1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a recording-material identifying apparatus configured to pick up an image of the surface of a recording material to identify the surface properties thereof, and to an image forming apparatus configured to control image-forming conditions based on the identification result.
2. Description of the Related Art
In a conventional image forming apparatus, a user sets the type (size, etc.,) of a recording material through a computer, serving as an external apparatus, an operation panel provided on the body of the image forming apparatus, or the like. Transfer conditions (transfer voltage and conveyance speed of the recording material during transfer) at a transfer unit, fixing conditions (fixing temperature and conveyance speed of the recording materials during fixing), etc., are controlled based on the user's setting.
To spare users from such an inconvenience, namely, setting the type of the recording material through a computer or an operation panel, there has been provided an image forming apparatus having a sensor for identifying the type of a recording material to automatically identify the type of the recording material. Such an image forming apparatus having the sensor automatically identifies the type of a recording material and is controlled such that the transfer conditions, the fixing conditions, etc., are set based on the identification result.
More specifically, as disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2002-182518, an image of the surface of a recording material is picked up using a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS), and the surface smoothness is detected from the picked-up image to identify the type of the recording material. Then, the image forming conditions are determined based on the identification result.
In such an apparatus that picks up an image of the surface of the recording material, a precise image of the surface of the recording material is picked up by making the distance between the recording material and the sensor constant. For example, Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2002-111964 proposes a configuration in which, while a recording material is pressed by a pressing member, a surface image of a part not pressed by the pressing member is read.
In some cases, the identification accuracy can be improved by reading a surface image of a part not pressed by the pressing member, as in the case of Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2002-111964 described in the related art section. However, depending on the type of the recording material, the identification accuracy can be improved by reading a surface image of a part pressed by the pressing member. Therefore, with a sensor having the structure disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2002-111964, the identification accuracy is decreased in certain types of the recording material. Although it is possible to pick up a surface image of a part not pressed by the pressing member and a surface image of a part pressed by the pressing member using separate sensors, such a configuration leads to an increase in cost because it requires two sensors.
The present invention has been made in view of the above-described circumstances, and it can improve the accuracy of identifying the recording material with a low-cost sensor configuration.
The present invention provides a recording-material identifying apparatus including an illuminating unit configured to illuminate a recording material with light; a pressing member configured to press the recording material to form, in the recording material, a first pressing area and a second pressing area, a pressing force in the second pressing area being smaller than that in the first pressing area; an image-pickup unit configured to pick up images of light reflected by the recording material that is illuminated by the illuminating unit and is pressed by the pressing member as surface images of the recording material; and a control unit configured to identify the type of the recording material based on the surface images in the first pressing area and second pressing area that are picked up by the image-pickup unit.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Embodiments of the present invention will be described below with reference to the drawings. Note that the following embodiments do not limit the scope of the invention described in the claims, and not all the combinations of features described in the embodiments are needed to solve the problem.
A recording-material identifying apparatus according to this embodiment can be used in an image forming apparatus, such as a copier or a printer.
An image forming apparatus 1 shown in
The image forming apparatus 1 further includes developing units 14Y, 14M, 14C, and 14K that make the electrostatic latent images formed on the photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K visible; toner conveying rollers 15Y, 15M, 15C, and 15K that supply toner in the developing units 14Y, 14M, 14C, and 14K to the portions facing the photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K; primary transfer rollers 16Y, 16M, 16C, and 16K for the respective colors that primarily transfer the images formed on the photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K; an intermediate transfer belt 17 that carries the primarily transferred images; driving rollers 18 that drive the intermediate transfer belt 17; a secondary transfer roller 19 that transfers the image formed on the intermediate transfer belt 17 to the recording material P; a secondary-transfer opposing roller 20 that faces the secondary transfer roller 19; a fixing unit 21 that fusion-fixes the toner image transferred to the recording material P while conveying the recording material P; and a discharge roller 22 that discharges the recording material P having gone through the fixing process in the fixing unit 21.
The photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K, the charging rollers 12Y, 12M, 12C, and 12K, the developing units 14Y, 14M, 14C, and 14K, and the toner conveying rollers 15Y, 15M, 15C, and 15K for each color are integrated as a single unit. The unit including the photoconductive drum, the charging roller, and the developing unit is called a cartridge. The cartridges for the respective colors can be easily attached to and detached from the image forming apparatus 1.
