The entire disclosure of Japanese Patent Application No. 2016-072135 filed on Mar. 31, 2016 including description, claims, drawings, and abstract are incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electrophotographic image forming apparatus, and more particularly, to a process control thereof.
Description of the Related Art
Image formation using an electrophotographic method includes six processes of charging, exposure, development, transferring, fixing and cleaning. Among them, five processes except the fixing process use a photoreceptor as a direct object to be processed. Thus, in the electrophotographic image forming apparatus, the photoreceptor constitutes a rotating element such as a drum, and a belt, and five kinds of functional units are disposed around the photoreceptor. When the photoreceptor makes one rotation, each portion of the outer circumferential surface sequentially faces these functional units. For these portions, each functional unit specializes in charging, exposure, developing, transferring and cleaning. Thus, while the photoreceptor continues to rotate, each portion of the outer circumferential surface periodically continues to undergo five processes. In order to stably maintain a high image quality in the image forming apparatus, it is important to appropriately control the linkage between the rotation of the photoreceptor and the five processes, depending on switching of operation modes, fluctuation of environmental conditions, and deterioration with time of components.
For example, in an image forming apparatus disclosed in JP 2011-070117 A, an external additive having a lower resistance than the toner is retained in a contact portion between a photoreceptor and a cleaning blade. This external additive escapes charges from the toner scraped off by the blade, suppresses a peeling discharge, and prevents the damage to the photoreceptor caused thereby. However, the peeling discharge is hard to occur in a high humidity environment, whereas the retained external additive is likely to agglomerate into an excessive lump. This lump has a risk of hindering adhesion of toner to the surface of the photoreceptor and disturbing (filming) a horizontal stripe in the toner image. Therefore, when the risk of peeling discharge is low due to a high humidity, the device rotates the photoreceptor in reverse at the time of completion of the job process and levels the external additive to prevent its aggregation.
A copying machine disclosed in JP 2014-021261 A continues to rotate the photoreceptors for other colors even in a monochrome mode to keep job process at high speed and maintain high productivity. In this case, the copying machine periodically discharges toner to the photoreceptors to suppress the frictional force with the cleaning blade. This prevents troubles such as jitter, squealing and curling caused by excessive chatter (stick-slip) of the blade. The copying machine further applies a charging bias to the surface portion of the photoreceptor including the discharged toner after passage of the blade. This charging bias eliminates the charged state, even if the peeling discharge generated between the surface portion and the blade charges its surface portion. As a result, since the carrier contained in the two-component developer does not adhere to the surface portion thereof, the risk of filming or damage to the photoreceptor caused by the carrier is suppressed.
In the process control, the order of startup/stop of each element of the image forming apparatus accompanied by the start/end of the job process is restricted under various conditions. This order itself or the startup/stop control of this order is called a “rising/falling sequence”. Specifically, for example, in the falling sequence, the stopping order of driving, charging, developing and transferring of the photoreceptor is defined as follows. 1. The polarity of the transfer bias is reversed at the time when the termination of the portion containing the toner image among the surface of the photoreceptor passes through the transfer unit. 2. The application of the charging bias is stopped at the time when the termination passes the charging unit. By keeping the charging bias up to this time, the portion before the termination is uniformly charged. 3. The application of the developing bias is stopped at the time when the termination has reliably passed through the developing unit. By keeping the developing bias up to this time, the carrier contained in the two-component developer is prevented from adhering before the termination. However, at this time point, since the uncharged portion just after the termination thereof receives the developing bias, toner (hereinafter, referred to as “fogging toner”) adheres to this portion. 4. The application of the transfer bias, a drive motor of the photoreceptor, and an eraser are stopped at the later of the time when the termination passes through the eraser or the time when the termination passes through the cleaning blade. By keeping the transfer bias at the opposite polarity up to this time, movement of the fogging toner to the transfer unit is prevented, and by continuing to operate the eraser, the portion before the termination is discharged. Furthermore, by continuing to rotate the photoreceptor until this time, the blade is caused to scrape off the fogging toner by this time or after this time while the photoreceptor rotates with inertia.
