1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an image forming apparatus such as an electrophotographic copying machine or an electrophotographic printer.
2. Description of the Related Art
As a fixing device mounted in an image forming apparatus such as an electrophotographic printer or an electrophotographic copying machine, there exists a film heating type fixing device which has a heater having a heat generating resistor on a ceramic substrate, a fixing film configured to move while held in contact with this heater, and a pressurization member configured to be pressurized with a predetermined pressurization force to thereby form a nip portion together with the heater via the fixing film. In the film heating type fixing device, while a recording material bearing an unfixed toner image is being pinched and conveyed by the nip portion, the toner image is fixed to the recording material through heating.
In an image forming apparatus in which such a fixing device is mounted, a mechanism for changing the pressurization state of the fixing film and the pressurization member (hereinafter referred to as the pressure changing mechanism) is provided as needed. This pressure changing mechanism can make the pressurization force between the fixing film and the pressurization member other than at the time of fixing lower than that at the time of fixing. The reason for providing this mechanism is to prevent setting of an elastic member such as rubber used in the fixing film and the pressurization member; such setting will occur if the fixing film and the pressurization member are kept at rest while in the pressurization state.
A fixing device provided with such a pressure changing mechanism is discussed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2007-256875.
Conventionally, in an image forming apparatus in which a fixing device provided with a pressure changing mechanism as discussed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2007-256875 is mounted, electricity supply to the heater is started after the fixing film and the pressurization member have been placed in the pressurization state, in which fixing is feasible. The reason for doing this is to prevent cracking of the heater; for, when electricity is supplied to the heater in a state in which the pressure is lower than that in the pressurization state, in which fixing is feasible, the temperature of the heater rises abruptly, resulting in cracking of the heater. In this configuration, however, the requisite time for the fixing device to attain a predetermined temperature at which fixing is feasible when starting printing (hereinafter, this requisite time will be referred to as the warm-up time) is longer by the operation time of the pressure changing mechanism, so that it is rather difficult to shorten the first print out time (hereinafter referred to as the FPOT). The FPOT is the time it takes for the first sheet to be discharged after the input of a printing start signal; it is important to shorten this FPOT from the viewpoint of usability. Thus, an image forming apparatus with a fixing device equipped with a pressure changing mechanism, which is free from cracking of the heater and capable of further shortening the warm-up time, is demanded.
The present invention is directed to an image forming apparatus capable of shortening the time before the first recording material being output while preventing the heater from being damaged.
According to an aspect of the present invention, an image forming apparatus includes: an image forming unit configured to form an unfixed image on a recording material; a fixing unit including an endless belt, a heater held in contact with an inner surface of the endless belt, a pressurization roller configured to form a fixing nip portion for pinching and conveying the recording material together with the heater via the endless belt, and a pressure changing mechanism configured to effect switching between a pressurization state in which a pressure, at a time of fixing processing, is applied to the fixing nip portion and a pressure release state in which the pressure applied to the fixing nip portion is released; and a power control unit configured to control supply of power to the heater, wherein, in response to a print signal being input to effect transition from the pressure release state to the pressurization state, the power control unit starts the supply of power to the heater during a transition period before the pressurization state is attained and controls the supply of power to the heater such that a heater temperature does not exceed a predetermined upper limit temperature during the transition period.
Further features and aspects of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate exemplary embodiments, features, and aspects of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
Various exemplary embodiments, features, and aspects of the invention will be described in detail below with reference to the drawings.
The first exemplary embodiment will be illustrated.
(1) An image forming apparatus will be illustrated.
A transfer belt 6 is stretched between a driving roller 7 and a turn roller 8. The transfer belt 6 is arranged under the units Y, M, C, and K so as to extend over all the units, and is rotated counterclockwise as indicated by the arrow at a circumferential speed corresponding to the circumferential speed of the photosensitive drum 1. Transfer rollers 9 are held in press contact with the lower surfaces of the photosensitive drums 1 and sandwiches the transfer belt 6 therebetween, to form transfer nip portions. Registration rollers 10 feed a recording material (transfer material, sheet) P fed separately from a sheet feeding mechanism portion (not illustrated) to the first unit Y side end portion of the transfer belt 6 with a predetermined control timing. The recording material P thus fed is electrostatically attached to the surface of the transfer belt 6 by an electrode roller 11.
The transfer belt 6 holds the recording material P, and conveys it successively to the transfer nip portions of the first through fourth units Y, M, C, and K. A bias application power source V11 is for the electrode roller 11. A transfer bias application power sources V9 are for the transfer rollers 9. According to this construction, a yellow toner image, a magenta toner image, a cyan toner image, and a black toner image are successively transferred to and superimposed on the surface of the same recording material P in an aligned state, whereby an unfixed full color toner image (unfixed image) is formed. After being conveyed and passed through the transfer nip portion of the fourth unit K, the recording material P is separated from the transfer belt 6, and is introduced into a fixing device F to undergo heat fixing processing of the unfixed toner images before being discharged and conveyed as a resultant sheet with a full color toner image.
(2) A fixing device (fixing unit) F will be illustrated.
The fixing belt 130 consists of a base layer made of stainless steel (SUS) formed into a cylinder of a thickness of 30 μm and of an inner diameter of 24 mm, a silicone rubber layer of a thickness of 30 μm provided as an elastic layer, and an outer coating tube of a thickness of 30 μm made of tetrafluoroethylene perfluoroalkyl vinyl ether (PFA) serving as a release layer. As the material of the base layer of fixing belt 130, it is also possible to employ, instead of stainless steel, a metal material such as nickel, or a heat resistant resin material such as polyimide.
To control the temperature of the fixing belt 130 and the heater 131 to target values, a main thermistor (first temperature detection element) 160 serving as a temperature serving element is provided on the inner surface of the fixing belt 130, and a sub thermistor (second temperature detection element) 161 is provided on the side of the heater 131 not abutting on the fixing belt 130, each thermistor being held in an abutting arrangement. According to the detection results, the power applied is controlled so that a predetermined fixing temperature is maintained by a power control unit (not illustrated). More specifically, during the period in which the recording material undergoes fixing processing at the fixing nip portion (the period from the time T4 onward mentioned below), the power control unit controls the power applied to the heater 131 such that the detection temperature of the main thermistor 160 is maintained at the predetermined fixing temperature. On the other hand, during the period in which the fixing device is warmed up to a state in which fixing is feasible (During this period, the heater 131 is warmed up to a target temperature; this period is prior to the time T4 mentioned below); during this period, the power control unit controls the power applied to the heater 131 according to the detection temperature of the sub thermistor 161.
A holder member 132 is made of a heat resistant resin (such as liquid crystal polymer) and serves to hold the heater 131 and to guide the running of the fixing belt 130. A metal skeleton 151 supports the holder member along the longitudinal direction. The total pressurization force the metal skeleton 151 receives from the pressure changing mechanism 150, which is 225 N, is transmitted via the holder member 132 to the heater 131 so as to be longitudinally uniform, with the result that the heater 131 brings the fixing belt 130 into press contact with the pressure roller 201.
The pressurization roller 201 is formed by providing a silicone rubber elastic layer 141 of a thickness of 3.5 mm on an iron core 140 of an outer diameter of 18 mm, and further providing thereon a release layer 142 of a thickness of 50 μm made of PFA (Thus, the pressurization roller has an outer diameter of approximately 25 mm). The product hardness of the pressurization roller is 56 degrees (ASKER-C; load: 9.8N). The width of a fixing nip portion 101 formed through deformation of the elastic layer 141 as a result of receiving the pressurization force from the heater 131 is approximately 10 mm. In the present exemplary embodiment, the pressurization roller 201 is driven by a driving motor (not illustrated). Regarding the operation of the driving motor, its driving, stopping, and rotation speed is controlled by a control unit (not illustrated).
The fixing belt 130 is driven by the pressurization roller 201 by the frictional force exerted between the pressurization roller 201 and the fixing nip 101, and is rotated in the direction of the arrow at the same circumferential speed as the pressurization roller 201 while sliding on and held in press contact with a part of the heater 131 and the holder member 132.
In usual image formation, in which image formation is performed on an ordinary paper sheet or the like of a basis weight of 60 to 100 g/m2, the pressurization roller 201 is driven at a circumferential speed of 240 mm/sec, and the electricity supply to the heater 131 is adjusted such that the temperature of the back surface of the fixing belt 130 is 190° C.
The recording material 105, which has undergone the transfer process and which has the unfixed toner image 104 thereon, is guided to the fixing nip portion, and the toner is melted by the pressure applied at the nip portion and the heat conducted from the fixing belt 130 and the heater 131, with the toner image being fixed to the recording material 105.
(3) The pressure changing mechanism and the power control timing will be illustrated.
First, the pressure condition of the fixing device will be illustrated with reference to
At this time, the power control unit (not illustrated) starts electricity supply to the heater 131 at the timing of T1, at which the heater temperature actually rises. In the present exemplary embodiment, the maximum power applied is 1000 W. It takes 0.2 seconds from T0 to T1. Here, the timing T1 and the timing for changing of the pressurization force T0′ can replace each other. Further, in order that the heater 131 may not attain a level of a fixed temperature or higher during the transition period T2 (in order that the heater temperature may not exceed a predetermined upper limit temperature), during the transition period T2, a temperature upper limit value for the heater 131 is provided separately from that during the period of the fixing processing, thus controlling the power supply.
This temperature upper limit value is provided for the purpose of preventing the heater from cracking as a result of an abrupt increase in the heater temperature. In the conventional construction, in which the power supply to the heater 131 is started after the pressurization state P2 has been attained, heat is likely to be dissipated by the sufficient pressure being applied, so that there is no fear that the temperature of the heater 131 increase abruptly. However, in the construction of the present exemplary embodiment, in which the power supply to the heater 131 is started during the transition period T2, heat is likely to be kept in the heater 131 since the pressurization force is not sufficient. Thus, there is a fear that the temperature of the heater 131 abruptly increase to cause heater cracking, therefor, before attaining the pressurization state P2, the power supply is controlled such that the temperature upper limit value is not exceeded while the temperature rising rate of the sub thermistor 161 arranged in contact with the heater 131 is monitoring. In the present exemplary embodiment, the temperature upper limit value is 120° C. However, this should not be construed restrictively; the temperature upper limit value can be changed according to the construction of the fixing device. The ultimate heater target temperature during the warm-up period (from T0 to T4) is 200° C.
A first comparative example will be illustrated. Apart from the power supply start timing, the comparative example is of the same construction as the first exemplary embodiment.
A second exemplary embodiment will be illustrated. In the present exemplary embodiment, the maximum initial power applied is 1200 W, which is larger than that in the first exemplary embodiment; apart from this, the present exemplary embodiment is of the same construction as the first exemplary embodiment.
While in the present exemplary embodiment described above the operation is started with the heater 131 being at room temperature, also in the state in which the heater 131 has been warmed, it is possible to perform warming-up from the pressure release state P1 through the same control. On the other hand, when a print signal is input with the fixing device being in the pressurization state P2, the maximum power of 1200 W may be applied from the start of electricity supply to the heater 131.
As described above, in the present exemplary embodiment, a printing start signal is input to the image forming apparatus, and the electricity supply to the heater is started by the power control unit during the transition period from the pressure release state to a point in time before the attaining of the pressurization state, with the power supply being controlled such that the heater temperature during this transition period does not exceed a fixed temperature, whereby it is possible to provide an image forming apparatus helping to prevent heater cracking and to further shorten the warm-up time.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all modifications, equivalent structures, and functions.
This application claims priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-255296 filed Nov. 15, 2010, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-255296 | Nov 2010 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6345169 | Haneda et al. | Feb 2002 | B1 |
20040218943 | Hirai et al. | Nov 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2007-212868 | Aug 2007 | JP |
2007-256875 | Oct 2007 | JP |
Entry |
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Machine translation of JP 2007-212868 (published on Aug. 23, 2007) dated Jul. 22, 2013. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120121285 A1 | May 2012 | US |