1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a mark sensing device, a device for driving a turnable body and an image forming apparatus.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Today, an image forming apparatus of the type including a photoconductive belt, intermediate image transfer belt or similar turnable body for image formation is extensively used. A prerequisite with this type of image forming apparatus is that the amount of turn or movement of the turnable body be controlled accurately enough to precisely position an image on the turnable body or a recording medium being conveyed by the turnable body. In practice, however, the amount of turn of the turnable body often varies due to some cause and makes it difficult to reduce the shift of an image position. Particularly, in a color image forming apparatus, a change in the amount of rotation prevents images of different colors from being registered at a preselected position, i.e., causes the images of different colors to be shifted in position from each other.
Further, the moving speed, or amount of turn, of the photoconductive belt, intermediate image transfer belt or similar turnable body varies in accordance with, e.g., the variation of the thickness of the belt, the eccentricity of rollers or the irregular speed of a drive motor assigned to the turnable body. Particularly, in a color image forming apparatus, positioning errors ascribable to the irregular speed of the belt appear in the form of a waveform containing a plurality of frequency components. Images of different colors transferred to the belt whose speed is varying one above the other are not accurately registered, resulting in color shift, color variation or similar image defect.
In light of the above, Japanese Patent Laid-Open Publication No. 6-175427, for example, discloses an image forming apparatus in which a rotary encoder is directly connected to the shaft of a drive roller that drives a turnable body or similar rotary shaft. In this configuration, the angular velocity of the drive motor is controlled in accordance with the angular velocity of the turnable body sensed by the encoder. However, it is difficult with this prior art apparatus to accurately control the amount of turn or movement of the turnable body because it is only indirectly controlled via the control of the angular velocity of the drive motor.
To solve the problem stated above, Japanese Patent Laid-Open Publication Nos. 6-263281 and 9-114348 each teach a system configured to sense marks formed on the surface of a belt or turnable body with a sensor and calculate the surface velocity of the belt on the basis of the resulting pulse intervals for thereby feedback-controlling the amount of movement of the belt. This kind of system is capable of directly observing the behavior of the belt surface and therefore directly controlling the amount of turn or movement of the belt. However, neither one of the two Laid-Open Publications mentioned above teaches a method of forming the marks on the belt or a method of sensing the marks. Further, because a belt generally applied to, e.g., an image forming apparatus is flexible, deformable and irregular in thickness, the distance or the angle between the marks formed on the belt and the sensor is caused to vary.
Technologies relating to the present invention are also disclosed in, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 3,107,259.
It is an object of the present invention to control the amount of turn of a turnable body with an accurate control signal even when the distance or the angle between marks formed on the surface of the turnable body and a sensor for sensing them is noticeably varied to, in turn, vary the quantity of light to be incident on the sensor.
A mark sensing device of the present invention senses marks formed on a turnable body in a preselected periodic pattern in a direction of movement of the turnable body with light emitted from a light source. A slit mask is formed with slits for splitting the light emitted from the light source. A light receiving portion receives the light thus split and then incident on the mark. The slits of the slit mask each belong to either one of two regions one of which is shifted from the other by one-half of the period of the periodic pattern. The light receiving portion receives the light incident on the mark in each of the two regions and converts the light received to two electric signals. A control signal for controlling the amount of movement of the turnable body is produced from the two electric signals.
A device for driving the turnable body and an image forming apparatus using the above mark sensing device are also disclosed.
The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description taken with the accompanying drawings in which:
To better understand the present invention, the conventional technologies and problems thereof stated previously will be described more specifically hereinafter.
To begin with, in an image forming apparatus, the moving speed, or amount of turn, of a photoconductive belt, intermediate image transfer belt or similar turnable body varies in accordance with, e.g., the variation of the thickness of the belt, the eccentricity of rollers or the irregular speed of a drive motor assigned to the turnable body. In a color image forming apparatus in particular, positioning errors ascribable to the irregular speed of the belt appear in the form of a waveform containing a plurality of frequency components, as shown in
In
As shown in
As shown in
Preferred embodiments of the present invention free from the problems stated above will be described hereinafter.
Reference will be made to
The electronic process units (simply process units hereinafter) 1K, 1M, 1Y and 1C, playing the role of an image forming unit each, are configured to form a black, a magenta, a cyan and a yellow toner image, respectively. Because the process units 1K through 1C are identical in configuration with each other except for the color of an image to form, let the following description concentrate on the process unit 1K by way of example. The constituents of the other process units 1M, 1Y and 1C are distinguished from the constituents of the process unit 1K and from each other by suffixes M, Y and C.