In recent years, the particle diameter of the toner is reduced in order to further improve the image quality, and the rotational speed of the photoreceptor increases in order to further improve the productivity. Accordingly, in the falling sequence, there is a high risk of occurrence of peeling discharge between the cleaning blade and the photoreceptor at the time of removing the fogging toner. This is due to the following reason. A. With an increase in the speed of the rotation of the photoreceptor, the uncharged portion of the surface of the photoreceptor that receives the developing bias expands and the amount of fogging toner increases. B. With a decrease in the particle diameter of the toner, the surface shape of the lump of the toner scraped off by the blade is miniaturized and electric field concentration is easily generated. C. With an increase in the frictional force received by the photoreceptor from the blade, the amount of charge induced on the surface of the fogging toner peeled off from the surface of the photoreceptor increases.
Meanwhile, in the falling sequence, the eraser and the drive motor of the photoreceptor are stopped, on the later of the time when the termination of the portion of the photoreceptor surface which receives the charging bias passes through the eraser and the time when the termination passes through the cleaning blade. Therefore, generally, the uncharged portion immediately after the termination thereof cannot be subjected to the discharging process by the eraser after passing through the blade. Therefore, when the uncharged portion is charged by the peeling discharge, the carrier adheres to the uncharged portion, while the photoreceptor continues to rotate by inertia, or when the drive motor of the photoreceptor is started up next. These carriers have a high risk of causing image quality deterioration due to filming or a damage to the photoreceptor. However, it is difficult suppress this risk with the above-described falling sequence.
An object of the present invention is to solve the aforementioned problems, and in particular, to provide an image forming apparatus capable of achieving prolonged maintenance of high image quality and a long lifetime of a photoreceptor, by suppressing adhesion of a carrier to the photoreceptor caused by a peeling discharge at the time of stopping the rotation of the photoreceptor.
To achieve the abovementioned object, according to an aspect, there is provided an electrophotographic image forming apparatus which sequentially performs charging, exposure, development, transfer and cleaning on each surface portion of a photoreceptor during rotation, and the apparatus reflecting one aspect of the present invention comprises: a cleaning blade configured to scrape off toner from the surface of the photoreceptor; a detecting unit configured to detect a rotation angle of the photoreceptor; and a control unit configured to control each of a start process and an end process of rotation of the photoreceptor and charging, development and transfer of the photoreceptor, wherein, in the end process, the control unit estimates a position of a surface portion of the photoreceptor, at which a charged state caused by a peeling discharge when the cleaning blade scrapes off the toner remains even after the stop of the photoreceptor, from the rotation angle from the time of start of deceleration of the photoreceptor to the time of stop of the photoreceptor, and adjusts parameters necessary for the next start process or end process depending on the position.
The electrophotographic image forming apparatus preferably further comprises: a driving unit configured to rotate the photoreceptor; a charging unit configured to charge a surface of the photoreceptor; an exposure unit configured to irradiate the charged surface of the photoreceptor with light to form an electrostatic latent image; a developing unit configured to develop the electrostatic latent image as a toner image with a two-component developer; a transfer unit configured to transfer the toner image from the photoreceptor to a sheet; and a discharging unit configured to remove electric charge from the surface of the photoreceptor after the toner image is transferred. The parameters necessary for the start process preferably comprise startup timing of each unit of the driving unit, the charging unit, the developing unit, the transfer unit and the discharging unit or a bias voltage value of the developing unit. The parameters necessary for the end process preferably comprise a stop timing of each unit.
The control unit preferably first stops the charging unit in the end process, the control unit preferably stops the developing unit at a time point when the charging termination as the surface portion of the photoreceptor facing the charging unit at the time of the stop is assumed to face the developing unit, and the control unit preferably stops the discharging unit and the driving unit at a time point when the charging termination is assumed to face the discharging unit, and the control unit preferably estimates a stop position of the charging termination from a rotation angle from the time of stop of the driving unit to the time of stop of the photoreceptor, and the control unit preferably estimates the position of the surface portion of the photoreceptor at which the charged state caused by the peeling discharge remains, from the stop position.
When the stop position of the charging termination is between a position facing the charging unit and a position facing the developing unit, the control unit preferably sets the startup timing of the developing unit earlier than the startup timing of the charging unit, among the parameters necessary for the next start process, and sets a bias voltage value immediately after the startup of the developing unit to be closer to a ground voltage than a value at the time of development. The control unit preferably sets the startup timing of the developing unit earlier than the startup timing of the charging unit, at least by a time necessary for the driving unit to cause the rotational speed of the photoreceptor to reach a target value.
When the stop position of the charging termination is between a position facing the developing unit and a position facing the discharging unit, the control unit preferably delays the stop timing of the discharging unit and the driving unit, among the parameters necessary for the next end process. The control unit preferably delays the stop timing of the discharging unit and the driving unit, at least by a time necessary for the bias voltage value of the developing unit to return from the value at the time of development to the ground voltage.
The electrophotographic image forming apparatus preferably further comprises: a display unit configured to display characters, figures, or images. When the stop position of the charging termination is between a position facing the developing unit and a position facing the discharging unit, the control unit preferably displays a message, a symbol or an image warning that there is a risk of deterioration of the quality of the toner image, on the display unit.
The electrophotographic image forming apparatus preferably further comprises: a measuring unit configured to measure environmental conditions of the photoreceptor. The control unit preferably determines whether a probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge exceeds an allowable upper limit from the environmental conditions measured by the measuring unit, and when exceeding the allowable upper limit, the control unit preferably estimates the position of the surface portion of the photoreceptor at which the charged state caused by the peeling discharge remains.
The above and other objects, advantages and features of the present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description given hereinbelow and the appended drawings which are given by way of illustration only, and thus are not intended as a definition of the limits of the present invention, and wherein:
Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present invention will be described with reference to the drawings. However, the scope of the invention is not limited to the illustrated examples.
[External Shape of Image Forming Apparatus]
[Internal Structure of Image Forming Apparatus]
The feeding unit 10 uses a conveying roller 12 and a sheet feeding roller 13 to separate the sheets SH1 one by one from a bundle SHT of sheets stored in a sheet feeding cassette 11, and feeds the sheets SH1 to the image forming unit 20. The term “sheet” refers to a thin film-like or thin plate-like material, article or printed matter made of sheet or resin. The type of sheet that can be stored in the sheet feeding cassette 11, that is, the sheet type, is plain sheet, high-quality sheet, color sheet or coated sheet, and its size is A3 , A4 , A5 or B4. Furthermore, the posture of the sheet can be set both in a vertical position and in a horizontal position.
The image forming unit 20 forms a monochrome toner image on the sheet SH2 sent from the feeding unit 10. Specifically, first, the timing roller 21 temporarily stops the sheet arriving from the sheet feeding cassette 11, and allows the sheet to pass through a nip between the photoreceptor (PC) drum 22 and the transfer roller 23 in accordance with the timing indicated by the drive signal from a main control unit 60 (see
The fixing unit 30 thermally fixes the toner image to the sheet SH2 sent from the image forming unit 20. Specifically, the fixing unit 30 causes the sheet SH2 to pass through the nip between the fixing roller 31 and the pressure roller 32, while rotating the fixing roller 31 and the pressure roller 32. At this time, the fixing roller 31 applies the heat of a built-in heater to the surface of the sheet SH2, and the pressure roller 32 applies the presses to the heated portion of the sheet SH2 to be pressed against the fixing roller 31. The toner image is fixed onto the surface of the sheet SH2 by the heat from the fixing roller 31 and the pressure from the pressure roller 32. The fixing unit 30 further sends the sheet SH2 to the sheet discharge unit 40 by the rotation of the fixing roller 31 and the pressure roller 32.
The sheet discharge unit 40 discharges the sheet SH3 with the toner image fixed thereon from the sheet discharge port 42 to the sheet discharge tray 44. Specifically, the sheet discharge unit 40 rotates the sheet discharge roller 43 disposed inside the sheet discharge port 42, and sends the sheet SH3 having moved from the upper portion of the fixing unit 30 to the sheet discharge port 42 to the outside of the sheet discharge port 42 and places the sheet SH3 on the sheet discharge tray 44.
[Structure of Photoreceptor Unit]
The PC drum 22 is a cylindrical member made of a conductor such as aluminum with an outer circumferential surface covered with a photoreceptor, and is rotatably supported around a central axis (in
The charging unit 24 includes a wire or thin plate-like electrode 241 which extends in the axial direction at an interval from the outer circumferential surface of the PC drum 22. By applying, for example, a negative high voltage (−several hundreds to −several thousands of V, hereinafter, referred to as “charging bias”) to the electrode 241, the charging unit 24 generates the discharge between the electrode 241 and the outer circumferential surface of the PC drum 22. The discharge charges the surface portion of the photoreceptor facing the electrode 241 to negative polarity. The charged portion passes through the gap between the charging unit 24 and the developing unit 26 with the rotation of the PC drum 22. The exposure unit 25 irradiates the charged portion of the PC drum 22 with laser beam through the gap. The amount of laser beam is modulated by the exposure unit 25, based on the gradation value indicated by the image data. Meanwhile, in the charged portion of the PC drum 22, in the region irradiated with the laser beam, the charge amount decreases depending on the amount of received beam. Therefore, a distribution of the charge amount corresponding to the distribution of the gradation value indicated by the image data, that is, an electrostatic latent image is generated in the charged portion.
With the rotation of the PC drum 22, the surface portion of the PC drum 22 including the electrostatic latent image faces the developing unit 26. First, the developing unit 26 agitates the two-component developer DVL with two auger screws 261, and charges the toner contained in the developer DVL into negative polarity by the friction at that time. Next, the developing unit 26 rotates the developing roller 262 to cover its outer circumferential surface with the developer DVL, and brings the outer circumferential surface close to the opposing surface of the PC drum 22. In parallel with this, the developing unit 26 applies a negative high voltage (−several hundred to −several thousands of V, hereinafter, referred to as “developing bias”) to the developing roller 262. As a result, since the potential of the electrostatic latent image is higher than that of the developing roller 262 in the region having the relatively small amount of charge, the toner separates from the developer covering the outer circumferential surface of the developing roller 262 and adheres. The electrostatic latent image is developed by this toner.
With the rotation of the PC drum 22, the actualized toner image moves to the nip between the PC drum 22 and the transfer roller 23. At this time, since a positive high voltage (about several hundreds to several thousands of V, hereinafter, referred to as “transfer bias”) is applied to the transfer roller 23, the negatively charged toner image is transferred from the surface of the PC drum 22 to the surface of the sheet SH2 which simultaneously passes through the same nip.
The surface portion of the photoreceptor including the trace of the toner image transferred to the sheet SH2 comes into contact with the cleaning blade 27 with the rotation of the PC drum 22. The cleaning blade 27 is a thin rectangular plate-like member made of a thermosetting resin such as polyurethane rubber, and the length thereof is substantially equal to the portion of the outer circumferential surface of the PC drum 22 covered with the photoreceptor. One of the plate surfaces of the blade 27 that faces the outer circumferential surface of the PC drum 22 comes into contact with the outer circumferential surface of the PC drum 22 in a state in which one of its long sides (edge) is parallel to the axis of the PC drum 22, and the one plate surface obliquely intersects with the tangential plane of the outer circumferential surface at the edge. This contact follows the reading method. That is, the portion of the outer circumferential surface of the PC drum 22 which comes into contact with the edge of the blade 27 faces the plate surface of the blade 27 immediately after the contact, by the rotation of the PC drum 22. The blade 27 scrapes off the toner remaining on the transfer trace of the toner image from the surface portion of the photoreceptor coming into contact with the edge.
The surface portion faces the eraser 28 with the rotation of the PC drum 22. The eraser (also referred to as “pre-exposure unit”) 28 includes, for example, light emitting diodes (LEDs) arranged in the axial direction of the PC drum 22, and faces the surface portion of the photoreceptor earlier than the charging unit 24 to irradiate the portion with light and discharge that portion. Thereafter, this surface portion faces the charging unit 24 again with the rotation of the PC drum 22.
[Transmission Mechanism of Rotational Force from Drive Motor to Photoreceptor Drum]
[Electronic Control System of Image Forming Apparatus]
—Driving Unit—
Each of the elements 10 to 40 of the printer 100 includes driving units 10D, 20D, 30D and 40D. Each of the driving units 10D to 40D controls a drive motor for the conveying rollers 12, 13, 21, 22, 23, 31, and 43. Although it is not illustrated in
—Operation Unit—
The operation unit 50 accepts a job request and image data to be printed through the user's operation or communication with an external electronic device, and transmits the job request and the image data to the main control unit 60. Referring to
—Main Control Unit—
The main control unit 60 is an integrated circuit mounted on one printed circuit board installed inside the printer 100. Referring to
—Image Forming Unit—
Referring to
[Falling Sequence of Process Control]
At the time t3, generally, since the uncharged start end NTL has not yet reached the position facing the eraser 28, the eraser 28 is turned off before the uncharged start end NTL receives irradiation light from the eraser 28. Therefore, if the uncharged start end NTL is charged by the peeling discharge SPD between the uncharged start end NTL and the cleaning blade 27, the uncharged start end NTL remains charged even after the motor stop time t3. In this case, there is a high risk that the carrier moves and adheres to the uncharged start end NTL from the developing roller 262, while the PC drum 22 continues to rotate by inertia or when the PC motor 20A is subsequently started up.
