The present invention relates to a sheet processing apparatus including a binding portion configured to bind a bundle of sheets, and to an image forming apparatus.
Hitherto, some image forming apparatuses such as a copier, a laser beam printer, a facsimile machine, and a multi-function printer are provided with a sheet processing apparatus configured to carry out such a process as stapling on sheets on which images have been formed. Such a sheet processing apparatus is configured to bind a sheet bundle by using a metallic staple. Such a stapling process using the staple is adopted in many sheet processing apparatuses because it enables to bind a plurality of output sheets reliably at a position specified by a user.
However, it is necessary, and hence troublesome, to remove the staple in putting the stapled sheets through a shredder. It is also necessary and troublesome to remove the staple to separate the sheets and the staple in recycling the stapled sheet bundle from an aspect of environmental concerns.
Due to that, Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2010-189101 proposes a sheet binding apparatus provided with a pair of die members having concave and convex teeth. This sheet binding apparatus binds a sheet bundle by entangling fibers of the overlapping sheets with each other by forming concave and convex portions on the sheet bundle in a thickness direction thereof by engaging the pair of die members after stacking and aligning the sheets. That is, this sheet binding apparatus binds the fibrous sheets without using staples.
However, such a sheet binding apparatus is liable to cause such a problem that the sheet is torn and paper powder thereof attaches on the teeth of the die members if the sheet bundle on the way of the binding process is forcibly pulled and taken out due to such a reason of jamming of a sheet.
Still further, if a number of times of the binding process increases, the paper powder generated during a fastening process may accumulate between the teeth of the pair of die members. If the paper powder attaches on the teeth or accumulates between the teeth as described above, there is a possibility that the paper powder affects the engagement of the upper and lower dies in executing a next binding process and drops a fastening power of the sheet bundle that has been bound.
A sheet processing apparatus of the present invention includes a sheet stacking portion configured to stack a plurality of sheets, a binding portion having first and second die portions disposed so as to face with each other and having a plurality of concave and convex teeth that engage with each other, the binding portion binding a sheet bundle formed on the sheet stacking portion by biting the sheet bundle by the first and second die portions, and a control portion controlling the binding portion to carry out a binding process of binding the sheet bundle by biting the sheet bundle by the first and second die portions and to carry out a cleaning process of engaging the first and second die portions in a non-binding process in which no binding process is carried out.
It is possible to remove dusts of the sheet attaching to the teeth of the die portions and to prevent a drop of fastening power in a binding process by causing the binding portion to carry out the cleaning process of engaging the first and second die portions in the non-binding process.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
An embodiment for carrying out the present invention will be described below in detail with reference to the drawings.
The apparatus body 200 includes an image forming portion 201 configured to form an image and a feed portion 230 configured to feed a sheet to the image forming portion 201. The image forming portion 201 includes a photoconductive drum 203, an exposure portion 202 configured to form an electrostatic latent image on the photoconductive drum 203, and a developer 205 configured to visualize the electrostatic latent image formed on the photoconductive drum 203. The feed portion 230 includes cassettes 231 through 234 in which sheets are stored, a pickup roller 238 configured to feed the sheets stored in the cassettes 231 through 234, and a separating portion 237 configured to separate the sheets to be fed one by one.
The image forming apparatus 1 is also provided with a finisher 500, i.e., a sheet processing apparatus, between an upper surface of the apparatus body 200 and the image reading apparatus 100, and with a control portion 600 configured to control the finisher 500 and the apparatus body 200.
Next, an image forming operation of the image forming apparatus 1 configured as described above will be described. Documents set in the document feeding portion 120 are fed one by one in order from a top page and conveyed on the platen glass 122. The image reading apparatus 100 reads an image of the document conveyed on the platen glass 122 by irradiating the document by a lamp of the scanner unit 124 and by leading light reflected from the document to the image sensor 129 through first and second minors 125 and 126 and the lens 127. The document from which its image has been read is discharged to the discharge tray 112.
