1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a scrap stacking apparatus that can stack scraps generated upon executing processes on sheets, and detect its stacked state, and a sheet processing apparatus provided with such a scrap stacking apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
Conventionally, various sheet processing apparatuses provided with a processing portion that carries out a predetermined process on a sheet on which an image is formed by an image forming apparatus have been proposed. For the processing portion, for example, a perforating portion for carrying out a perforating process on a sheet and a shearing portion for carrying out a shearing process on a sheet bundle that has been saddle-stitched and folded in the middle to be formed into a book have been known. In the sheet processing apparatus having such a processing portion, since sheet scraps are generated by the perforating portion and the shearing portion, a sheet scrap stacking apparatus used for stacking the sheet scraps is installed. In such a sheet scrap stacking apparatus, a sheet scrap detection device composed of an oscillation portion and a receiving portion for detecting a fully stacked state of the sheet scraps is installed, as disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2001-293691. In this sheet scrap detection device, an electromagnetic wave, emitted by the oscillation portion, is directed into a dust box through an incident port for the electromagnetic wave formed on the dust box to be used for housing sheet scraps. When the dust box is fully filled with the sheet scraps, the electromagnetic wave that has been directed thereto is blocked by the sheet scraps to prevent it from reaching an exit port and the receiving portion so that the fully filled state of the sheet scraps is detected.
In the above-mentioned conventional art, however, the incident port and the exit port that allow the electromagnetic wave to pass therethrough need to be formed on the dust box. In the case where holes are formed as the incident and exit ports, there is a possibility that sheet scraps might leak through these holes to be scattered externally. In contrast, in the case where electromagnetic wave transmitting members are attached to the incident and exit ports, although scattering of sheet scraps outside the dust box can be prevented, sheet scraps that have been charged tend to adhere to the incident and exit ports, with the result that the fully stacked state might be detected prior to an actual fully filled state.
In view of the above problems, the present invention provides a scrap stacking apparatus that can prevent scraps from leaking outside and avoid an erroneous detection of the filled state of scraps.
In order to achieve the above-mentioned object, a scrap stacking apparatus according to the present invention includes a stacking portion to which scraps, generated in processing portions that carry out processes on sheets, are stacked, an oscillation portion that is placed out of the stacking portion, and generates an electromagnetic wave, and a receiving portion that is placed out of the stacking portion, and receives the electromagnetic wave oscillated by the oscillation portion through the stacking portion, wherein the oscillation portion generates an electromagnetic wave in a band from 30 GHz to 100 THz, and the electromagnetic wave, oscillated by the oscillation portion, is received by the receiving portion through the stacking portion so that a stacked state of the scraps housed in the stacking portion is detected.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
In the following, embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail as examples with reference to the drawings. Here, dimensions, materials, shapes and relative arrangement of structural components described in the following embodiments may be appropriately modified according to apparatus configurations to which the present invention is applied and various conditions. Therefore, unless otherwise specified, the scope of the present invention is not to be limited thereto.
First, referring to
The copying apparatus 1000 includes a document feeding portion 100, an image reader portion 200, a printer portion 300, a fold processing portion 400, a finisher 500, an inserter 900, a trimmer portion 1100, and the like. The fold processing portion 400, the inserter 900, the trimmer portion 1100 and the like can be installed as optional devices.
The document feeding portion 100 is used for successively feeding documents sheet by sheet toward an image reading position of the image reader portion 200. The image reader portion 200 reads the image of the document. The printer portion 300 forms an image on a sheet based on the image information of the document thus read in the image reader portion 200, or image information that has been sent thereto.
The finisher 500 captures sheets bearing images formed thereon from the printer portion 300, and arranges a plurality of sheets thus captured so as to bind them as one sheet bundle. Moreover, this also carries out a stapling process (binding process) in which the rear end of the sheet bundle is stapled and a perforating process in which the rear end of the sheet bundle is also perforated. Moreover, this further carries out sheet processes, such as a sorting process, a non-sorting process and a saddle-stitch bookbinding process.