[Adjustment of Parameters Necessary for Rising/Falling Sequences]
When the charged state of the uncharged start end NTL due to the peeling discharge SPD remains even after the motor stop time t3, there is a high risk of adherence of the carrier to the uncharged start end NTL. For the purpose of suppressing this risk, as it will be described below, the control unit 202 estimates the stop position of the charging termination LSP from the rotation angle of the PC drum 22 detected by the detecting unit 201, and adjusts the parameters necessary for the next rising sequence or falling sequence depending on the position.
Since the probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge SPD depends on the environmental humidity of the photoreceptor, the control unit 202 first determines the necessity of estimating the stop position of the charging termination LSP, depending on the environmental humidity. Specifically, the control unit 202 reads the measured value of the environmental humidity of the photoreceptor from the measuring unit 64 at the motor stop time t3, and compares the measured value with a threshold value. The threshold value indicates the environmental humidity when the probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge SPD is equal to an allowable upper limit. When the environmental humidity is equal to or higher than the threshold value, since the probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge SPD is lower than the allowable upper limit, the risk that the uncharged start end NTL remains charged even after the stop of the PC drum 22 may be negligible. Meanwhile, when the environmental humidity is less than the threshold, since the probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge SPD exceeds the allowable upper limit, its risk is not negligible. Therefore, in the latter case, the control unit 202 actually estimates the stop position of the charging termination LSP.
After the motor stop time t3, the control unit 202 causes the detecting unit 201 to count the output pulses of the rotary encoder 22R. This count value continues to increase, since the PC drum 22 continues to rotate by inertia during the period from the start of deceleration of the PC drum 22 with the stop of the PC motor 20A to the actual stop, that is, during the braking time of the PC drum 22. If the count value does not increase for a certain period of time or if the elapsed time from the counting start exceeds the upper limit of the braking time of the PC drum 22, the control unit 202 considers that “the PC drum 22 has stopped”, and estimates the rotation angle of the PC drum 22 after the motor stop time t3, that is, the braking distance of the PC drum 22 from the count value of the detecting unit 201 at that time. For example, in the rotary encoder 22R illustrated in
The stop position φ=φ0 closest to the reference position φ=0° represents the range 0°≤φ<θ1 from the reference position to the position φ=θ1 facing the charging unit 24. When the charging termination LSP stops in this range, in the next rising sequence, the uncharged start end NTL first faces the charging unit 24 and is subjected to the charging process. Therefore, even if the uncharged start end NTL remains charged by the peeling discharge SPD during the falling sequence, the uncharged start end NTL reaches the developing roller 262 only after this charged state is eliminated by the charging bias. Therefore, the risk of adherence of carrier to the uncharged start end NTL is negligible.
The stop position φ=φ1 which is next nearer to the reference position φ=0° represents a range θ1≤φ<θ2 from the position φ=θ1 facing the charging unit 24 to the nip φ=θ2 between the PC drum 22 and the developing roller 262. When the charging termination LSP stops in this range, since the uncharged start end NTL does not reach the nip φ=θ2 in the immediately preceding falling sequence, even if the NTL remains charged by the peeling discharge SPD, the risk of adherence of carrier to the NTL is negligible. However, in the next rising sequence, since the uncharged start end NTL enters the nip φ=θ2 earlier than the charging process, if the NTL remains charged by the peeling discharge SPD in the immediately preceding falling sequence, there is a high risk of adherence of carrier to the NTL.
The stop position φ=φ2 farthest from the reference position φ=0° represents the range θ2≤φ<360° from the nip φ=θ2 between the PC drum 22 and the developing roller 262 to the reference position φ=360°. When the charging termination LSP stops in this range, the uncharged start end NTL has already passed through the nip φ=θθ2 in the immediately preceding falling sequence. Therefore, if the uncharged start end NTL is charged by the peeling discharge SPD, there is a high risk that carriers have already adhered to the uncharged start end NTL when passing through the nip φ=θ2. Meanwhile, in the next rising sequence, the uncharged start end NTL reaches the developing roller 262 only after passing through the charging unit 24. Therefore, at the startup of the rising sequence, even if the charge amount remains at the uncharged start end NTL, the risk of adherence of new carrier to NTL is negligible.
