Printing system

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6438352
  • Patent Number
    6,438,352
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, November 22, 2000
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 20, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
Duplex printing apparatus for printing on two sides of a sheet, the apparatus including:an expression roller on which the sheet is held during printing;a imager which prints an image on a first side of the sheet while it is being held on the impression roller; anda sheet inverter which removes the sheet from the impression roller, inverts the sheet and returns it to the impression roller for printing on a second side of the sheet by imager, wherein the sheet it to held on said impression roller referenced to a first edge thereof during the printing of the first side thereof and is also held on the impression roller referenced to said first edge during printing of the second side thereof.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates generally to printing systems and more particularly to duplex printing systems for printing variable information on one or both sides of a sheet.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Apparatus for duplex copying of documents and for duplex printing by means of laser printers are known in the art. U.S. Pat. No. 4,949,949 to Holmes et al. describes a “Hybrid Sequencing Duplex Automatic Document Handling System” which includes apparatus for handling document sheets both sides of which are to be copied and for making duplex (i.e. double-sided) copies of such document sheets. The apparatus involve the use of one or more pairs of reversible rollers, lengthy inversion paths, and buffer trays for the handling of the documents and the copy paper prior to and in the course of making duplex copies. U.S. Pat. No. 4,884,794 to Dinatale et al. describes a document handler for duplex photocopying having first and second inverting path segments, which are utilized to re-orient the copy paper prior to duplex copying. U.S. Pat. No. 5,003,355 to Tanzawa describes a sheet transport control apparatus for use in a duplex unit of a laser printer, the apparatus including a transport system and a switchback system, and a series of driving motors and sensors. All these systems described in the prior art share the common feature of being mechanically complex, and they all involve transporting the paper through relatively lengthy and convoluted paths after printing on the first side so as to be able to print on the second side. Other systems for duplex printing are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,806.079; 4,814,822; 4,568,169; 4,639,126; 4,428,667; 4,607,940; 4,375,326 and 5,020,788 and EP publication 0342704.




PCT publication 93/04409 describes a switchback system with a much shorter path than older systems, which allowed for on demand duplex printing without storage of large numbers of sheets.




Systems which utilize the same impression roller and/or the same printing engine for printing both sides of a web are known in the art. However, even in those systems the two sides of the web are printed at different printing positions in the printer and the web is not indexed at an edge.




Also known are systems for reversing sheets between printing stations. One such system is called a “perfecta” type system and comprises a roller that acts to turn over the sheet. Such systems, unlike those used for laser printers, reference the printing sheet from the same edge for printing on both sides.




A prior art perfecta system


10


is shown in

FIGS. 1A and 1B

. This system comprises a first impression roller


12


, which holds a sheet


14


for printing thereon by a print roller (not shown). Sheet


14


is transferred to roller


16


where it is held by a front edge clamp


20


. Roller


16


continues to rotate and the front edge of sheet


14


passes an inverting roller


18


. When the trailing edge reaches inverting roller


18


, a clamp


20


on roller


18


catches the trailing edge of sheet


14


and, as shown in

FIG. 1B

inverts the sheet prior to its being clamped to a second impression roller


22


.




An advantage of perfecta systems is that while the leading edge for printing the first and second sides of the sheet are reversed, the same edge is used as a reference position for printing both sides. Another advantage of perfecta systems, which is related to the first advantage, is that the sheets are always positively held by the system during inversion of the sheet. Positive holding of sheets distinguishes “perfecta” systems from systems which utilize a single printing engine and which generally do not positively hold the sheets during the entire process of transfer and reversal.




However, inverting systems which provide the advantages of perfecta systems are not known in a printer using the same impression roller and printing engine for printing both sides of the sheet.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




One aspect of some preferred embodiments of the present invention provides apparatus and a method for duplex printing of sheets, utilizing the same edge of the sheet for reference for printing both sides thereof, while utilizing the same impression roller and/or the same printing engine.




One aspect of some preferred embodiments of the present invention provides apparatus and a method for duplex printing of sheets utilizing an impression roller for printing both sides of a sheet, while positively holding the sheet during the entire process of reversal and transfer of the sheet. Preferably, this means that the sheet is positively held from the start of the printing process to its end.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention only one sheet, other than a sheet held in the impression roller is in the inverting system.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the same set of one or more printing engines is used in the printing of both sides of all the sheets.




In preferred embodiments of the present invention a perfecta-like system is used. This system includes rollers and/or belts which receive the sheet from one position on the circumference of an impression roller and, after reversing the sheet. delivers the sheet to a second position on the impression roller. Preferably, the path traveled by the sheet between the two positions holds an integral number of sheets. Preferably, the impression roller holds a plurality of sheets and presents them seriatim to one or more print engines. Preferably, the engine or engines are electrographic or other engines providing programmable images such as electrophotographic engines, ink or bubble jet print heads thermal printing heads or any other suitable printing engines.




Other aspects of some preferred embodiments of the invention are concerned with high speed printing engines, especially with high speed electrographic printing engines. In such engines special care must be taken in charging a photoreceptor and, when liquid toner is utilized, in treating and transport of the image. Some aspects of some preferred embodiments of the present invention deal with improvements in such engines especially useful for high speed printing.




