The present invention relates generally to the field of image forming apparatuses and in particular to a photoconductive member biased to an operating voltage and electrically isolated from a mounting shaft.
A variety of elements within an electrophotographic image forming apparatus operate at relatively high operating voltages. These voltages are used, for example, to pre-charge a photoconductive member to allow a latent image to be optically formed thereon; to transfer electrically and/or magnetically charged toner particles to the photoconductive member to develop the latent image; and to transfer the developed image from the photoconductive member to a media sheet. Where possible, it is preferable to isolate these voltages to specific operational elements, to reduce the risk of short circuit or electrocution. For example, an operating voltage applied to a photoconductive member is preferably restricted to the photoconductive member itself, and isolated from a metallic housing to which the photoconductive member is mounted.
Electrical isolation of various components has traditionally been addressed in the design of removable cartridges in which the components are mounted. For example, a typical prior art electrophotographic image forming apparatus may include one or more removable cartridges, each cartridge containing a reservoir holding a supply of toner, a photoconductive drum for optically forming a latent image and developing the image with the toner, and a developer roller for applying the toner to the photoconductive drum. The image removable cartridge may additionally include various rollers, paddles, augers and blades, as well known in the art. One or more electrical contacts on the cartridge accept an operating voltage, and transfer it to the appropriate component(s).
A recent development in the state of the art of electrophotography is the separation of many components traditionally CaCO-located in a single removable container into separate units. In some cases, the components may be mounted to a moveable subunit such as a door, and removed from their operational position whenever the subunit is opened. This requires the provision of precise positioning means, so that the components are returned to a precise operating position each time the subunit is mated to the main housing. One well-known way to repeatedly, precisely locate a cylindrical component is to provide V-shaped receiving voids in a rigid frame, into which fit metallic bearings supporting a shaft that runs through the axis of the cylindrical component. In the event that the cylindrical component must be biased to a high operating voltage, however, prior-art electrical contacts would simultaneously bias the conductive shaft to the operating voltage. This may present an unacceptable hazard where the conductive shaft mounts via conductive bearings to a conductive machine frame.
The present invention relates to a photoconductive member for an image forming apparatus. The photoconductive member includes a hollow, conductive cylindrical core; an insulating end cap disposed axially within the core at either end thereof, each end cap including an axial bore; a shaft disposed axially through the core and the bores, the shaft electrically isolated from the core by the end caps; and an electrical contact assembly operative to bias the core, but not the shaft, to an operating voltage.
Within the image forming apparatus body 12 and/or in the subunit 13, the image forming apparatus 10 includes registration rollers 22, a media sheet transfer belt 24, one or more removable developer units 26, a corresponding number of removable photoconductor units 28, an imaging device 30, a fuser 32, reversible exit rollers 34, and a duplex media sheet path 36, as well as various rollers, actuators, sensors, optics, and electronics (not shown) as are conventionally known in the image forming apparatus arts, and which are not further explicated herein.
The internal components of the developer units 26 and photoconductor units 28 are briefly described (these components are not all explicitly depicted in the drawings). Each developer unit 26 is a removable cartridge that includes a reservoir holding a supply of toner, paddles to agitate and move the toner, a toner adder roll for adding toner to a developer roll 27, a developer roll 27 for applying toner to develop a latent image on a (separate) photoconductive drum, and a doctor blade to regulate the amount of toner on the developer roll 27. Each photoconductor unit 28 is a separate removable cartridge that includes a photoconductive (PC) drum 29. The PC drum 29 may comprise, for example, a hollow aluminum cylindrical drum coated with one or more layers of light-sensitive organic photoconductive materials. The photoconductor unit 28 also includes a charge roll for applying a uniform electrical charge to the surface of the PC drum 29, a photoconductor blade for removing residual toner from the PC drum 29, and an auger to move waste toner out of the photoconductor unit 28 into a waste toner container (not shown).
Each developer unit 26 mates with a corresponding photoconductor unit 28, with the developer roll 27 of the developer unit 26 developing a latent image on the surface of the PC drum 29 of the photoconductor unit 28 by supplying toner to the PC drum 29. In a typical color printer, three or four colors of toner—cyan, yellow, magenta, and optionally black—are applied successively (and not necessarily in that order) to a print media sheet to create a color image. Correspondingly,
The operation of the image forming apparatus 10 is conventionally known. Upon command from control electronics, a single media sheet is “picked,” or selected, from either the primary media stack 16 or the manual input 20. Alternatively, a media sheet may travel through the duplex path 36 for a two-sided print operation. Regardless of its source, the media sheet is presented at the nip of a registration roller 22, which aligns the sheet and precisely controls its further movement into the print path.