The following description will discuss a configuration of the sheet processing apparatus together with a flow of the sheet. As illustrated in
The stapling process is carried out by the stapler 560 serving as the binding portion. The stapler 560 is allowed to shift in a width direction orthogonal to the sheet conveying direction so that the stapling process is executed at a desired position of the sheet bundle. The stack trays 700 and 701 are designed to be shiftable in upper and lower directions. The upper stack tray 701 can receive sheets from the upper discharge path 521 and the processing tray 550, and the lower stack tray 700 can receive sheets from the processing tray 550. In this manner, a large amount of sheets or a large amount of sheet bundles can be stacked on the stack trays 700 and 701 so that the sheets or sheet bundles stacked thereon are arranged, with their rear ends being regulated by a rear end guide 710 that extends longitudinally.
The following description will discuss a structure of a saddle-stitch bookbinding portion 800 in the finisher. Sheets, whose conveying path is switched to a saddle discharge path 523 by the switching member 514 installed in the middle of the lower discharge path 522, are sent to the saddle-stitch bookbinding portion 800. The sheets are received by a pair of saddle inlet rollers 801, and conveyed into a housing guide 803 of the saddle-stitch bookbinding portion 800, with the conveying inlet thereof being selected by a switching member 802 that is operated by a solenoid depending on sizes. The sheets thus conveyed therein are further conveyed by a sliding roller 804 until the tips thereof have been made in contact with a movable sheet positioning member 805. The pair of saddle inlet rollers 801 and the sliding roller 804 are driven by a motor M1. Moreover, in the mid position of the housing guide 803, a stapler 820, which serves as a binding portion, and whose divided portions are disposed to be opposed to each other with the housing guide 803 interposed therebetween, is installed. The stapler 820 is divided into a driver 820a that pushes needles out and an anvil 820b that bends the protruded needles. Additionally, upon conveying a sheet therein, the sheet positioning member 805 is stopped at a position that allows the center portion in the sheet conveying direction to be coincident with the binding position of the stapler 820. The sheet positioning member 805 is freely shifted upon being driven by the motor M2, and changes its position depending on the sheet sizes and the like.
A pair of folding rollers 810a and 810b is placed on the downstream side of the stapler 820, and a protruding member 830 is installed at an opposed position between the pair of folding rollers 810a and 810b. The protruding member 830 has a position retracted from the housing guide 803 as a home position. The protruding member 830, driven by a motor M3, protrudes toward a sheet bundle thus housed so that the sheet bundle is folded while being pushed into a nip of the pair of folding rollers 810a and 810b. Thereafter, the protruding member 830 again returns to its home position. Additionally, a pressure F1 that is sufficient to put a fold to the bundle is applied between the pair of folding rollers 810 from a spring, not illustrated. The bundle with the fold put thereon is conveyed by a pair of first fold conveying rollers 811a, 811b and a pair of second fold conveying rollers 812a, 812b. Pressures F2 and F3 that are sufficient to convey and stop the bundle with the fold put thereon are also applied to the pair of first fold conveying rollers 811 and the pair of second fold conveying rollers 812.
A conveying guide 813 is a conveying guide that connects the pair of folding rollers 810 and the pair of first fold conveying rollers 811 with each other. A conveying guide 814 is a conveying guide that connects the pair of first fold conveying rollers 811 and the pair of second fold conveying rollers 812. In this case, the pair of folding rollers 810, the pair of first fold conveying rollers 811 and the pair of second fold conveying rollers 812 are rotated at a uniform velocity by the same motor M4 (not illustrated).
The folding operations of the sheet bundle bound by the stapler 820 are executed after the sheet positioning member 805 has been lowered from the position relating to the stapling process by a predetermined distance after the completion of the stapling process so as to make the stapled position of the sheet bundle coincident with the nip position of the pair of folding rollers 810. Thus, the sheet bundle can be folded at the position that has been subjected to the stapling process.
A pair of alignment plates 815 serves as an aligning portion that aligns sheets housed in the housing guide 803, and has protruding faces into the housing guide 803, with the peripheral surfaces of the pair of folding rollers 810a and 810b being sandwiched in between. The pair of alignment plates 815 carries out a positioning process in the sheet width direction by moving in sandwiching directions relative to the sheets, when driven by a motor M5.
A fold press unit 860 is installed on the downstream side of the pair of second fold conveying rollers 812. The fold press unit 860 has a press holder 862 that supports pair of press rollers 861, and by shifting the press holder 862 in the direction of the fold, with the fold being nipped by the pair of press rollers 861, the fold is strengthened.