The image of the document read by the image sensor 129 undergoes image processing and is sent to the exposure portion 202 which irradiates a laser beam to the photoconductive drum 203 whose surface is homogeneously charged. The laser beam is reflected by a rotating polygon minor and is turned back further by a reflection minor to be irradiated to the photoconductive drum 203 to form an electrostatic latent image on the photoconductive drum 203. This electrostatic latent image is then developed by the developer 205 as a toner image and the toner image is transferred to a transfer belt 211.
Concurrently with this image forming operation, the sheet stored in the cassettes 231 through 234 is selectively sent out by the pickup roller 238, is separated one by one by the separating portion 237, and is sent to a transfer position in synchronism with rotation of the photoconductive drum 203. Then, the toner image that has been transferred to the transfer belt 211 is transferred to the sheet in the transfer position. After that, the sheet on which the toner image has been transferred is conveyed to a fixing roller pair 206 and undergoes heating and pressing processes performed by the fixing roller pair 206 to fix the toner image on the sheet. The sheet on which the toner image has been fixed is led to the finisher 500 by a discharge roller pair 207.
As shown in
The discharge roller 508 is provided along a conveying path 507 connected with the apparatus body 200, and conveys the sheet lead by the discharge roller pair 207 of the apparatus body 200 into the finisher 500. The discharge roller 508 is driven by a conveyance motor M750 shown in
The swing and guide portion 50 is provided with a swing arm 551, a swing cam 554 and a swing roller 550 rotatably disposed at one end of the swing arm 551. The swing arm 551 is disposed downstream in a sheet conveying direction of the discharge roller 508 and above the conveying path 507 and is supported swingably in an up-and-down direction centering on a swing shaft 552. A tensile spring 555 that biases the swing arm 551 clockwise is attached at another end of the swing arm 551.
The swing cam 554 is provided above the swing arm 551 and is supported rotatably in the up-and-down direction centering on the cam shaft 553. The swing cam 554 rotates downward when the cam shaft 553 is rotated by a swing arm driving motor M751 shown in
The swing roller 550 rotatably supported at one end of the swing arm 551 is rotated by a swing roller driving motor M752 shown in
The sheet processing portion 51 is provided with an intermediate processing tray 540 serving as a sheet stacking portion, a return belt 560, a rear end stopper 562, front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542 serving as a pair of aligning members shown in
The return belt 560 is suspended around a pulley 508a provided around a rotary shaft of the discharge roller 508 and a driven pulley 564 and conveys the sheet discharged to the intermediate processing tray 540 to an upstream in the sheet conveying direction by rotating while being in contact with the sheet stacked on the intermediate processing tray 540. It is noted that the return belt 560 is configured so as to recede in a sheet thickness direction corresponding to a number of sheets stacked on the intermediate processing tray 540. The rear end stopper 562 is disposed at an upstream end in the sheet conveying direction of the intermediate processing tray 540 and aligns a position of the sheets in the sheet conveying direction by abutting against an upstream end in the sheet conveying direction of the sheets conveyed upstream in the sheet conveying direction by the return belt 560.
The front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542 are constructed to be movable in a width direction intersecting with the sheet conveying direction on the intermediate processing tray 540, and align a widthwise position of the sheets by pressing widthwise both ends of the sheets in moving in the width direction. It is noted that the front aligning plate 541 is driven by a front aligning plate motor M753 shown in
Home positions of the front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542 are set at positions where they do not contact with the sheet when the sheet is conveyed to the intermediate processing tray 540. These home positions are also positions where the front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542 reside when the finisher 500 is not operative. Moves of the front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542 to the home positions are controlled by signals from front and rear aligning plate home sensors S772 and S773 shown in
In response to the conveyance of a sheet by the swing and guide portion 50, the front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542 move to predetermined standby positions set in advance corresponding to sizes of the sheet (longitudinal and widthwise lengths). The sheet bundle stacking portion 52 includes a stacking tray 504 configured to stack the sheets (sheet bundle) processed in the sheet processing portion 51.
The staple-less binding unit 10 is a binding portion having lower and upper teeth 1014 and 1010 detailed later and binds the sheet bundle formed on the intermediate processing tray 540 by biting by the lower and upper teeth 1014 and 1010. Specifically, as shown in
Here, the gear 105 is mounted to a rotational shaft 106. Then, a cam 107 is mounted to the rotary shaft 106 as shown in
When the cam 107 thus rotates, a cam-side end portion of the upper arm 109 in pressure contact with the cam 107 through an intermediary of a roller 108 as shown in
With this arrangement, the end portion on the side opposite from the cam 107 of the upper arm 109 drops when the cam-side end portion of the upper arm 109 rises and along with that, the upper teeth 1010 drop and engage with the lower teeth 1014, pressing the sheets interposed between the upper and lower teeth. When the sheets are pressed as described above, fibers of surfaces of the sheets S are exposed as the sheets are stretched. By being pressed further, the fibers of the sheets are entangled with each other and are fastened. That is, the sheets are fastened in the binding process carried out on the sheets (sheet bundle) by biting (pressure-engaging) the sheets by the upper teeth 1010 of the upper arm 109 and the lower teeth 1014 of the lower arm 1012 by swinging the upper arm 109. It is noted that the binding process of binding a sheet bundle by biting the sheet bundle between the lower and upper teeth 1014 and 1010 of the binding unit 10 without using staples will be referred to as a ‘staple-less binding process’ in the explanation hereinafter.
The CPU circuit portion 630 includes a CPU 629, a ROM 631, and a RAM 655. The CPU 629 controls the document feeder control portion 632, the image reader control portion 633, the image signal control portion 634, the printer control portion 635, and the finisher control portion 636 in accordance to programs stored in the ROM 631 and settings input from the manipulating portion 601. The RAM 655 is used as an area for temporarily holding control data and as a working area for calculations accompanying to the controls. It is noted that the RAM 655 also stores information on occurrence of jamming, errors and the like.
The document feeder control portion 632 controls the document feeding apparatus 121, and the image reader control portion 633 controls the scanner unit 124, the image sensor 129 and others that read information of a document fed from the document feeding apparatus 121 (see
The finisher control portion 636 is mounted in the finisher 500, and controls the whole drive of the finisher 500 while exchanging information with the CPU circuit portion 630. As shown in
Sensor signals from units and others connected with the CPU 701, the network interface 704 and the communication interface 706 are input to input ports of an input/output portion (I/O) 705 of the finisher control portion 636. Meanwhile, output ports of the input/output portion (I/O) 705 are connected with the conveyance control portion 707, the intermediate processing tray control portion 708 and the staple-less binding control portion 709. Then, the CPU 701 outputs predetermined signals from the output ports of the input/output portion (I/O) 705 to the respective driving systems of the conveyance control portion 707, the intermediate processing tray control portion 708 and the staple-less binding control portion 709.
The conveyance control portion 707 controls conveyance of a sheet to be conveyed to the finisher 500 by controlling the sheet position detecting sensor 5770 and the conveyance motor M750. The intermediate processing tray control portion 708 controls and drives the respective home sensors 5771, 5772 and 5773 and the respective motors M751, M752, M753, and M754. The intermediate processing tray control portion 708 controls the moves of the front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542, the drive of the return belt 560, the swinging motion of the swing arm 551, and the rotation of the swing roller 550 by thus controlling the respective home sensors and the respective motors. The staple-less binding control portion 709 controls the binding operation of the staple-less binding unit 10 by controlling a home sensor S10 detecting a position of the cam 107, and the clinch motor M10.
Next, a sheet processing operation carried out by the finisher 500 will be described. As shown in
Next, the swing roller 550 rotates counterclockwise by being driven by the swing roller driving motor M752, so that the sheet S is pulled in upstream in the sheet conveying direction. After that, the swing roller 550 rotates until when the rear end (upstream end in the sheet conveying direction) of the sheet S comes in contact with the return belt 560 as shown in
Next, when the alignment of the sheet S in the sheet conveying direction on the intermediate processing tray 540 ends, the widthwise alignment of the sheet S is conducted by the front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542. After the alignment, a sheet bundle 51 is formed on the intermediate processing tray 540 as shown in
When the staple-less binding unit 10 is to carry out the staple-less binding on the sheets, the staple-less binding unit 10 detects the cam position by the home sensor S10 shown in
Then, when the sheet bundle is to be bound, the staple-less binding unit 10 rotates the clinch motor M10 to swing the upper arm 109 clockwise centering on the shaft 1011 by the cam 107. Then, when the cam 107 comes to a top dead point as shown in
After that, when the cam 107 rotates further and arrives again at the bottom dead point, the home sensor S10 detects the cam 107 and the rotation of the clinch motor M10 is stopped.
When the binding process on the sheet bundle S1 ends, the swing roller 550 rotates clockwise by being driven by the swing roller driving motor M752 in a condition in which the swing roller 550 nips the sheet bundle S1 with the driven roller 571 and discharges the sheet bundle S1 on the stacking tray 504 as shown in
By the way, there is a case when the image forming apparatus or the sheet processing apparatus halts or the staple-less binding unit causes an error during the staple-less binding operation carried out on the sheet bundle as described above by the reason of jamming or the like. If the sheet bundle is pulled out here to take out the sheet bundle on which the staple-less binding is being implemented, there is a case when the sheet is torn and paper powders attach on the teeth of the die portions. Still further, even if the staple-less binding process is carried out normally, there is a case when the die portions collect paper powders generated during the fastening process between teeth thereof if a number of times of the staple-less binding process increases. Then, if such paper powders attach on the teeth of the die portions or are collected between the teeth, the paper powders affect the engagement of the lower and upper die portions and drop a fastening power of a next sheet bundle on which a next staple-less binding process is carried out.
Then, in order to prevent the drop of the fastening power of the sheet bundle on which the staple-less binding process has been carried out, the control portion 600 (the finisher control portion 636) causes the staple-less binding unit 10 to carry out a cleaning process in which the upper teeth 1010 are engaged with the lower teeth 1014 in a non-binding process in which no binding process is carried out in the present embodiment.
More specifically, an idle striking operation is carried out by applying a load in the direction of the arrow (A) from the upper teeth 1010 to the lower teeth 1014 in a condition in which no sheet exists between the upper and lower teeth 1010 and 1014. That is, the idle striking operations or so-called idle striking of engaging the upper teeth 1010 with the lower teeth 1014 are carried out by moving the upper teeth 1010 in the condition in which no sheet exists in the present embodiment. Such idle striking operations make it possible to remove the paper dusts attached to engaging faces (inclined surfaces of the teeth) of the upper teeth 1010 or of the lower teeth 1014 out of the engaging faces.
Next, a principle for removing the paper dusts attached to the engaging faces of the upper teeth 1010 or the lower teeth 1014 out of the engaging faces will be explained.
When the idle striking operation of the staple-less binding unit 10 is carried out, i.e., when the upper teeth 1010 is lowered, in the condition in which the paper dusts Pd thus attach to the engaging faces E of the lower teeth 1014, the paper dusts move along directions of the inclined surfaces of the teeth indicated by arrows F in
Then, the paper dusts Pd moved to the inclined surface direction of the teeth move around to positions indicated by rectangular marks in the vicinity of tips and bottoms (troughs) of the teeth due to a pressure of the upper teeth 1010. When the upper teeth 1010 drops further, the paper dusts Pd are pushed out of gaps G formed respectively by the tips and bottoms of the teeth as shown in
If no jamming or error has occurred during the previous binding operation, i.e., No in Step 901, the control portion 600 starts to print by the apparatus body 200 in Step 902. If an error has occurred during the previous binding operation, i.e., Yes in Step 901, the control portion 600 causes the staple-less binding unit 10 to carry out the idle striking by a plurality of times through the finisher control portion 636 before starting the staple-less binding process in Step 910. After that, the control portion 600 starts to print by the apparatus body 200 in Step 902.