Next, an image-forming operation of the image forming apparatus 1 will be described. Print data containing a print instruction and image information are input from a host computer or the like (not shown) to the image forming apparatus 1. The image forming apparatus 1 then starts a printing operation, and a recording material P is fed from the sheet-feed cassette 2 or the sheet-feed tray 3 by the sheet-feed roller 4 or the sheet-feed roller 4′ into a conveyance path. The recording material P stops at the conveying roller 5 and the conveying opposing roller 6 and waits until an image is formed, so that an image-forming operation, in which an image is formed on the intermediate transfer belt 17, and the conveyance of the recording material P are synchronized. At the same time when the recording material P is fed, the charging rollers 12Y, 12M, 12C, and 12K charge the photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K at a certain potential (image-forming operation). The optical units 13Y, 13M, 13C, and 13K scan the laser beam across the surfaces of the charged photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K according to the input print data, thereby forming electrostatic latent images thereon. The developing units 14Y, 14M, 14C, and 14K and the toner conveying rollers 15Y, 15M, 15C, and 15K develop the electrostatic latent images formed on the photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K to make them visible. The electrostatic latent images formed on the surfaces of the photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K are developed as color images by the developing units 14Y, 14M, 14C, and 14K. The photoconductive drums 11Y, 11M, 11C, and 11K are in contact with the intermediate transfer belt 17 and, thus, are rotated in synchronization with the rotation of the intermediate transfer belt 17. The developed images are sequentially transferred to the intermediate transfer belt 17 in an overlapping manner by the primary transfer rollers 16Y, 16M, 16C, and 16K. The images are then transferred to the recording material P by the secondary transfer roller 19 and the secondary-transfer opposing roller 20.
Then, in synchronization with the image-forming operation, the recording material P is conveyed to a secondary transfer section to be subjected to the secondary transfer. The image formed on the intermediate transfer belt 17 is transferred to the recording material P by the secondary transfer roller 19 and the secondary-transfer opposing roller 20. The toner image transferred to the recording material P is fixed by the fixing unit 21 that includes the fixing roller etc. The recording material P after the fixing process is discharged by the discharge roller 22 onto a paper output tray (not shown). Thus, the image-forming operation is completed.
In the image forming apparatus in
Next, referring to
The recording-material identifying apparatus 40 shown in
Furthermore, the conveying roller 5 and the conveying opposing roller 6 that convey the recording material P, and a conveyance guide (not shown) that forms a conveyance path for the recording material P, are provided as a mechanism for conveying the recording material P. Although the illuminating LED 41 used in this embodiment is a white-color LED, the illuminating LED 41 is not limited to a white-color LED, as long as it can illuminate the recording material P.
Note that the pressing member 48 does not necessarily have to press the recording material P at both tight contact area and non-tight-contact area. For example, the tight contact area may serve as a pressing area where the recording material P is pressed, and the non-tight-contact area, in which the diameter of the pressing member 48 is small, may serve as a non-pressing area where the recording material P is not pressed.
As shown in
In the identification processing unit 45, the received surface images of the recording material P are subjected to AD conversion in an A-D converter 451. Thus, images on the same straight line perpendicular to the conveying direction of the recording material P are obtained. In this embodiment, an 8-bit A-D conversion IC is used, and the A-D converter 451 outputs a value in the range from 0 to 255. An image extracting device 452 and a storage area 455 connect the received surface images of the recording material P in the conveying direction to form a two-dimensional surface image. In this embodiment, the recording material P is conveyed at a speed of 80 mm/s, and the CMOS line sensor 43 has a resolution of 600 dpi per line (about 42 μm per dot). Therefore, the image size is 236 dots×118 dots, and an image of an area having a size of about 10 mm×5 mm of the recording material P can be picked up. The CMOS line sensor 43 picks up an image at 42 μam/(80 mm/s), at an interval of about 530 μs or more. This prevents the image-pickup areas of the recording material P from overlapping.
From the thus-obtained two-dimensional surface images, a surface image used to identify the type of the recording material P is extracted according to the information about the optical axis and effective image area stored in the storage area 455. At this time, to identify the type of the recording material P, the shading of the surface image is corrected. In a feature value calculator 453, the feature value is calculated from the extracted surface image. Based on the result calculated by the feature value calculator 453, a sheet-type identifying device 454 identifies the sheet type. The result obtained by the sheet-type identifying device 454 is output to an image-forming condition control section 101 of a control unit 10, which controls the image-forming conditions based on the result. The image-forming conditions include the transfer voltage, the conveyance speed of the recording material P, the temperature of the fixing unit, etc. For example, when, as a result of the sheet-type identification, the recording material P is determined to be bond paper, whose fixing characteristics are not good compared with plain paper, control, such as slowing down the conveyance speed of the recording material P to increase the fixing time in the fixing unit 21, increasing the fixing temperature, or the like is performed. The storage area 455 stores the current value for controlling emission of the LED 41, the light-intensity target value needed to adjust the light intensity (described below), and dark current data when the LED 41 is OFF and light-intensity variation data when the LED 41 is ON, which are used to correct light intensity variation (described below).
In the tight contact area, because fluttering of the recording material P during conveyance can be significantly reduced, variation of the focal point of the image-pickup unit is reduced. Thus, an accurate surface image can be picked up. As a result, the difference in surface smoothness can be further accentuated, and a stable output value can be obtained. Thus, the identification accuracy is improved. However, recording materials P like coated paper, which have relatively flat surface properties compared with plain paper, may adhere to the reading surface of the image-pickup unit. This causes the light emitted to the recording material P, at a part adhered to the reading surface, to be specularly reflected, and hence, the light is not reflected to the image-pickup unit. As a result, the surface image picked up from this part is darker than the actual brightness of the surface of coated paper. That is, with the surface image picked up in the tight contact area, the identification accuracy of recording materials P like plain paper, whose surface properties are not relatively smooth, can be improved, whereas the identification accuracy of recording materials P like coated paper, whose surface properties are relatively smooth and smooth, is difficult to improve.
On the other hand, in the non-tight-contact area, if fluttering of the recording material P during conveyance occurs, the picked up surface image may be blurred. The output value of a blurred surface image may be lower than that of the surface image picked up in the tight contact area. However, with recording materials P like coated paper, whose surface properties are relatively smooth, even if fluttering of the recording material P during conveyance occurs, it is possible to pick up a surface image that is more precise than a surface image picked up when the recording material P adheres to the image-pickup surface in the tight contact area. That is, the surface image picked up in the non-tight-contact area may be affected by conveyance fluttering when recording materials P like plain paper, whose surface properties are not relatively smooth, are used, and the identification accuracy may be decreased compared with the surface image picked up in the tight contact area. However, in the case of recording materials P like coated paper, whose surface properties are relatively smooth, even if they are affected by conveyance fluttering, the identification accuracy is improved compared with the surface image picked up in the tight contact area.
A method of improving the accuracy of identifying the recording material P by combining the merits of the surface image in the tight contact area and the surface image in the non-tight-contact area will be described in detail below.
Referring to
Referring to the flowchart in
In step S102, the control unit 10 determines to which group, in the graph in
In step S103, the control unit 10 determines whether the recording material P is bond paper or plain paper, which can be determined based on the feature value A. Because the feature value A obtained from the surface image picked up in the tight contact area is a stable output value without the influence of conveyance fluttering, the type of the recording material P can be accurately identified. Based on the type of the recording material P identified, the image-forming conditions of the image forming apparatus are controlled.
In step S104, the control unit 10 calculates the feature value B of the surface roughness using the surface image picked up in the non-tight-contact area. The calculation is performed in the same way as the calculation of the feature value A.
In step S105, the control unit 10 calculates the difference between the feature value A calculated in step S101 and the feature value B calculated in step S104 (A−B). By calculating the difference between the feature value A and the feature value B, whether the output value of the feature value A indicates the recording material P with smooth surface properties or the recording material P with non-smooth surface properties is determined.
In step S106, the control unit 10 identifies the type of the recording material P based on the difference between the feature values (A−B). When the difference (A−B) is small, the recording material P is determined to be plain paper, because such a small difference between the output values of the surface images picked up in the tight contact area and in the non-tight-contact area is caused by conveyance fluttering. When the difference (A−B) is large, the recording material P is determined to be coated paper, because such a large difference between the output values of the surface images picked up in the tight contact area and in the non-tight-contact area is caused by the smooth recording material P being adhered to the reading surface, and by an image darker than the actual brightness that represents its surface properties being picked up. Although plain paper and coated paper are distinguished based on the difference between the feature values A and B (A−B), they may be distinguished based only on the feature value B. Because the feature value B obtained from coated paper tends to be lower than that obtained from plain paper, the recording material P can be identified according to the output distribution shown in
As has been described, by making it possible to pick up surface images in the tight contact area and the non-tight-contact area using a single pressing member, the accuracy of identifying the recording material P is improved using surface images in the tight contact area and the non-tight-contact area.
In the first embodiment, the method of identifying the recording material utilizing a roller-shaped pressing member capable of forming a tight contact area and a non-tight-contact area has been described. In this embodiment, a configuration in which the tight contact area and the non-tight-contact area can be formed by improving the configuration of the image-pickup surface of an image-pickup unit will be described. Note that the same reference numerals refer to the same configurations as in the above-described first embodiment, and a description thereof will be omitted.
As shown in
Note that the pressing member 48 does not necessarily have to press the recording material P at both tight contact area and non-tight-contact area. For example, the tight contact area may serve as a pressing area where the recording material P is pressed, and the non-tight-contact area, in which the diameter of the pressing member 48 is small, may serve as a non-pressing area where the recording material P is not pressed. Furthermore, in the non-tight-contact area, the configuration of the pressing member 48 described in the first embodiment may be incorporated; the groove 47a may be provided in the protection member 47, and the diameter of the pressing member 48 may be reduced.
Because the groove is provided in the protection member 47, paper dust from the recording material P may deposit in the groove. To prevent paper dust from depositing, a gentle slope downward toward the CMOS line sensor 43 is formed in the protection member 47, from the upstream side toward the downstream side in the conveying direction of the recording material P, as shown in
In the first embodiment, the configuration in which the tight contact area and the non-tight-contact area are formed by providing a step in the pressing member, in the rotation direction thereof, has been described. In this embodiment, a configuration in which the tight contact area and the non-tight-contact area are formed by providing a step in the pressing member, in the direction perpendicular to the rotation direction thereof, will be described. Note that the same reference numerals refer to the same configurations as in the above-described first embodiment, and a description thereof will be omitted.
As shown in
Referring to the flowchart in
In step S203, the control unit 10 performs picking up of the surface image until a predetermined number of pixels needed in the conveying direction is reached. Although the number of pixels needed is 118 pixels in this embodiment, the number of pixels needed for identifying the recording material P is not limited thereto. In step S204, the control unit 10 performs picking up of a surface image in the non-tight-contact area, after a predetermined period of time has elapsed since the pressing member 48 started rotating. The “predetermined period of time” is a period of time needed for the pressing member 48 to form a stable non-tight-contact area, and, in this embodiment, the pressing member 48 starts to rotate clockwise from the position shown in
In step S205, the control unit 10 performs picking up of the surface image until a predetermined number of pixels needed in the conveying direction is reached. Although the number of pixels needed is 118 pixels in this embodiment, the number of pixels needed for identifying the recording material P is not limited thereto. In step S206, when the surface images in the tight contact area and the non-tight-contact area have been picked up, the control unit 10 causes the pressing member 48 to stop rotation at the position shown in
In this manner, by controlling the rotation of the pressing member 48, surface images in the tight contact area and the non-tight-contact area can be picked up. By performing the method of identifying the recording material P, described with reference to the flowchart in
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-242461 | Oct 2010 | JP | national |
2011-194964 | Sep 2011 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation application of application Ser. No. 13/272,101, filed on Oct. 12, 2011, which claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-242461 filed Oct. 28, 2010, and Japanese Patent Application No. 2011-194964 filed Sep. 7, 2011, which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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8861999 | Ishida et al. | Oct 2014 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2013210240 | Oct 2013 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140376936 A1 | Dec 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13272101 | Oct 2011 | US |
Child | 14482483 | US |