The present invention relates to an image forming apparatus that forms an image on a transferring material by an electrophotography method.
In recent years, increase in speed and image quality of an image forming apparatus, such as a laser printer or a copier, has been desired. Accordingly, the image forming apparatus typically employs a configuration, in which a toner image formed on an image bearing member, such as a photosensitive drum, is transferred onto an intermediate transfer member, such as a belt, and then the toner image is transferred from the intermediate transfer member onto a transferring material, such as a sheet.
A full-color machine of tandem type has been widely used as an image forming apparatus that can form a color image at a high speed with high image quality. For example, the full-color machine has a configuration in which four image forming portions of yellow (Y), magenta (M), cyan (C), and black (Bk) are arranged in parallel, and photosensitive drums of the image forming portions are in contact with an intermediate transfer belt that serves as an intermediate transfer member. Here, by using primary transfer members, the intermediate transfer belt is pressed to the photosensitive drums and hence comes into contact with the photosensitive drums.
With the image forming portions, toner images are superposed on the intermediate transfer belt, then the toner images are secondarily transferred onto a transferring material from the intermediate transfer belt, and the toner images are fixed by fixing. Thus, a full-color image is formed.
Meanwhile, the image forming apparatus that can form a full-color image has a full-color mode, in which the image forming portions of all colors are in operation while all the photosensitive drums are in contact with the intermediate transfer belt. In addition, the image forming apparatus may have a mono-color mode, in which at least one of the image forming portions (for example, black) is in operation while at least one of the photosensitive drums is separated from the intermediate transfer belt. Thus, the apparatus may have the two modes.
The apparatus has the two modes mainly to increase the life of the photosensitive drums of the image forming portions, and to decrease toner consumption. For example, in the mono-color mode in which only black is used, the photosensitive drums of the image forming portions out of operation are separated from the intermediate transfer belt and inhibited from contacting the intermediate transfer belt. Accordingly, wear of the surfaces of the photosensitive drums can be prevented, and the life of the photosensitive drums can be increased. If a blade is used for cleaning the photosensitive drum, since the rotation of the photosensitive drum is stopped, it is not necessary to use a toner for lubrication to prevent the blade to be curled. Thus, the toner consumption can be decreased.
However, in the mono-color mode, the number of the photosensitive drums being in contact with the intermediate transfer belt is smaller than that in the full-color mode. In particular, the number of support points to nip the intermediate transfer belt by the photosensitive drums and primary transfer members is small, and hence the nipping force for the intermediate transfer belt is small. As described above, in the mono-color mode in which the nipping force for the belt is small, a load that is exerted on the intermediate transfer belt may vary when a front edge of a sheet, which is a transferring material, enters a secondary transfer nip portion, which is defined by the intermediate transfer belt and the secondary transfer member, or when a rear edge of the sheet exits the secondary transfer nip portion. The variation in load may affect a driving member that drives the intermediate transfer belt, and may cause the speed of the intermediate transfer belt to vary. Consequently, density difference may occur in a toner image during the toner image is transferred at the primary transfer nip portion because of the variation in speed of the intermediate transfer belt.
Patent Literature 1 suggests a configuration in which, a pressing force of a primary transfer member to an intermediate transfer belt that is a primary transfer member, which comes into contact with an intermediate transfer belt, in a mono-color mode is larger than a pressing force in a full-color mode.
However, the number of support points for the intermediate transfer belt is not changed in the suggestion in Patent Literature 1. Hence, a certain pressing force of the primary transfer member is needed to increase a supporting force to a sufficient level. When the pressing force is excessively increased, the nip width between the primary transfer member and the intermediate transfer belt is excessively increased, likely resulting in occurrence of an image failure.
The present invention is made in light of the situations, and an object of the present invention is to provide an image forming apparatus that decreases variation in speed of an intermediate transfer belt, the variation which is generated when a transferring material exits a secondary transfer nip portion defined by a secondary transfer member and the intermediate transfer belt, and hence that can obtain an image with high image quality.
According to the present invention, an image forming apparatus includes a rotatable intermediate transfer belt; a plurality of image bearing members arranged in a rotation direction of the intermediate transfer belt and configured to bear toner images; a plurality of primary transfer members respectively facing the plurality of image bearing members with the intermediate transfer belt interposed therebetween and being capable of defining primary transfer nip portions with the corresponding image bearing members facing the primary transfer members; a secondary transfer member configured to transfer the toner images transferred on the intermediate transfer belt by the primary transfer members, onto a transferring material at a secondary transfer nip portion; a fixing portion configured to fix the toner images transferred by the secondary transfer member, to the transferring material at a fixing nip portion; and a speed control circuit configured to control a conveying speed of the transferring material at the secondary transfer nip portion and a conveying speed of the transferring material at the fixing nip portion. A first image formation mode and a second image formation mode are executable, in the first image formation mode, image formation being performed while the image bearing members define the primary transfer nip portions with the corresponding primary transfer members respectively facing the image bearing members, in the second image formation mode, image formation being performed while at least one of the image bearing members does not define the primary transfer nip portion with the corresponding primary transfer member facing the image bearing member. The speed control circuit controls the conveying speed of the transferring material at the secondary transfer nip portion and the conveying speed of the transferring material at the fixing nip portion when the second image formation mode is executed such that a loop amount of a loop of the transferring material at a position between the secondary transfer nip portion and the fixing nip portion when the second image formation mode is executed is larger than a loop amount of a loop of the transferring material at the position between the secondary transfer nip portion and the fixing nip portion when the first image formation mode is executed.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Embodiments of image forming apparatuses according to the present invention will be described below with reference to the attached drawings.
The general configuration of an image forming apparatus will be briefly described with reference to
The printer section 100 shown in
The developing units 4a, 4b, 4c, and 4d respectively include developing rollers 6a, 6b, 6c, and 6d, developer application rollers 7a, 7b, 7c, and 7d, and toner containers. The cleaning units 5a, 5b, 5c, and 5d respectively include photosensitive drums 1a, 1b, 1c, and 1d, which serve as image bearing members, charging rollers 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2d, drum cleaning blades 8a, 8b, 8c, and 8d, and waste toner containers.
A scanning unit 9 is arranged vertically below the process cartridges 3a, 3b, 3c, and 3d. The scanning unit 9 causes the photosensitive drums 1a, 1b, 1c, and 1d to be exposed to light in accordance with image signals. The photosensitive drums 1a, 1b, 1c, and 1d are charged by the charging rollers 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2d to have a predetermined negative-polarized electric potential. Then, electrostatic latent images are formed on the photosensitive drums 1a, 1b, 1c, and 1d by the scanning unit 9. The developing units 4a, 4b, 4c, and 4d cause negative-polarized toners to adhere to the electrostatic latent images. Accordingly, toner images of Y, M, C, and Bk are developed.
The intermediate transfer belt unit 10 includes a driving roller 52, a tension roller 53, a secondary transfer opposite roller 54, primary transfer rollers 50a to 50d, and an intermediate transfer belt 51. The primary transfer rollers 50a to 50d are primary transfer members. The intermediate transfer belt 51, which is an endless intermediate transfer member, is supported by the driving roller 52, the tension roller 53, and the secondary transfer opposite roller 54, which are support rollers. The intermediate transfer belt can be rotated when the driving roller 52 rotates. Further, the tension roller 53 applies a tension to the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the inside to the outside (in a direction indicated by arrow T). The primary transfer rollers 50a, 50b, 50c, and 50d, which are primary transfer members, are provided on the inner surface side of the intermediate transfer belt 51 to respectively face the photosensitive drums 1a, 1b, 1c, and 1d. Though not shown, bias applying means applies a transfer voltage to the primary transfer rollers 50a, 50b, 50c, and 50d. Each primary transfer roller and the corresponding photosensitive drum, which faces the primary transfer roller with the intermediate transfer belt interposed therebetween, may define a primary transfer nip portion. The photosensitive drums 1a, 1b, 1c, and 1d, which are image bearing members, are arranged in a rotation direction of the intermediate transfer belt 51.
The photosensitive drums 1a to 1d rotate clockwise as shown in
Meanwhile, the drum cleaning blades 8a, 8b, 8c, and 8d remove the toners remaining on the surfaces of the photosensitive drums 1a, 1b, 1c, and 1d after the toner images are transferred. Also, a transfer belt cleaning device 11 removes the toners remaining on the intermediate transfer belt 51 after secondary transfer onto a sheet S, which is a transferring material. The removed toners pass through a waste toner conveyance path (not shown) and are recovered to a waste toner recovery container (not shown) arranged in a far side portion of the apparatus.
The image forming apparatus of this embodiment includes two sheet feeding devices (sheet feeding portions). A first sheet feeding portion is an apparatus body sheet feeding portion 20 provided in the printer section 100. A second sheet feeding portion is a manual sheet feeding portion 30 provided on a side surface of the printer section 100.
The apparatus body sheet feeding portion 20 includes a sheet feeding cassette 21 that is inserted to contact a positioning portion of the image forming apparatus body. In this embodiment, the sheet feeding cassette 21 contacts a front side panel (not shown) disposed on the near side in
The sheet feeding portion 20 also includes a sheet feeding roller 22 that feeds sheets S from the sheet feeding cassette 21 that houses sheets S, and a separating roller 23 that serves as separating means. The sheets S housed in the sheet feeding cassette 21 contact the sheet feeding roller 22 with a pressure, and are separated and conveyed by the separating roller 23 one by one. The separated sheet S passes through an apparatus body sheet conveyance path 25, and is conveyed to a registration roller pair 38.
The manual sheet feeding portion 30 includes a middle plate 31 on which sheets S are stacked, a sheet feeding roller 32 that feeds a top sheet S included in the sheets S on the middle plate 31, and a separating pad 33 that serves as separating means. In addition, the manual sheet feeding portion 30 includes a side regulation plate 37a on the near side in the drawing and a side regulation plate 37b on the far side in the drawing to regulate the positions in the direction perpendicular to the conveyance direction (sheet width direction). The middle plate 31 is lifted, the sheets S stacked on the middle plate 31 contact the sheet feeding roller 32 with a pressure, and the sheets S are separated and conveyed by the separating pad 33 one by one. The separated sheet S passes through a manual sheet feeding conveyance path 34, is conveyed to a sheet re-feeding roller pair 35, passes through a sheet re-feeding conveyance path 36, and is conveyed to the registration roller pair 38.
As described above, the two conveyance paths are combined in the path located upstream of the registration roller pair 38 in the printer section 100.
The registration roller pair 38 conveys the sheet S to the secondary transfer nip portion 13. The secondary transfer nip portion 13 is defined by a secondary transfer roller 60 that serves as a secondary transfer member, and the intermediate transfer belt 51. A positive-polarized transfer voltage is applied to the secondary transfer roller 60 that serves as the secondary transfer member, at the secondary transfer nip portion 13. Accordingly, the four-color toner images on the intermediate transfer belt 51 are secondarily transferred onto the conveyed sheet S.
A fixing portion includes a heating rotary member 16 and a pressure member 15. Reference sign 15 denotes an elastic pressure roller (hereinafter, referred to as pressure roller) that serves as a pressure member. The pressure roller 15 contacts the heating rotary member 16 with a pressure, and hence a fixing nip portion is defined.
The heating rotary member 16 contains a heater 90 and a thermistor 91 therein. The heater 90 generates heat at a predetermined temperature while the thermistor 91 monitors the temperature of the heater 90 (see
The image forming apparatus of this embodiment can execute at least two modes including a first image formation mode and a second image formation mode and a second image formation mode.
Next,
The primary transfer rollers 50a to 50d can come into contact with or be separated from the intermediate transfer belt 51. When the primary transfer rollers 50a to 50d come into contact with the intermediate transfer belt 51, the primary transfer rollers 50a to 50d are pressed to the intermediate transfer belt 51 respectively by compression springs 56a to 56d. The primary transfer nip portions are defined by the primary transfer rollers that are pressed by the compression springs 56, and the photosensitive drums that respectively face the primary transfer rollers, with the intermediate transfer belt interposed therebetween.
The secondary transfer roller 60 can come into contact with and be separated from the intermediate transfer belt. A compression spring 61 causes the secondary transfer roller 60 to contact the intermediate transfer belt 51 and the secondary transfer opposite roller 54 with a predetermined contact pressure, and hence a secondary transfer nip portion 99 is defined. The sheet S fed by the apparatus body sheet feeding portion 20 or the manual sheet feeding portion 30 shown in
Driving of the respective rollers and control of the fixing temperature etc. are performed by, for example, a speed control circuit 101 including a CPU, a RAM, and a ROM. In addition, referring to
Variation in load of the intermediate transfer belt 51, the variation which occurs when a sheet S0 exits the secondary transfer nip portion in
Referring to
The image failure called “sheet rear edge exit blur” likely occurs when the second image formation mode is executed. In the second image formation mode, the number of support points to nip the intermediate transfer belt 51 by the primary transfer members and the photosensitive drums is small as compared with the case in the first image formation mode, and hence the effect appearing when the previous sheet S0 exits the secondary transfer nip portion may be large.
The second image formation mode is a mode in which image formation is performed while at least one of the plurality of photosensitive drums 1 and the corresponding primary transfer roller do not define the primary transfer nip portion. The primary transfer roller can come into contact with and be separated from the intermediate transfer belt. When the primary transfer roller is separated from the intermediate transfer belt, a state in which the primary transfer nip portion is not defined can be provided.
It is to be noted that the mono-color mode which is the second image formation mode described in this image forming apparatus is a case in which a single color image is formed while at least one of the plurality of photosensitive drums 1 and the corresponding primary transfer roller do not define the primary transfer nip portion. As described above, a case in which a single color image is formed while all the photosensitive drums define the primary transfer nip portions is the first image formation mode.
In the following description, it is assumed that the first image formation mode is the full-color mode, and the second image formation mode is the mono-color mode.
This embodiment features that, referring to
The large loop is formed at the position between the secondary transfer nip portion (a T2 nip portion) 99 and the fixing nip portion, and a large pushing force is exerted on the intermediate transfer belt 51 by the transferring material. Thus, an image failure due to the insufficient nipping force for the intermediate transfer belt 51 is suppressed. Here, the loop is a flexure of the sheet S0 with respect to a virtual straight line connecting the T2 nip portion 99 and the fixing nip portion. As a loop amount (a flexure amount) is larger, a length of the sheet S0 between the T2 nip portion 99 and the fixing nip portion is larger with respect to a straight distance between the secondary transfer nip portion 99 and the fixing nip portion.
In the full-color mode, a large loop is not formed unlike the loop in the mono-color mode by the following reason. If an excessively large loop is formed in the full-color mode to correspond to the mono-color mode, a pushing force that is exerted on the intermediate transfer belt 51 may cause color shift among stations.
Thus, it is important to form loops of minimum sizes respectively in the mono-color mode and the full-color mode in accordance with the nipping force for the intermediate transfer belt 51, which can be attained by this embodiment.
The balance of the tangential forces that are exerted on the intermediate transfer belt 51 immediately before the rear edge of the sheet S0 exits the secondary transfer nip portion 99 when the loop amount is small is expressed as follows:
f
54
+f
p
+f
0
=f
52 (1).
f
54
+f
pl
+f
0
=f
521 (2).
As the loop of the sheet S0 is larger, the pushing force exerted on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the sheet S0 is larger. Thus, a magnitude relation is established as follows:
f
pi
>f
p (3).
With the expressions (1), (2), and (3), a magnitude relation is established as follows for the tangential force on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the driving roller 52:
f
521
>f
52 (4).
Although the loop amounts are the same, as the thickness of the sheet S0 is smaller, the pushing force on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the transferring material is smaller. Therefore, to obtain a pushing force required for improving the sheet rear edge blur, the loop amount has to be increased if the thickness of the sheet S0 is small.
f
54
′+f
0
=f
52′ (5).
Regarding the tangential force on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the secondary transfer opposite roller 54, when f54′ at the moment when the rear edge of the sheet has exited the secondary transfer nip portion 99 and f54 during the secondary transfer are compared with one another, the force during the secondary transfer additionally has a sliding load of a bearing (not shown) of the secondary transfer opposite roller 54. Thus, a magnitude relation is established as follows:
f
54
>f
54′ (6).
With the expressions (1), (5), and (6), a magnitude relation is established as follows for the tangential force on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the driving roller 52:
f
521
>f
52
>f
52′ (7).
Next,
f
54
″+f
60
+f
0
=f
52″ (8).
Herein, the compression spring 61 has a smaller urging force when the sheet S0 is not present at the secondary transfer nip portion 99 and the secondary transfer roller 60 contacts the intermediate transfer belt 51 with a pressure, than an urging force when the sheet S0 is present at the secondary transfer nip portion 99. The tangential force from the secondary transfer roller 60 when the sheet S0 is not present at the secondary transfer nip portion 99 is smaller than the tangential force when the sheet S0 is present at the secondary transfer nip portion 99. Thus, a magnitude relation is established as follows:
f
p
>f
60 (9).
Regarding the tangential force on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the secondary transfer opposite roller 54, when f54″ in the case in which the sheet S0 is not present at the secondary transfer nip portion 99 and the secondary transfer roller 60 contacts the intermediate transfer belt 51 with a pressure and f54′ at the moment when the rear edge of the sheet has exited the secondary transfer nip portion 99 are compared with one another, the following relation is established. In particular, f54″ when the secondary transfer roller 60 contacts the intermediate transfer belt 51 with a pressure is larger because a sliding load of the bearing (not shown) of the secondary transfer opposite roller 54 is added. Thus, a magnitude relation is established as follows:
f
54
″>f
54′ (10).
Regarding the tangential force on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the secondary transfer opposite roller 54, if f54 when the sheet S0 is present at the T2 nip portion 99, and f54″ when the sheet S0 is not present at the secondary transfer nip portion 99 and the secondary transfer roller 60 contacts the intermediate transfer belt 51 with a pressure are compared with one another, f54″ has the following relation. In particular, f54 when the sheet S0 is present at the secondary transfer nip portion 99 is larger because a sliding load of the bearing (not shown) of the secondary transfer opposite roller 54 is added. Thus, by combining the expression (10), a magnitude relation is established as follows:
f
54
>f
54
′>f
54′ (11).
With the expressions (5), (8), and (11), a magnitude relation is established as follows for a tangential force on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the driving roller 52:
f
52
″>f
52′ (12).
By combining the expressions (1), (8), (9), (11), and (12), a magnitude relation is established as follows for a tangential force from the driving roller 52:
f
521
>f
52
>f
52
″f
52′ (13).
Herein, a driving load of the driving roller 52 is larger as a tangential force on the intermediate transfer belt 51 from the driving roller 52 expressed by the expression (13) is larger, and a deformation amount of a gear that is the driving member defining the driving portion 102 is proportional to the tangential force. The gear serving as the driving member is deformed as far as the deformation does not exceed the limit of elasticity. Also, Δt is a period of time after the rear edge of the sheet S0 exits the secondary transfer nip portion 99, and while the intermediate transfer belt 51 does not contact the sheet S0 or the secondary transfer roller 60.
When the loop amount is increased, the increase in loop amount is started at a time t1 indicated in (b-1) and (b-2) in
As described above, at the timing immediately before the time t2 at which the rear edge of the sheet S0 exits the secondary transfer nip portion 99, the tangential force that is exerted on the intermediate transfer belt 51 is larger when the loop amount is increased by a difference of the pushing force by the transferring material, as compared with the case when the loop amount is small (f521>f52). However, during a period from the time t2 at which the rear edge of the sheet S0 exits the secondary transfer nip portion 99 to the end of Δt, the tangential force is instantaneously decreased to the same tangential force f52′. Meanwhile, the deformation amount for the driving member of the intermediate transfer belt 51 immediately before the rear edge of the sheet S0 exits the secondary transfer nip portion 99 is proportional to the tangential force that is exerted on the intermediate transfer belt 51. Thus, when Z2 is an absolute deformation amount of the gear when the loop amount is large, and Z1 is an absolute deformation amount of the gear when the loop amount is small, Z2>Z1 is established.
As shown in (a-1) and (b-1) in
At a time t2+Δt at which the increase in tangential force is started again, Z2′ is an absolute deformation amount of the gear when the loop amount is large, and Z1′ is an absolute deformation amount of the gear when the loop amount is small. Then, the deformation amounts of the gear from t2 to t2+Δt are substantially equivalent, and Z1−Z1′=Z2−Z2′ is established. Hence, Z2′>Z1′ is established.
Then, referring to (a-2) and (b-2) in
Thus, the change in rotating speed of the intermediate transfer belt 51 can be considered as follows. In a period until the absolute deformation amount of the gear that is the driving member is converged again to Z0, a force is not transmitted from the driving portion 102 defined by the gear to the driving roller 52. With this effect, the speed of the intermediate transfer belt 51 may be decreased. Therefore, as the deformation amount of the gear until the absolute deformation amount is converged again to Z0 is larger, the period of time in which the force is not transmitted from the driving portion 102 defined by the gear to the driving roller 52 is increased.
ΔZ2′ is a deformation amount of the driving member from when the rear edge of the sheet S0 has exited the secondary transfer nip portion 99 and the deformation amount of the driving member is maximally decreased until when the increase in deformation amount is started again, in the case with the large loop amount. ΔZ1′ is a deformation amount of the gear in the case with the small loop amount.
Then, the relationship between the deformation amounts becomes ΔZ2′<τZ1′. Referring to (a-3) and (b-3) in
Accordingly, the deformation amount of the driving member is small when the loop amount is large. Hence, the decrease in speed of the intermediate transfer belt 51 is small.
Thus, by increasing the loop amount immediately before the rear edge of the sheet S0 exits the secondary transfer nip portion, and by causing the rear edge of the sheet S0 to exit the secondary transfer nip portion while the pushing force is exerted on the intermediate transfer belt 51, the decrease in speed of the intermediate transfer belt 51 due to the variation in load can be decreased. Accordingly, appearance of an image failure can be suppressed.
Meanwhile, in a method of suppressing deformation of a gear by using a gear made of metal, an image failure such as shift of scanning line intervals, which occurs when the rigidity of the gear is increased, may likely occur. By using a gear made of resin and not having high rigidity as the driving member, an image failure such as the shift of scanning line intervals can be suppressed.
Next, a sequence, in which a loop is formed for the transferring material at a position between the secondary transfer nip portion and the fixing nip portion, will be described.
First, the CPU in the control portion (not shown) determines the presence of a print job (in step S1, hereinafter, a step number is referred to like S1). If the CPU determines that the print job is “present” (S1, Yes), the thickness sensor 55 detects the thickness of a sheet, and the CPU acquires information of the speed of the intermediate transfer belt (belt speed) and the fixing motor speed (N1) (S2). Next, the CPU determines whether the state of the image forming apparatus is the mono-color mode (S3).
Herein, the mono-color mode and the full-color mode respectively have different loop amount tables for respective thicknesses of sheets (for example, evaluated by using basis weight) as shown in
First, the basis weight (g/m2) of sheets is classified into predetermined ranges of 105 g/m2 or smaller, 105 to 120 g/m2, 120 to 160 g/m2, and 160 g/m2 or larger. Loop amounts in the mono-color mode are A1, A2, A3, and A4. Loop amounts in the full-color mode are B1, B2, B3, and B4. As described above, since a larger loop is required in the mono-color mode than that in the full-color mode, A1>B1, A2>B2, A3>B3, and A4>B4 are satisfied. Also, as the thickness (basis weight) of a sheet is smaller, the rigidity of a transferring material is low. Thus, a larger loop has to be provided to obtain a required pushing force. Thus, relations of A1>A2>A3>A4, and B1>B2>B3>B4 are established.
By referring the loop amount tables, in the mono-color mode (S3, Yes), a loop amount A is selected (S4a), and in the full-color mode (S3, No), a loop amount B is selected (S4b). Then, the speed control circuit 101 determines the fixing motor speed to a fixing motor speed (N=N1) shown in the graph in
Next, a sheet position sensor (not shown) located near the registration roller pair 38 detects the rear edge of a sheet (S6). After a predetermined time has elapsed (S7, Yes), the speed control circuit 101 changes the fixing motor speed from N1 to N2 (S8). That is, the control by the speed control circuit is ended after the rear edge of the transferring material exits the secondary transfer nip portion.
Herein, a time t1 in
When the rear edge of the sheet has exited the secondary transfer nip portion (S9, Yes), the speed control circuit 101 recovers the fixing motor speed to the original speed, that is, from N2 to N1 (S10). Herein, a time t3 in
Even with the same loop amount, by changing the two parameters of t2 and Vf2, a time to provide a predetermined loop amount can be changed.
For example, as shown in
As described above, with this embodiment, even in the second image formation mode in which the number of support points for the intermediate transfer belt 51 is small, the variation in speed of the intermediate transfer belt occurring when the transferring material exits the secondary transfer nip portion can be suppressed, and hence an image with high image quality can be obtained.
In the first embodiment, the control is performed such that the loop amount of the sheet when the rear edge of the sheet has exited the T2 nip portion in the mono-color mode becomes larger than the loop amount in the full-color mode. Also, the control is performed such that, even in the same mode, the loop amount is increased more if the thickness of the sheet is small. In the second embodiment, a method of dealing with a change in temperature for the diameter of the heating rotary member 16 and the diameter of the pressure roller 15 will be described in addition to the configuration in the first embodiment.
The conveying speed for the transferring material at the fixing nip portion may vary because of expansion and contraction of the diameter of the pressure roller 15 and the diameter of the heating rotary member 16 due to a change in temperature. As a result, the loop amount of a loop formed at a position between the T2 nip portion and the fixing nip portion may vary.
Basically, design may be made such that a predetermined loop amount is provided when the rear edge of the sheet exits the T2 nip portion under a condition that the conveying speed at the fixing nip portion is highest (a condition that a loop likely becomes the smallest). However, the space for the sheet conveyance path from the secondary transfer nip portion to the fixing nip portion may be limited. With this limitation, if the variation in loop amount due to a change in temperature of the diameter of the pressure roller 15 and the diameter of the heating rotary member 16 is not allowable, the fixing motor speed has to be changed to an optimal speed in accordance with the temperature, to stabilize the loop amount to be formed.
For example, referring to
Alternatively, a temperature sensor (not shown), which is a temperature detecting member, may be attached to the pressure roller 15. In this case, the temperature sensor (not shown) detects the temperature of the pressure roller 15, and the speed control circuit controls the fixing motor on the basis of the detection result of the temperature detecting member so that the loop amount to be formed becomes constant.
Alternatively, the thermistor 91 that monitors the temperature of the heater 90 of the heating rotary member 16 may be used as the temperature detecting member. The CPU in the control portion (not shown) turns off the heater 90 at a predetermined timing, the thermistor 91 monitors a decrease rate per unit time of the heater 90, and the temperature of the pressure roller 15 is estimated, to obtain the conveying speed at the fixing nip portion. The speed control circuit may change the fixing motor speed in accordance with the obtained conveying speed. Accordingly, the loop amount to be formed becomes constant.
In this embodiment, the variation in speed of the intermediate transfer belt can be suppressed, the variation which occurs when the sheet has exited the secondary transfer nip portion, and hence an image with high image quality can be obtained.
With the present invention, the variation in speed of the intermediate transfer belt can be decreased, the variation which is generated when the transferring material exits the secondary transfer nip portion defined by the secondary transfer member and the intermediate transfer belt.
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 such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2009-019688 | Jan 2009 | JP | national |
2010-016267 | Jan 2010 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/827,100 filed Jun. 30, 2010, which is a Continuation of International Application No. PCT/JP2010/051263, filed Jan. 29, 2010, which claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2009-019688, filed Jan. 30, 2009 and No. 2010-016267 filed Jan. 28, 2010, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 12827100 | Jun 2010 | US |
Child | 13490027 | US | |
Parent | PCT/JP2010/051263 | Jan 2010 | US |
Child | 12827100 | US |