As described above, the risk of adherence of carrier to the uncharged start end NTL varies, depending on the stop of charging termination LSP at one position of the three stop positions φ=φ0, φ1 and φ2. Therefore, the control unit 202 adjusts the parameters necessary for the next rising sequence or the falling sequence in different manners for each of the stop positions φ=φ0, φ1, and φ2 of the charging termination LSP as follows.
—Stop Position φ=φ0—
This stop position φ=φ0 falls within from the reference position φ=0° to the position φ=θ1 facing the charging unit 24: 0°≤φ0<θ1. In this case, even if the uncharged start end NTL remains charged even after the falling sequence, the risk of adherence of carriers to the NTL in the next rising sequence is negligible. Therefore, when the braking distance φ of the PC drum 22 estimated from the count value of the detecting unit 201 falls within this range of 0°≤φ<θ1, the control unit 202 maintains the parameters necessary for the rising sequence and the falling sequence at default values.
—Stop Position φ=φ1—
The parameters required for such a rising sequence include startup timings of each unit of the driving unit 20D, the charging unit 24, the developing unit 26, the transfer unit 203, and the discharging unit 204, specifically, the interval between the respective timings T0, T1, T2 , T3 and T4 illustrated in
When the braking distance φ of the PC drum 22 estimated from the count value of the detecting unit 201 falls within θ1≤φ<θ2, as illustrated in
—Stop Position φ=φ2—
The parameters necessary for such a falling sequence include the stop timing of each unit of the driving unit 20D, the charging unit 24, the developing unit 26, the transfer unit 203, and the discharging unit 204, specifically, the intervals of each time t0, t1, t2 and t3 illustrated in
In the falling sequence, since the braking distance of the PC drum 22 is considered to be substantially equal to the value φ2 in the immediately preceding falling sequence, the stop position of the charging termination LSP will advance by the rotation angle Δφ from the position φ2 in the immediately preceding falling sequence: φ=φ2+Δφ. Since the rotation angle Δφ is generally sufficiently smaller than the braking distance φ2, the stop position of the charging termination LSP does not reach the position θ1 facing the charging unit 24. Therefore, even if the uncharged start end NTL remains charged, in the next rising sequence, the uncharged start end NTL reaches the developing roller 262 only after passing through the charging unit 24. Therefore, since the risk of the adherence of carrier to the uncharged start end NTL is negligible, the control unit 202 maintains the necessary parameters at the default values in the subsequent rising sequence.
In the falling sequence after the motor stop time is delayed, the control unit 202 maintains the motor stop time at the delayed value t4. As a result, even in any subsequent falling sequence, subsequent to the charging termination LSP, the uncharged start end NTL passes through the developing unit 26 only after receiving the irradiation light from the eraser 28. Therefore, the risk of adherence of carriers to the uncharged start end NTL is negligible.
[Flow of Process Control in Falling Sequence]
In step S101, the control unit 202 reads the value of the parameters necessary for the falling sequence from the built-in memory. Thereafter, the process proceeds to step S102.
In step S102, the control unit 202 determines the stop timings of the driving unit 20D, the charging unit 24, the developing unit 26, the transfer unit 203 and the discharging unit 204, based on the values read in step S101. Specifically, the control unit 202 assumes the respective times t0, t1, t2 and t3 illustrated in
In step S103, as the exposure unit 25 finishes the irradiation of the laser beam modulated with the image data of the process object, the control unit 202 starts to measure the elapsed time t from that time point. Thereafter, the process proceeds to step S104.
In step S104, in accordance with the time counting value t reaching the transfer completion time t0, the control unit 202 causes the transfer unit 203 to start the polarity inversion of the transfer bias. Thereafter, the process proceeds to step S105.
In step S105, in accordance with the time counting value t reaching the charging end time t1, the control unit 202 stops the application of the charging bias to the charging unit 24. Thereafter, the process proceeds to step S106.
In step S106, in accordance with the time counting value t reaching the development end time t2, the control unit 202 stops the application of the developing bias to the developing unit 26. Thereafter, the process proceeds to step S107.
In step S107, in accordance with the time counting value t reaching the motor stop time t3 or t4, the control unit 202 causes the transfer unit 203 to stop the application of the transfer bias, causes the discharging unit 204 to turn on the LED of the eraser 28, and causes the driving unit 20D to stop the PC motor 20A. Thereafter, the process proceeds to step S201.
