The present application claims priority to and incorporates by reference the entire contents of Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-054319 filed in Japan on Mar. 12, 2012 and Japanese Patent Application No. 2013-000085 filed in Japan on Jan. 4, 2013.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an image forming apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
Techniques adopted by image forming apparatuses, such as printers, facsimiles, and copiers, for reducing density variations and correct color misregistration caused by a lapse of time and environmental change include a technique of forming test toner patches on a transfer belt and detecting densities and positions of the patches.
Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2002-207337 discloses such a technique for bringing yellow, magenta, cyan, and black toner images in registration by forming a plurality of toner patches for use in correcting color misregistration on a transfer belt every time the number of output sheets reaches a predetermined number at power-on or the like.
There is also known a similar technique for performing density adjustment on toner-image forming devices, each of which forms a toner image of one color, in a full-color image forming apparatus.
Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2006-293240 discloses a technique for performing density correction by forming toner patches in a non-image frame during a period when a to-be-output image (hereinafter, “output image”) is formed.
A large number of currently-used full-color image forming apparatus adopts such a technique as that disclosed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2002-207337 for reducing density variations and correcting misregistration by (i) disabling image-output processing every time the number of output sheets reaches a predetermined number, (ii) forming a plurality of toner patches on a transfer belt, and (iii) detecting densities and positions of the toner patches.
However, the technique described above is disadvantageous in that the process of forming the plurality of toner patches in every corresponding color and detecting the patches is time consuming, and an image cannot be output during the process. As a scheme for resolving this problem, lengthening time intervals between corrective detections is conceivable. However, this scheme can disadvantageously make image density less stable or cause color misregistration to be likely to occur.
The technique disclosed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2006-293240 does not involve such a period as that described above during which image output is disabled because the toner patches are formed concurrently with image-output processing. However, because the toner patches are formed outside an image area, the number of patches that can be formed is limited; accordingly, control becomes less accurate. Thus, this technique is not satisfactorily appropriate for full-color image forming apparatuses for which tone stability is of primary importance for the sake of printing photographic images and the like.
Therefore, there is a need for an image forming apparatus capable of stabilizing image densities and reducing color misregistration without downtime.
It is an object of the present invention to at least partially solve the problems in the conventional technology.
According to an embodiment, there is provided an image forming apparatus that includes an image carrier; a toner-image forming device configured to form a toner image on the image carrier; a controller configured to control the toner-image forming device to form a toner patch; a detector configured to detect the toner patch on the image carrier; and a developing unit including a developing roller. During a non-printing period, the controller causes the toner-image forming device to form a plurality of toner patches, causes the detector to detect densities of the plurality of toner patches, and adjusts an image-forming condition of the toner-image forming device based on detected densities. During a printing period, the controller causes the toner-image forming device to form an output image in an image area and form fewer toner patches in a non-image area, causes the detector to detect densities of the fewer toner patches, and adjusts the image-forming condition of the toner-image forming device based on detected densities, the fewer toner patches being selected from and fewer than the plurality of toner patches formed during the non-printing period.
The above and other objects, features, advantages and technical and industrial significance of this invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description of presently preferred embodiments of the invention, when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings.
An embodiment of the invention is described below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
An exposure unit 8 is arranged below the photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk, the electrostatic charging rollers 4, the developing units 6, and the cleaning members 7. The exposure unit 8 forms electrostatic latent images by scanning each of the uniformly-electrostatically-charged photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk with laser light according to image data for corresponding one of the colors. Provided between the respective electrostatic charging rollers 4 and the respective developing rollers 5 are elongated spaces (slits) that allow the laser light emitted from the exposure unit 8 to pass therethrough toward the photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk. The exposure unit 8 illustrated in
An intermediate transfer belt 12 that is supported by a plurality of rollers 9, 10, and 11 and to be rotated counterclockwise is arranged on tops of the photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk. The intermediate transfer belt 12 is shared by the photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk. The intermediate transfer belt 12 is arranged approximately horizontally and flat so that a portion of each of the photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk comes into contact with the intermediate transfer belt 12 after a developing process. Transfer rollers 13Y, 13M, 13C, and 13Bk are arranged on an inner periphery of the belt so as to face the photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk, respectively. A cleaning device 14 is arranged on an outer periphery of the intermediate transfer belt 12 at a position, for instance, where the cleaning device 14 faces the roller 11. The cleaning device 14 removes unnecessary toner left on a surface of the belt. The intermediate transfer belt 12 can be, for example, a belt of which substrate is a plastic film or rubber that is 50 to 600 μm thick and having a resistance that allows transferring toner images on the photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk via the belt. A toner-image forming device including the photosensitive element 3, the electrostatic charging roller 4, the developing unit 6, the cleaning member 7, and the exposure unit 8 forms a toner image on the intermediate transfer belt 12, which is an image carrier. The toner image is transferred via the transfer roller 13 onto the intermediate transfer belt 12.
A plurality of paper cassettes (two paper cassettes, which are paper cassettes 23 and 24, in the present embodiment) arranged in the apparatus body 2 at a position below the exposure unit 8. The paper cassettes 23 and 24 can be pulled out to be dismounted from the apparatus body 2 as appropriate. The paper cassettes 23 and 24 hold therein sheets S of recording medium. Each of the sheets S is selectively fed by one of sheet feeding rollers 25 and 26, which are for the paper cassettes 23 and 24, respectively. A sheet-feed conveying path 27 is formed approximately vertically to convey the sheet S toward a transfer position. A conveying belt 35 is laterally adjacent to the intermediate transfer belt 12. A secondary transfer roller 18, which is a secondary transfer unit, is arranged inside a loop of the conveying belt 35 in a manner to face the roller 9, which is one of the rollers supporting the intermediate transfer belt 12. The roller 9 and the transfer roller 18 are brought into pressure contact with each other with the intermediate transfer belt 12 and the conveying belt 35 therebetween. A pair of registration rollers 28 for feeding the sheet S to the transfer position at appropriate timing is arranged on the sheet-feed conveying path 27 at a position immediately upstream of the transfer position. A sheet-output conveying path 30 is arranged above the transfer position. The sheet-output conveying path 30 extends from the sheet-feed conveying path 27 to be connected to a discharged sheet stacker 29 on a top of the apparatus body 2. A fixing unit 31 including a pair of fixing rollers and a pair of sheet output rollers 32 are arranged on the sheet-output conveying path 30.
A toner-bin container 33 that stores toner of the respective colors for use by the photosensitive elements 3Y, 3M, 3C, and 3Bk is arranged in the apparatus body 2 in a space below the discharged sheet stacker 29. The toner-bin container 33 is capable of supplying the toner of each color to the corresponding developing unit 6 using a pump or the like.
Operations performed by the image forming apparatus 1 configured as described above to form an image on the sheet S are described below.
An image signal representing an output image is transmitted from a personal computer (PC), a scanner, a facsimile or the like to a controller 50. The controller 50 converts the image signal to an appropriate output image signal determined by control operations, which will be described later, and transmits the converted image signal to the exposure unit 8. In the exposure unit 8, a semiconductor laser emits laser light according to image data for yellow to the surface of the photosensitive element 3Y that is uniformly charged by the electrostatic charging roller 4Y. As a result, an electrostatic latent image is formed on the surface. This electrostatic latent image is subjected to a developing process performed by the developing unit 6Y to be developed into a visible image with yellow toner. The toner image is transferred via the transfer roller 13Y onto the intermediate transfer belt 12 that is rotated in synchronization with the photosensitive element 3Y. The latent-image formation, the development, and the transfer are sequentially performed by the toner-image forming devices each including one of the photosensitive elements 3M, 3C, and 3Bk at appropriate timing. As a result, a yellow toner image, a magenta toner image, a cyan toner image, and a black toner image are sequentially superimposed on one another on the intermediate transfer belt 12, and the thus-formed full-color toner image is carried on and conveyed by the intermediate transfer belt 12.
Meanwhile, the sheet S is fed from any one of the paper cassettes 23 and 24 and conveyed through the sheet-feed conveying path 27 to the registration rollers 28. The sheet S is fed out from the registration rollers 28 at timing synchronized with the full-color toner image on the intermediate transfer belt 12. The full-color toner image on the intermediate transfer belt 12 is transferred to the sheet S via the transfer roller 18. The sheet S onto which the full-color toner image is transferred is conveyed by the conveying belt 35 to the fixing unit 31. The sheet S onto which fixation is performed by the fixing unit 31 is output by the sheet output rollers 32 onto the discharged sheet stacker 29.
When duplex printing is to be performed, the sheet S is turned upside down as follows. A switching claw 38 is operated to guide the sheet S, onto which a toner image is fixed, to a reverse path 36 where the sheet S is turned upside turn. A switching claw 39 is then operated again to feed the turned-upside-down sheet S from a re-feed path 37 to the registration rollers 28. Concurrently therewith, a toner image to be formed on a back side of the sheet S is formed and carried by the intermediate transfer belt 12. The toner image is transferred onto the back side (second surface) of the sheet S and fixed by the fixing unit 31. The sheet S is output by the sheet output rollers 32 onto the discharged sheet stacker 29.
Operations to be performed to form a full-color image are described above, operations for mono-color printing for forming an image of a specific color or black are performed in a similar manner. The mono-color printing differs from full-color printing only in that the mono-color printing is performed without using some of the photosensitive elements.
Density control to be performed during a non-printing period (non-printing-period control) is described with reference to
The “non-printing period” denotes a period during which the image forming apparatus 1 is not performing image-output processing. Examples of the non-printing period include a period in which a start-up operation following power-on is performed and a period in which the photosensitive elements 3 are on idling before or after image-output processing. Generally, even after image density detection and density correction are performed, an image forming apparatus suffers from deviation in image density that occurs over time. In particular, when the temperature and the humidity in the image forming apparatus have changed or the image forming apparatus is unused for a long period, the density is likely to deviate. In addition, as the number of output sheets increases, the density deviates more. In view of such circumstances, image-forming-condition adjusting timing criteria are set to: when the image forming apparatus has printed a predetermined number, which is experimentally determined, of output sheets; when a temperature-humidity sensor provided in the image forming apparatus detects a change equal to or greater than an experimentally-determined threshold value; when the image forming apparatus remains unused longer than an experimentally-determined unused period; and the like. The image-forming-condition adjusting timing criteria are stored in a memory in the controller 50. The controller 50 in the image forming apparatus determines whether any one of such image-forming-condition adjusting timing criteria is met according to internally-stored program instructions (Step S1).
When it is determined that one of the image-forming-condition adjusting timing criteria is met (Yes at Step S1), such patches as those illustrated in
As a result, ten toner patches that vary in density are formed as illustrated in
The toner patches formed on the photosensitive elements 3 are transferred via the transfer roller 13 (e.g., transfer rollers 13Y, 13M, 13C, and/or 13Bk) onto the intermediate transfer belt 12. As a result, ten toner patches for each color are formed in each of the three zones, which are the front (F) zone, the rear (R) zone, and the center (C) zone, on the intermediate transfer belt 12 as illustrated in
Each of the sensors 40 includes a light-emitting element 40B-1, a regular-reflection-light sensor 40B-2, and a diffused-reflection-light sensor 40B-3 as illustrated in
There can be employed another configuration in which the light-emitting element 40B-1 starts emitting light earlier by a certain period than predicted time when the patches should reach the position immediately below the sensors; data is sampled successively; and patches are determined using the threshold value described above. This configuration allows using patches smaller than those used in the configuration in which when to perform patch exposure and when to read the patches are determined based on the layout. Using smaller patches leads to reduction in toner consumption. It is also desirable to reduce detection areas to be detected by the sensors 40 for reducing the patch size. Detection areas of the sensors of the present embodiment are circular areas that are 1 mm in diameter by virtue of employment of compact light-emitting elements and light-receiving elements or provision of slits and the like. The detection areas of the sensors are desirably 2 mm or less. In the present embodiment, the toner patch is 7 mm long in the sub-scanning direction. Toner patches that are approximately 5 mm in the sub-scanning direction may be employed with the number of data sets to be sampled, accuracy in detection of patch edges, and the like taken into account. Thence, the patch is preferably 5 to 7 mm long in the sub-scanning direction.
Referring back to
The apparatus according to the present embodiment is configured as follows to achieve any one of attaining an intended maximum reflection density and placing the slope γ in a predetermined range. When the value of the slope γ is within the predetermined range, the developing bias and the charging bias are changed so as to attain the intended maximum reflection density. When the slope γ goes out of the predetermined range, a control target value of the toner density is changed so as to place the slope γ in the predetermined range. Amounts by which the developing bias and the charging bias are to be changed can be determined easily from experimentally obtained values and sensor outputs (Step S5 (
Subsequently, dot patches are formed as illustrated in
An example of dot patches, which are cyan dot patches, is illustrated in (a) of
Output image signals are determined according to the dot patches having the varying dot area ratios. Reflection densities of the dot patches are obtained from outputs of the sensors. An approximate function is calculated from a graph where the output image signals are plotted along its horizontal axis and the reflection densities of the dot patches are plotted along its vertical axis (at Step S8 (
Finally, the controller 50 determines a target density value for printing-period control to be performed while an image is output (Step S10 (
Toner patches for use in the printing-period control are included in the toner patches, which are referred to at Step S7, having the varying dot area ratios illustrated in
Density control to be performed during the printing period (printing-period control) is described with reference to
The printing period denotes a period in which the image forming apparatus 1 is performing image-output processing. Detection of toner patches during the printing period may be performed constantly; however, densities of the toner patches rarely fluctuate greatly in the printing period. Meanwhile, it is desired to reduce toner consumption. Thence, it is preferable to perform density control by forming toner patches every predetermined number of output sheets, every predetermined period of time over which the image forming apparatus 1 performs a predetermined operation, or every predetermined cumulative number of rotations made by the photosensitive element 3 or the developing roller 5, each of which is experimentally determined. In the printing-period control, the controller 50 determines whether one of such image-forming-condition adjusting timing criteria is met first (Step S11 (
When the controller 50 determines that one of the image-forming-condition adjusting timing criteria is met (Yes), the controller 50 causes not only an output image to be written to an image area but also end-portion toner patches to be formed in non-image areas in end portions in the main-scanning direction of the intermediate transfer belt 12 as illustrated in
The end-portion toner patches illustrated in
The lowermost black patch among the end-portion toner patches illustrated in
Furthermore, it is desirable that the medium-density black dot patches illustrated in
Referring back to
In the present embodiment, a mean value of densities of two identical dot patches is calculated as illustrated in
As described above, in the present embodiment, a plurality of toner patches are formed to adjust the image forming condition with high accuracy during the non-printing period; during the printing period, end-portion toner patches that are fewer than the toner patches of the non-printing period control are formed and detected in parallel with an output image, and density control is performed while maintaining the same condition as that in the non-printing period. Accordingly, a condition where images are stable can be maintained longer when compared to a configuration in which only non-printing-period density control is performed. Furthermore, density control is performed more finely when compared to a configuration in which only printing-period density control is performed.
Although
When the apparatus of the present embodiment adopts the configuration in which the printing-period control is performed even when maximum-size paper is used, the secondary transfer roller 18 desirably has a width that is appropriate for the width of the maximum-size paper and prevents contact between the end-portion toner patches on the intermediate transfer belt 12 and the secondary transfer roller 18. When the secondary transfer roller 18 has such a width, contact between the end-portion toner patches and the secondary transfer roller 18 does not occur. Accordingly, it is unnecessary to move the secondary transfer roller 18 away from the intermediate transfer belt 12. In the non-printing-period control, the secondary transfer roller 18 is moved away from the intermediate transfer belt 12 by a mechanism (not shown) that moves the secondary transfer roller 18 toward and away from the intermediate transfer belt 12 to prevent the secondary transfer roller 18 from contacting the toner patches.
There can be a case where a user desires to use the sheet S that is large enough to overlap an area where the end-portion toner patches are to be formed in the image forming apparatus 1 that includes the secondary transfer roller 18 whose width is smaller than the width of the intermediate transfer belt 12 to prevent the secondary transfer roller 18 from contacting with the end-portion toner patches. In such a case, the user can use the sheet of large size by changing the secondary transfer roller 18 to wider one. However, in this case, it should be noted that it is necessary to disable forming toner patches in the printing-period control to prevent contamination of the secondary transfer roller 18.
In the embodiment described above, the intermediate transfer belt is used as the image carrier. However, an apparatus to which the control according to the embodiment is applicable is not limited to an image forming apparatus that uses an intermediate transfer belt. For instance, the intermediate transfer belt may be an intermediate transfer drum. The embodiment is applicable to an image forming apparatus that uses a direct transfer belt onto which paper is conveyed and via which a toner image is transferred from a photosensitive element onto the paper. The embodiment can be implemented in a configuration in which toner patches on a photosensitive element are detected. When this configuration is employed, the photosensitive element serves as the “image carrier”, the photosensitive element is omitted from the “toner-image forming device”, and the “toner-image forming device” is a device for forming a toner image on the photosensitive element.
According to an aspect of the embodiments, it is possible to perform highly-accurate density correction and the like by forming sufficient toner patches during a non-printing period, such as at power-on or after a predetermined number of output images are formed, and to maintain, during an image output period, an image-forming condition determined during the non-printing period by forming fewer toner patches. Accordingly, there can be obtained an image forming apparatus that requires less frequent toner patch formation and has reduced variations in image density and less color misregistration.
Although the invention has been described with respect to specific embodiments for a complete and clear disclosure, the appended claims are not to be thus limited but are to be construed as embodying all modifications and alternative constructions that may occur to one skilled in the art that fairly fall within the basic teaching herein set forth.
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2012-054319 | Mar 2012 | JP | national |
2013-000085 | Jan 2013 | JP | national |
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