltage higher than −400 V to the negative side is applied to the doctor 25M, the collection ratio of residual toner grains is not improved at all. It is therefore considered that a voltage of −400 V maintains the coverage of the toner grains with the carrier grains sufficiently low within the range in which bending and turning stated above occur.
While the doctor 25M bifunctions as electric field forming means in the above modification, an electric field forming member may be provided independently of the doctor 25M. In such a case, the electric field forming member will be positioned between the doctor 25M and the developing zone because the length of the magnet brush is not regulated at the upstream side of the doctor 25M.
The modification of the first embodiment described above has the following advantages. The doctor 25M serves as electric field forming means also. Assume that the amount of charge Q deposited on the toner grains is negative and that the voltage V1 is applied to the doctor 25M at the time of residual toner collection, then the V1 is so selected as to satisfy a relation:
(V1−Vb)≦0
where Vb is a voltage applied to the sleeve 22M. In this condition, the toner grains of negative polarity can move toward the sleeve 22. This successfully reduces the coverage of the carrier with the toner at the tip portion of a magnet brush and thereby increases the collection ratio of the residual toner grains at the tip of the magnet brush that contacts the drum 11M.
Assuming that the voltage applied to the doctor 25M at the time of development is V2, then the voltage V2 is so selected as to satisfy a relation:
(V2−Vb)≧0
In this condition, the toner grains of negative polarity can be moved toward the tip portion of the magnet brush to thereby increase the coverage of the carrier with the toner at the tip portion of the magnet brush. Consequently, faithful development of a latent image and therefore high image quality is achievable.
When the doctor 25M plays the role of electric field forming means also, an independent, electric field forming member is not necessary, reducing the number of parts and therefore the overall size of the apparatus.
Another modification of the illustrative embodiment will be described hereinafter. In the previous embodiment, the residual toner grains are stopped at the time of development and then released between paper sheets or at the end of development to be collected by the developing device. In another modification, the cleaning system of the illustrative embodiment is applied to an image forming apparatus of two rotations, one development system. In the two rotations, one development type of apparatus, a developing device performs development during the first rotation of a drum and then performs the collection of residual toner grains during the second rotation.
In this type of image forming apparatus, too, it is possible to prevent toner grains once collected from again depositing on the drum by applying a DC voltage that forms an electric field preventing the toner once collected from again depositing on the drum. In addition, with a main-pole magnetic field that generates a magnetic force of between 100 mT and 200 mT in the developing zone, it is possible to enhance the efficient collection of residual toner grains.
In the first embodiment, the toner holding means for holding the residual toner grains left on the drum 11M after image transfer is implemented as a blade. In a second embodiment to be described hereinafter, the toner holding means is implemented as a magnet brush. Arrangements identical with those of the first embodiment will not be described specifically in order to avoid redundancy.
As shown in
The sleeve 41a with the above configuration is rotated by a drive source, not shown, clockwise, as viewed in
Because the illustrative embodiment does not use a blade contacting the drum 1M, it noticeably reduces load torque to act on a drive source assigned to the drum 11M. However, the illustrative embodiment cannot hold the residual toner grains left on the drum 22M as positively as the first embodiment. As a result, it is likely that additives separated from the toner grains firmly adhere to the surface of the drum 11M in the form of a film, i.e., so-called toner filming occurs. Although the amount of residual toner grains stated above may decrease if use is made of so-called spherical toner grains, toner filming is still apt to occur after a long time of use. In light of this, in the illustrative embodiment, the surface of the magnet brush roller 41 is caused to move in the opposite direction to the surface of the drum 1M. This configuration scrapes off additives deposited on the surface of the drum 11M more strongly than a configuration causing the roller 41 to follow the rotation of the drum 11M or a configuration driving the former in the same direction as the latter, thereby obviating toner filming.
A first and a second power supply 43 and 44, respectively, selectively apply a bias to the magnet brush roller 41. More specifically, a switch 45 is connected between the power supplies 43 and 44 and the magnet brush roller 41 and controlled by a control unit, not shown, to selectively connect the power supply 43 or 44 to the brush roller 41. In the illustrative embodiment, the first power supply 43 applies a hold bias that makes the surface potential of the brush roller 41 −50 V while the second power supply 44 applies a release bias that makes the above potential −350 V. The illustrative embodiment further includes a blade or metering member 42 configured to regulate the thickness of the magnet brush formed on the brush roller 41. The blade 41 is spaced from the sleeve 11M by a gap of 0.6 mm to 0.8 mm.
The carrier grains 47 stored in the holding device 40 are the same as the carrier grains stored in the developing device 5. More specifically, the carrier grains 47 are coated with silicone resin for negatively chargeable toner, provided with a mean grain size of 50 μm and provided with low to medium resistance of 106 Ω·cm to 1012 Ω·cm. The resistance of the carrier grains 47 is measured by a method that places two 4×5 mm electrode plates at a distance of 2 mm, packs carrier grains in the space between the electrode plates and applies a voltage of 100 V. In this manner, in the illustrative embodiment, a magnet brush can be formed by carrier grains of low to medium resistance and can therefore reverse the direction of the electric field acting on the brush tip more easily than a fur brush roller.
The carrier grains 47 stored in the casing 46 are conveyed by the sleeve 41a toward the drum 11M while forming a magnet brush due to the magnetic field of the magnet roller 41b. The magnet brush is metered by the blade 42 in the axial direction of the sleeve 41a to be provided with uniform thickness thereby. On contacting the drum 11M, the magnet brush collects the residual toner grains left on the drum 11M while being applied with the hold bias from the first power supply 43. The hold bias is substantially the same as the surface potential, which is −50 V to −100 V, of the drum 11M left thereon after image transfer, so that no potential difference occurs between the drum 11 and the magnet brush roller 41. Consequently, an electrostatic attracting force ascribable to a potential difference between the drum 11M and the magnet brush roller 41 does not act on the residual toner grains, allowing the magnet brush to hold the residual toner grains with a frictional force without regard to the polarity of the residual toner grains.
The mean amount of charge deposited on residual toner grains collected by the magnet brush was measured to be −10 μC/g to −15 μC/g, which was greater than −2 μC/g deposited on the residual toner grains after image transfer. Also, the residual toner grains held by the magnet brush were grains T0 of expected polarity. This is because when the magnet brush collects the residual toner grains from the surface of the drum 1M, the magnet brush electrifies the residual toner grains. Therefore, among the residual toner grains, toner grains T1 of positive or opposite polarity become toner grains T0 of negative or expected polarity by friction acting between them and the magnet brush. Likewise, the amount of charge deposited on, among the residual toner grains, the toner grains T0 of negative or expected polarity becomes higher due to friction with the magnet brush. As a result, the amount of negative charge deposited on the residual toner grains held by the magnet brush increases, compared to the amount of charge left on the toner grains just after image transfer.
As stated above, the residual toner grains held by the magnet brush are returned to the surface of the drum 11M at preselected timing. More specifically, the switch 45 is switched from the first power supply 43 to the second power supply 44 at preselected timing to thereby apply the release bias of −350 V to the magnet brush roller 41. The resulting potential difference between the drum 11M, about −50 V, and the magnet brush roller 41, −350 V, causes the residual toner grains charged to negative polarity by friction to eletrostatically adhere to the drum 1M. Consequently, the residual toner grains held by the magnet brush are again returned to the surface of the drum 1M.