The inserter 900 is used for supplying sheets set in insert trays 901 and 902 by the user toward either the stack trays 701 and 700, or the saddle-stitch bookbinding portion, without passing them through the printer portion 300. The sheet bundle, stacked on the insert trays 901 and 902, are successively separated sheet by sheet, and allowed to join to the conveying path 520 at a desired timing.
The RAM 152 is used as an area for temporarily storing control data and a working area for operations relating to a controlling process. The external I/F 203 is an interface between the copying apparatus 1000 and an external computer 204, and develops print data from the computer 204 into a bit-mapped image, and outputs the image to the image signal controlling portion 202 as image data. Moreover, from the image reader controlling portion 201 to the image signal controlling portion 202, an image of a document, read by the image sensor (not illustrated), is output. The printer controlling portion 301 outputs image data received from the image signal controlling portion 202 to an exposure controlling portion (not illustrated).
Punch scraps (perforation scraps) as cut scraps generated upon carrying out punching operations as described above are stacked onto a scrap stacking apparatus, which is described below. Referring to
As illustrated in
The punch scrap detection portion 537 includes an oscillation portion 537a that oscillates an electromagnetic wave in a band from 30 GHz to 100 THz, and a receiving portion 537b. These portions are disposed face to face with each other with the punch scrap box 536 interposed therebetween, and every time the punching processes are carried out a predetermined number of times, a scanning operation is executed in an arrow E direction. When, after the scanning operation, the punching processes have been again carried out the predetermined number of times, the scanning operation is executed in an opposite arrow F direction this time. Every time the punching processes (perforating process) have been carried out the predetermined number of times, the above-mentioned scanning operation is repeated. Upon scanning, the electromagnetic wave, oscillated from the oscillation portion 537a, is transmitted through the punch scrap box 536, and at this time, the amplitude is attenuated. Moreover, the amplitude is also attenuated by the punch scraps P1 located inside the punch scrap box 536. By detecting the attenuated electromagnetic wave by the receiving portion 537b, the stacked amount of scraps (stacked state of cut scraps) inside the punch scrap box 536 is detected in a direction connecting the oscillation portion 537a and the receiving portion 537b.
More specifically, the oscillation portion 537a oscillates a continuation electromagnetic wave. Then, the attenuation of the amplitude of the electromagnetic wave which occurs when penetrating through the punch scrap box 536 and the punch scrap P1 is received by the receiving portion 537b. Thus, the stacked state of the punch scrap P1 stacked into the punch scrap box 536 (stacked state of punch scraps located between the oscillation portion 537a and the receiving portion 537b, and stacked state of punch scraps in a scanning direction from the oscillation portion 537a to the receiving portion 537b) can be detected.
Moreover, the punch scrap box 536 serving as a stacking portion is made from a material such as plastics that allow the electromagnetic wave oscillated by the oscillation portion 537a to transmit therethrough.
The following description will discuss processes that are carried out upon detecting the stacked amount of punch scraps P1. As illustrated in
Moreover, even in the case where punch scraps P1 have adhered to the inner wall face of the punch scrap box 536, as illustrated in
Moreover, the scrap stacking apparatus includes a vibrating portion (see
The vibrating portion 538 illustrated in
Moreover, the punch scrap box 536 is detachably attached to the apparatus main body. With this structure, in the case where the punch scrap box 536 is completely filled with punch scraps stacked therein, the punch scrap box 536 can be exchanged. Moreover, in a non-attached state of the punch scrap box 536, since no attenuation of electromagnetic wave (amplitude) is generated by the punch scrap box 536, the amplitude value of the detected electromagnetic wave becomes greater than the stored amplitude value, as illustrated in
The scraps stacking apparatus may be used as an apparatus that stacks and stores not only punch scraps generated in the punch unit in the finisher, but also sheet scraps generated in a shearing portion 1105 of the trimmer portion 1100, illustrated in
Referring to
Sheet scraps (cut scraps), derived from the saddle-stitch bundle cut by the upper blade 1105a and the lower blade 1105b that form the shearing portion 1105, are housed in a scrap box 1106 forming a stacking portion in the scrap stacking apparatus. After shearing processes for a predetermined number of sheets, the scrap detection portion 1112 carries out a scanning process in a depth direction of the scrap box 1106 to detect the stacked state of scraps. In the same manner as in the punch scrap detection portion 537, this scrap detection portion 1112 includes an oscillation portion 1112a that oscillates an electromagnetic wave in a band from 30 GHz to 100 THz, and a receiving portion 1112b. The detection method for the stacked state of scraps by this scrap detection portion 1112 is also carried out in the same manner as in the scrap stacking apparatus of the aforementioned punch unit.
The present embodiment is described by exemplifying a shearing portion that shears the smaller edge portion of a sheet bundle bound into a book; however, the shearing portion is not intended to be limited to this structure. For example, the shearing portion may be prepared as such a portion as to shear the upper and lower end portions of the sheet bundle bound into a book, or as such a portion as to shear the smaller edge portion as well as the upper and lower end portions of the sheet bundle. That is, the present invention is effectively applied to a scrap stacking apparatus used for stacking sheet scraps (cut scraps) generated upon shearing end portions of the sheet bundle by the shearing portion.
As described above, according to the present embodiment, by using an electromagnetic wave in a band range from 30 GHz to 100 THz having a permeating characteristic through polymer materials, the electromagnetic wave oscillated from the oscillation portion is allowed to transmit through the stacking portion and sheet scraps to reach the receiving portion. With this arrangement, since there is no need for preparing incident/exit ports for the electromagnetic wave, there is no possibility of leakage of cut scraps such as sheet scraps outside of the stacking portion. Moreover, even in the case where sheet scraps have adhered to the inner wall of the stacking portion, the electromagnetic wave is positively allowed to reach the receiving portion so that the stacked state of scraps housed in the stacking portion can be detected.
The embodiment has exemplified a perforating portion having at least one or more perforating patterns, and a shearing portion that shears the smaller edge portion and the upper and lower end portions of the sheet bundle bound into a book, as a processing portion for carrying out processes on sheets; however, the present invention is not intended to be limited to these structures. For example, the processing portion may carry out a binding process on the sheet bundle by using binding tools, such as needles, or may include a cutting portion used for cutting binding margins of the binding tools according to the thickness of the sheet bundle. In this case, the resulting scraps correspond to cut scraps generated upon cutting the binding margins of the binding tools according to the thickness of the sheet bundle. The present invention is effectively applied to such a scrap stacking apparatus that stacks these scraps.
Moreover, in the above-mentioned embodiment, a copying machine has been exemplified as the image forming apparatus; however, the present invention is not intended to be limited to this. For example, other image forming apparatuses, such as scanners, printers, and facsimile machines, and multifunction machines in which these functions are combined with one another, may also be used. By applying the present invention to a sheet processing apparatus or a scrap stacking apparatus to be used for these image forming apparatuses, the same effects can be obtained.
Moreover, in the above-mentioned embodiment, a scrap stacking apparatus (to which a stacking portion is detachably attached), which has a sheet processing apparatus as an integral apparatus, has been exemplified; however, the present invention is not intended to be limited to this structure. For example, a scrap stacking apparatus, which can be detachably attached to a sheet processing apparatus, may be used, and by applying the present invention to such a scrap stacking apparatus, the same effects can be obtained. Moreover, a scrap stacking apparatus, which is used for a sheet processing apparatus that is detachably attached to an image forming apparatus, has been exemplified; however, the present invention is not intended to be limited to this structure. For example, a scrap stacking apparatus that is integrally possessed by an image forming apparatus may also be used, and by applying the present invention to such a scrap stacking apparatus, the same effects can be obtained.
According to the present invention, by using an electromagnetic wave in a band range from 30 GHz to 100 THz that has a permeating characteristic through polymer materials, the electromagnetic wave, oscillated from the oscillation portion, is allowed to reach the receiving portion after passing through the stacking portion and sheet scraps. With this arrangement, since there is no need for preparing incident/exit ports for the electromagnetic wave, there is no possibility of leakage of cut scraps such as sheet scraps outside of the stacking portion. Moreover, even in the case where sheet scraps have adhered to the inner wall of the stacking portion, the electromagnetic wave is positively allowed to reach the receiving portion so that the stacked state of scraps housed in the stacking portion can be detected.
While the present invention has been described with reference 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 modifications, equivalent structures and functions.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2009-295865, filed Dec. 25, 2009, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-295865 | Dec 2009 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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8122798 | Shafer et al. | Feb 2012 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2001-293691 | Oct 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110154965 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |