This application claims priority from Korean Patent Application No. 2004-72076, filed on Sep. 9, 2004, in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein its entirety by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present general inventive concept relates to an ion print head and an image forming apparatus using the same, and more particularly, to an ion print head in which a discharge cell array structure having microelectrodes is employed, and a image forming apparatus using the same.
2. Description of the Related Art
In a conventional image forming apparatus, a charged photoconductor is exposed to a laser beam, thereby forming a latent image on an image forming part. A toner is supplied between the photoconductor and a development roller to selectively adhere the toner on the image forming part according to an electrostatic property thereof. Herein, the development roller engages the photoconductor but has a different electrostatic potential than the photoconductor. Since the conventional image forming apparatus uses laser beams, a laser scanning unit is required to expose the photoconductor. However, the laser scanning unit requires a precise optical arrangement. Additionally, the laser scanning unit is expensive.
In an attempt to avoid these disadvantages associated with the conventional image forming apparatus that used the laser scanning unit, a printer with a conventional ion print head is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,406,314. The printer with the conventional ion print head of U.S. Pat. No. 5,406,314 is illustrated in
Referring to
Accordingly, when a voltage pulse is applied to the needle electrode 35, gas molecules in the proximity of the needle electrode 35 lose at least one electron under the influence of a strong electrostatic field created by the needle electrode 35. The electrons are then absorbed by the needle electrode 35. Positive ions from the gas molecules that lose at least one electron tend to migrate away from the needle electrode 35 to a lower electrical potential at a bottom portion of the tunnel 31a where the positive ions encounter and are neutralized by the wraparound electrode 37. The positive ions are more strongly attracted to the conductive layer 17 than by the wraparound electrode 37 because an electric potential of the conductive layer 17 is more negative than is an electric potential of the wraparound electrode 37. Thus, the positive ions can be accumulated on the dielectric layer 16 to form the latent image thereon.
The disadvantage of the conventional ion print head of the printer is that the needle electrode 35 in the insulating body 31 is arranged in a radial direction of the image cylinder 15 and the wraparound electrode 37 is additionally provided at the bottom of the tunnel 31a, thereby increasing complexity of the electronic writing head 30. Additionally, the process of accumulating the positive ions on the dielectric layer 16 of the image cylinder 15 is complicated.
The present general inventive concept provides an ion print head and an image forming apparatus using the same including at least one discharge cell array structure having microelectrodes. The ion print head and the image forming apparatus using the same can be simply constructed.
Additional aspects of the present general inventive concept will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the general inventive concept.
The foregoing and/or other aspects of the present general inventive concept may be achieved by providing an ion print head to form an electrostatic latent image on an insulation layer of an electrostatic drum by selectively applying charged particles to the insulation layer. The ion print head includes at least one discharge cell provided with a plurality of discharge elements to emit the charged particles, and each of the discharge elements includes a base, a microelectrode disposed on the base to emit the charged particles toward the insulation layer, and a control electrode spaced apart from the base and having a hole therein through which the emitted charged particles pass and to control the emission of the charged particles from the microelectrode. The ion print head further includes a controller to control the plurality of discharge elements of the at least one discharge cell.
The foregoing and/or other aspects of the present general inventive concept may also be achieved by providing an image forming apparatus including: an electrostatic drum on which a latent image is formed, an ion print head having a structure of at least one discharge cell having a base, a microelectrode, and a control electrode to form a latent image on an insulation layer of the electrostatic drum by selectively applying charged particles to the insulation layer, a development unit to apply a developer to the charged insulation layer of the electrostatic drum to form a developer image that corresponds to the latent image, a transfer unit to transfer the developer image of the electrostatic drum to a printing medium, and a fuse to fuse the transferred image on the printing medium.
These and/or other aspects of the present general inventive concept will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the embodiments of the present general inventive concept, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to the like elements throughout. The embodiments are described below in order to explain the present general inventive concept while referring to the figures.