There is thus provided, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention duplex printing apparatus for printing on two sides of a sheet, the apparatus comprising:




an impression roller on which the sheet is held during printing;




imager which prints an image on a first side of the sheet while it is being held on the impression roller; and




a sheet inverter which removes the sheet from the impression roller, inverts the sheet and returns it to the impression roller for printing on a second side of the sheet by the imager, wherein the sheet is held on said impression roller referenced to a first edge thereof during the printing of the first side thereof and is also held on the impression roller referenced to said first edge during printing of the second side thereof.




Preferably, the sheet inverter positively controls the position of the sheet during the inversion thereof, without releasing the sheet during the inversion.




There is further provided, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention a duplex printing apparatus for printing on two sides of a sheet, the apparatus comprising:




a surface, on which an image to be printed is selectably formed;




an impression roller on which the sheet is held during printing, referenced to a first edge thereof;




an imager which prints an image on a first side of the sheet while it is being held on the impression roller; and




a sheet inverter which removes the sheet from the impression roller, inverts the sheet and returns it to the impression roller for printing on a second side of the sheet by the imager, wherein the sheet inverter positively controls the position of the sheet from the removal of the sheet from the impression roller to the return of the sheet thereto after the inversion thereof, without releasing the sheet.




in a preferred embodiment of the invention the sheet inverter comprises:




a paper pick-off system which removes the sheet from the impression roller, after printing of the first side of the sheet, while the sheet is held referenced to said first edge;




an inverting transport past which the first edge is carried while the sheet remains referenced to said first edge; and




a sheet pick-off on said inverting transport which captures a second edge of the sheet, opposite the first edge while the sheet is still being held referenced to the first edge, such that said capture is made referenced to the first edge,




said inverting transport transporting the second edge to the impression roller for capture by the impression roller, such that the second side of the sheet is presented for printing by the imager.




Preferably, the apparatus includes at least one intermediate transport which receives the sheet from the sheet pick-off system and transports it to the inverting transport while the sheet remains referenced to the first edge. Preferably, the at least one intermediate transport comprises at least one roller. Preferably, a sheet path in the paper pick-off, sheet pick-off and intermediate transport is at least the length of a plurality of sheets.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the inverting transport comprises a transport roller.




Preferably, the page inverter comprises a perfecta system.




In a preferred embodiment of he invention, the page inverter stops the motion of the sheet while positively holding it referenced to the printing on the first side and then moves the sheet in a reverse direction for capture by the impression roller.




Preferably, the paper pick-off comprises at least one vacuum pick-off that picks the sheet off the impression roller and holds it while it is being inverted. Preferably, the at least one vacuum pick-off comprises two sets of vacuum pick-offs each comprising at least one pick-off, wherein the vacuum pick-offs pick offs alternate in picking sheets off the impression roller.




Preferably, the apparatus includes a belt transport that receives a sheet from the at least one vacuum pick-off and transports it to the impression roller while positively holding the sheet referenced to the image printed on the first side.




Preferably, the vacuum pick-offs rotate about an axis and have a radial extent from the axis and the apparatus has at least one at least partial disk concentric with the axis and the disk has a radial extent equal to the radial extent of the vacuum pick-offs.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the impression roller and the inverting system hold no more than two sheets at any one time.




Preferably, the imager comprises a plurality of imaging stations each of which transfers an image of a different color to the sheet.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the imager includes an image forming surface on which the image is formed prior to transfer to the sheet. Preferably, the imager includes at least one intermediate transfer member to which images are transferred from the image forming surface and from which the images are transferred to the sheet.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention the imager provides different images to the sides of the sheet.




According to one preferred embodiment of the invention the imager is an electrographic imager.




The imager can be a powder toner imager or a liquid toner imager.




The imager can be an ink-jet or bubble jet imager.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention the impression roller is adapted to hold a plurality of sheets at one time.




There is further provided, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, a duplex printing method for printing on two sides of a sheet, the method comprising:




printing an image on a first side of the sheet at a printing position, the sheet and thus said printing being referenced to an edge of the sheet;




inverting the sheet and returning it to the printing position while it remains referenced to said edge; and




printing an image on a second side of the sheet at said printing position while the sheet and thus said printing is referenced to said edge.




Preferably, the position of the sheet is positively controlled during inversion thereof, without releasing the sheet between printing of the first and second sides thereof.




There is further provided, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention a duplex printing method for printing on two sides of a sheet, the method comprising:




printing an image on a first side of the sheet at a printing position;




inverting the sheet and returning it to the printing position; and




printing an image on a second side of the sheet at said printing position,




wherein the position of the sheet is positively controlled during printing and inversion thereof, without releasing the sheet.




Preferably, the sheet is delivered to said printing position by a moving member on which it is held while being referenced to said edge.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention the sheet is printed while being moved by the moving surface, past the printing position and wherein the sheet is held at said edge during printing of one side thereof and held by an opposite edge of the sheet during printing of the other side thereof.




Preferably, the sheet is printed while being moved past the printing position with said edge passing the position first during printing of one side of the sheet and wherein said edge passes the printing position after the rest of the sheet during the printing of the other side of the sheet.




Preferably the method includes printing different images on the two sides of the sheet.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention, inverting the sheet includes:




moving the sheet to a first position while holding it referenced to the first edge; and




stopping it at the first position: and




returning it to the printing position while it remains referenced to the first edge.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The present invention will be more completely understood and appreciated from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention, taken in conjunction with the drawings. Corresponding structures in different drawings are indicated with the same reference numeral. The drawings are:





FIGS. 1A and 1B

illustrate schematically a prior art multi-station (multi-impression roller) duplex printing apparatus;





FIG. 2

is a schematic cross-sectional view of a single impression roller duplex printing apparatus in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 3

is a schematic cross sectional view of a portion of the apparatus of

FIG. 2

, showing a portion the mechanism by which a sheet is inverted;





FIG. 4

is a schematic cross sectional view of an alternative apparatus for inverting a sheet in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 5

is a very schematic cross-sectional illustration of a printing engine in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 6

is a schematic cross-sectional view of a second single impression roller duplex printing apparatus in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 7

is a schematic isometric view of a portion of a sheet inverter of the preferred embodiment of

FIG. 6

;





FIGS. 8A-8H

schematically shows the progress of sheets in the preferred embodiment of

FIG. 6

;





FIG. 9

is a schematic cross sectional view of a dual duplex printer in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 10

illustrates a photoreceptor charging system, especially suitable for high speed printing, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 11

illustrates a developing station in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 12

illustrates an intermediate transfer member and associated apparatus, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention; and





FIG. 13

is a cross-sectional representation of a cleaning station in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




Reference is now made to

FIGS. 2 and 3

, which illustrate a multi-color duplex printing system


40


in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention.




System


40


includes an impression roller


42


that rotates in a direction indicated by arrow


44


. Situated around the periphery of roller


42


are one or more print engines


46


. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, each of engines


46


transfers a single color image to substrate sheets


48


that are held on- and travel with-impression roller


42


. Thus, as illustrated in

FIG. 2

, four color separations may be printed on a sheet as it sequentially passes the four engines shown. If it is desired to print a greater or lesser number of colors, more or fewer engines may be provided. While in a preferred embodiment of the invention engines


46


are a particular type of electrophotographic engine described below, any suitable electrophotographic engine or a printing engine of another type may be used. Especially suitable for use in the present invention are printing engines which print a variable image, such as a computer generated image. This allows for different images to be printed on the front and back of the sheet and for different images to be printed on sequential sheets.




Also situated around the periphery of impression roller


42


are a source of sheets


50


and associated sheet feeding apparatus


52


, a sheet take-off apparatus


54


, a stacker for printed sheets


56


and a sheet inverting system


58


. A portion of inverting system


58


, illustrating various stages in the inversion of a sheet, is shown in FIG.


3


.




The following discussion describes the progress of a single sheet


48


as it is printed on both sides. As shown in

FIG. 2

, one edge of each of sheets


48


is held by a clamp


60


of conventional design. A sheet


48


is synchronously fed from source


50


, by feeding apparatus


52


such that its leading edge is captured by one of clamps


60


. Impression roller


42


, which is preferably driven by a motor (not shown) carries sheet


48


past print engines


46


such that by the time it passes the last engine, printing of a first side of the sheet is complete. Alternatively, fewer engines may be used and each engine may print a plurality of colors in one of several rotations of impression roller


42


. The sheet then approaches sheet take-off mechanism


54


. Since only the first side of sheet


48


has been printed, mechanism


54


is not activated and sheet


48


passes it. A controller (not shown), which controls the printing and sheet transportation determines which path the sheet should take. As the leading edge of the sheet held by clamp


60


passes a first roller


64


of inverting system


58


, the leading edge of sheet


48


is handed off to a similar clamp


62


on roller


64


. The leading edge of the sheet is then successively handed off to a clamp


66


on a roller


68


and a clamp


70


on a roller


72


. During each hand-off the sheet is held between two rollers and or by a clamp such that registration of the leading edge is preserved.




When the leading edge of the sheet approaches a roller


74


, the leading edge is captured by a clamp


76


and carried toward roller


74


. Roller


74


receives the sheet and a clamp


76


holds the sheet on the roller.




When the leading edge of sheet


48


reaches an inverting roller


78


, the trailing edge is fed to a clamp


80


on roller


78


(shown more clearly in

FIG. 3.

) preferably utilizing by a lifter


82


. Lifter


82


may lift the trailing edge of the sheet by air pressure or mechanically. Lifter


82


can also utilize a vacuum to hold the sheet to the roller. It should be understood that when clamp


80


captures the trailing edge of sheet


48


, the position of the sheet is still determined by its leading edge, held by clamp


76


. Clamp


76


releases sheet


48


as or just after it is captured by clamp


80


.




However, while sheet


48


has reversed direction (as well as having been turned over), and is traveling with the (former) trailing edge first, its position remains referenced to the leading edge, which reference has been preserved during the various hand-offs of the sheet from roller to roller.





FIG. 3

shows a number of stages of transfer of sheet


48


from roller


74


to impression roller


42


by roller


78


and clamp


80


. As can be seen from

FIG. 3

, the sheet has now been reversed and, when it is transferred to impression roller


42


it is ready for having its second side printed.




Returning again to

FIG. 2

, sheet


48


again passes printing engines


46


whereat an image is printed on the second side of the sheet.




The sheet now approaches take-off apparatus


54


. Since both sides of the sheet have now been printed, the sheet is ready for removal. As clamp


60


(holding the edge of the sheet) approaches apparatus


54


, a clamp


84


on a belt


86


receives the sheet and removes it to stacker


56


.




When the blank space in the inverter system reaches the impression roller another sheet is fed to impression roller


42


from source


50


and placed in the position vacated by the sheet which was removed by apparatus


54


. It should be understood that whenever no sheet is available from inverter


58


to fill a clamp


60


, a new sheet is preferably fed from paper source


50


.




While the system has been shown with an inverter having a path that holds three sheets at one time and an impression roller that has four sections for holding sheets, a greater or lesser number of sheets and positions can be provided. One major consideration is the amount of room taken by the print engines and other apparatus situated around the periphery of the impression roller. Furthermore, while separate engines for each color are shown, a single multicolor engine may be provided. Furthermore, stacker


56


may be replaced by a finisher which produces booklets directly from the sheets as they are printed.





FIG. 4

shows an alternate inverting system in which rollers


64


and


68


have been replaced by a belt mechanism which receives the sheets from the front end of take-off apparatus


54


.





FIG. 5

shows a very schematic representation of a preferred printing engine


100


(corresponding to one of engines


46


of FIG.


2


), in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention. While preferred engine


100


is especially suitable for a high speed duplexing system as shown in

FIGS. 2-4

, as indicated above, the duplexing system can operate with a wide variety of print engines. Similarly, engine


100


may operate with other types of duplexing systems or in a single sided printer.




Engine


100


includes a photoreceptor drum


102


, a charger


104


which charges the photoreceptor, an imagewise discharge system, such as a scanning laser


106


which forms a latent image on charged drum


102


and a developer


108


which develops the latent image. The developed image is preferably transferred to an intermediate transfer member


110


. After the image is transferred to intermediate transfer member


110


, photoreceptor


102


is cleaned of residual toner by a cleaning station


112


.




For slow speed systems, intermediate transfer members as described below can operate without any drying systems. In these systems the heat of the intermediate transfer member dries the image somewhat and removes some of the liquid carrier in the image, to improve the transfer of the image to sheet


48


on impression roller


42


. For some systems, liquid is removed prior to transfer of the image to the intermediate transfer member. For high speed imaging a dryer


114


is preferably used to dry the image on the intermediate transfer member. After transfer of the image to sheet


48


, a further dryer


116


removes some liquid which remains on or is solvated by the intermediate transfer member to improve transfer of the next image to the intermediate transfer member.




The duplexing mechanisms shown in

FIGS. 2-4

operate in a synchronous manner with all of the rollers and/or belts moving in a synchronous manner. Thus, these duplex mechanisms are basically limited to one size sheet of paper or other printing material.





FIGS. 6-8

illustrate a printer having a duplexing mechanism which can handle a large variety of sheet sizes.





FIG. 6

shows a general layout of a printer


200


in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention. In addition to the differences in the duplex mechanism described below, printer


200


differs from printer


40


in other ways. For example, in printer


40


a plurality of printing engines


46


(shown as engine


100


in FIG.


5


), each including a photoreceptor


102


and associated components and an intermediate transfer member


110


and associated components. Printer


200


of

FIGS. 6-8

, utilizes a single photoreceptor


102


and intermediate transfer member


110


. However, situated about photoreceptor


102


are a plurality of developers


108


. Each developer develops an electrostatic image on photoreceptor


102


with a different color image. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a sheet


48


on impression roller


110


rotates once for each color and the different color images are transferred to the sheet seriatim. Preferably, photoreceptor


102


is large enough so that a plurality or all of the individual color images are developed during a single rotation of photoreceptor


102


.




It should be understood that the printing arrangement shown in FIG.


6


and that shown in

FIGS. 2-5

are substantially interchangeable and can be used with any of the sheet inverting apparatus shown in this application or with sheet inverting apparatus of the prior art. As indicated above, the sheet inverting apparatus disclosed herein can be used with any suitable printer system known in the art.




Printer


200


shows sheet inverting apparatus


258


which is different from sheet inverting apparatus


58


of

FIGS. 2-4

. In particular, inverting apparatus


258


is capable of handling sheets of different sizes. It can invert sheets all of which are the same size and also invert sheets which have different sizes and which are interleaved.




In a preferred embodiment of the invention, when a sheet


48


is fed by feeding apparatus


52


, a detector detects the leading and trailing edges of the sheet being fed. The length of the sheet thus determined is transferred to a controller (not shown) which also controls the movement of the other elements of the printer as described below.




After being fed, sheet


48


is acquired by clamp


60


on impression roller


42


. Impression roller


42


may carry a single sheet or multiple sheets (a single sheet version is shown in

FIGS. 6-8

) at one time. After capture, individual color images are generated on photoreceptor


102


and transferred to the sheet, seriatim. In general, the photoreceptor may have a diameter many times that of the impression roller, such that the images can all be developed on the photoreceptor. during a single rotation of photoreceptor


102


, which corresponds to multiple rotations of impression roller


42


. Of course, the images on photoreceptor


102


are spaced such that, when transferred to sheet


48


, they are overlaid in an aligned manner.




When all the color images have been transferred to sheet, it is acquired by a first transfer mechanism


202


. Mechanism


202


is shown in perspective in

FIG. 7 and a

portion of inverting mechanism


258


is shown in FIG.


8


. As shown in

FIG. 7

, mechanism


202


preferably comprises two sets of vacuum pick-up arms A and B. Arms A are attached to and rotate with a central shaft


204


, driven by a motor


206


. Arms B are attached to and rotate with a series of elements


208


which can rotate about shaft


204


. Arms B are made to rotate together by a series of belts


210


and a shaft


212


which is driven by a motor


214


. As is clear, arms A rotate together and arms B rotate together as sets; however, the set of arms A and the set of arms B can rotate independently of each other.




