Reducing waste toner with electrophotographic voltage control in imaging devices
10782627 ยท 2020-09-22
Assignee
Inventors
- Andrew Pryse Dale (Lexington, KY, US)
- MATTHEW DAVID HEID (LOUISVILLE, KY, US)
- Christopher David Strack (Lexington, KY, US)
Cpc classification
G03G15/0812
PHYSICS
G03G15/80
PHYSICS
G03G15/0283
PHYSICS
G03G15/5004
PHYSICS
G03G21/20
PHYSICS
International classification
G03G15/02
PHYSICS
Abstract
An imaging device includes a photoconductive drum charged by a charge roll and opposed by developer roll. The developer roll adds toner to the drum to develop a latent image on the drum for transfer to media. One or more high voltage power supplies communicate with a controller to set voltages on the rolls. The controller determines whether imaging of the media is to occur at a time when the drum is rotating. If not, a laser beam discharges the drum and the voltage on the charge roll is decreased to reduce the charge on the drum, but the controller maintains the voltage differential between the drum and the developer roll.
Claims
1. In an imaging device having a photoconductive drum charged by a charge roll and opposed by developer roll to add toner to the drum to develop a latent image on the drum for transfer to media, further including a high voltage power supply in communication with a controller to set voltages on the charge roll and developer roll, a method comprising: determining whether imaging of the media is to occur at a time when the drum is rotating; and if no imaging of the media, but rotation of the drum, turning off a voltage of the charge roll to reduce the charge on the drum and after the charge roll reaches 0 Vdc keeping a voltage differential between the drum and the developer roll at a constant voltage, wherein the constant voltage is a same voltage maintained between the drum and the developer roll when the media is being imaged under imaging conditions.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the voltage differential is about |100| Vdc.
3. The method of claim 1, further including determining a size of an interpage gap of an imaging request.
4. The method of claim 1, further including determining whether or not a first page of an imaging request has been imaged.
5. The method of claim 1, further including determining whether or not a last page of an imaging request has been imaged.
6. The method of claim 1, further including erasing an existing charge on the drum.
7. The method of claim 6, further including discharging the drum with a laser beam.
8. The method of claim 1, further including determining a relative humidity of an operating environment of the imaging device.
9. The method of claim 1, further including determining a temperature of an operating environment of the imaging device.
10. The method of claim 1, further including determining a relative humidity and temperature of an operating environment of the imaging device and adjusting voltages based on results of the determining the relative humidity and temperature.
11. The method of claim 1, further including determining a relative humidity and temperature of an operating environment of the imaging device at a time before a first page of an imaging request.
12. The method of claim 1, further including decreasing a voltage on the developer roll.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the voltage differential is about |100| Vdc and a voltage on the developer roll is about 250 Vdc while a voltage on the drum is about 350 Vdc.
14. The method of claim 1, further including maintaining a voltage on the developer roll of about 600 Vdc while a voltage on the drum is about 700 Vdc during the determining whether the imaging of the media is to occur at the time when the drum is rotating.
15. In an imaging device having a photoconductive drum charged by a charge roll and opposed by developer roll to add toner to the drum to develop a latent image on the drum for transfer to media, further including a high voltage power supply in communication with a controller to set voltages on the charge roll and developer roll, a method comprising: determining a relative humidity and temperature of an operating environment of the imaging device; determining whether imaging of the media is to occur at a time when the drum is rotating; if no imaging of the media, but rotation of the drum, discharging the drum with a laser beam and turning off a voltage on the charge roll to reduce the charge on the drum, and after the charge roll reaches 0 Vdc keeping a constant voltage differential of 100 Vdc magnitude between the drum and the developer roll, wherein the constant voltage differential is a same voltage differential maintained between the drum and the developer roll when the media is being imaged under imaging conditions; and adjusting an amount of voltages based on results of the determining the relative humidity and temperature.
16. The method of claim 15, further including decreasing a voltage on the developer roll.
17. The method of claim 15, further including determining a size of an interpage gap existing between a trailing edge and a leading edge of adjacent sheets of media being imaged.
18. The method of claim 15, further including determining whether a first page of an imaging request has been imaged.
19. The method of claim 15, further including determining whether a last page of an imaging request has been imaged.
Description
DRAWINGS
(1) The sole FIGURE is a diagrammatic view of an imaging device for reducing waste toner with EP voltage control.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
(2)
(3) To minimize the accumulation of waste toner from the drum scraped by a blade 35 into a reservoir 37, the controller implements an algorithmic routine of EP voltage control. The routine is triggered for execution at various times, but especially when the drum is rotating but the media is otherwise not undergoing imaging. In terms from the industry, the routine executes during run-in and run-out of an imaging request and/or at times when there exists an excessively large interpage gap. That is, run-in occurs when the controller begins preparing to honor the imaging request, but before the first page of the media of the imaging request becomes imaged with toner. Events undertaken by the controller at this time include signaling to motors to rotate the drums and rolls, to warm-up the fuser to fusing temperature, and to power the laser, to name a few. Run-out, on the other hand, occurs after the last page of media of the imaging request has been imaged, but not yet exited the imaging device. The drum and rolls continue to rotate during this time. Excessively large interpage gaps exist during image duplexing of media sheets or when users operate the imaging device in narrow-media modes, such as when imaging envelopes. A size of the gaps are also measurable by the controller between a trailing edge (T.E) of one sheet of media 50 and a leading edge (L.E.) of an adjacent sheet of media. Operational conditions may be also considered when initiating the routine, such as accepting input from a local or remote weather station 95 regarding the relative humidity and temperature of the environment in which the imaging device is operating.
(4) Regardless, once triggered, the routine consists of lowering the charge on the drum, but maintaining the voltage differential between the drum 30 and the developer roll 34. Under normal imaging conditions, the charge roll is set to about 1200 Vdc to charge the drum to about 700 Vdc. The developer roll, on the other hand, has its voltage set to about 600 Vdc. The voltage differential between the drum and developer roll is about 100 Vdc in magnitude, or 700 Vdc minus 600 Vdc=100 Vdc, or |100| Vdc. Under the routine when the drum rotates but no imaging occurs, the controller erases the existing charge on the drum by discharging the laser. The laser beam writes all pixels to the drum. The controller next lowers the voltage on the charge roll, such as by turning off its voltage or setting a voltage close to 0 Vdc, so that the drum only charges to its core voltage of about 350 Vdc, vice 700 Vdc during imaging. The controller also keeps the voltage differential of 100 Vdc between the drum and the developer roll thereby setting the voltage of the developer roll to about 250 Vdc, or 350 Vdc minus 250 Vdc=100 Vdc, or |100| Vdc. As a result, the inventors have discovered that much less toner becomes attracted to the drum and less waste toner results. Through empirical testing, the inventors have discovered that in environments of 78 F. and 80% humidity, for example, up to 66% of (k) waste toner has been eliminated in comparison to not executing the routine. The elimination of waste toner for (c), (y), and (m) also saw improvement in a range of 40%-50%. In comparison of the routine to simply lowering the voltage of the charge roll, to lower the charge on the drum, but not maintaining the voltage differential between the drum and developer roll, the inventors have recognized that appreciably more waste toner accumulates than when maintaining the voltage differential.
(5) Of course, the voltages and differential given above are only representative. Other values are possible. Skilled artisans will appreciate that implementation details need understanding of how quickly power supplies can react to adjustment of their voltages and the speeds at which the drum and rolls rotate. In other embodiments, it is contemplated that a range of hot temperature and humidity conditions may be implemented in which to execute the routine, but at no other time. Alternatively, still, an amount of adjustment on the drum, but maintaining its voltage differential with the developer roll, can also exist based on specific values of the temperature and humidity of the operating environment. That is, the charge on the drum can be lowered to 300 Vdc when relatively cooler (e.g., 78 F.) and dryer (e.g., 80%), but lowering the charge on the drum to 350 Vdc when relatively hotter (e.g., 90 F.) and wetter (85%). Still other designs are readily imagined. In any, artisans should appreciate that the foregoing greatly overcomes designs of the prior art that involved mechanical separation between the developer units and drum and/or the use of AC power. Now the accumulation of waste toner can be minimized by a simple control routine that sets EP voltages.
(6) The foregoing description of several methods and example embodiments has been presented for purposes of illustration. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the claims. Modifications and variations to the description are possible in accordance with the foregoing. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.