US3832055A - Foraminous vacuum bias roll transfer system - Google Patents

Foraminous vacuum bias roll transfer system Download PDF

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Publication number
US3832055A
US3832055A US00367279A US36727973A US3832055A US 3832055 A US3832055 A US 3832055A US 00367279 A US00367279 A US 00367279A US 36727973 A US36727973 A US 36727973A US 3832055 A US3832055 A US 3832055A
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nip
roller
support surface
foraminous
conductive core
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US00367279A
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R Hamaker
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Xerox Corp
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Xerox Corp
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Priority to US00367279A priority Critical patent/US3832055A/en
Priority to CA197,264A priority patent/CA1009504A/en
Priority to JP5776874A priority patent/JPS611745B2/ja
Priority to GB2324874A priority patent/GB1448386A/en
Priority to IT2321274A priority patent/IT1012842B/en
Priority to DE19742425609 priority patent/DE2425609A1/en
Priority to BR439574A priority patent/BR7404395D0/en
Priority to ES426760A priority patent/ES426760A1/en
Priority to FR7418641A priority patent/FR2231994B1/fr
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Publication of US3832055A publication Critical patent/US3832055A/en
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03GELECTROGRAPHY; ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY; MAGNETOGRAPHY
    • G03G15/00Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern
    • G03G15/14Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern for transferring a pattern to a second base
    • G03G15/16Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern for transferring a pattern to a second base of a toner pattern, e.g. a powder pattern, e.g. magnetic transfer
    • G03G15/1665Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern for transferring a pattern to a second base of a toner pattern, e.g. a powder pattern, e.g. magnetic transfer by introducing the second base in the nip formed by the recording member and at least one transfer member, e.g. in combination with bias or heat
    • G03G15/167Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern for transferring a pattern to a second base of a toner pattern, e.g. a powder pattern, e.g. magnetic transfer by introducing the second base in the nip formed by the recording member and at least one transfer member, e.g. in combination with bias or heat at least one of the recording member or the transfer member being rotatable during the transfer
    • G03G15/1685Structure, details of the transfer member, e.g. chemical composition

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the transfer of image developing charges or materials from one support surface to another in electrostatography, and more particularly to the use of endless foraminous members in connection with electrical fields for such transfers.
  • 1t provides advantages of vacuum sheet retention to a generic transfer system disclosed and claimed in a copending U.S. Pat. application No. by Robert W. Gundlach entitled, Foraminous Electrostagographic Transfer System filed May 29, 1973 as Ser. 'No. 364,463 and having the same assignee.
  • Foraminous members have, of course, been utilized in other different applications in electrostatography, such as paper handling, or photoelectrophoretic development rollers. c.g., Canadian Pat. No. 876,045. Also, aplanar. evenly compressed conductive pressure pad for intermittent latent.(charge) image transfer is disclosed in U.S.-Pat. No. 3,635,556. issued Jan. 18, 1972, to R. L. Levy.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 3 ,633,543 issued Jan. 11, 1972.,to Carl R. Pitasi discloses a xerographic biased transfer roller having a resilient material surface layer capable of passing air'therethrough for sheet retention.
  • the specified material is either conductive rubber or a thin insulator, and the air passages are formed by pinholes through the material.
  • This patent also discloses a recessed lip portion on the roll circumference for registration stopping of the copysheet.
  • the transfer of the development materials involves the difficult and critical physical detachment and transfer over of such particulate materials by high intensity electrostatic force fields from one surface into attachment with another surface, maintaining the same pattern and intensity as the original latent electrostatic image being reproduced without scattering or smearing of the developer material.
  • This difficult requirement can only be met by careful control of the electrostatic fields, which must be high enough for transfer yet not cause arcing or excessive corona generation at undesired locations, since such electrical disturbances can easily cause scattering or smearing of the development materials.
  • the second surface is a cut sheet, it must be precisely registered with the image on the first surface prior to transfer.
  • Controlled generation of corona in post-nip for electrostatic tacking of toner to paper after transfer may be provided along with suppression of pre-nip corona.
  • the upstream or entrance air gap is conventionally referred-to as the pre-nip region and the downstream air gap as the post-nip region. Due to the fact that the breakdown voltage across an air gap is very non-linear with changes in the gap dimensions (this characteristic is known as the Paschen curve) control of arcing or ionization in such air gaps when there is a high biasing voltage on the electrodeis very difficult. The higher the applied bias voltage the more difficult such control becomes, yet in many applications high voltages are either required or highly desirable for efficient transferring of the material fromthe original surface or liquid suspension to the second surface.
  • both vector direction and intensity of the applied electrical fields varies at different locations and times relative to the roller electrode because the electrical fields are geometrically dependent upon the electrode configurations, and change as the electrode moves.
  • the presentinvention provides a system inwhich such desired high biasing voltages and close arrangement also providing desired suppression of arcing and suppression or control of corona emissions in all of the nip, pre-nip and post-nip regions, for more efficient and reliable transfer of development materials.
  • the paper contact with the photoreceptor must precede the applied build up of high electrostatic fields by the transfer roller for two reasons.
  • air ionization in the pre-nip gap can occur, reversing the polarity of toner particle charges and therefore preventing their subsequent transfer in the nip. The latter effect usually occurs intermittently, because it is self-quenching, and so manifests itself in what has been called zebra stripe transfer.
  • this tacking charge may be created by deliberately inducing, but controlling, corona generation in the post-nip gap with a transfer roller of an electrically relaxable material.
  • a constant current bias voltage supply can compensate for resistance charges in the relaxable material.
  • this tacking charge may be applied to the paper in the nip by the contact between the roller and the paper. It will be noted that post-nip corona generation to generate toner tacking charges is not required for conventional xerographic corona transfer systems, where both transfer and tacking are effected by ionicly depositing charges on the back of the paper.
  • FIGURE is a plan view, partially in cross-section, of an exemplary xerographic bias roller transfer system in accordance with the present invention.
  • a xerographic transfer station 50 incorporating a vacuum foraminous bias transfer roller 15 in accordance with the invention.
  • Other details of the transfer system 50 such as the photoreceptor l1 and the related xerographic systems known in the art are taught in the above-incorporated references on bias roller' transfer systems and need not be described in detail herein.
  • roller 15 illustrated here is normally cylindrical and the vast majority of its crosssectional area and outer volume comprises a roller body 21 of foraminous open cell material uniformly coaxially surrounding a smaller cylindrical hollow central core 22 of conductive material, such as a perforated metal roller.
  • a vacuum is applied to the interior of the core 22 by conventional vacuum means, such as the blower 18 illustrated schematically.
  • the foraminous material here is shown as normally cylindrical and bonded to the outside of the central core 22 surface, extending over the perforations 37.
  • roller electrode or roller as used herein are not intended to be limited to integral cylindrical rollers. They are also intended to read broadly on equivalent structures such as moving endless belts of the same foraminous materials with either rolling or stationary (sliding contact) arcuate conductive vacuum backing members. Examples of such equivalent structures are disclosed in the above-cited references.
  • the foraminous material of the roller 15 is open cell material rather than closed cell, i.e., having open voids or pores which allow expulsion or transfer of the contents of individual cells when the cells are compressed, and movement of air through the material.
  • This material is preferably highly foraminous, i.e., the principal volume of the material in its normal uncompressed state comprises a multiplicity of convolute and separated random voids or pores closely interspaced throughout the material, so that the solid material itself can be considered primarily as discontinuous cell walls separating these voids and occupying only a minor portion of the total volume of the foamed material.
  • suitable materials are 45 pore (45 cells per inch) or pore open celled polyurethane foam, which may be commercially obtained, for example, from the Scott Paper Company.
  • the present invention is applicable to many different foraminous materials, many of which ler 15 is highly compressed from its normal uncompressed radius into close to the radius of the conductive core 22.
  • the maximum compression of the roller body 2 due to the curvature of the core 22 (which is not compressed), occurs at the normal nip area 17, and the compression is substantially less in the pre-nip and post-nip areas.
  • the low durometer resiliencyof the foam roller body provides a large area of roller surface contact with the photoreceptor 11 surface extending well into the pre-nip andpostmip areas and covering an area much larger than a normal solid roller nip contact area.
  • the minimum (compressed) distance between the core 22 and the outer surface 24 of the roller 15 is here preferably less than half the normal umcompressed thickness of the foraminous material, so that a substantial number of the normally open cells in the nip 17 are closed by compression. However, full compression (closing of substantially all cells in the center of the nip) is not desired where registration lips are provided as subsequently discussed. With 50 percent compression (not practicably achievable with a solid roller) the transfer field in the nip can be twice the field in the pre and post-nip air gaps.
  • An uncompressed foraminous layer of approximately one centimeter in thickness can be utilized, or a deep pillow roller may be utilized.
  • An air permiable coating may be provided on the circumferential exterior surface 24 of the roller electrode 15 which is sufficiently elastic and resiliently conformable to the compression of the foraminous material.
  • An example is mil perforated polyurethane.
  • Such a surface coating of non-compressible material can be used to permit surface speed synchronization of the system, and to provide increased wear resistance and cleanability.
  • the exemplary xerographic transfer bias roller 15 has a foraminous roller body 21 with a conductive core 22 connected to a conventional transfer bias voltage source 33 by wiper contact 20.
  • the bias source 33 may be connected through common grounds 13 to a conductive backing roll 12 against which the roller 15 is highly compressed with moderate pressure.
  • a flexible belt photoreceptor 11 and paper or other final support sheet 16 Through the nip 17 between the two rollers passes a flexible belt photoreceptor 11 and paper or other final support sheet 16. Negatively charged toner particles 14 previously developed onto the photoconductor 11 surface are retained thereon by positive latent image charges until transfer is effected.
  • transfer by the bias source 23 occurs from the high fields in the nip area 17 created by the foraminous roller body 21 being highly compressed so that the conductive core 22 is closely spaced in the nip from the photoconductor.
  • the disclosed structure provides greatly improved control capabilities as compared to an ordinary transfer roller which maintains a generally cylindrical configuration and simple pre and post-nip air gap configurations.
  • the foraminous material fills the space between the conductive coreand the contacting support surface with a multiplicity of small discontinuities provided by the cells in the material, thereby providing a greatly improved air ionization control barrier.
  • the foraminous material is significantly less compressed (less dense) in the pre-nip and post-nip areas than in the nip area. That is, it has a much greater thickness and porosity between the conductive core and the support surface in the normal pre-nip and postnip areas.
  • the foraminous material extends much further laterally into the pre-nip and post-nip areas, due to its greater deformation, i.-e., it has a much larger surface contact area.
  • This increasing thickness and porosity of the foraminous material can be utilized to provide a varying ionization control barrier in the pre-nip and post-nip areas.
  • even further ionization control variability between the nip area and the pre and post-nip areas can be provided by the degree of compression of the foraminous material in the nip. As the compression is increased, the individual cells may be collapsed, whereby the tops and bottoms of the cell walls contact one another.
  • the electrical properties of the roller in the nip can change dramatically from those of the normal uncompressed porous material to those of a thinner solid roller in the same material. This greatly adds to the effect of the increase in field strength due to the closer conductor spacing geometry of the nip.
  • the deformed radius of curvature of the roller 15 surface 24 at the post-nip exit is much less than the normal roll radius. This sharp curvature, together with the paper beam strength, assists in assuring stripping of the paper from the transfer roll 15.
  • the foraminous bias roller systems disclosed herein may be utilized in different material modes, with different operational properties and functions, although the above-described features and advantages are applicable to all of them.
  • One mode is to provide a foraminous material 21 which is highly insulative, and therefore non-conductive to the bias voltage supply.
  • Another mode is to provide a foraminous materialwhich is resistive, but at least semi-conductive, such as an electrically relaxable material as disclosed in the above-cited references on bias transfer rollers.
  • this second mode at least part of the transfer bias charge will'be conducted out toward the outer surface of the transfer roller.
  • the foraminous roller body is insulative and the pores are air filled, it may be seen that in this case the foraminous material does not affect the vector direction or intensity of the transfer fields. These fields will be controlled entirely by the geometry of the spacing between the conductive core and the opposing conductive support 12 surface.
  • the foraminous material allows the application of biasing potentials of over 1,000 to 3,000 volts between the conductive core and the support surface with very close nip proximity there between to provide very high field intensities.
  • The'foraminous material can allow such high field intensities while either totally suppressing ionization in the entire air gap, or allowing some ionization in post-nip and suppressing it in the pre-nip and nip areas.
  • the electrical field intensity at which any air breakdown occurs is a function of the air gap distance, and a smaller gap will support a much higher field intensity without breakdown. This is represented by the characteristic Paschen curve.