Also shown in

FIG. 7

is a disk


215


preferably mounted on shaft


204


. The radial extent of disk


215


is substantially the same as that of arms A and B. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a plurality of such disks are present, where the disks are placed between the arms A, preferably one between each pair of arms. Only one is shown for clarity of presentation.





FIG. 8A

shows mechanism


258


at a moment when gripper


60


which grips the leading edge of sheet


48


has just reached a point at which arms A can grip the sheet. (The trailing edge of the sheet is shown by reference number


49


). Arm B is also shown, however, it does not yet play any part in the operation. At this point gripper


60


release sheet


48


arms A which are suction arms acquire the sheet. It should be understood that at this point sheet


48


is still held in a nip


216


between intermediate transfer member


110


and impression roller


42


. The tip of arms A rotate together with impression roller such that the sheet is removed from the impression roller gradually as portions of the sheet reach the 8 o'clock position on impression roller


42


.




At a later period shown in

FIG. 8C

, trailing edge


49


of sheet


48


is free of nip


216


, (shown in FIG.


8


B). At this point sheet


48


is no longer held by impression roller


42


and is free to move under the influence of arms A. However, it remains on the impression roller due to its being held by arms A and by friction with impression roller


42


and disks


215


. It should be noted that at this point a new sheet


48


′ is approaching gripper


60


which meanwhile has rotated to about


11


o'clock. Arm A then advances the sheet so that it “falls off the edge” of impression roller onto a belt


218


. This position is shown in FIG.


8


D. It is noted that the image printed on sheet


48


is facing away from the belt. It is noted that at this point gripper


60


has gripped new sheet


48


′, having a trailing edge


49


′, and carried it into nip


216


.




Arms A hold sheet


48


in the position shown in

FIG. 8D

while the impression roller (together with sheet


48


′ rotates a number of times required to transfer color images to it from intermediate transfer member


110


. At that time it is ready to be removed and replaced by sheet


48


so that the unprinted side of the sheet is printed.





FIG. 8E

shows this condition. Arms B have now gripped sheet


48


′ after its release by grippers


60


. At this point arms A start rotating counterclockwise such that trailing edge


49


of sheet


48


reaches gripper


60


when it reaches belt


218


at which point it acquires sheet


48


. This is shown in FIG.


8


F. Arms A then release sheet


48


, which is carried along by impression roller


42


for printing of the reverse side of sheet


48


. It should be noted that while gripper


60


has gripped the trailing edge of the sheet, it remains referenced to its leading edge, since this edge (or at least the sheet referenced to this edge) are held throughout by arms A and/or belt


218


.




In a continuation of the operation, the situation shown in

FIG. 8B

is reached with A replacing B and with trailing edge being held by gripper


60


and the leading edge lying on belt


218


.




In alternate preferred embodiments of the invention, belt


218


is provided with vacuum grippers or other mechanical grippers which acquire the sheet such that it is carried towards gripper


60


by the belt and not by the arms. In this situation, it is possible to provide only a single set of arms.




Alternatively or additionally the impression roller is enlarged somewhat so that the length of sheet


48


is only about 70% or less than the circumference of impression roller


42


. Under these conditions, the single set of arms will have enough time to drop one sheet and move to the position at which it has to pick-up the sheet.




Alternatively or additionally, the impression roller is enlarged such that it holds two sheets at the same time. For this configuration, only a single arm is necessary, especially if belt


218


is supplied with grippers.




After the reverse of sheet


48


is printed, the reverse of sheet


48


′ is to be printed. The attachment of sheet


48


′ to impression roller


42


is as described above for sheet


48


. Sheet


48


is now removed from the printer according to the process whose start is shown in

FIGS. 8G and 8H

. In

FIG. 8G

sheet


48


′ is advancing toward nip


216


and sheet


48


has been gripped by arms A. In general, the position of grippers


60


and the arms is similar to that shown in

FIG. 8D

, except that arm A does not stop at this point but continues carrying sheet


48


to the position shown in FIG.


8


H.




As shown in

FIG. 8H

, in a preferred embodiment for the invention, sheet


48


is advanced so that it meets gripper arms


220


, which may be of the same type as arms A and B. Gripper arms


220


transfer the sheet directly to exit stack


56


. See FIG.


6


. Alternatively, if it is desired to invert the sheet before stacking, an addition set of gripper arms


222


receives the sheet from arms


220


and delivers it to the stack. Alternatively, a belt may receive the sheet from arms A and transfer it to the stack. Alternatively or additionally, stacker


56


may be replaced by a finisher which produces booklets directly from the sheets as they are printed.





FIG. 9

shows a tandem printer


300


for duplex printing. Printer


300


is comprised of first printer section


301


, second printer section


302


and transfer section


303


. After one side of a sheet is printed in first printer section


301


the sheet is removed from impression roller


42


by a vacuum gripper arm


306


. Gripper arm


306


transfers the sheet to a second gripper arm


308


. The sheet is then transferred to gripper arms


310


, which in turn transfer the sheet to gripper arms


312


. The sheet is then transferred to an impression roller


42


. It should be noted that the sheet is image side down on arms


306


, image side up on arms


308


, image side down on arms


310


(note the reversal of direction of the sheet), image side up on arms


312


. The sheet is placed image side down on the second impression roller such that the inverse side of the sheet is printed in the second printer.




In each of the above embodiments, grippers


60


are shown as mechanical grippers. However, in alternative preferred embodiments of the invention, air suction grippers may be used on impression roller


42


.




The elements of engine


100


or the printer section of

FIGS. 2-9

may be purely conventional as has been described in numerous patents, patent applications and patent publications assigned to the assignee of the present application, Indigo, Nev. and Spectrum Sciences B.V. In addition certain parts of the preferred embodiment of the invention including intermediate transfer blankets, photoreceptor sheets, etc. are available from Indigo, Nev.




Some of such elements are described, for example. in PCT publications WO 94/23347, WO 96/17277, WO 97/07433, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,684,238, PCT Publication WO 90/04216, U.S. Pat. No. 4,974,027 and WO 93/01531 and in other patents and applications referred to therein. The disclosures of all these documents are incorporated herein by reference.





FIG. 10

shows a preferred embodiment of a charger


120


corresponding to charger


104


of

FIGS. 5 and 6

. The charger shown comprises six corotrons or scorotrons, each comprising a charging surface such as a charged wire


122


and grid


124


for scorotrons, although a greater or lesser number may be used as required. Each pair of scorotrons is preferably housed in a housing


126


including a chamber


128


into which air is pumped. This air is forced by pressure past wires


122


and onto the surface of photoreceptor


120


. This flow of air carries away evaporated carrier liquid which otherwise has a tendency to coat the wires and reduce their life. In addition, this flow also caries away ozone which is generated by the charging surface.




In order to prevent the air (now containing some carrier liquid and/or ozone) from contaminating the surroundings, both inside the printer and outside of it, chambers


130


are provided, beside the scorotrons. These chambers are connected to suction pumps, such that air fed to chambers


128


and passing wires


122


to the surface of drum


102


is immediately removed from the environment. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, carrier liquid and/or ozone are removed from the air suctioned via chambers


130


, for example by catalytic action.





FIG. 11

shows a preferred embodiment of a developer


140


corresponding to developer


108


of

FIGS. 5 and 6

. This developer corresponds generally to developers whose structure and operation is shown and described in WO 93/01531 and WO 95/10801, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. Developer


108


comprises a toner inlet


142


which feeds toner concentrate to a toner chamber


144


. Toner is fed from chamber


144


to a rotating developer roller


146


. The rotation of developer roller


146


pumps the toner past an electrode


148


. A voltage difference between electrode


148


and roller


146


preferably coats roller


146


with a concentrated layer of toner. A squeegee


150


preferably removes additional liquid from the toner layer which layer is then selectively transferred to develop a latent image on photoreceptor


102


. Toner remaining on developer


146


is preferably removed by a charged roller


152


(see for example element


174


in

FIG. 7B

of WO 93/01531). Toner is preferably removed from roller


152


by the combined action of a scrapper


154


and a counter rotating sponge roller


156


. A squeegee


158


preferably compresses sponge roller


156


and removes excess material from it into a waste chamber


159


. Other designs of liquid development systems or powder toner systems may be substituted for developer


140


if desired.





FIG. 12

shows further details of print engine


100


and printer


200


. In preferred embodiments of the invention, especially where the printing speed is high, it is desirable to dry the image somewhat while heating it on intermediate transfer member


110


. To this end, a dryer


160


(corresponding to dryer


114


of

FIG. 5

or


6


) is preferably provided. To minimize the amount of pollution generated, dryer


160


preferably comprises a chamber


162


into which air is pumped via an inlet


164


. The air exits chamber


162


via an exit slit


166


onto the surface of transfer member


110


. The air which exits slit


166


preferably forms an air knife. A second chamber


168


, open to the surface of the transfer member, is provided with an exit for air through which air is withdrawn via an exit port


169


. Thus, excess carrier liquid that is withdrawn from the image on intermediate transfer member


110


is immediately removed without polluting the internal environment of the printer.




To improve transfer of images and to provide more consistent transfer, intermediate transfer member


110


is preferably provided with a further dryer


170


(corresponding to dryer


116


of

FIG. 5

or FIG.


6


), which dryer operates in a similar manner to dryer


160


, in that air is forced onto the surface of the intermediate transfer member and is removed therefrom by suction.




In preferred embodiments of the invention, carrier liquid removed by dryers


160


and


170


is removed from the air stream, for example by catalytic action and the air is recirculated for drying.





FIG. 13

shows a cleaning station


180


corresponding to cleaning station


112


of FIG.


5


. Cleaning station


180


comprises three stages. In a first stage cooled liquid (for example carrier liquid) is supplied to the surface via a chamber


182


. A roller


184


is operative to keep the liquid from leaking out of the cleaner and for pumping it in the upstream direction of photoreceptor


102


. The cooled liquid flows along the surface of the photoreceptor to a counter-rotating sponge roller


184


which removes adhering toner particles. These particles and liquid picked up by the sponge roller are squeegeed out of sponge roller


184


by a squeegee roller


186


. A scrapper blade


188


completes the cleaning process by scrapping any remaining toner from the surface and keeping excess carrier liquid from leaving the cleaning station.




While preferred printing engines have been shown and described, it should be understood that duplex printers of the type described above may use other types of electrographic printers as are known in the art. Thus, the printing engines may be of any suitable type. Preferably, the engines are of a type which produces images under control of a computer such that the images may be changed from print to print. Such printers are generally known as “digital” printing engines. Furthermore, while in the preferred embodiment of the invention, image transfer utilizing an intermediate transfer member is described, such transfer may be replaced by direct transfer from an imaging surface.