The belt 3 is an endless belt passed over a drive roller 4 and a driven roller 5 at opposite ends and caused to turn in a direction indicated by an arrow in
More specifically, the process unit 1K includes a photoconductive drum or image carrier 7K and a charger 8K, an exposing unit 9K, a developing unit 10K and a drum cleaner 11K arranged around the drum 7K. In the illustrative embodiment, the exposing unit 9K is implemented as a laser scanner configured such that a laser beam issued from a laser or light source is reflected by a polygonal mirror and then output via optics including an fθ lens and mirrors, although not shown specifically.
To form an image, the charger 8K uniformly charges the surface of the drum 7K to preselected polarity. Subsequently, the exposing unit 9K scans the charged surface of the drum 7K with a laser beam 12K modulated in accordance with black image data, forming a latent image on the drum 7K. The developing unit 10K develops the latent image thus formed on the drum 7K with black toner to thereby produce a black toner image. The black or single-color toner image is transferred by an image transferring device 13M from the drum 7K to the paper sheet 2 being conveyed by the belt 3 at an image transfer position where the drum 7K and paper sheet 2 contact teach other. The drum cleaner 11K removes residual black toner left on the drum 7K after the above image transfer to thereby prepare the drum 7K for the next image formation.
The paper sheet 2, carrying the black toner image thereon, is conveyed to the next process unit 1M by the belt 3. The process unit 1M forms a magenta toner image on a photoconductive drum 7M and then transfers it to the paper sheet 2 over the black toner image present on the paper sheet 2 by the same process as the process unit 1K. Subsequently, when the paper sheet 2 is conveyed to the process unit 1Y by the belt 3, the process unit 1Y transfers a yellow toner image formed on a photoconductive drum 7Y to the paper sheet 2 over the composite black-magenta toner image present on the paper sheet 2. Finally, the process unit 1C transfers a cyan toner image formed on a photoconductive drum 7C to the paper sheet 2 over the composite black-magenta-yellow toner image, thereby completing a full-color or four-color toner image. The paper sheet 2, thus carrying the full-color toner image, is peeled off from the belt 3 and then driven out as a full-color copy via a fixing unit 14.
As shown in
In the illustrative embodiment, the reflection marks 21a play the role of marks. Alternatively, when an arrangement is made to sense light passed through the slits 21b, the slits 21b will serve as marks. The gist is therefore that any marks are usable so long as their reflectance or transmittance is variable, e.g., a black and white printed pattern or a full-reflection pattern implemented by a deposited aluminum pattern. The reflection marks 21a and slits 21b cause a single or a continuous reflectance variation to occur in accordance with their number.
A mark sensor 22 responsive to the reflection marks 21a of the scale 21 is located to face the scale 21 at a preselected distance, or sensing distance, from the belt 3. The drive roller 4 is connected to a drive motor 24 via a speed reducer 23 and caused to rotate thereby.
A specific configuration of the mark sensor 22 is shown in
The mark sensor 22 with the above configuration serves as a sensor in which the light source 31 emits a light beam toward the scale 21 while the light-sensitive device 34 senses light reflected from the scale 21. Specifically, by sensing light reflected from the reflection mark 21a of the scale 21, the mark sensor 22 produces information representative of a relative position between the reflection mark 21a and the mark sensor 22 itself. More specifically, the reflectance of the light beam reflected by the scale 21 differs from the reflection marks 21a to the slits 21b, so that the quantity of light reflected or scattered by the reflection marks 21a varies. The mark sensor 22 senses such a variation of the quantity of light with the light-sensitive device 34 for thereby determining the position of the mark 21a.
While the light source 31 is implemented by an LED by way of example, it may be replaced with a semiconductor laser or an electric bulb, if desired. A semiconductor laser or an LED or spot light source having a small emission area is desirable because the light beam should preferably be highly parallel. The lens 32 should preferably be implemented as, e.g., a collimator lens. The light-sensitive device 34 should only be able to transform the intensity of light to an electric signal and may be implemented by a photodiode or a phototransistor by way of example.
In the illustrative embodiment, a slit mask, see
As shown in
The mark sensor 22 senses one spot S formed on the scale 21 and then senses the other spot S shifted from the above spot S by one-half of the mark period, outputting two consecutive electric signals shifted from each other by one-half of the mark period, i.e., shifted in phase by 180°.