  • the wide lateral extent of the roller contact area and its relatively even pressure insures that the air gap between the outer surface of the roller and the support surface is small and substantially constant to well outside of the normal nip areas, thereby suppressing arcing or undesired corona. No larger air gaps which would induce ionization are formed until the distance from the conductive core is so great that the field intensity or stress in the air gaps is below the ionization potential, i.e., the field intensity is greatly reduced by the time the larger pre or post-nip air gap is formed.
  • the foraminous roller With the foraminous roller, the normal position of the pre-nip and post-nip gaps can be greatly laterally displaced, yet simultaneously the distance between the conductors forming the transfer field can be made very small. These two inter-related desired criteria cannot be effectively met by a solid roller. They can be readily met by a foraminous roller body which is sufficiently thick and sufficiently compressible.
  • this mode can be used to pro vide unsymmetrical fields. That is, the internal resistivity relaxation properties of the material can provide suppression of ionization in the pre-nip air gap while simultaneously encouraging it in the post-nip air gap.
  • Suitable material resistivities for such relaxable transfer operations are discussed in above-cited references such as the Dolcimascolo, et al., US. Pat. No. 3,702,482 and the Thomas Meagher US. Pat. No. 3,781,101 supra.
  • the foraminous material of the invention can provide significant improvements in such systems because the bulk resistivity (resistance per unit volume) of the foraminous material can be changed substantially by its compression. That is, as the foraminous material is compressed in the nip the actual resistance between the conductive core and the roller surface decreases. Therefore, the roller resistance and relaxation time in the nip is greatly lower than in the uncompressed prenip area of the roller. This allows a faster relaxation of the material in the nip, which in turn provides higher fields between the roller surface and the support surface in the nip and in post-nip over a much greater area. Accordingly. the effective latitudes for transfer are much greater electrically as well as mechanically.
  • Resistivity changes under compression for foraminous relaxable materials of several orders of magnitude I have been experimentally observed, which clearly allows greatly improved design and operating control over charge relaxations. That is, once the tops and bottoms of the cell walls touch one another in compression the resistivity has been observed to sharply drop immediately. Conductivity changes of to 1,000 times have been measured between the fully expanded foam and a practical degree of high compression achievable with low pressures.
  • a much larger and more uniform mechanical contact area of a foraminous roller surface with any paper between it and a photoreceptor provides greatly improved mechanical tacking of the paper to the photoreceptor.
  • the chances of premature toner transfer across any significant air gap between the paper and the photoreceptor are greatly reduced, since the paper is already mechanically held against the photoreceptor before it can be subjected to fields sufficient for toner transfer, either from the transfer roll or from charges deposited on the paper from pre-nip corona. This is even more true of the fully insulative foraminous material mode previously described.
  • the outer surface 24 of the roller can be substantially spacedfrom the conductive core 22. This allows a sheet of paper 16 or other second support to be held against the roll surface 24 before and after the sheet contacts the photoreceptor 11 without being charged by the bias voltage and in sufficiently low fields so that undesired arcing or corona in the feeding or stripping off of the sheet from the transfer roll 15 is not a problem.
  • the transfer roll 15 provides positive vacuum retention of the cut sheet 16 on its outer surface 24 from before the pre-nip area until substantially after the postnip area. This is provided here by applying a uniform vacuum on the interior of the foraminous material in these areas so that the paper is uniformly positively mechanically tacked by air pressure to the surface 24. Even though the foraminous material 22 is relatively thick the open cell structure provides a multiplicity of small air passages from the outer surface 24 to the interior surface, where the air then passes through the perforations 37 in the perforated conductive core tube 22. Only the portion of the roller 15 encompassing the initial sheet registration, pre-nip and post-nip areas need to be subjected to the vacuum.
  • Blocking of the vacuum to the rest of the roll may be accomplished as shown here by a stationary semi-cylindrical manifold tube 23 which slideably abuts most of the interior surface of the perforated tubular core 22 to block the air passageways 37 in all but the desired vacuum area (in which the manifold 23 is cutaway).
  • a Teflon or other lubricant surface may be provided therebetween.
  • the manifold 23 may also provide the support for rotation of the roll 15.
  • the roll 15 may also be rotatably mounted by the core 22 providing suitable electrical insulation is provided at the ends of the tube.
  • the vacuum means l8' may be applied at one end of the interior of the manifold 23,'and the other end sealed.
