The present application claims priority to and incorporates by reference the entire contents of Japanese priority document 2007-229054 filed in Japan on Sep. 4, 2007.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a sheet processing device that performs a predetermined process on a conveyed sheet and an image forming apparatus including the sheet processing device integrally or separately.
2. Description of the Related Art
A sheet processing device capable of performing a finishing process on a sheet has been come into wide use in recent years. Specifically, the sheet processing device can perform various finishing processes, such as a punching process, an aligning process, a stapling process, a folding process, and a binding process, on a sheet conveyed from an image forming apparatus, i.e., a sheet on which an image is formed by the image forming apparatus. Incidentally, the sheet processing device can be built into the image forming apparatus, or provided separately from the image forming apparatus as an external device. However, the conventional sheet processing device has such a problem that when a stack of sheets to be stapled is discharged from a staple tray, a buckling distortion or a bending deformation may occur in the stack of sheets depending on a type and a size of the sheets, or a use environment. If a degree of the buckling distortion or the bending deformation is large, the stack of sheets may come in contact with a brush roller (a return roller) arranged on the upstream of the staple tray, and thereby causing a sheet jam. To avoid such a situation, in conventional technologies, a pressing unit is provided in the sheet processing device. The pressing unit presses on near a trailing end portion of the stack of sheets thereby aligning the sheets and also moving the stack of sheets not to come in contact with the brush roller.
A sheet processing device including such a pressing unit is disclosed in, for example, Japanese Patent No. 3748710. The sheet processing device disclosed in Japanese Patent No. 3748710 includes a staple tray, a trailing-end fence, a stapling unit, and the pressing unit. A sheet discharged from an image forming apparatus is stacked in the staple tray. An end of the sheet stacked in the staple tray in a sheet conveying direction is struck on the trailing-end fence thereby being aligned. The stapling unit staples a stack of sheets aligned by the trailing-end fence. The pressing unit is configured to be movable in a thickness direction of the stack of sheets stacked in the staple tray so as to change a distance between the pressing unit and a sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray. The stack of sheets is guided to the trailing-end fence while being pressed by the pressing unit.
However, in some of the conventional technologies, the pressing unit is fixed, i.e., the distance between the pressing unit and the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray is kept constant regardless of the number of sheets staked on the staple tray. Therefore, it is possible to prevent the stack of sheets from having contact with the brush roller. However, it is not possible to reduce an occurrence of a buckling distortion or a bending deformation in the stack of sheets when the number of sheets is few. In this case, the stack of sheets passes by the pressing unit in a state where the sheets are still buckled or bent. To solve the problem, in the sheet processing device disclosed in Japanese Patent No. 3748710, the pressing unit is configured to be movable. However, the pressing unit does not move in consideration of a distance between a top-sheet face of the stack of sheets and the pressing unit, so that there is still a possibility of an occurrence of a buckling distortion or a bending deformation.
With an increase in processing speed of an image forming apparatus in recent years, there has been expected to provide a sheet processing device capable of processing at high speed. Therefore, it is necessary to improve the sheet processing device in such a manner that the stack of sheets is prevented from occurring a buckling distortion or a bending deformation and a wasted motion of the sheet processing device is reduced as much as possible to improve the productivity.
It is an object of the present invention to at least partially solve the problems in the conventional technology.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a sheet processing device including a tray in which a conveyed sheet is stacked; a pressing unit that presses vicinity of a trailing edge of a stack of sheets stacked in the tray; an aligning unit that aligns the stack of sheets stacked in the tray; a stapling unit that binds the stack of sheets aligned by the aligning unit; a discharging unit that discharges the stack of sheets bound by the stapling unit; and a control unit that controls the pressing unit to keep a constant distance from a surface of a top sheet of the stack of sheets when the discharging unit discharging the stack of sheets.
Furthermore, according to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an image-forming apparatus including a sheet processing device. The sheet processing device includes a tray in which a conveyed sheet is stacked; a pressing unit that presses vicinity of a trailing edge of a stack of sheets stacked in the tray; an aligning unit that aligns the stack of sheets stacked in the tray; a stapling unit that binds the stack of sheets aligned by the aligning unit; a discharging unit that discharges the stack of sheets bound by the stapling unit; and a control unit that controls the pressing unit to keep a constant distance from a surface of a top sheet of the stack of sheets when the discharging unit discharging the stack of sheets.
The above and other objects, features, advantages and technical and industrial significance of this invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description of presently preferred embodiments of the invention, when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are explained in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The sheet post-processing apparatus PD is attached to a side surface of the image forming apparatus PR. A sheet discharged from the image forming apparatus PR is guided to the sheet post-processing apparatus PD. The sheet is conveyed through any of conveying paths A, B, C, and D selectively by branch claws 15 and 16. The conveying path A includes a post-processing unit that performs post-processing on sheets one by one (in this embodiment, a punch unit 100 as a punching unit). The conveying path B is used to guide a sheet passing through the conveying path A to an upper tray 201. The conveying path C is used to guide a sheet passing through the conveying path A to a shift tray 202. The conveying path D is used to guide a sheet passing through the conveying path A to a processing tray F where the sheet is, for example, aligned and staple-bound.
Although the image forming apparatus PR is not fully illustrated in the drawing, the image forming apparatus PR includes at least an image processing circuit, an optical writing device, a developing unit, a transfer unit, and a fixing unit. The image processing circuit converts received image data into printable image data. The optical writing device performs optical writing on a photosensitive element based on an image signal output from the image processing circuit. The developing unit develops a latent image formed on the photosensitive element by the optical writing into a toner image. The transfer unit transfers the toner image onto a sheet. The fixing unit fixes the toner image transferred onto the sheet thereon. The image forming apparatus PR discharges the sheet on which the image is formed to the sheet post-processing apparatus PD. The sheet post-processing apparatus PD performs desired post-processing on the sheet. In the present embodiment, an electrophotographic image forming apparatus is employed as the image forming apparatus PR. Alternatively, any other types of commonly-used image forming apparatuses, such as an ink-jet image forming apparatus or a thermal-transfer type image forming apparatus, can be used as the image forming apparatus PR. Incidentally, in the present example, an image forming unit is composed of the image processing circuit, the optical writing device, the developing unit, the transfer unit, and the fixing unit.
When the sheet is conveyed to the staple tray F (hereinafter, “a staple tray F”) through the conveying paths A and D, the sheet is, for example, aligned and stapled in the staple tray F. After that, the sheet is guided by a guide member 44 so as to be conveyed to any of the conveying path C or a saddle-stitch/center-folding processing tray G (hereinafter, just “a saddle-stitch processing tray G”) where the sheet is, for example, folded. After the sheet is folded in the saddle-stitch processing tray G, the sheet is guided to a lower tray 203 through a conveying path H. A branch claw 17 is provided on the conveying path D. The branch claw 17 is maintained in a state shown in
The conveying path A is located on the upstream of the conveying paths B, C, and D, and is a common pathway connecting to each of the conveying paths B, C, and D. Along the conveying path A, an inlet sensor 301, a pair of inlet rollers 1, the punch unit 100, a chad hopper 101, a pair of conveying rollers 2, the branch claws 15 and 16 are arranged in this order from an inlet. The branch claws 15 and 16 are maintained in a state shown in
When the sheet is to be guided to the conveying path B, the solenoids are turned off, i.e., the branch claws 15 and 16 are in the state shown in
The sheet post-processing apparatus PD can perform punching (by the punch unit 100), sheet alignment and edge binding (by jogger fences 53, 54, and 55 and an edge binding stapler S1), sheet alignment and saddle-stitch binding (by a saddle-stitch upper jogger fence 250a, a saddle-stitch lower jogger fence 250b, and a saddle-stitch binding stapler S2), sheet sorting (by the shift tray 202), center-folding (by a folding plate 74 and a pair of folding rollers 81), and the like.
As shown in
The return roller 13 is made of sponge. The return roller 13 serves to align a sheet discharged from the shift discharge rollers 6 in such a manner that the return roller 13 has contact with the sheet and strikes a trailing end of the sheet on an end fence. The return roller 13 rotates in accordance with rotation of the shift discharge rollers 6. A tray lift-up limiting switch 333 is provided near the return roller 13. When the shift tray 202 is lifted up, the return roller 13 is pressed up, so that the tray lift-up limiting switch is turned on, and a tray lifting motor is stopped. Therefore, it is possible to prevent the shift tray 202 from overrunning. Furthermore, as shown in
The shift discharge rollers 6 are composed of the shift discharge drive roller 6a and the shift discharge driven roller 6b. The shift discharge driven roller 6b is rotatably supported by a free end of an openable guide plate 33. One end of the openable guide plate 33 on the upstream side in the sheet discharging direction is supported, and the other end can rotate up and down. The shift discharge driven roller 6b has contact with the shift discharge drive roller 6a by the use of its own weight or a bias force, so that the sheet is discharged while being sandwiched between the shift discharge drive roller 6a and the shift discharge driven roller 6b. When the bound stack of sheets is discharged, the openable guide plate is rotated upward. At a predetermined timing, the openable guide plate is rotated back. The timing is determined based on a detection signal from the sheet-face detecting sensor 330. A stop position of the openable guide plate is determined based on a detection signal from a discharge guide-plate open/close sensor (not shown). The openable guide plate is driven to rotate by a discharge guide-plate open/close motor (not shown).
A configuration of the staple tray F in which sheets are stapled is explained below with reference to
A sheet guided into the staple tray F by the staple discharge rollers 11 is sequentially stacked on top of previously-stacked sheets on the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F. In this case, each time a sheet is stacked on top of the other on the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F, the sheet is returned in a longitudinal direction (the sheet conveying direction) by a return roller 12, and struck on trailing-end fences 51a and 51b by leading-end stoppers 512a and 512b, and then aligned in a lateral direction (a direction perpendicular to the sheet conveying direction, i.e., a sheet width direction) by the jogger fence 53. At an interval between jobs, i.e., an interval between when a last sheet of a stack of sheets is conveyed and when a first sheet of a subsequent stack of sheets is conveyed, the edge-binding stapler S1 is activated upon receiving a stapling signal from a control unit, and the stack of sheets is bound by the edge-binding stapler S1. The bound stack of sheets is lifted up by movable fences 57a and 57b. Incidentally, a sheet-stack receiving portion of each of the movable fences 57a and 57b is located slightly below a sheet-stack receiving portion of each of the trailing-end fences 51a and 51b so as to prevent the movable fences 57a and 57b from interfering with the leading-end stoppers 512a and 512b when the leading-end stoppers 512a and 512b perform the longitudinal alignment by striking the stack of sheets on the trailing-end fences 51a and 51b. After the stack of sheets is lifted up by the movable fences 57a and 57b, a discharge belt 52 is driven to rotate counterclockwise. The stack of sheets is picked up by a discharge claw 52a, and conveyed toward the discharge rollers 6. In this manner, the stack of sheets is discharged from the staple tray F. Incidentally, such an operation is also performed on a non-bound stack of sheets, i.e., a stack of sheet that is not to be bound after the alignment.
A home position of the discharge claw 52a is detected by a discharge-belt HP sensor 311. The discharge-belt HP sensor 311 is turned on/off by the discharge claw 52a. Actually, two numbers of the discharge claws 52a are provided on an outer circumference of the discharge belt 52 to be opposed to each other. The discharge claws 52a alternately convey a stack of sheets contained in the staple tray F.
As shown in
The return roller 12 is caused to swing like a pendulum around a supporting point 12a by a tap solenoid 170, whereby a trailing end of a sheet conveyed to the staple tray F is struck on the jogger fence 53 intermittently. Incidentally, the return roller 12 rotates counterclockwise. As shown in
The edge binding stapler S1 is driven to move in the sheet width direction by a stapler travel motor via a timing belt so that the edge binding stapler S1 can bind an edge portion of sheets at a predetermined position. The stapler travel motor can rotate in any of forward and reverse directions.
Subsequently, a mechanism for pressing an uplift of a trailing end portion of a stack of sheets is explained below with reference to
The sheets discharged onto the edge-binding processing tray F are aligned in the longitudinal direction (the sheet conveying direction) by the return roller 12, as described above. At this time, a trailing end of any of the sheets may be curled up, or if the sheets are soft, a trailing end of each of the sheets tends to buckle by its own weight. Furthermore, as the number of stacked sheets increases, a space of a trailing-end fence 51 for a subsequently-stacked sheet is getting decreased. Therefore, it becomes difficult to align sheets in the longitudinal direction gradually. To solve the problems, the mechanism is provided to prevent an uplift behavior of a trailing end portion of the sheets and thereby making it easy for a subsequently-stacked sheet to be put into the trailing-end fence 51.
As shown in
In this manner, after a sheet or a stack of sheets conveyed into the staple tray F through the conveying path D has been aligned in both the longitudinal direction and the lateral direction, the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 as a pressing unit moves toward the staple tray F to press near a trailing end portion of the sheet or the stack of sheets, and thereby preventing an uplift behavior of the sheet or the stack of sheets and ensuring a conveying path for an entry of a subsequent sheet or a subsequent stack of sheets. At this time, in the present embodiment, a travel distance of the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is changed depending on the number of sheets stacked in the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F. For example, when a hundred sheets are stacked in the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F, the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 stops moving at a position 5 millimeters (mm) away from the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F. In this manner, a travel distance of the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is changed depending on the number or a thickness of sheets stacked in the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F, so that a pressing force of the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 to be applied to the stack of sheets is controlled to be constant. Therefore, an uplift behavior of the sheets can be prevented properly. Incidentally, the number of sheets is determined based on a count value tallied up by the image forming apparatus PR, and the thickness of the stack of sheets is determined based on a thickness of one sheet. If a thin sheet or a thick sheet is selected by a user via an operation panel of the image forming apparatus PR, a thickness of a stack of sheets is determined (calculated) based on an average thickness of typical thin sheets or typical thick sheets. When the user does not specify a type of sheet, a thickness of a stack of sheets is determined based on an average thickness of plain sheets.
Incidentally, the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is configured to stop moving so to meet a condition of “N>M” when a distance between a pressing surface of the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 and the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F is denoted by “M” and a distance between an outer circumferential surface of the brush roller, which is located on the upstream of the staple tray F, and the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F is denoted by “N”.
In the present embodiment, after each of sheets corresponding to the number of sheets to be bound is aligned and conveyed into the staple tray F as described above, the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is moved from a sheet-stack pressing position directly to a supporting position where the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 supports to discharge the stack of sheets. At this time, the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is controlled to move so as to keep a constant distance from a top-sheet face of the stack of sheets on the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F regardless of the number of sheets to be bound, and also controlled to cause the stack of sheets not to come in contact with the outer circumferential surface of the staple discharge roller (the brush roller) 11 located on the upstream of the staple tray F. Therefore, the stack of sheets can be prevented from a buckling distortion occurring when the stack of sheets is discharged. Consequently, it is possible to improve the productivity. In a case of a two-point binding mode, after binding the stack of sheets at the first binding point, the edge-binding stapler S1 is moved to a position corresponding to the second binding point of the stack of sheets. Therefore, in this case, after the first-point binding process, the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is once retracted to the home position. And then, after the edge-binding stapler S1 has been moved to the position corresponding to the second binding point, the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is moved from the home position to the supporting position.
Subsequently, a sheet pressing mechanism according to the present embodiment is explained in detail below.
Upon completion of the alignment of a stack of sheets (Step S101), whether the sheets corresponding to the predetermined number of sheets to be bound are aligned is checked (Step S102). When the sheets corresponding to the predetermined number of sheets to be bound have been aligned (YES at Step S102), the stapler S1 binds the stack of sheets (Step S103). Then, whether a binding mode is the two-point binding mode is checked (Step S104). When the binding mode is not the two-point binding mode (NO at Step S104), the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is moved to the supporting position (Step S105.), and the stack of sheets is discharged while being supported by the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 (Step S106).
On the other hand, when the binding mode is the two-point binding mode (YES at Step S104), the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is moved to the home position (Step S107). After the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 has been moved to the home position (Step S108), the stapler S1 is moved to the position corresponding to the second binding point of the stack of sheets (Step S109). After the stapler S1 has been moved to the position corresponding to the second binding point (Step S110), the stack of sheets is bound at the second binding point (Step S111). After that, the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is moved to the supporting position (Step S112), and the stack of sheets is discharged while being supported by the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 (Step S106).
In the two-point binding mode, with reference to the alignment center, the jogger fences 1 and 2 center-align the stack of sheets. After that, in a state where the trailing end portion of the stack of sheets is pressed by the trailing-end-portion pressing levers 110a, 110b, and 110c, the stack of sheets is stapled at the first binding point. During this operation, the trailing-end-portion pressing levers 110a, 110b, and 110c are retracted to the home position, and the stapler S1 is moved to a position corresponding to the second binding point of the stack of sheets. Upon completion of the first binding process, i.e., when the stack of sheets is stapled at the second binding point, the trailing-end-portion pressing levers 110a, 110b, and 110c are moved from the home position to the supporting position. Upon completion of the second binding process, the trailing-end-portion pressing levers 110a, 110b, and 110c discharge the stack of sheets.
In this manner, in the present embodiment, a distance between a top-sheet face of a stack of sheets stacked in the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray F and the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 is controlled to keep constant. Therefore, the stack of sheets can be prevented from a buckling distortion occurring when the stack of sheets is discharged regardless of the number of sheets, and thus it is possible to provide a highly reliable apparatus. Moreover, a timing when the trailing-end-portion pressing lever 110 presses a stack of sheets is changed depending on whether the one-point binding mode or the two-point binding mode, so that the timing can be optimally controlled depending on the binding mode. Therefore, it is possible to shorten a staple-processing time from when the stack of sheets is aligned to when the stapled stack of sheets is discharged. Consequently, it is possible to improve the productivity.
According to an aspect of the present invention, when a stack of sheets is discharged by the discharging unit, a distance between a top-sheet face of the stack of sheets stacked in the sheet-stacked surface of the staple tray and the pressing unit is controlled to keep constant. Therefore, the stack of sheets can be prevented from a buckling distortion occurring when the stack of sheets is discharged, and thus the productivity can be improved.
Although the invention has been described with respect to specific embodiments for a complete and clear disclosure, the appended claims are not to be thus limited but are to be construed as embodying all modifications and alternative constructions that may occur to one skilled in the art that fairly fall within the basic teaching herein set forth.
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