It is to be noted that the number of slits formed in the slit mask 33 is not limited to two. For example, as shown in
More specifically, the slit mask 33 is formed by dividing the six slits 33a into two regions A and *A, each including three slits, and shifting one region A from the other region *A by one-half of the mark period. With this configuration, the slit mask 33 splits the light beam into six light beams and causes them to form six beam spots S on the scale 21, as shown in
While the two regions A and *A are shifted by one-half of the mark period in the illustrative embodiment, such a configuration is only illustrative. For example, the regions A and *A may be shifted from each other by (2n+1)/2 of the mark period where n is a natural number, or nonnegative integer, inclusive of zero, i.e., n=0, 1, 2, . . . .
Preferably, the two regions A and *A of the slits 33a should be divided from each other in the direction of movement of the scale 21. More specifically, hardly any problem arises in the case of a transmission type or a vertical input type of optical arrangement. On the other hand, in a reflection type of optical arrangement and in a layout that requires, e.g., the light beam to be obliquely incident to the scale 21, the light beam should preferably not be provided with an angle relative to the direction of movement of the scale 21. It is therefore preferable to provide the phase difference in the direction of movement of the scale 21 so as not to disturb the balance of the quantities of reflected light even when the sensing distance, e.g., the distance between the scale 21 and the mark sensor 22 varies.
Further, as shown in
As stated above, the slits 33a of the slit mask 33 and the slits 21b of the scale 21 each are formed relatively broad in the direction perpendicular to the direction of movement of the belt 3. This not only insures accurate, stable mark sensing against the tilting or the meandering of the belt 3, but also allows electric signals to be surely output even when the marks of the scale 21 are partly smeared or lost.
With the above configuration, the light-sensitive device 34 transforms the light beams incident on the two light-sensitive areas 41 to electric signals that respectively correspond to the two regions A and *A. As a result, an A-phase signal and an *A-phase or opposite-phase signal are respectively output from the two light-sensitive areas 41 of the light-sensitive device 34. It is to be noted that the *A-phase signal is an inverted signal whose offset varies in the same phase as the offset of the A-phase signal. In the illustrative embodiment, a binary signal or pulse signal for controlling the amount of rotation of the belt 3 is produced from the A-phase and *A-phase signals. More specifically, the A-phase and *A-phase signals are compared to produce a binary signal that remains highly accurate against the variations of offset and signal amplitude.
It is noteworthy that the differential output of the A-phase and *A-phase signals corresponds to the offset component of the quantity of light reflected by the reflection mark 21a of the scale 21 and can therefore be used to, e.g., examine the smearing of the scale 21, to control the quantity of light to be emitted from the light source 31 or to control the amplification ratio of an amplifier not shown.
As stated above, when the scale 21 moves in accordance with the movement of the belt 3, the mark sensor 22 outputs two different electric signals matching with the moving speed of the scale 21. Subsequently, a binary signal is produced from the above electric signals, and then the drive of the belt 3 is so controlled as to maintain the amount of rotation of the belt 3 constant in accordance with the binary signal. In the illustrative embodiment, such a procedure constitutes control means. More specifically, the mark sensor 22 receives light beams reflected from the two areas A and *A of the individual reflection mark 21a shifted in phase from each other by one-half of the mark period. The mark sensor 22 then converts the input light beams to corresponding electric signals also shifted by half a phase. The electric signals are used to generate a binary signal for controlling the amount of rotation of the belt 3.
The illustrative embodiment stated above has various unprecedented advantages to be described hereinafter. A binary signal for controlling the amount of rotation of the belt 3 is produced from two electric signals different in phase from each other by one-half of the mark period, i.e., by 180°. It is therefore possible to maintain the binary signal accurate even when the quantity of light incident on the mark sensor 22 varies due to the variation of the distance or the angle between the scale 21 and the mark sensor 22 itself. Further, it is possible to see the offset level of the entire signals and therefore the reflection condition of the scale 21. In addition, by controlling the amount of rotation of the belt 3 with a PLL (Phase Locked Loop) circuit to which the binary signal is applied, it is possible to allow the belt 3 to convey the paper sheet 2,
In the illustrative embodiment, a laser beam is split by the two regions A and *A shifted from each other by one-half of the mark period to thereby output two electric signals also different in phase from each other by half a period, i.e., by 180°, allowing the marks to be stably sensed without regard to the smears or the local omission of the scale 21. Particularly, when more than two slits 21b are formed in the sale 21, the light beam is split into more than two and then sensed at the same time, further promoting the stable sensing of the marks.
The mark sensor 22 included in the illustrative embodiment is used as an encoder sensor for measuring the positions of rollers or positioning the rollers and an endless belt, which are included in an electrophotographic apparatus, ink jet printer or similar image forming apparatus, so that the entire quantity of light or the offset level is apt to vary due to a change in the height of the scale 21 or a smear. However, the mark sensor 22 is capable of accurately sensing the positions of the individual reflection marks 21 of the scale 21.
In the illustrative embodiment, the belt 31 or an intermediate image transfer belt on which the scale 21 is formed of resin and about 0.1 mm thick and is therefore likely to deform or slack by way of example. Further, the direction of deformation is not limited to the direction of rotation of the belt, but is sometimes angled about the center of rotation of the belt. For example, when a circular beam and a circular mark are used, the mark and light beam are misaligned due to the variation of the above angle. Moreover, it is likely that the belt meanders perpendicularly to the direction of rotation and brings the light beam and mark out of alignment in the direction of rotation, making signals unavailable at all. To solve such problems, in the illustrative embodiment, the slits 33a of the slit mask 33 are formed relatively broad in the direction perpendicular to the direction of movement of the belt 3 for thereby insuring accurate mark sensing against the tilting and meandering, among others, of the belt 3.
It is generally recommended to tilt a reflection type photointerrupter relative to the direction of movement of marks when reading the marks. For this reason, the optical axis and the sensing surface of the photointerrupter are, in many cases, inclined relative to each other. Therefore, if the photointerrupter is positioned such that the optical axis and a line normal to the sensing surface are inclined by an angle of dθ relative to the direction of movement of the marks, then when the sensing surface varies by a preselected amount of dz, the position of the resulting beam spot is shifted by dz·tan(dθ). In this manner, when the optical axis of the photointerrupter is not perpendicular to the sensing surface, there occurs an error in the position of the mark sensed. By contrast, in the illustrative embodiment, the light source 31 is not inclined relative to the direction of movement of the belt 3, allowing the marks to be stably, accurately sensed.
Referring to
As shown in
As stated above, in the illustrative embodiment, the light beam emitted from the light source 31 is incident perpendicularly on the scale 21, so that the marks can be accurately, stably sensed despite the up-down movement or the variation of the angle of the belt 3. Of course, the illustrative embodiment achieves the other advantages stated in relation to the first embodiment as well.
If the light beam is angled, then the position where the light beam is reflected is apt to vary and bring about measurement errors. To solve this problem, the light source 31 is positioned such the light beam emitted therefrom is incident perpendicularly on the individual reflection mark 21a. This allows the marks to be accurately sensed without any error even when the distance between the mark sensor 22 and the scale 21 or the sensing angle varies.
In the illustrative embodiment, the light-sensitive device 34 is provided with four light-sensitive regions 41,
While the four regions A, B, *A and *B are shifted by one-fourth of the mark period in the illustrative embodiment, such a configuration is only illustrative. For example, the regions A through *B may be shifted from each other by (2n+1)/4 of the mark period where n is a natural number, or nonnegative integer, inclusive of zero, i.e., n=0, 1, 2, . . . .
In the illustrative embodiment, the four regions A through *B are sequentially arranged in this order with their phases being shifted by each ¼ pitch. However, such an order is only illustrative and may be replaced with any other suitable order so long as it allows the electric signals to be distinguished from each other. This is because a signal in the phase B is shifted in phase from a signal in the phase A by, e.g., 90°, a signal in the phase *A is shifted by 180°, and a signal in the phase *B is shifted by 270°. Also, the regions A through *B do not have to be arranged in the direction of movement of the scale 21. For example, the regions A and B may be positioned side by side perpendicularly to the direction of movement of the scale 21. In such a case, the regions A and *A and the regions B and *B each should preferably be positioned next to each other in the direction of movement of the scale 21 for removing offsets stated earlier and other purposes.
As stated above, as shown in
As shown in
In the illustrative embodiment, a light beam is emitted toward the scale 21 via the polarization split mask 61. While this light beam appears to be uniform in intensity, it consists of polarized beams arranged in the form of slits.
The deflector 52 is implemented as a polarization beam splitter by way of example. Because the scale 21 consists of full-reflection slits or transmission slits and therefore the light beam incident on the light-sensitive device 34 maintains the polarizations, the light-sensitive device 34 can receive the deflected components if the light beam is split by, e.g., a beam splitter and the resulting polarized components are individually subject to photoelectric transduction or if the light beam is split into two light beams and then input to a light-sensitive device provided with a polarizing filter.
As stated above, in the illustrative embodiment, the two polarized beams are incident on the scale 21 at positions shifted from each other by half a pitch. The illustrative embodiment can therefore output an A-phase and a *A-phase signal opposite in phase to each other like the second embodiment. Of course, the illustrative embodiment is comparable with the second embodiment as to the other advantages, too.
To remove offsets, nearby slits 33a should preferably, if possible, be shifted in phase from each other. However, as for the slit mask 33, if light beams, each having a width of half a pitch, adjoin each other at positions shifted by half a pitch, then the beams simply form a single opening together. On the other hand, by generating signals of opposite phases at nearby positions of the scale 21 by using the polarization of light, it is possible to reduce a difference in the quantity of reflection between the signals ascribable to smears or defects for thereby enhancing the removal of offsets and realizing stable mark sensing.
A further alternative embodiment of the present invention will be described with reference to
More specifically, as shown in
The printer 200b is a tandem, intermediate image transfer type of electrophotographic device and includes an endless, intermediate image transfer belt or intermediate image carrier 202 located at the center. The intermediate image transfer belt (simply belt hereinafter) 202 is made up of a base layer, an underlayer formed on the base layer and implemented by, e.g., fluoroplastic scarcely stretchable or stretchable rubber and canvas, and an elastic layer formed on the underlayer, although not shown specifically. The elastic layer is formed of fluororubber or acrylonitrile-butadiene copolymer rubber by way of example. The surface of the elastic layer is covered with a highly smooth coating layer implemented by, e.g., fluoroplastic.
The belt 202 is passed over three support rollers 214, 215 and 216 and driven to turn clockwise, as viewed in
Arranged above the belt 202 is a tandem, image forming section 220 in which four printer engines 218Y, 218M, 218C and 218K each for forming a toner image of a particular color are arranged side by side in the direction of movement of the belt 202. The printer engines 218Y through 218K each include a photoconductive drum or image carrier and a charger, a developing unit and other process units arranged around the drum. An exposing unit 221 is positioned above the image forming section 220 and configured to optically write latent images on the drums of the printer engines 218Y through 218K.
A secondary image transferring device 222 is arranged at the opposite side to the image forming section 220 with respect to the belt 202 and includes, e.g., an endless secondary image transfer belt 224 passed over two rollers 223. The secondary image transferring device 222 is pressed against the third support roller 216 via the belt 202 so as to transfer an image formed on the belt 202 to a paper sheet or similar recording medium.
A fixing unit 225 is located at the left-hand side of the secondary image transferring device 222, as viewed in
A full-color mode operation available with the image forming apparatus 200 will be described hereinafter.
When the operator of the image forming apparatus 200 pushes a start switch, not shown, the scanner 200a reads the image of a document while the printer 200b forms a full-color image on the a paper sheet in accordance with image data output from the scanner 200a.
More specifically, a drive roller, not shown, included in the image forming apparatus 200 causes the rollers 214 through 215 to rotate, causing the belt 202 to turn in the direction indicated by an arrow in
On the other hand, the top paper sheet is paid out from designated one of the sheet cassettes 244 by the pickup roller 245 and conveyed to the sheet path 246. The paper sheet is then conveyed by a roller pair 247 to the sheet path 248 arranged in the printer 200b. The registration roller pair 249 is caused to start rotating in synchronism with the movement of the full-color image carried on the belt 202, feeding the paper sheet to a nip between the belt 202 and the secondary image transferring device 222. The secondary image transferring device 222 transfers the full-color image from the belt 202 to the paper sheet.
In the image forming apparatus 200 described above, the accuracy of drive of the belt 202 has critical influence on the quality of a full-color image to be formed on a paper sheet. In the illustrative embodiment, the scale 21 is formed at one edge of the belt 202 and sensed by the mark sensor 22,
In summary, it will be seen that the present invention can accurately generate a control signal for controlling the amount of turn of a turnable body even when a distance or an angel between a plurality of marks formed on the turnable body and a mark sensor or light-sensitive device noticeably varies and causes the quantity of light incident on the mark sensor to vary. Particularly, the present invention can accurately, stably sense the marks against the tilting or the meandering of the turnable body.
Various modifications will become possible for those skilled in the art after receiving the teachings of the present disclosure without departing from the scope thereof.
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