The invention relates generally to the field of print finishing, and more particularly to a device and method for fixing toner onto a receiver, also referred to as a receiver, using an automated skive.
Many electrographic printers/copiers use rollers to feed material to a nip near a web. A pressure sensitive roller and a heated roller form a nip. During fusing, after printing, the pressure sensitive roller and heated roller are in pressure contact with one another in what is referred to as contact fusing. If heated rollers do contact the receiver it is referred to as contact fusing and if not they are referred to as non-contact fusing.
Although the non-contact fusers do reduce wear and maintenance in electrographic printers, many of the non-contact fusing systems have suffered from the absence of a contact roller for toner dot spreading, which acts as an assist for toner/receiver surface wetting and gloss modulation. This is due to the fact that the surface finish of the roller coating is normally used to act as a gloss modulator in contact fusing systems but is not available in the non-contact fusing systems currently available. Without the use of the roller, the non-contact fuser can cause large differences in toner gloss (luster) from light scattering off of separate toner particles at low to mid range color densities that produce low gloss, and solid high density layers of toner that produce high gloss. Rollers tend to modulate the gloss to near the finish of the roller coating except when toner particles are separated enough to scatter light at low lay-downs (or low to mid range color densities), where the rollers tend to spread the toner dots to reduce the light scattering effect that produces low gloss. Non-contact systems toner formulations can also produce various limitations for non-contact fusing image quality. Many non-contact fusers operate in conjunction with a toner that has a sharp melting point and attains a low enough viscosity to attain a high gloss level at high toner lay-downs (highest color densities). These toner types tend to have other associated problems such as cratering which leads to poor quality results. Cratering can be attributed to volatiles escaping through a molten toner layer: gasses push their way through the molten toner layer leaving a toner void surrounded by a rim of toner that looks very similar to a volcanic crater, or a meteor crater. In some cases the non-wetting of the toner melt can lead to image artifacts such as lower gloss and image density in a manner similar to cratering.
There is a need for a printer that wears well and does not have associated maintenance problems but also works well with a contact fuser. The self-adjusting intermittent fuse skive is described below works in conjunction with the electrographic printer.
In accordance with an object of the invention, an apparatus is provided for improving the quality of print finishes using a self-adjusting intermittent fuser skive, in conjunction with a fuser roller that minimally touches the roller to skive the paper and/or toner from the roller without wearing the roller surface.
The primary function of the self-actuated skive is to intermittently skive the paper and/or toner from a roller to prevent the paper and/or toner sticking to the roller and thus keep the paper moving along the transport path. The self-actuated skive intermittently touches the roller to minimize contact with the roller as the receiver moves along the transport path past the fuser by automatically optimizing the timing and force that the self-actuated skive touches the roller and prevent undesirable wear on the actuator tip and the roller surface and thus reduces print quality. The objective is to minimize any undesirable and unnecessary contact with the roller as the receiver moves along the transport path past the fuser by automatically optimizing the timing and force that the self-actuated skive touches the roller to minimize wear and maximize efficiency.
The present description will be directed in particular to elements forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, apparatus and methods in accordance with the present invention. It is to be understood that elements not specifically shown or described may take various forms well known to those skilled in the art.
In the apparatus and method of this invention more than one imaging member, as defined above, can be used. Typically, an apparatus for making single color final toner images has a single primary imaging member, and an apparatus for making multi-color final toner images has either one or more than one primary imaging members. In some embodiments of the invention, to make multi-color toner images, a single primary imaging member can be used to make each individual electrostatic image for each color separation and then the individual color toner images are transferred from the primary imaging member to the ITM sequentially and in registration. The method comprises forming one electrostatic image on a primary imaging member corresponding to one color in the desired toner image; toning by applying the corresponding color marking toner particles to the electrostatic image to form an individual color toner image; and transferring the individual color toner image to the surface of an ITM in the presence of an electric field which urges the individual toner image toward the ITM and repeating the forming, toning and transferring steps for each color separation in a desired toner image.
The electrographic apparatus 10 includes a controller or logic and control unit (LCU) 18 that is programmed to provide closed-loop control of printer 10 in response to signals from various sensors and encoders. Aspects of process control are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,121,986 incorporated herein by this reference. In the electrographic apparatus 10, a toner development station is provided for storing a supply of toner particles and selectively depositing toner particles on a latent image charge photoconductive drum and onto the receiver as shown in
The self-activated skive system 12 shown in
The actuating arm is moved about pivot 32 when a receiver 16 contacts the actuating arm as the receiver moves along said travel path P. The self-actuating skive may further interact with the controller 18 in communication with the self-actuating skive 14 and the roller to control the pressure on the receiver 16 as it passes the rollers 22 based on information received from the self-actuating skive 14. The self-actuating skive should have a somewhat smooth finish on the portion of the self-actuating skive potentially in contact with the receiver, such as the first end, so that the receiver moves past the self-actuating skive without hindrance since it is important to keep traction on the receiver to a minimum. It is equally important for the actuator tip to have a smooth surface so that it does not mark/wear the roller surface during the time it is in contact with the roller. This minimized the undesirable side effect described above.
The self-actuating skive 14 also can include a spring device 34 to control the tension on the self-actuating skive to control and balance the force the actuator tip exerts on the roller when it is engaged with the roller 22 so that the self-actuating skive can be spring actuated. A spring enhanced self-actuated skive may be useful to help customize the force the skive has on the roller 22 and to balance this force with the force the acting on the receiver as it moves along the first travel path P past the self-actuated skive 14.
A controller, including a tension controller, can be control the tension on the self-actuating skive by controlling the force between self-actuated skive and the roller. A skive profile may be stored and/or created on self-actuated skive to work with the spring to controllably decrease and/or increase the force between the skive and the roller. The receiver, which has at least one property such as thickness, can interact with the controller logic and control system may adjust the predetermined amount of spring force according to that one or other properties. For example a thicker substrate will move the actuator tip farther from the roller surface and it will be more important for the system to get the actuator tip back in to the skiving (touching) position after the sheet leaves the actuator arm.
Referring now to the accompanying drawings,
The surface of the fuser roller 110 can be externally heated by heater rollers, 140 and 142, which are of incandescent or ohm-rated heating filament 141 and 143, or internally heated by the incandescent or ohm-rated heating filament 117, or heated by the combination of both external heater rollers, 140 and 142, and internally heating incandescent or ohm-rated filament 117. A counteracting pressure roller 130 rotating in the direction A′, countering the fuser roller rotating direction A forms a fusing nip 300 with the fuser roller 110 made of a plurality of compliant layers. An image-receiving receiver 212, generally paper, carrying unfused toner 211, i.e., fine thermoplastic powder of pigments, facing the fuser roller 110 is shown approaching the fusing nip 300. The receiver is fed by employing well know mechanical transports (not shown) such as a set of rollers or a moving web for example. The fusing station is preferable driven by one roller, for instance the fusing roller, 110, with pressure roller 130 and optional heater rollers, 140 and 142, being driven rollers.
The fuser member can be a pressure or fuser plate, pressure or fuser roller, a fuser belt or any other member on which a release coating is desirable. The support for the fuser member can be a metal element with or without additional layers adhered to the metal element. The metal element can take the shape of a cylindrical core, plate or belt. The metal element can be made of, for example, aluminum, stainless steel or nickel. The surface of the metal element can be rough, but it is not necessary for the surface of the metal element to be rough to achieve good adhesion between the metal element and the layer attached to the metal element. The additional support layers adhered to the metal element are layers of materials useful for fuser members, such as, silicone rubbers, fluoroelastomers and primers.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.