The present invention relates generally to the field of image forming and in particular to a variable force biasing mechanism and an electrical connection for a removable cartridge unit in an image forming apparatus.
The electrophotographic image forming process is well known in the art. A photoconductive surface, such as a drum, roller, or belt, is uniformly charged to a first voltage level. A latent image is then formed on the photoconductive surface by incident optical energy, such as a laser beam. The latent image is developed by applying toner to the photoconductive surface. The toner is typically applied by a developer roller, the surface of which is charged to a second voltage, with toner electrostatically adhered thereto. The toner is electrostatically transferred from the developer roller to the latent image on the photoconductive surface by the voltage difference between the developer roller surface and the latent image area on the photoconductive surface.
Critical factors in the accurate development of latent images are the force applied along the contact between the developer roller and the photoconductive surface, known in the art as the nip force, and the uniformity of the nip force along the nip or contact area. Among other factors, the optimal nip force is determined by properties of the toner. As the state of the art in toner composition advances, the optimal nip force between the developer roller and photoconductive surface, for a given toner formulation, may change.
The nip force is typically controlled by housing the photoconductive surface, such as a photoconductive drum, and the developer roller in a common replaceable cartridge unit, with the nip force controlled within the cartridge unit by low rate springs. The nip force adjustment is accomplished by altering the low rate springs within the cartridge, so that new cartridges, containing the latest formulation of toner, can be installed in existing machines and function at the latest desired nip force.
In addition to control of the nip force, a recurring challenge in the design of removable cartridge units is the provision of electrical contacts for biasing the photoconductive drum and developer roller surfaces to their required voltages, and in grounding these elements. These contacts should provide reliable electrical connectivity, but exert minimal influence on the carefully controlled nip force. Additionally, electrical contacts may be necessary for a doctor blade and/or toner-adder roller, and possibly characterization electronic circuits.
A recent advance in the design of electrophotographic image forming devices separates the developer roller and the PC drum into distinct removable cartridge units. A removable developer unit stores fresh toner of one color, and includes a developer roller, a toner-adder roller, doctor member and three agitating paddles. A removable cleaner unit contains a photoconductive drum, a charge roller, a toner cleaner unit, and a waste toner auger. Mechanical hardware in the machine housing urges the developer unit against the cleaner unit, generating a nip force between the developer roller and the photoconductive drum. However, since this hardware resides in the machine, it is difficult to adjust the nip force to different values for different developer units.
The present invention relates to an image forming apparatus having a housing and including a cartridge unit removably mounted in the housing. In particular, the image forming apparatus includes a pivot member fixed to the housing. An arm is pivotally mounted in the housing about the pivot member, with the arm in contact with the cartridge unit. A force generating member is mounted in the housing and contacts the arm so as to urge the arm to pivot about the pivot member and press against the cartridge unit. The resulting force exerted on the cartridge unit by the arm varies according to the point of contact between said cartridge unit and the arm. In some embodiments, the arm and its contact point on the cartridge unit are electrically conductive, and establish an electrical contact.
In another aspect, the present invention relates to a method of controlling the force exerted on different removable cartridge units by an image forming apparatus. The method includes providing at least one arm pivotally mounted in the image forming apparatus about a pivot point and biased by a force generating member into contact with a removable cartridge unit having at least one protrusion, where the arm includes a contact member having a longitudinal extent and where the protrusion contacts the arm along the contact member. The method includes positioning a first protrusion on a first removable cartridge unit to contact the contact member at a first longitudinal position, the arm thereby exerting a first force on the first cartridge unit. The method also includes positioning a second protrusion on a second removable cartridge unit to contact the contact member at a second longitudinal position different from the first longitudinal position, the arm thereby exerting a second force on the second cartridge unit different from the first force. In some embodiments, the arm and the protrusion are electrically conductive, and establish an electrical contact.
In yet another aspect, the present invention relates to an image forming apparatus including a housing that includes two fixed pivot points. The image forming apparatus also includes two arms, each pivotally mounted about a pivot point, each arm including a force receiving member and a contact member having a longitudinal extent. The image forming apparatus further includes two force generating members, each exerting a first force at a position on the force receiving member of a different arm, biasing the arm to pivot about a pivot point. The image forming apparatus additionally includes at least one removable cartridge unit housing a first roller and having two protrusions, each of which contacts the contact member of a different arm along the longitudinal extent thereof such that the arm exerts a second force on the cartridge unit through the protrusion. In some embodiments, the arm and the protrusion are electrically conductive, and establish an electrical contact.
The present invention is described herein with respect to an image forming apparatus having two separate removable cartridge units for each image forming station, although it is not limited to such an application. In this embodiment, one removable cartridge unit includes a photoconductive drum (PC drum), which is uniformly charged to a first voltage, a latent image formed thereon by irradiation by a laser, which latent image is developed by the application of toner and the developed image transferred to a media sheet or intermediate transport belt. A second removable cartridge includes a developer roller operative to apply toner to the PC drum in the first removable cartridge unit. The cartridge unit containing the developer roller may additionally include a reservoir of toner, and various rollers and other mechanical systems for stirring the toner and transporting it to the developer roller.
When the image forming apparatus is in an operative condition, one or the other of the removable cartridge units may be rigidly fixed within the housing of the image forming apparatus. By use of the variable-force biasing mechanism of the present invention, the non-fixed cartridge unit is pressed against the fixed cartridge unit to develop a nip force between the developer roller and the PC drum. For simplicity of explanation, the following description will assume that the present invention applies an urging force to a cartridge unit containing a developer roller (which in turn generates a nip force as it presses against a PC drum), although those of skill in the art will readily recognize that the present invention may be advantageously applied to the cartridge unit containing the PC drum, either in lieu of or in addition to the embodiment described.
The action of the biasing mechanism 10 is described with reference to
The pivoting arm 11 includes a bias force receiving member 12, and a contact member 14 having a longitudinal extent and disposed along one edge of the removable cartridge unit 22 when the latter is installed in the image forming apparatus. The force receiving member 12 receives a biasing force from the force generating member 20, which in the embodiment of
A raised protrusion 24 is formed at a predetermined location on the surface of the removable cartridge unit 22 adjacent the contact member 14. Contact between the pivoting arm 11 and the cartridge unit 22 is limited to the contact between the protrusion 24 and the contact member 14. The protrusion 24 may be located at any point along the side of the removable cartridge unit 22 that is within the longitudinal extent of the contact member 14. For example, dotted-line elements 24′ and 24″ depict alternative representative locations for the protrusion 24. In the embodiments of the present invention in which the pivoting arm 11 is electrically conductive and biased to a voltage, the protrusion 24 is also electrically conductive, and an electrical contact is established by the contact member 14 pressing against the protrusion 24. However, in general, the protrusion 24 need not be electrically conductive.
The transmission of force to the removable cartridge unit 22 by the biasing mechanism 10 is described with reference to the free body diagram of the pivoting arm 11 depicted in
FS×d1=FC×d2 or
Hence, the force Fc urging the cartridge unit 22 against a cartridge unit 29 is inversely proportional to d2, the distance of the protrusion 24 from the pivot point 16. That is, referring to
The present invention is particularly suited to adjusting the nip force between the developer roller 26 and PC drum 28 in an image forming apparatus as the toner formulation changes. A method for adjusting the nip force is depicted in flow diagram form in
A second toner formulation may then be developed, the second toner formulation perhaps offering some benefit over the first toner formulation. The optimal nip force for the second toner formulation (the second force) is determined at step 40. At step 42, assuming the required second force is different than the first force (that required by the first toner formulation), a second position for protrusions 24 is calculated that will generate the second force when the developer cartridge unit 22 is operatively installed in an image forming apparatus. The developer cartridge 22 is then manufactured at step 44, containing toner of the second toner formulation and having protrusions 24 at the second position. This model of developer cartridge unit 22 may then replace the first model of cartridge units 22 in some or all image forming devices of the appropriate model. In this manner, either the first or second toner formulation may be utilized by simply inserting the appropriate cartridge unit 22, and the appropriate nip force for the toner contained therein is applied between the developer roller 26 and PC drum 28, without requiring any adjustment, calibration, or alteration of the image forming apparatus.
The pivoting arm 11 is depicted in
Although described herein with respect to an image forming apparatus utilizing a PC drum and developer roller in separate cartridge units, the present invention is not limited to this application. As those of skill in the art will readily recognize, the biasing mechanism of the present invention is mounted in a housing, and applies a variable force against a separate unit or member. That unit may comprise a removable cartridge housing a PC drum, a developer roller, or both (or neither). In a cartridge unit housing both a PC drum and developer roller, the present invention may control the nip force between the two by applying a bias force to the cartridge unit that is mechanically translated within the cartridge unit to a nip force. Alternatively, it may urge the PC drum of a removable cartridge unit against an intermediate transfer belt or media sheet, wherein a precise nip force is required to transfer a developed image from the PC drum to the belt or sheet. Those of skill in the art will recognize various other applications of the present invention wherein providing a variable bias force is advantageous, within the broad practice of the present invention as claimed herein.
Additionally, although
According to some embodiments of the present invention, in addition to applying a variable force to a removable cartridge unit, the biasing mechanism serves as an electrical contact that provides electrical connectivity to the cartridge unit. This may be advantageous, for example, to charge the surface of a developer roller (or PC drum) in the removable cartridge unit, and/or to provide a ground connection. In these embodiments, as depicted in
In these embodiments, the protrusion 24 of the removable cartridge unit 22 is also electrically conductive. As both the contact member 14 and the protrusion 24 are electrically conductive, an electrical connection is established and maintained between the variable force biasing mechanism 10 and the removable cartridge unit 22 for as long as the cartridge unit 22 is operatively installed in the image forming apparatus.
For example,
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.
This application is a divisional application that claims priority from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/804,691 filed Mar. 19, 2004 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,082,275.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2229009 | Berry | Jan 1941 | A |
4453791 | Ledbetter | Jun 1984 | A |
4826457 | Varatta | May 1989 | A |
6185390 | Higeta et al. | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6400914 | Noda et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060210299 A1 | Sep 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10804691 | Mar 2004 | US |
Child | 11438873 | US |