In step S201, the control unit 202 checks whether or not the motor stop time read in step S101 is equal to the default value t3. If the motor stop time is equal to the default value t3, the process proceeds to step S202, otherwise the process proceeds to step S208.
In step S202, since the motor stop time is equal to the default value t3, the stop position of the charging termination LSP does not exceed the nip φ=θ2 between the PC drum 22 and the developing roller 262 until the previous falling sequence. The control unit 202 reads the measured value of the environmental humidity of the photoreceptor from the measuring unit 64 at the motor stop time t3, and checks whether the measured value is less than the threshold value. If the measured value is less than the threshold value, the process proceeds to step S203, and if the measured value is equal to or greater than the threshold value, the process proceeds to step S208.
In step S203, since the environmental humidity of the photoreceptor is less than the threshold value, the probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge SPD exceeds the allowable upper limit. That is, the risk of adherence of carriers to the uncharged start end NTL is not negligible. Therefore, after the motor stop time t3, the control unit 202 causes the detecting unit 201 to count the output pulses of the rotary encoder 22R. Thereafter, the process proceeds to step S204.
In step S204, the control unit 202 determines whether or not the PC drum 22 has stopped from the count value of the output pulse of the rotary encoder 22R. Specifically, if the count value does not increase for a certain period of time or if the elapsed time from the start of counting exceeds the upper limit of the braking time of the PC drum 22, the control unit 202 determines that “the PC drum 22 has stopped”. If the PC drum 22 is stopped, the process proceeds to step S205, and if the PC drum 22 is not stopped, the process repeats step S204.
In step S205, since the PC drum 22 will be stopped, the control unit 202 first estimates the rotation angle of the PC drum 22 after the motor stop time t3 from the count value of the detecting unit 201 at that time, that is, the braking distance of the PC drum 22. Next, the control unit 202 sets the position φ advanced from the reference position φ=0° facing the eraser 28 by the estimated value at the stop position of the charging termination LSP. Thereafter, the process proceeds to step S206.
In step S206, the control unit 202 checks whether or not the stop position φ of the charging termination LSP set in step S205 falls within 0°≤φ<θ1 from the reference position φ=0° to the position φ=θ1 facing the charging unit 24. If the stop position φ falls within the range, the process proceeds to step S207, and if not, the process proceeds to step S208.
In step S207, the control unit 202 checks whether the stop position φ of the charging termination LSP falls within θ1≤φ<θ2 from the position φ=θ1 facing the charging unit 24 to the nip φ=θ2 between the PC drum 22 and the developing roller 262. If the stop position φ falls within the range, the process proceeds to step S209, and if not, the process proceeds to step S210.
In step S208, one of the following conditions is satisfied. (1) The motor stop time is different from the default value t3. (2) The measured value of the environmental humidity of the photoreceptor is equal to or greater than the threshold value. (3) The stop position φ of the charging termination LSP falls within 0°≤φ<θ1 from the reference position φ=0° to the position φ=θ1 facing the charging unit 24. When the condition (2) is satisfied, the probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge SPD is sufficiently low. If the conditions (1) and (3) are satisfied, even if the uncharged start end NTL remains charged by the peeling discharge SPD during the falling sequence, the risk of the adherence of carrier to the uncharged start end NTL is negligible. Therefore, the control unit 202 sets the parameters necessary for the next rising sequence to the default values, and maintains the parameters required for the next falling sequence at the current value. After that, the process ends.
In step S209, the stop position φ of the charging termination LSP falls within the range from the position φ=θ1 facing the charging unit 24 to the nip φ=θ2 between the PC drum 22 and the developing roller 262: θ1≤φ<θ2. In this falling sequence, if the uncharged start end NTL remains charged by the peeling discharge SPD, there is a high risk of adherence of carriers to the uncharged start end NTL in the next rising sequence. Therefore, the control unit 202 shortens the application start of the developing bias among the parameters necessary for the next rising sequence from the developing start time T2 to the motor startup time T0, and sets the target value of the development bias up to the developing start time T2 at the carrier blocking voltage −VPR. After that, the process ends.