Next, when the discharge of the sheets to the intermediate processing tray 540 of the finisher 500 is completed, i.e., Yes in Step 903, the finisher control portion 636 executes a width aligning process by the front and rear aligning plates 541 and 542 in Step 904. Then, when the width aligning process ends, the finisher control portion 636 judges whether or not the discharged sheet is a final sheet within a bundle in Step 905, and repeats the operations of Step 902 through S904 when the discharged sheet is not the final sheet within the bundle (No in Step 905).
When the discharged sheet is the final sheet within the bundle, i.e., Yes in Step 905, the finisher control portion 636 executes the binding process by the staple-less binding unit 10 in Step 906 and then executes a bundle discharge process of discharging the sheet bundle bound without staple in Step 907. Next, the finisher control portion 636 judges whether or not the discharged sheet bundle is a final bundle in Step 908, and repeats the operations of Steps 902 through 907 when the discharged sheet bundle is not the final bundle, i.e., No in Step 908. When the discharged sheet bundle is the final bundle, i.e., Yes in Step 908, the control portion 600 ends the staple-less binding process in Step 909.
As described above, the present embodiment is arranged such that the idle striking operation is carried out in the condition in which no sheet exists between the upper and lower teeth 1010 and 1014 before starting the staple-less binding process when an error has occurred during the previous binding process. Such an idle striking operation makes it possible to remove dusts of the sheet attaching to teeth of the upper and lower teeth 1010 and 1014 due to abnormal operations such as jamming and errors and to prevent a drop of fastening power in carrying out the staple-less binding process.
It is noted that although the case of providing the upper teeth 1010 so as to be movable in the up-and-down direction has been explained in the present embodiment, the present invention is not limited to that and at least one of the upper and lower teeth 1010 and 1014 may be made movable. Still further, the idle striking operation is carried out when an error has occurred in the previous binding operation in the explanation above, the invention is not limited also to that. That is, the idle striking operation may be carried out at predetermined timing that will not increase a total amount of time during which the sheets on which images have been formed is bound, as follows.
For instance, the idle striking operation may be carried out before starting the staple-less binding process (between image forming jobs or during standby time) regardless whether or not an error has occurred during the previous binding operation. In other words, it is possible to arrange such that the sheet bundle staple-less binding operation is started after carrying out the idle striking operation before when a sheet bundle on which a next staple-less binding process is to be carried out is stacked on the intermediate processing tray 540. Still further, it is possible to carry out the idle striking operation before starting the binding operation again when the staple-less binding unit 10 halts during a sheet binding operation regardless whether or not an error has occurred during the previous binding operation.
Still further, because dusts of sheets attach to the teeth of the upper and lower teeth 1010 and 1014 by also carrying out the normal staple-less binding, it is possible to arrange such the idle striking operation is carried out every time when a predetermined number of times of the binding operation is carried out. It is noted that this predetermined number of times is input to the finisher control portion 636 from the manipulating portion 601 or by the external computer (PC) 620 serving as another input portion. Then, the finisher control portion 636 controls the staple-less binding unit 10 to carry out the idle striking operation after executing the input number of times of binding operation. It is noted that the predetermined number of times may be changed corresponding to environment conditions because high moisture sheets are softened and paper powder tends to be collected between the teeth. In this case, an arrangement is made such that a moisture sensor not shown is provided for example and the finisher control portion 636 changes the predetermined number of times based on information from the moisture sensor.
Still further, although the upper and lower teeth 1010 and 1014 are engaged in the condition in which no sheet exists during the cleaning process in the embodiment described above, it is possible to engage the upper and lower teeth 1010 and 1014 in a condition in which a cleaning sheet that adsorbs paper powder and the like is interposed. Furthermore, although the finisher is provided integrally within the image forming apparatus in the embodiment described above, they may be configured separately.
The sheet processing apparatus of the invention can be used for the finisher for use in the image forming apparatus such as a printer, and is suitably used for the finisher that binds a sheet bundle without using staples.
While the present invention has been described with reference to the 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.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-242699, filed on Nov. 2, 2012, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012-242699 | Nov 2012 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2013/006459 | 10/31/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/068985 | 5/8/2014 | WO | A |
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