ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHIC CONTROL IN IMAGING DEVICES, INCLUDING SENSING CURRENT BETWEEN A DEVELOPER ROLL AND DRUM PERTAINING TO CURRENT OF A LATENT IMAGE AND A PASCHEN BREAKDOWN
20240201614 ยท 2024-06-20
Inventors
- Marc Cousoulis (Lexington, KY, US)
- MICHAEL CHARLES DAY (Lexington, KY, US)
- KWEKU KORSAH (LEXINGTON, KY, US)
- JARED KOUHUI LIN (LEXINGTON, KY, US)
- DAVID WILLIAM SHUMAN (LEXINGTON, KY, US)
- MATTHEW RUSSELL SMITHER (FRANKFORT, KY, US)
Cpc classification
G03G15/0808
PHYSICS
G03G2215/066
PHYSICS
G03G15/5004
PHYSICS
International classification
G03G15/02
PHYSICS
Abstract
An imaging device has a developer roll to provide toner to a photoconductive drum to develop a latent image on the drum for direct transfer to media or an intermediate transfer member. A power supply in communication with a controller sets relative voltages on the developer roll and drum. During transfer of the toner, the imaging device determines a current between the developer roll and drum. In turn, the controller determines a charge and mass of the toner for setting with the power supply an operating voltage on the drum or developer roll. Preventing and reporting toners with insufficient charge are other embodiments.
Claims
1. In an imaging device having a photoconductive drum opposed by developer roll to provide toner to the drum to develop a latent image on the drum for transfer to media or an intermediate transfer member and later the media, further including a power supply in communication with a controller, a method comprising: with the power supply, setting a first voltage on a charge roll that creates a second voltage on a surface of the drum; based on the first and second voltages, transferring the toner from a developer roll to the drum; and sensing a current between the developer roll and the drum, including determining a first current of the latent image and a second current of a Paschen breakdown between the developer roll and the drum.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the sensing the current occurs in the power supply.
3. The method of claim 1, further including providing the current to the controller.
4. (canceled)
5. (canceled)
6. The method of claim 1, further including storing the first and second currents in a memory accessible by the controller.
7. The method of claim 1, further including, by the controller, subtracting from the current the first and second currents.
8. The method of claim 1, further including determining a charge of the toner.
9. The method of claim 1, further including determining a charge per mass of the toner.
10. The method of claim 1, further including determining a mass of the toner.
11. The method of claim 1, further including developing a toner patch on the intermediate transfer member.
12. The method of claim 11, further including projecting a light on the toner patch and collecting the light scattered from the toner patch.
13. The method of claim 12, further including determining a toner mass from the light scattered.
14. The method of claim 13, further including using the sensed current and the determined toner mass of the toner patch to determine an operating condition of the toner.
15. The method of claim 1, further including changing a third voltage on the developer roll or the drum based on the sensed current.
16. The method of claim 1, further including providing a toner cartridge having said toner.
17. In an imaging device having a photoconductive drum opposed by developer roll to provide toner to the drum to develop a latent image on the drum for transfer to media or an intermediate transfer member and later the media, further including a power supply in communication with a controller, a method comprising: with the power supply, setting a first voltage on a charge roll that creates a second voltage on a surface of the drum; based on the first and second voltages, transferring the toner from a developer roll to the drum; sensing a current between the developer roll and the drum; and providing a resistor through which the current is sensed and the sensed current having a corresponding voltage being amplified and provided to the controller.
18. In an imaging device having a supply of toner in communication with a toner adder roll for providing the toner to a developer roll opposing a photoconductive drum to develop with the toner a latent image on the drum for first transfer to an intermediate transfer member and second transfer to media, further including a high voltage power supply in communication with a controller, a method comprising: with the power supply, setting a first voltage on a charge roll that creates a second voltage on a surface of the drum; based on the first and second voltages, transferring the toner from a developer roll to the drum; sensing a current between the developer roll and the drum, including determining a first current of the latent image and a second current of a Paschen breakdown between the developer roll and the drum, further storing the first and second currents in a memory accessible by the controller, the controller subtracting from the current the first and second currents; and providing the current or corresponding voltage to the controller for determining a mass of the toner for setting with the power supply an operating voltage on the drum or developer roll.