The media sheet passes the registration roller 22 and contacts the transport belt 24, which carries the media sheet successively past the photoconductor units 28. At each photoconductor unit 28, a latent image is formed by the imaging device 30 and optically projected onto the PC drum 29. The latent image is developed by applying toner to the PC drum 29 from the developer roll 27 of the corresponding developer unit 26. The toner is subsequently deposited on the media sheet as it is conveyed past the photoconductor unit 28 by the transport belt 24.
The toner is thermally fused to the media sheet by the fuser 32, and the sheet then passes through reversible exit rollers 34, to land facedown in the output stack 35 formed on the exterior of the image forming apparatus body 12. Alternatively, the exit rollers 34 may reverse motion after the trailing edge of the media sheet has passed the entrance to the duplex path 36, directing the media sheet through the duplex path 36 for the printing of another image on the back side thereof.
Accurate positioning of the PC drums 29 is critical to high quality printing. To ensure accurate positioning of the PC drums 29, V-blocks 40 are cut into the metal framework 42 of the housing 12 of the image-forming apparatus 10. A steel shaft 44 running through each PC drum 29 is precisely located within a corresponding V-block 40 by a ball bearing assembly 46. Alternatively, other metallic bearings 46 may be used.
During operation, the PC drum 29 is charged to an operating voltage, such as −200V. However, because the steel shaft 44 is electrically connected to the metal frame 42 via ball bearings 46, the −200V supplied to the PC drum 29 must be electrically isolated from the steel shaft 44, for user safety considerations.
According to the present invention, an electrical connection is established between a biasing contact 48 disposed on part of the photoconductor unit 28 (not depicted in
The external electrical connector 50 is an integral part of the PC drum brake 52. The brake 52 counters rotational forces imparted to the PC drum 29 by the corresponding developer roller 27 contacting it, which rotates at a slightly higher speed than the PC drum 29. This tends to accelerate the rotational speed of the PC drum 29, a tendency that the PC drum brake 52 counters, such that the PC drum 29 actually rotates at a speed determined by its own drive mechanism.
The PC drum brake 52 is disposed about an annular conductive hub 54. The annular conductive hub 54 is electrically conductive, and is preferably formed from a conductive plastic. Alternatively, the annular conductive hub 54 may be formed from any suitable material, as well known in the art. The annular conductive hub 54 includes at least one protrusion 56, directed toward the interior of the PC drum 29.
The PC drum brake 52 is disposed over the annular conductive hub 54, and the assembly of the two is disposed within an insulating end cap 58. The insulating end cap 58 is an electrical insulator, and may be formed of any suitable material, such as rubber, plastic, and the like, as known in the art. The insulating end cap 58 comprises an outer annular ring 60, an inner annular ring 62 and a floor 64 forming a cylindrical chamber, in which the assembly comprising PC drum brake 52 and annular conductive hub 54 is disposed. The inner annular wall 62 defines a bore 66, through which the steel shaft 44 is disposed. Disposed opposite the floor 64 from the inner annular wall 62, and protruding into the interior region of the PC drum 29, is an interior annular wall 63, which may be segmented, as shown in
At least one protrusion 56 of the annular conductive hub 54 protrudes through the floor 64 of the insulating end cap 58, and forms an electrical connection to a generally disc-shaped internal electrical contact 68. The internal electrical contact 68 is electrically conductive, and contains a large bore 70 formed in the central region thereof. When assembled, the interior annular wall 63 of the insulating end cap 58 may protrude through the bore 70 in the internal electrical contact 68. The interior annular wall 63 assists in the capture of the steel shaft 44 as it passes through the PC drum 29, and may additionally electrically isolate the shaft 44 from the internal electrical contact 68. Disposed around the periphery of the internal electrical contact 68 is a plurality of points or protrusions 72. The points 72 extend slightly outward of the inner diameter of the PC drum 29, and thus form physical and electrical contact to the interior surface of the PC drum 29 when the internal electrical contact 68 is disposed within the PC drum 29.
The entire end cap 58 and electrical connector assembly according to the present invention is preferably assembled and then press fitted into at least one end of the PC drum 29, as depicted in section view in
In this manner, the PC drum 29 is biased to an operating voltage, such as for example, −200V, while the steel shaft 44, located in a V-block 40 of the metal frame 42 via ball bearings 46, is insulated from the operating voltage. This prevents the metal frame 42 from becoming an electrocution hazard to the user.
Although the present invention has been described herein with respect to particular features, aspects and embodiments thereof, it will be apparent that numerous variations, modifications, and other embodiments are possible within the broad scope of the present invention, and accordingly, all variations, modifications and embodiments are to be regarded as being within the scope of the invention. The present embodiments are therefore to be construed in all aspects as illustrative and not restrictive and all changes coming within the meaning and equivalency range of the appended claims are intended to be embraced therein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050214018 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |