Claims
- 1. A liquid developer for development of latent electrostatic images comprising flat configuration polymer particles within a dispersion medium, wherein the flat configuration polymer particles are prepared by deforming spherical polymer particles without distorting a mean volume particle size thereto, said flat configuration polymer particles have a mean volume particle size d.sub.50 of 0.5.about.5.0 .mu.m, 80% of the total volume of the flat configuration polymer particles being present within a range of d.sub.50 .+-.1 .mu.m, and degree of flatness is greater than 1.5 but less than 30, said flatness being the ratio of the longest diameter of a single particle to the shortest diameter of said single particle.
- 2. The liquid developer according to claim 1, wherein the dispersion medium is an electrically insulative organic material which is selected from the group consisting of aliphatic hydrocarbons, alicyclic hydrocarbons, aromatic hydrocarbons halogenated hydrocarbons, and polysiloxane.
- 3. The liquid developer according to claim 2, wherein the aliphatic hydrocarbons are isoparaffin hydrocarbons.
- 4. The liquid developer according to claim 2, wherein the polymer particles have the concentration of 0.5.about.50 percent by weight of the dispersion medium.
- 5. The liquid developer according to claim 1, wherein 80% of the total volume of the flat configuration polymer particles is present within a range of d.sub.50 .+-.0.5 .mu.m.
- 6. The liquid developer according to claim 1, wherein the flat configuration polymer particles comprise a resin selected from the group consisting of polyester resin, styrene-acrylic copolymer, polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride, polyvinyl acetate, polymethacrylate ester, polyester polyacrylic ester, epoxy resin, polyethylene, polyurethane, polyamide, and paraffin wax.
- 7. The liquid developer according to claim 1, wherein the flat configuration polymer particles contain pigments used for coloring.
- 8. The liquid developer according to claim 1 further comprising agents in the dispersion medium, the agents being enhancing agents or dispersion stabilizers.
- 9. The liquid developer according to claim 8, wherein the agents are selected from the group consisting of polyolefin petroleum resin, linseed oil, and polyalkylmethacrylate.
- 10. The liquid developer according to claim 8, wherein the agents have the concentration of 0.01.about.20 percent by weight of the dispersion medium.
- 11. The liquid developer according to claim 1, further comprising charge control agents in dispersion medium, the charge control agents being charge-regulating agents or charge enhancing agents.
- 12. The liquid developer according to claim 11, wherein the charge control agents have the concentration of 0.0001.about.10 percent by weight of dispersion medium.
- 13. The liquid developer according to claim 11, wherein the charge-regulating agents are selected from the group consisting of metal salts of fatty acids, metal salts of sulfosuccinate, metal salts of abietic acid, alkyd resins, lecithin, nitrogen compounds, and polyamide resins.
- 14. The liquid developer according to claim 11, wherein the charge enhancing agents are selected from the group consisting of SiO.sub.2, Al.sub.2 O.sub.3, TiO, and ZnO.
- 15. The liquid developer according to claim 1, wherein the flat configuration polymer particles are obtained by an emulsion dispersion granulation method, comprising the steps of:
- preparing a polymer solution by dissolving a polymer structural resin in a non-water soluble organic solvent;
- forming an oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion by dispersing the polymer solution in an aqueous dispersion solution;
- obtaining polymer particles by heating the O/W emulsion while mixing so as to evaporate the organic solvent;
- drying the polymer particles;
- dispersing the dried polymer particles into the dispersion medium;
- deforming the dispersed polymer particles, by heating the dispersion medium to a temperature near the glass transition point of said structural resin; and
- exerting stress on the dispersed polymer particles to produce the flat configuration polymer particles.
- 16. The liquid developer according to claim 15, wherein said stress is exerted on said polymer particles to produce said flat configuration polymer particles by adding an added medium to the dispersion medium, said added medium selected from the group consisting of glass beads, sand beads, zirconia beads, resin beads and resin-coated ferrite beads, and mixing the dispersion medium and the added medium.
- 17. The liquid developer according to claim 1, wherein the flat configuration polymer particles are obtained by spray drying method, comprising the steps of:
- preparing a polymer solution by dissolving a polymeric structural resin in a non-water soluble organic solvent;
- spraying said polymer solution into a drying chamber to obtain dried polymer particles;
- dispersing the dried polymer particles into the dispersion medium;
- deforming the dispersed polymer particles by heating the dispersion medium to a temperature near the glass transition point of said structural resin; and
- exerting stress on the dispersed polymer particles to produce the flat configuration polymer particles.
- 18. The liquid developer according to claim 17, wherein said stress is exerted on said polymer particles to produce said flat configuration polymer particles by adding an added medium to the dispersion medium, said added medium selected from the group consisting of glass beads, sand beads, zirconia beads, resin beads and resin-coated ferrite beads, and mixing the dispersion medium and the added medium.
- 19. A liquid developer for development of latent electrostatic images comprising flat configuration polymer particles within a dispersion medium, wherein the flat configuration polymer particles are prepared by stress exerted on spherical polymer particles without distorting a mean particle size thereto, said flat configuration polymer particles have a mean volume particle size d.sub.50 of 0.5-3.0 .mu.m, 80% of the total volume of the flat configuration polymer particles being present within a range of d.sub.50 .+-.1 .mu.m, and degree of flatness is greater than 1.5 but less than 30, said flatness being the ratio of the longest diameter of a single particle to the shortest diameter of said single particle.
- 20. A method of preparing a liquid developer for development of latent electrostatic images comprising polymer particles within a dispersion medium, said method comprising:
- preparing a polymer solution by dissolving a polymeric structural resin in a non-water soluble organic solvent;
- forming an oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion by dispersing the polymer solution in an aqueous dispersion solution;
- obtaining polymer particles by heating the O/W emulsion while mixing so as to evaporate the organic solvent;
- drying the polymer particles;
- dispersing the dried polymer particles into the dispersion medium, said dispersed polymer particles having a mean volume particle size d.sub.50 of 0.5.about.5.0 .mu.m, 80% of the total volume of the dispersed polymer particles being present within a range of d.sub.50 .+-.1 .mu.m;
- deforming the dispersed polymer particles, by heating the dispersion medium to a temperature near the glass transition point of the structural resin of the polymer particles;
- exerting stress on the dispersed polymer particles to produce flat configuration polymer particles having a first degree of flatness greater than 1.5 but less than 30, said first degree of flatness being the ratio of the longest diameter of a single particle to the shortest diameter of said single particle, and having a mean volume particle size d.sub.50 of 0.5.about.5.0 .mu.m, 80% of the total volume of the flat configuration polymer particles being present within a range of d.sub.50 .+-.1 .mu.m;
- controlling a shape of the flat configuration polymer particles by heating the flat configuration polymer particles at a temperature near the glass transition point of the structural resin of the polymer particles and thermally restoring the flat configuration polymer particles to a shape ranging from a spherical configuration to shapes of optional gradations without exerting stress on said polymer particles, said resulting heated polymer particles having a second degree of flatness greater than 1.5 but less than 30 said second degree of flatness being the ratio of the longest diameter of a single particle to the shortest diameter of said single particle, and having a mean volume particle size d.sub.50 of 0.5.about.5.0 .mu.m, 80% of the total volume of the resulting heated polymer particles being present within a range of d.sub.50 .+-.1 .mu.m.
- 21. A method of preparing a liquid developer for development of latent electrostatic images comprising polymer particles within a dispersion medium, said method comprising:
- preparing a polymer solution by dissolving a polymeric structural resin in a non-water soluble organic solvent;
- spraying said polymer solution into a drying chamber to obtain dried polymer particles;
- dispersing the dried polymer particles into the dispersion medium;
- deforming the dispersed polymer particles by heating the dispersion medium to a temperature near the glass transition point of the structural resin of the polymer particles;
- exerting stress on the dispersed polymer particles to produce flat configuration polymer particles having a first degree of flatness greater than 1.5 but less than 30, said first degree of flatness being the ratio of the longest diameter of a single particle to the shortest diameter of said single particle, and having a mean volume particle size d.sub.50 of 0.5.about.5.0 .mu.m, 80% of the total volume of the flat configuration polymer particles being present within a range of d.sub.50 .+-.1 .mu.m;
- controlling a shape of the flat configuration polymer particles by heating the flat configuration polymer particles at a temperature near the glass transition point of the structural resin of the polymer particles and thermally restoring the flat configuration polymer particles to a shape ranging from a spherical configuration to shapes of optional gradations without exerting stress on said polymer particles, said resulting heated polymer particles having a second degree of flatness greater than 1.5 but less than 30 said second degree of flatness being the ratio of the longest diameter of a single particle to the shortest diameter of said single particle, and having a mean volume particle size d.sub.50 of 0.5.about.5.0 .mu.m, 80% of the total volume of the resulting heated polymer particles being present within a range of d.sub.50 .+-.1 .mu.m.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
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5-259458 |
Sep 1993 |
JPX |
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Parent Case Info
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/308,516 filed Sep. 21, 1994, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (8)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
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0524016 |
Jan 1993 |
EPX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
U.S. application No. 08/308,525, Fujiwara et al., filed Sep. 19, 1994. |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
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308516 |
Sep 1994 |
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