Referring to
The electrostatic drum 50 includes a conductor 51 and the insulation layer 55 coated on an outer surface of the conductor 51. The conductor 51 provides electric stability for the electrostatic drum 50 and lowers sensitivity of the electrostatic drum 50 against humidity, temperature, etc. Additionally, the conductor 51 receives a bias voltage from the controller 79 to form an electric field. The insulation layer 55 holds the charged particles that are selectively applied by the ion print head on a surface thereof.
Referring to
Further, each of the discharge cells 70 may be replaced independently such that the discharge cell array 60 can be easily formed, replaced, and repaired. The controller 79 and the discharge cell array 60 are electrically connected. Herein, the electrical connection is constructed such that each of the discharge cells 70 can be replaced independently. A detailed description of the electrical connection will not be provided, since electrical connections should be well known to one skilled in the art.
Referring to
The microelectrode 73 is disposed on the base 71 and between the spacer 75 to emit charged particles toward the insulation layer 55 of the electrostatic drum 50. Although an emission of negatively charged particles is illustrated in
The microelectrode 73 may have an aspect ratio (H/W) that satisfies the equation below in order to maximize an electric field around an end of the microelectrode 73.
H/W=10
where H and W represent a height and a width of the microelectrode 73, respectively.
A large aspect ratio enables the microelectrode 73 to create a high electric field around the end thereof, thereby ionizing surrounding air. The microelectrode 73 may have a rod, a pyramid, or a needle shape that has a large aspect ratio.
Further, the microelectrode 73 may be made of a carbon nanotube, silicon, molybdenum, gallium arsenide, or diamond, which can easily generate ions through a corona discharge.
The control electrode 77 is spaced apart from the base 71 by the spacer 75 to control the charge particle emission of the microelectrode 73. The charge particles are emitted by the electric field formed between the microelectrode 73 and the control electrode 77 according to the control exerted by the controller 79.
The control electrode 77 includes a hole 77a through which the charged particles pass. A spreading angle at which the charged particles are projected toward the electrostatic drum 50 is determined according to a size of the hole 77a. That is, a smaller hole makes the spreading angle of the charged particles smaller, which can be used for a high-resolution printing operation. Additionally, the controller 79 is capable of applying a voltage to each of the discharge elements 70a independently.
The controller 79 includes a control power supply 79a to supply a control voltage of a predetermined waveform to the control electrode 77, and a bias power supply 79b to supply a bias voltage to the conductor 51 of the electrostatic drum 50 and the microelectrode 73 through the base 71 thereof. An amount of the charged particles is controlled by adjusting one or more properties and an application time of the control voltage. The bias voltage supplied to the electrostatic drum 50 and the microelectrode 73 increases a speed of the charged particle emission after the control voltage is supplied to the control electrode 77, thereby reducing time required to form the latent image on the electrostatic drum 50.
In the ion print head of various embodiments of the present general inventive concept, one discharge element 70a can be used to form one unit pixel, or a combination of discharge elements 70a can be used to form one unit pixel (See unit pixels A and B in
Operation of the ion print head according to an embodiment of the present general inventive concept will now be described with reference to
A voltage is applied between the microelectrode 73 and the control electrode 77, thereby forming a strong electric field around the microelectrode 73 as a result of the large aspect ratio of the microelectrode 73. The strong electric field around the microelectrode 73 ionizes surrounding air, and another electric field that is formed between the microelectrode 73 and the electrostatic drum 50 (i.e., the conductor 51) forces the ions to migrate to the insulation layer 55 of the electrostatic drum 50, thereby forming the latent image on the insulation layer 55. Herein, each control electrode 77 of the discharge elements 70a of the discharge cell 70 and the discharge cell array 60 can be provided with the control voltage independently such that the control voltage can be turned on or off according to image signals that correspond to the discharge elements 70a that are provided to the controller 79. Therefore, the amount of the charged particles to be applied on the electrostatic drum 50 can be controlled using the control electrode 77 and thus an intensity (and resolution) of the latent image can also be controlled. For example, when ten thousand discharge elements 70a are arranged in one line in a widthwise direction of an A4 size print medium, a resolution of 600 dpi (dots per inch) is obtained by using two discharge elements 70a for one unit pixel. Similarly, a resolution of 1200 dpi is obtained by using one discharge element 70a for one unit pixel. In this manner, printing can be performed with desired resolutions. Additionally, the discharge elements 70a can be arranged in matrix form (two-dimensional) to form a plurality of lines of the latent image at a particular time (i.e., at one time) to increase printing speed.
Referring to
An electrostatic latent image that corresponds to an image to be printed on a printing medium (S) is formed on the electrostatic drum 150 by the ion print head 160. The electrostatic drum 150 and the ion print head 160 may have the same structure illustrated in
The development unit 120 includes a container 125 to contain a developer (T), an agitator 127, a feed roller 124, and a development roller 121. The developer (T) of the container 125 is moved by the agitator 127, the feed roller 124, and the development roller 121 to the electrostatic latent image of the electrostatic drum 150 to form an image. According to electrophotography, the development roller 121 is supplied with a DC voltage from a power supply to apply the developer (T) to the electrostatic latent image of the electrostatic drum 150. A regulating blade 123 is abutted on an outer surface of the development roller 121 to regulate the applied developer (T). In order words, the developer (T) on the development roller 121 has a uniform thickness after it passes between the regulating blade 123 and the development roller 121. In addition, the development unit 120 is provided with a waste developer collector 129 to store a waste developer (W) that is collected from the electrostatic drum 150 by a cleaning blade 112 after the developing process.
The image formed on the electrostatic drum 150 by the development unit 120 is transferred to the printing medium (S) that passes between the electrostatic drum 150 and the transfer roller 117. The transferred image of the printing medium (S) is then fused by the fusing roller 119.
Further, the image forming apparatus includes a first cassette 131 and a second cassette 135 that hold the printing medium (S), a feed passage 141 along which the printing medium (S) is fed, and an output passage 45 along which the printing medium (S) is output after printing. Along the feed passage 141, the image forming apparatus also includes pick-up rollers 132 and 136 to pick up the printing medium (S) one by one, a feed roller 133 to guide and feed the picked up printing medium (S), and a registration roller 142 to feed the printing medium (S) for printing the image to a desired area of the printing medium (S). Along the output passage 45, the image forming apparatus also includes the fusing roller 119 and a plurality of ejection rollers 147.
Therefore, the transfer roller 117 transfers the image of the electrostatic drum 150 to the printing medium (S), which is fed along the feed passage 141 from the first cassette 131 or the second cassette 135. The transferred image is then fused by the fusing roller 119 to the printing medium (S). The printing medium (S) is then conveyed along the output passage 45 and is ejected to an output tray 149 provided at a top of the frame 110, thereby completing a printing process.
As described above, an ion print head according to various embodiments of the present general inventive concept employs a discharge cell array structure using a microelectrode such that the ion print head has a simple structure to form a latent image on an electrostatic drum. Additionally, each discharge cell of the discharge cell array can be replaced independently such that maintenance of the discharge cell array can be easily performed.
Further, an image forming apparatus employing an ion print head according to the various embodiments of the present general inventive concept does not require a light scanning unit and a charger necessary to charge an electrostatic drum such that the image forming apparatus can be simply constructed. Additionally, the electrostatic drum merely requires a conductor and an insulation layer capable of holding charged particles such that the electrostatic drum can be more easily fabricated and can have an enhanced electric field that is influenced less by humidity and temperature when compared to a photoconductive drum of the conventional art.
Although a few embodiments of the present general inventive concept have been shown and described, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in these embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the general inventive concept, the scope of which is defined in the appended claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-72076 | Sep 2004 | KR | national |