In step S210, the stop position φ of the charging termination LSP falls within from the nip φ=θ2 between the PC drum 22 and the developing roller 262 to the reference position φ=360°≡0°: θ2≤φ<360°. In this falling sequence, if the uncharged start end NTL is still charged by the peeling discharge SPD, there is a high risk that carriers already adhere to the uncharged start end NTL. Therefore, the control unit 202 delays the motor stop time from the default value t3 among the parameters necessary for the next falling sequence by the time Δt necessary for the developing bias to return from the developing value −VDV to the ground voltage 0 V. After that, the process ends.
[Advantages of Embodiment]
In the printer 100 according to the embodiment of the present invention, the detecting unit 201 detects the rotation angle of the PC drum 22 of the braking time in the falling sequence, and the control unit 202 estimates the stop position φ of the charging termination LSP from the rotation angle. The control unit 202 further adjusts parameters necessary for the next rising sequence or falling sequence, depending on the stop position φ. As a result, adhesion of carriers to the photoreceptor in each sequence is effectively suppressed. In this way, the printer 100 can achieve a prolonged maintenance of high image quality and a long lifetime of the photoreceptor.
[Modified Example]
(A) The image forming apparatus 100 illustrated in
The invention can also be applied to a color laser printer of an intermediate transfer type. In the intermediate transfer type, the toner image is transferred from the photoreceptor to the sheet via the intermediate transfer member.
The charging unit 24 includes a charging roller 242. The charging roller 242 is a cylindrical member in which the circumference of a metallic core metal is surrounded by a conductive resin, and is rotatably supported around a central axis (an axis penetrating the center of the circular cross section of the charging roller 242 perpendicularly to the sheet plane in
With the rotation of the PC drum 22, the toner image actualized by the developing unit 26 moves to the nip between the PC drum 22 and the primary transfer roller 231, and is transferred into the surface portion of the intermediate transfer belt 29 simultaneously passing through the same nip from the surface of the PC drum 22, by the transfer bias applied to the primary transfer roller 231.
The surface portion of the photoreceptor including the transfer trace of the toner image receives the irradiation light from the eraser 28 with the rotation of the PC drum 22. As a result, the surface portion is discharged. The surface portion further comes into contact with the cleaning blade 27 with the rotation of the PC drum 22. The blade 27 scrapes off the toner remaining in the transfer trace of the toner image from the surface portion. Thereafter, the surface portion faces the charging unit 24 again with the rotation of the PC drum 22.
(B) The photoreceptor illustrated in
(C) The charging bias, the developing bias, and the transfer bias may be opposite to the polarities illustrated in
(D) The transmission mechanism between the PC drum 22 and the PC motor 20A illustrated in
(E) In the rotary encoder 22R illustrated in
(F) Since the rotary encoder 22R is an increment type, the detecting unit 201 detects the number of output pulses as a relative rotation angle of the PC drum 22. In this case, the control unit 202 estimates the braking distance of the PC drum 22 from the number of output pulses after the motor stop time t3. In addition, the detecting unit 201 may detect the absolute rotation angle of the PC drum 22, by utilizing an absolute type rotary encoder, or by tracking a specific mark on the surface through the image of the outer circumferential surface of the PC drum 22. In this case, the control unit 202 may estimate the braking distance of the PC drum 22 from the difference in the rotation angle of the PC drum 22 between the motor stop time t3 and the stop time.
(G) The intervals of the times T0 to T4, and t0 to t4 illustrated in the timing charts of
(H) In the falling sequence, strictly as illustrated in
(I) In
(J) The measuring unit 64 may measure a physical amount indicating the environmental conditions of the photoreceptor, such as a temperature in addition to the humidity, and the control unit 202 may evaluate the probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge SPD with the measured values. Further, when the probability of occurrence of the peeling discharge SPD is not negligible regardless of the environmental humidity of the photoreceptor, the control unit 202 may skip step S202 illustrated in
(K) As illustrated in
The present invention relates to an electrophotographic image forming apparatus, and as described above, estimates a stop position thereof from a rotation angle of a PC drum in a falling sequence, and adjusts the parameters necessary for a next rising/falling sequence depending on the position. Thus, the present invention is obviously industrially applicable.
Although the present invention has been described and illustrated in detail, it is clearly understood that the same is by way of illustrated and example only and is not to be taken by way of limitation, the scope of the present invention being interpreted by terms of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2016-072135 | Mar 2016 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20080271556 | Imamura | Nov 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2011070117 | Apr 2011 | JP |
2014021261 | Feb 2014 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170285556 A1 | Oct 2017 | US |