19. The method of claim 18, further including developing a toner patch on the intermediate transfer member and projecting a light on the toner patch, further collecting the light scattered from the toner patch and the controller determining a toner mass from the light scattered.
20. (canceled)
Description
IN THE DRAWINGS
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0012]
[0013] In any context, the controller converts the request to appropriate signals for providing to a laser scan unit 16. The unit turns on and off a laser 18 according to pixels of the imaging request. A rotating mirror 19 and associated lenses, reflectors, etc. (not shown) focus a laser beam 22 onto a photoconductive drum 30 rotating in the direction of arrow (A), as is familiar. The drum corresponds to a supply of toner, such as black (k), changeable by users in the form of a replaceable toner cartridge 29. A charge roll 32 sets a charge on a surface of the drum 30 as the drum rotates. The laser beam 22 electrostatically discharges the drum to create a latent image. A developer roll 34 introduces toner T to the latent image and such is electrostatically attracted to create a toned image on a surface of the drum. A toner adder roll 35 also works in conjunction with the developer roll to introduce toner from the toner supply to the developer roll. A voltage differential between the surface of the drum 30 and an opposed transfer roll 36 transfers the toned image at first transfer from the drum to an intermediate transfer member (ITM) 37, e.g., belt, and for subsequent, or second transfer, to a sheet of media 50 by way of another voltage differential at a second transfer roll 38. (Alternatively, the toned image may be transferred direct to a sheet of media in an imaging device without an intermediate transfer member.) Afterwards, the sheet advances from a tray 52 to a fuser assembly 56 to fix the toned image to the media through application of heat and pressure. Users pick up the media from a bin 60 after it advances out of the imaging device. The controller coordinates the operational conditions that facilitate the timing of the image transfer and transportation of the media from tray to output bin. The controller also coordinates with one or more high voltage power supplies 90 to set the relative voltages for the electrophotgraphic image process, including setting the voltages for the charge roll 32, the developer roll 34, and the transfer rolls 36, 38. A blade 135 scrapes into a reservoir 137 excess toner from the drum and the process repeats for the next image on the drum.
[0014] To periodically identify imaging print density, the controller C develops on the ITM 37 one or more toner patches 77. A light source 79, such as an LED transmitter, illuminates the toner patch with light 81 that the toner patch scatters 83 upon reflection. A diffuse light sensor 85 (angled to collect light scattered approximately 90? from the toner patch) and specular light sensor 87 (angled to collect light scattered about the same angle as the incident light from the light source, or angled to collect light scattered approximately 45? from the toner patch) collect the scattered light and signal to the controller C their various readings. As described in more detail below, with reference to
[0015] With reference to
[0016] The voltage bias on the drum 30 also typically gets set by way of a resistor 100 and Zener diode 102 with node 95 being tapped between the two. With the foregoing arrangement, when toner T develops during use from the developer roll to the photoconductive drum, the movement of the charged toner particles creates a current measurable by circuitry given as I.sub.DR/PC. In turn, the controller uses this current to determine the mass of the toner and set operating conditions for the EP process. Also, skilled artisans will note that the current I.sub.DR/PC is a conglomeration of other currents. Namely, I.sub.DR/PC includes therein the actual current of the toner (I.sub.Toner), the current of the latent image developed on the drum (I.sub.Latent Image), and the current associated with the Paschen breakdown voltage between the developer roll and the drum (I.sub.DR/PC Paschen). Mathematically, the measurable current I.sub.DR/PC between the developer roll and the drum is represented as:
[0017] As the current of interest for determining the mass of the toner is I.sub.Toner, rearrangement of Equation 1 gives I.sub.Toner Equation 2 as follows:
[0018] From empirical testing the conditions of the EP process after manufacturing the imaging device, for instance, the current of the latent image and that of the Paschen breakdown voltage are known. They are stored in a local or remote memory M (
[0019] The mass of the toner, M.sub.Toner, is then the charge of the toner at a given charge per mass, or:
[0020] The way this works graphically is found with reference to
[0021] With reference to
[0022] In other embodiments,
[0023] The foregoing description of the methods and apparatus 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.