The switch 45 is operated at such timing that a latent image is not formed when the residual toner grains returned to the drum 11M pass through the latent image forming zone. For example, when the trailing edge of an image formed on the drum 11M during one image forming cycle reaches the hold nip, the switch 45 is switched from the first power supply 43 to the second power supply 44 to thereby apply the release bias to the magnet brush. Subsequently, when the portion of the surface of the drum 11M to be uniformly charged by the charge roller 15M first during the next image forming cycle reaches the hold nip, the switch 45 is switched to the second power supply 43. Then, the release bias applied to the magnet brush is replaced with the hold bias with the result that the residual toner grains held by the magnet brush stops being released to the surface of the drum 11M. By switching the switch 45 at such timing, it is possible to prevent the residual toner grains from existing on the drum surface when a latent image is being formed on the drum surface. This obviates an occurrence that the residual toner grains form hidden, or non-exposed, portions and thereby form white spots in a solid black portion and other image defects.
If desired, a cleaning mode may be effected at the start-up or the end of operation of the apparatus or after the image forming cycle has been repeated a preselected number of times, switching the switch 45 to the second power supply 44. In such a cleaning mode, an image is not formed, so that the residual toner grains released from the magnet brush are prevented from forming hidden or non-exposed portions.
The residual toner grains released from the magnet brush are collected by the magnet brush formed on the sleeve 22M in the developing zone in the same manner as in the first embodiment.
The illustrative embodiment with the above configuration has various advantages, as will be described hereinafter. The magnet brush roller 41, serving as a toner holding member, noticeably reduces load torque to act on a drive source assigned to the drum 1M, compared to a blade contacting the drum 11M.
Because the magnet brush roller 41 temporarily holds the residual toner grains, the residual toner grains can be electrified by the magnet brush. This allows the amount of negative charge deposited on the residual toner grains to be increased and allows the toner grains of opposite polarity to be inverted to expected or negative polarity.
The surface of the sleeve 41a rotates in the opposite direction to the surface of the drum 1M, as seen at the hold nip, so that the tips of many brush chains contact the sleeve 41a while the surface of the drum 11M is passing through the hold nip. Further, the above configuration scrapes off the additives of toner grains deposited on the surface of the drum 1 more positively than the configuration wherein the magnet brush roller 41 follows the rotation of the drum 11M or is driven in the same direction as the drum 1M, obviating toner filming.
While the carrier grains 47 used in the illustrative embodiment have the same grain size, use may be made of carrier grains having two or more different grain size distributions. For example, use may be made of magnetic grains with a grain size of between 70 μm and 100 μm and magnetic grains with a grain size of between 20 μm and 50 μm. Carrier grains with a large grain size would fail to make the carrier grains dense when used alone while carrier grains with a small grain size would cause the tips of brush chains to fall on contacting the drum 11M because of a short magnetic restraining force when used alone. Thus, by using both of carrier grains with a large grain size and carrier grains with a small grain size, it is possible to form a dense magnet brush capable of exerting a strong magnetic restraining force.
A third embodiment of the present invention will be described hereinafter with reference to
As shown in
The elastic blade 81, included in the toner holding device 80, is mounted on one end of a support plate 83 while a spring 84 and a solenoid 82 are connected to the other end of the support plate 83. The spring 84 constantly biases the support plate 83 leftward, a viewed in
In the event of development, the solenoid is energized to pull the support plate 83 against the action of the spring 84. Consequently, the support plate 83 is angularly moved clockwise, as viewed in
When a latent image is not formed, the solenoid 82 is deenergized with the result that the support plate 83 is pulled to the left, as viewed in
As stated above, the elastic blade 81 is brought into contact with the drum 11M when a latent image is being formed by the optical writing unit 2 or brought out of contact with thedrum11Mwhenalatentimageisnotbeingformed. Therefore, the residual toner grains do not deposit on the surface of the drum 11M passing through the latent image forming zone when a latent image is being formed on the drum 11M by the writing unit 2. This prevents the residual toner grains from forming non-exposed portions which would result in white spots or similar image defects.
Because the drum 11M is charged to negative polarity, toner grains of positive or opposite polarity adhere to the drum 11M more firmly than the toner grains of negative or expected polarity, so that the toner grains with opposite polarity are apt to pass through the gap between the elastic blade 81 and the drum 1M. It is therefore necessary to strongly press the elastic blade 81 against the drum 11M for allowing the blade 81 to hold the toner grains of opposite polarity. In this respect, in the illustrative embodiment, the charge roller 15M temporarily holds the toner grains of opposite polarity at a position upstream of the elastic blade 81, so that all the residual toner grains held by the elastic blade 81 are of expected polarity. Because the toner grains of expected polarity do not strongly adhere to the drum 11M and can therefore be surely held by the elastic blade 81 even if the blade 81 is not strongly pressed against the drum 11M. This successfully reduces stress acting on the elastic blade 81 and drum 11M for thereby extending their lives. Further, it is possible to surely prevent the residual toner grains from passing through the latent image forming zone when the exposing means is in operation. In addition, conditions required of the elastic glade 81 can be easily set.
As shown in
When the optical writing unit 2 is forming a latent image on the surface of the drum 11M, the switch 55 is opened to maintain the charge injection plate 54 in a floating state. On the other hand, when a latent image is not being formed, the switch 55 is closed to connect the charge injection plate 54 to ground with the result that the potential of the plate 54 becomes 0 V. The resulting potential difference between the charge injection plate 54 and the charge roller 15M causes a negative bias to be applied from the charge roller 15M to the charge injection plate 54. Consequently, the toner grains of opposite polarity held in a region D between the charge roller 15M and the charge injection plate 54 are again charged to negative polarity, again deposited on the surface of the drum 11M and then conveyed to the developing zone via the gap between the charge roller 15M and the drum 11M.
As stated above, the illustrative embodiment temporarily holds the toner grains of opposite polarity with the charge roller 15M and injects a charge in the above toner grains with the charge injection plate 54, surely charging the toner grains of opposite polarity to expected polarity. As a result, the residual toner grains are entirely charged to negative polarity when brought to the developing zone.
In the illustrative embodiment, the charge brush or auxiliary charging member 12M may be positioned upstream of the charge roller 15M and held in contact with the drum 11M as in the first embodiment. In this configuration, the residual toner grains deposited on the drum 11M pass the charge brush 12M with the residual toner contacting the charge brush 12M. As a result, a charge is injected in the residual toner grains to invert the polarity of toner charged to positive or opposite polarity to negative or expected polarity. Further, the illustrative embodiment does not have to consider, e.g., timing for applying a voltage to the charge brush 12, so that a voltage can be continuously applied to the charge brush 12M even when an image is being formed. In addition, part of the toner grains of opposite polarity is again charged to expected polarity before it passes through the charging zone. This reduces the amount of toner grains to deposit on the charge roller 15M for thereby reducing a load on the charging device.
The toner grains of negative polarity, contained in the residual toner grains moved away from the charge brush 12M, are passed through the charging zone and then temporarily held by the elastic blade 81. The residual toner grains of opposite polarity not inverted in polarity by the charge brush 12M deposit on the charge roller 15M and are temporarily held by the charge injection plate 54 and again charged to negative polarity when the optical writing unit 2 is not forming a latent image. On the other hand, the toner grains temporarily held by the elastic blade 81 are conveyed to the developing zone when the elastic glade 82 is released from the drum 1M, and then collected in the developing device by the developing roller.
If desired, an AC-biased DC voltage may be applied to the charge brush 12M in order to uniform the amount of charge of the toner grains after image transfer. It is therefore possible to reduce the amount of toner grains to undesirably deposit on the charge roller 15M and therefore to maintain the charging device stable at all times. Also, the charge injection plate or charge injecting means 54 may be omitted, in which case the charge brush 12M serves as charge injecting means.
As stated above, in the illustrative embodiment, residual toner grains, left on the drum 11M without being electrostatically transferred to the paper sheet 100 at the image transfer nip, is temporarily, mechanically held by the elastic blade or toner holding means 81 before reaching the latent image forming zone. Such mechanical holding means is capable of holding both of toner grains of expected polarity and toner grains of opposite polarity. The residual toner grains are returned to the surface of the drum 11M at such timing that the optical writing unit 2 is not forming a latent image when the toner grains pass through the latent image forming zone. This prevents the residual toner grains from depositing on the drum 11M whose surface is passing through the latent image forming zone when a latent image is being formed. Consequently, hidden or non-exposed portions ascribable to the residual toner grains and therefore white spots or similar image defects are obviated, so that high image quality is insured.
The charge roller 15M plays the role of temporary toner holding means on which the toner grains of opposite charge are caused to deposit. The charge injection plate or charge injecting means 54 is associated with the charge roller 15M. The charge injection plate 54 injects a charge in the toner grains of opposite polarity held by the charge roller 15M, inverting the opposite polarity to the expected polarity. By temporarily holding the toner grains of opposite polarity and then injecting a charge therein, as stated above, it is possible to surely invert the polarity of the residual toner grains to the expected polarity. It follows that the entire toner grains conveyed to the developing region are charged to the expected polarity when brought to the developing zone and can therefore be surely collected by the developing device.
The charge injection plate 54 provided on the charge roller 15M removes the residual toner grains from the charge roller 15M, thereby preventing toner grains of opposite polarity from depositing on the charge roller 15M and lowering the charging ability. In addition, it is not necessary to use, e.g., a waste toner tank customarily included in a cleaning device, which cleans the charge roller 15M, for storing residual toner grains collected from the charge roller. This contributes a great deal to the size reduction of the printer.
Moreover, the elastic blade or toner holding means 81 is positioned downstream of the charge injection plate 54 in the direction of rotation of the drum 11, so that all residual toner grains held by the elastic blade 81 are charged to expected polarity. Because toner grains of expected charge adhere to the drum 11 with a weaker force than toner grains of opposite polarity, it is possible to surely hold the residual toner grains without strongly pressing the elastic blade against the drum 11. Consequently, stress to act on the drum 11 and elastic blade 81 is reduced, so that the durability of the blade 81 and drum 11 is enhanced. In addition, conditions required of the elastic blade 81 can be easily set.
While in the first, second and third embodiments toner holding means for temporarily holding the residual toner grains left on the drum 11M is provided on the surface of the drum 11M, the charge roller 15M may play the role of toner holding means also. A fourth embodiment to be described hereinafter is configured such that the residual toner grains are held on the surface of the charge roller 15M. Parts and elements identical with those of the first embodiment will not be described in order to avoid redundancy.
As shown in
First, a polarity control step for controlling the polarity of the entire residual toner grains left on the drum 11M to positive polarity will be described.
Referring again to
The polarity control roller 71 is provided with hardness low enough to increase the area over which the residual toner grains and polarity control roller 71 contact each other, so that the polarity of toner grains charged to positive polarity, which will be described later, can be stably inverted. In the illustrative embodiment, the polarity control roller 71 is provided with resistance of 1.08 Ω cm or below and hardness of between 25 degrees and 70 degrees in Askar C scale.
When the hardness of the polarity control roller 71 lies in the above range, the roller 71 should preferably be pressed against the surface of the drum 11M by a force of between 0.1 g/mm2 and 30 g/mm2. In this case, when the roller hardness is Askar C 30 degrees or below, the residual toner on the drum 11M and the surface of the polarity control roller 71 may be caused to surely contact each other by a pressure as low as 0.1 g/mm2 or above, but 3 g/mm2 or below. This insures stable inversion of the polarity of the residual toner grains of expected polarity and, in addition, protects the surface of the drum 11M from wear because of the low pressure. Even when the roller hardness is higher than Askar C 30 degrees, but lower than 60 degrees, the pressure is selected to be between 1.0 g/mm2 and 10 g/mm2. This is also successful to insure positive, stable contact of the residual toner grains of expected polarity on the drum 11M and the polarity control roller 71 and insure stable inversion of the polarity of the residual toner grains of expected polarity. Further, even when the Askar C hardness is between 60 degrees and 70 degrees, the pressure is selected to be between 5 g/mm2 and 30 g/mm2. This is also successful to achieve the above advantages. It is preferable to coat the polarity control roller 71 with a material that allows toner to easily part therefrom so as to prevent toner from adhering to the roller 71.
As shown in
The first power supply 74 is connected to the polarity control roller 71 before part of the surface of the drum 11M on which the residual toner is deposited (roller contact zone hereinafter) contacts the polarity control roller 71, so that a charge injection bias that deposits +700 V on the surface of the polarity control roller 71 is applied to the roller 71. When the polarity control roller 71 with such a bias contacts the surface of the drum 11M, the toner grains To of expected polarity, contained in the residual toner grains left on the drum 11M, are inverted in polarity. The toner grains with the polarity thus inverted are conveyed via the roller contact zone by the drum 11M.
More specifically, the surface of the drum 11M is uniformly charged to −500 V by the charge roller 15M and then scanned by the writing unit 2 to form a latent image whose potential is about −50 V. Subsequently, when a developing step for depositing toner grains on the latent image and an image transferring step are sequentially executed in this order, the potential of the latent image portion becomes further closer to 0 V. Most of the residual toner grains are left on the surface portion of the drum 11M where the latent image existed. In this condition, the toner grains T0 of expected or negative polarity left on the above surface portion of the drum 11M are subjected to, in the roller contact zone, charge injection from the polarity control roller 71 applied with the bias of +700 V.
The potential of −500 Von the background around the latent image is also shifted toward the 0 V side by the image transfer. Although some residual toner grains may deposit on the background also, the toner grains T0 of expected or negative polarity on the background are also subjected to charge injection on contacting the polarity control roller 71 in the roller contact zone. When the toner grains T0 of expected polarity are thus inverted to toner grains T0 of positive polarity, the toner grains T0 of expected polarity are electrostatically biased toward the drum 11M in the roller contact zone. Consequently, among the residual toner grains left on the surface of the drum 11M, the toner grains T0 of expected polarity are inverted in polarity in the roller contact zone and therefore conveyed by the drum 11M via the roller contact zone.
On the other hand, among the residual toner grains, the toner grains T1 of opposite or positive polarity are electrostatically biased toward the drum 11M in the roller contact zone. As a result, the toner grains T1 remain on the surface of the drum 11M without being subjected to charge injection from the polarity control roller 71.
In this manner, all residual toner grains left on the drum 11M are uniformed to positive polarity in the roller contact zone and therefore passed through the roller contact zone by the drum 11M.
The polarity control roller 71 is driven by the driver 72 such that its surface moves in the same direction as the surface of the drum 11M at the roller contact zone. This allows the surface of the polarity control roller 71 and the residual toner on the drum 11M to contact each other over a long period of time and can therefore surely invert the polarity of the toner grains T0 of expected polarity left on the drum 11M. If the surface of the polarity control roller 71 are implemented as a brush, then it is likely that the tips of brush chains spring up and cause the residual toner grains to fly about at the moment when they leave the surface of the drum 11M. When the surface of the polarity control roller 71 moves in the same direction as the surface of the drum 11M as in the illustrative embodiment, it is likely that the residual toner grains are caused to fly toward the downstream side over the roller contact zone in the direction of movement of the drum surface, contaminating the inside of the printer. To solve this problem, the polarity control roller 71 of the illustrative embodiment is provided with a smooth surface.
The timing at which residual toner grains T2, uniformed to positive polarity by the polarity control roller 71, are temporarily held by the charge roller 15M and then returned to the drum 11M will be described more specifically hereinafter.
The toner grains T2 inverted in polarity by the polarity control roller 71 are temporarily held by the charge roller 15M in the charging zone. Subsequently, the toner grains, labeled T3, held by the charge roller 15M are released to the surface of the drum 11M at preselected release timing. In the illustrative embodiment, the toner grains T3 are inverted in polarity from positive to negative and then released to the drum 11M when the printer is not forming an image, i.e., between consecutive image forming cycles. More specifically, the toner grains T2 uniformed in polarity during one image forming cycle are temporarily held by the charge roller 15M in the charging zone. Subsequently, during the next image forming cycle, the toner grains T3 are released to the surface of the drum 11M before part of the drum surface to be charged by the charge roller 15M reaches the charging zone. By releasing the toner grains T3 at such timing, it is possible to collect them without influencing the next image forming cycle. When the image forming cycle is repeated, the toner grains T3 accumulated on the charge roller 15M may be released at the end of the last image forming cycle, if desired. This prevents a period of time to the end of the image forming operation from being extended due to the collection of the toner grains T3, which will be described later.
The temporary holding step will be described more specifically hereinafter. Residual potential left by the previous image forming cycle exists on the surface portion of the drum 11M on which the toner grains T2, uniformed to positive polarity by the polarity control roller 71, are deposited. In the illustrative embodiment, the residual potential is about −50 V. However, in the illustrative embodiment, the second power supply 74 is constantly connected to the polarity control roller 71 during image formation, so that the surface potential of the roller 71 is maintained at +700 V during image formation. Therefore, the potential of the background not exposed is also discharged to about −50 V, which is the residual potential mentioned above. As a result, the charge potential of the surface portion of the drum 11M on which the toner grains T2 are deposited is uniformed to about −50 V. It follows that the above portion of the drum surface 11M reaches the charging zone, an electrostatic force acts on the toner grains T2, which have been uniformed to positive polarity, toward the charge roller 15M whose surface potential is about −500 V. Consequently, the toner grains T2 of opposite polarity moved away from the roller contact zone of the polarity control roller 71 electrostatically adhere to the surface of the charge roller 15M and are temporarily held thereby.
As shown in
Further, the bias applying blade 76 is pressed against the charge roller 75M in order to limit the amount of toner grains T3 to pass. In the illustrative embodiment, the pressure of the bias applying blade 76 is selected such that the amount of toner grains T3 to get through between the charge roller 15M and the bias applying blade 76 is 0.1 mg or below, preferably 0.05 mg or below, for a unit square centimeter. In this condition, even if the amount of toner grains T3 deposited on the charge roller 15M may increase, the amount of toner grains to exist on the surface portion of the charge roller 15M that faces the charging zone can be reduced. This sufficiently reduces irregular or similar defective charging.
Next, the releasing step will be described in more detail. As shown in
The residual toner grains thus released from the charge roller 15M are collected in the developing zone by the magnet brush formed on the sleeve 22M as in the first embodiment.
Experiments showed that more toner grains passed through the contact portion between the charge roller 15M and the bias applying blade 76 in the releasing step than in the temporary holding step. Such a phenomenon is desirable in that the amount of toner grains present on the surface portion of the charge roller 15M that faces the charging zone decreases and in that a period of time necessary for the releasing step to complete decreases. The phenomenon is presumably derived from the influence of the potential difference between the charge roller 15M and the bias applying blade 76.
As stated above, in the illustrative embodiment, the polarity control device 70 plays the role of residual toner polarity control means for charging the residual toner grains T0 and T1, which are left on the drum 11M after image transfer, to positive polarity opposite to negative or expected polarity. With the toner polarity control device 70, it is possible to uniform the entire residual toner grains to positive polarity and therefore cause the entire residual toner grains T2 to be held by the charge roller 15M. This allows the toner grains T2 to be removed from the surface of the drum 11M before they are brought to the latent image forming zone assigned to the writing unit 2. Consequently, there can be obviated an occurrence that the toner grains T2 obstruct the formation of a latent image in the latent image forming zone, thereby insuring high-quality images free from local omission.
Further, the surface of the drum 11M can be sufficiently cleaned without resorting to a strong removing ability available with, e.g., a conventional cleaning blade. It follows that load torque to act on a drive source assigned to the drum 11M can be noticeably reduced, compared to a configuration wherein a cleaning blade is held in contact with the surface of the drum 11M. This allows a small-size drive source to be used and reduces banding or similar undesirable phenomenon, insuring high-quality images at all times.
In the illustrative embodiment, the bias applying blade 76 serves as charge injecting means for depositing on the residual toner grains T3 held on the charge roller 15M a charge of the same polarity as the expected or negative polarity to thereby uniform the residual toner grains to negative polarity. Further, an arrangement is made such that the toner grains T4, uniformed to the same polarity as the expected or negative polarity by the bias applying blade 76, are returned to the surface of the drum 11M at such timing that the toner grains returned from the charge roller 15M to the drum 11M do not obstruct the formation of a latent image by the writing unit 2. This allows the toner grains T3 controlled to the opposite or positive polarity by the polarity control device 70 to be again charged to the expected polarity and then released to the drum 11M. Consequently, adequate development can be effected even when the toner grains T3 are returned to the expected polarity and then returned to the drum 11M so as to contribute to development. In addition, because all the toner grains T4 returned to the drum 11M are of the expected polarity, they can be adequately collected from the drum 11M by an electrostatic force.
The polarity control roller 71 is driven such that its surface moves in the same direction as the surface of the drum 11M, as seen at the position where the former contacts the latter. In addition, the second power supply or bias applying means 74 applies a bias of opposite or positive polarity to the polarity control roller 71. By so driving the polarity control roller 71, it is possible to promote close contact of the roller 71 with the residual toner grains T0 and T1 left on the surface of the drum 11M more easily than by driving it in the direction counter to the drum surface. It is therefore possible to increase the charge injection efficiency in, among the residual toner grains, the toner grains T0 of expected polarity for thereby stably uniforming all residual toner grains to the positive or opposite polarity. This allows the toner grains T2 to surely deposit on the charge roller 15M.
In the polarity control device 70, the surface of the polarity control roller or contact member 71 moves in contact with the surface of the drum 11. Further, the bias applying means selectively applies a cleaning bias of expected or negative polarity or a charge injection bias of opposite or positive polarity to the polarity control roller 71. The bias applying means is made up of the first power supply 73, second power supply 74 and switch 75. With this configuration, it is possible to uniform all residual toner grains to positive polarity and cause them to deposit on the charge roller 15M when the charge injection bias is applied. On the other hand, with the cleaning bias, it is possible to increase the cleaning efficiency when a great amount of unnecessary toner grains exist on the surface of the drum 1M, e.g., in the event of a jam. Also, when toner grains with a defective charging characteristic and charged to negative polarity are deposited on the polarity control roller 71, the cleaning bias causes such toner grains to be released to the drum 1M.
In summary, in accordance with the present invention, when developing means collects residual toner grains left on an image carrier after image transfer, a DC voltage is applied to the image carrier and a developer carrier in such a direction that the toner grains move from the image carrier toward the developer carrier. In this condition, the residual toner grains are electrostatically attracted by a magnetic carrier present on the surface of the developer carrier and can therefore be easily scraped off from the surface of the image carrier by a magnet brush formed by the magnetic carrier. Further, the DC voltage generates a bias only in one direction, unlike an AC voltage, and therefore makes it difficult for the toner grains scarped off to again deposit on the image carrier.
Moreover, the developer carrier generates, at a position where it faces the image carrier, a magnetic field exerting a magnetic force of 100 mT or above in the direction normal to the surface of the developer carrier. Such a magnetic field makes the magnet brush hard to thereby increase the rubbing force of the magnet brush when it contacts the image carrier, so that the residual toner grains can be easily scraped off from the surface of the image carrier.
Various modifications will become possible for those skilled in the art after receiving the teachings of the present disclosure without departing from the scope thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-176285 | Jun 2004 | JP | national |