While the present invention has been described with respect to preferred embodiments thereof, these embodiments are presented by way of example only and are not meant to limit the scope of the invention which is defined by the claims. Furthermore, embodiments of the invention may incorporate some but not all features of the above preferred embodiments and may include combinations of features from different embodiments. As used in the claims the terms “comprise” or “include” and their conjugations shall mean “including but not necessarily limited to.”



Claims
  • 1. Duplex printing apparatus for printing on two sides of a sheet the apparatus comprising:an impression roller on which the sheet is held during printing; an imager which prints an image on a first side of the sheet while it is being held on the impression roller; and a sheet inverter which removes the sheet from the impression roller, inverts the sheet and returns it to the impression roller for printing on a second side of the sheet by the imager, wherein the sheet is held on said impression roller referenced to a first edge thereof during the printing of the first side thereof and is also held on the impression roller referenced to said first edge during printing of the second side thereof.
  • 2. Printing apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the sheet inverter positively controls the position of the sheet during the sheet during the inversion thereof, without releasing the sheet during the inversion.
  • 3. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said impression roller and said sheet inverter hold no more than two sheets at any one time.
  • 4. Duplex printing apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the sheet inverter comprises:a paper pick-off system which removes the sheet from the impression roller, after printing of the first side of the sheet, while the sheet is held referenced to said first edge; an inverting transport past which the first edge is carried while the sheet remains referenced to said first edge; and a sheet pick-off on said inverting transport which captures a second edge of the sheet, opposite the first edge while the sheet is still being held referenced to the first edge, such that said capture is made referenced to the first edge, said inverting transport transporting the second edge to the impression roller for capture by the impression roller, such that the second side of the sheet is present for printing by the imager.
  • 5. Apparatus according to claim 4 and including at least one intermediate transport which receives the sheet from the sheet pick-off and transports it to the inverting transport while the sheet remains referenced to the first edge.
  • 6. Apparatus according to claim 5 wherein the at least one intermediate transport comprises at least one roller.
  • 7. Apparatus according to claim 5 wherein a sheet path in the paper pick-off system, sheet pick-off and intermediate transport is at least the length of a plurality of sheets.
  • 8. Apparatus according to claim 4 wherein the paper pick-off system comprises at least one vacuum pick-off that picks the sheet off the impression roller and holds it while it is being inverted.
  • 9. Apparatus according to claim 8 wherein the at least one vacuum pick-off comprises two sets of vacuum pick-offs each comprising at least one pick-off, wherein the vacuum pick-offs pick offs alternate in picking sheets off the impression roller.
  • 10. Apparatus according to claim 8 and including a belt transport that receives a sheet from the at least one vacuum pick-off and transports it to the impression roller while positively holding the sheet referenced to the image printed on the first side.
  • 11. Apparatus according to claim 4 wherein the vacuum pick-offs rotate about an axis and have a radial extent from the axis and including at least one at least partial disks concentric with the axis and having a radial extent equal to the radial extent of the vacuum pick-offs.
  • 12. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the sheet inverter comprises a transport roller.
  • 13. Duplex printing apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the sheet inverter comprises a turn-over roller for sheet inversion.
  • 14. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the sheet inverter stops the motion of the sheet while positively holding it referenced to the printing on the first side and then moves the sheet in a reverse direction for capture by the impression roller.
  • 15. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said impression roller and said sheet inverter hold no more than two sheets at any one time.
  • 16. Apparatus according to claim 1 in which the imager comprises a plurality of imaging stations each of which transfers an image of a different color to the sheet.
  • 17. Apparatus according to claim 1 in which the imager includes an image forming surface on which the image is formed prior to transfer to the sheet.
  • 18. Apparatus according to claim 17 wherein the imager includes at least one intermediate transfer member to which images are transferred from the image forming surface and from which the images are transferred to the sheet.
  • 19. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the imager provides different images to the sides of the sheet.
  • 20. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the imager is an electrographic imager.
  • 21. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the imager is a powder toner imager.
  • 22. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the imager is a liquid toner imager.
  • 23. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the imager is an ink-jet or bubble jet imager.
  • 24. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the impression roller is adapted to hold a plurality of sheets at one time.
  • 25. Duplex printing apparatus for printing on two sides of a sheet, the apparatus comprising:an impression roller on which the sheet is held during printing, referenced to a first edge thereof; an imager which prints an image on first side of the sheet while it is being held on the impression roller; and a sheet inverter which removes the sheet from the impression roller, inverts the sheet and returns it to the impression roller for printing on a second side of the sheet by the imager, wherein the sheet inverter positively controls the position of the sheet from the removal of the sheet from the impression roller to the return of the sheet thereof after the inversion thereof, without releasing the sheet.
  • 26. Duplex printing apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the sheet inverter comprises: p1 a paper pick-off system which removes the sheet from the impression roller, after printing of the first side of the sheet, while the sheet is held referenced to said first edge;an inverting transport past which the first edge is carried while the sheet remains referenced to said first edge; and a sheet pick-off on said inverting transport which captures a second edge of the sheet, opposite the first edge while the sheet is still being held referenced to the first edge, such that said capture is made referenced to the first edge, said inverting transport transporting the second edge to the impression roller for capture by the impression roller, such that second side to the sheet is present for printing by the imager.
  • 27. Apparatus according to claim 26 and including at least one intermediate transport which receives the sheet from the sheet pick-off and transports it to the inverting transport while the sheet remains referenced to the first edge.
  • 28. Apparatus according to claim 27 wherein the at least one intermediate transport comprises at least one roller.
  • 29. Apparatus according to claim 27 wherein a sheet path in the paper pick-off system, sheet pick-off and intermediate transport is at least the length of a plurality of sheets.
  • 30. Apparatus according to claim 26 wherein the inverting transport comprises a transport roller.
  • 31. Apparatus according to claim 26 wherein the paper pick-off system comprises at least one vacuum pick-off that picks the sheet off the impression roller and holds it while it is being inverted.
  • 32. Apparatus according to claim 31 wherein the at least one vacuum pick-off comprises two sets of vacuum pick-offs each comprising at least one pick-off, wherein the vacuum pick-offs pick offs alternate in picking sheet off the impression roller.
  • 33. Apparatus according to claim 31 and including a belt transport that receives a sheet from the at least one vacuum pick-off and transports it to the impression roller while positively holding the sheet referenced to the image printed on the first side.
  • 34. Apparatus according to claim 31 wherein the vacuum pick-offs rotate about an axis and have a radial extent from the axis and including at least one at least partial disk concentric with the axis and having a radial extent equal to the radial extent of the vacuum pick-offs.
  • 35. Duplex printing apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the sheet inverter comprises a turn-over roller for sheet inversion.
  • 36. Apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the sheet inverter stops the motion of the sheet while positively holding it referenced to the printing on the first side and then moves the sheet in a reverse direction for capture by the impress roller.
  • 37. Apparatus according to claim 25 in which the imager comprises a plurality of imaging stations each of which transfers an image of a different color to the sheet.
  • 38. Apparatus according to claim 25 in which the imager includes an image forming surface on which the image is formed prior to transfer to the sheet.
  • 39. Apparatus according to claim 38 wherein the imager includes at least one intermediate transfer member to which images are transferred from the image forming surface and from which the images are transferred to the sheet.
  • 40. Apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the imager provides different images to the sides of the sheet.
  • 41. Apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the imager is an electrographic imager.
  • 42. Apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the imager is a powder toner imager.
  • 43. Apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the imager is a liquid toner imager.
  • 44. Apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the imager is an ink-jet or bubble jet imager.
  • 45. Apparatus according to claim 25 wherein the impression roller is adapted to hold a plurality of sheets at one time.
  • 46. A duplex printing method for printing on two sides of a sheet, the method comprising:printing an image on a first side of the sheet at a printing position, the sheet and thus said printing being referenced to a first edge thereof; inverting the sheet and returning it to the printing position while it remains referenced to said first edge; and printing an image on a second side of the sheet at said printing position while the sheet and thus said printing is referenced to said first edge.
  • 47. A printing method according to claim 46 wherein the position of the sheet is positively controlled during the step of inversion, without releasing the sheet between printing of the first and second sides thereof.
  • 48. A method according to claim 46 wherein the sheet is delivered to said printing position by a moving member on which the sheet is held while being referenced to said first edge.
  • 49. A method according to claim 48 wherein said sheet is printed while being moved by the moving member past the printing position and wherein the sheet is held at said first edge during printing of one side thereof and held by an opposite edge of the sheet during printing of the other side thereof.
  • 50. A method according to claim 48 wherein said sheet is printed while being moved past the printing position with said first edge passing the position ahead of the sheet during printing of one side of the sheet and wherein said first edge passes the printing position after the rest of the sheet during the printing of the other side of the sheet.
  • 51. A method according to claim 46 and including printing different images on the two sides of the sheet.
  • 52. A method according to claim 46 wherein inverting the sheet includes:moving the sheet to a first position while holding it referenced to the first edge; stopping it at the first position; and returning it to the printing position while it remains referenced to the first edge.
  • 53. A duplex printing method for printing on two sides of a sheet, the method comprising:printing an image on a first side of the sheet at a printing position, the sheet and thus said printing being referenced to a first edge thereof; inverting the sheet and returning it to the printing position; and printing an image on a second side of the sheet at said printing position, wherein the position of the sheet is positively controlled during printing and inversion thereof, without releasing the sheet, such that the printing on the second side thereof is referenced to the first edge.
  • 54. A method according to claim 53 wherein the sheet is delivered to said printing position by a moving member on which the sheet is held while being referenced to said first edge.
  • 55. A method according to claim 54 wherein said sheet is printed while being moved by the moving surface past the printing position and wherein the sheet is held at said first edge during printing of one side thereof and held by an opposite edge of the sheet during printing of the other side thereof.
  • 56. A method according to claim 54 wherein said sheet is printed while being moved past the printing position with said first edge passing the position ahead of the sheet during printing of one side of the sheet and wherein said first edge passes the printing position after the rest of the sheet during the printing of the other side of the sheet.
  • 57. A method according to claim 53 and including printing different images on the two sides of the sheet.
  • 58. A method according to claim 53 wherein inverting the sheet includes:moving the sheet to a first position while holding it referenced to the first edge; stopping it at the first position; and returning it to the printing position while it remains referenced to the first edge.
RELATED APPLICATION

The present application is a U.S. national stage application of PCT/IL98/00553, filed Nov. 11, 1998, and a continuation of PCT/IL98/00235, filed May 24, 1998.

PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/IL98/00553 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO99/61958 12/2/1999 WO A
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Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent PCT/IL98/00235 May 1998 US
Child 09/701049 US