  • the foraminous vacuum transfer roller 15 provides a fer roller exemplified by the US. Pat. No. 3,633,543 disclosure noted in the introduction. That reference discloses a thin transfer roller surface material wherein the vacuum air passages are formed by pinholes directly through the material. While these pinholes provide the necessary air passageways for vacuum retention of sheets on the roll surface, they increase the danger of air' breakdown in the nip, pre-nip and post-nip areas. This is because for-effective transfer a relatively high bias voltage must be applied between the bias roll conductive element and the opposing surface, and air breakdown therebetween is a function of the air path length, as modified by an effective interposed dielectric.
  • the air path length is axial and effectively limited to the thickness of the insulative material through which pinholes are formed.
  • Such pinholes cannot be lengthened without using a thicker solid insulative material layer, but that would increase the nip spacing and therefore lower the effective transfer fields.
  • the pinholes provide direct uninterrupted spark discharge paths inthe nip, in effect rendering the insulative layer relatively ineffective for spark suppression, other by than maintaining an air gap distance equal to the thickness of the layer. While such a system is nevertheless operative in that it can provide effective controlled spacing and vacuum retention of the sheet thereon, the foraminous roller of the invention is a substantial improvement thereon allowing higher intensity transfer fields yet reduced sparking danger.
  • the foraminous roller provides significant advantages over a perforated roller in that the air path length is not limited to the thickness of the insulative material. Rather the foraminous open cell material has highly convolute air passageways therethrough. These passageways have extensive lateral convolutions and discontinuities and do not provide direct axial spark discharge paths therethrough. Thus, the foraminous material provides a substantial ionization control barrier capable of controlling or suppressing much higher intensity electrostatic fields than anair gap of equivalent thickness. The spark discharge air paths through the material are very much longer than the radius or thickness of the foam layer even when the material is uncompressed. Thus, the foraminous material provides a cellular structure which is sufficiently convolute so as to effectively not provide air breakdown paths. yet provides sufficient air permiability for applying a vacuum to its outer surface 24.
  • the air passageways through the pores thereof becomes even more convolute relative to the material thickness.
  • the foraminous materials compresses the pores providing the air passages become constricted and then begin to close completely. Under sufficient compression, which may be achieved with relatively low pressures, the air passages in the nip may be substantially all effectively closed.
  • This provides an even more unique function and operating advantage'since it means that the transfer bias roller can effectively operate in the nip region with a continuous uninterrupted'insulative (or semi-conductive if desired) outerlayer (without any rous vacuum sheet retention function in the pre and post-nip areas. It will be noted that vacuum retention of the sheet 16 is not needed in the nip region 17 in any case, since the sheet 16 is being held betweenthe photoreceptor 11 and the transfer roll in this area.
  • the disclosed foraminous transfer roller provides very signifiblowing air into the post-nip area. This assists in the stripping of the sheet 16 from the roller 15. As the leading edge of the sheet 16 comes out of the nip 17 it may tend to adhere to the photo-receptor 11 in spite of the vacuum being applied to it by the vacuum means 18 through the foraminous material 21 as the material expands in the post-nip area.
  • the puffer 25 although not essential, assists in blowing air under the sheet 16 and giving it sufficient lift to make its initial separation from the photoreceptor 11.
  • the vacuum force from the transfer roller 15 is sufficient to overcome the gravitational and/or beam strength forces of the sheet and to hold the sheet on the roller 15 until the sheet passes through the post-nip region and reaches the area of the transfer roller 15 in which the vacuum force is cut off by the stationary manifold 23.
  • the spacing of the surface 24 away from the charged core 22 and the weight and beam strength of the paper allows the. paper to readily strip itself away from the surface 24 so that it can be carried away by conventional sheet feed-out means 26.
  • theconvolute and small di ameter air passageways through the foraminous layer provide a relatively high resistance to rapid air flow therethrough. This protects against excessive vacuum losses in areas of the roller surface 24 which are not' covered by a sheet 16 at any given time, so that the vacuum in other areas is not effected.
  • the transfer roller 15. is preferably positioned abovethe photoreceptor 11 at the nip, and that the segment of the transfer roller 15 to which the vacuum is applied (i.e., the pre-nip and post-nip areas) is in the lower-most sector of the transfer roller.
  • the weight of the paper maybe utilized in stripping it from the transfer roller 15.
  • this arrangement is merely exemplary and if a reversed arrangement is utilized a positive air pressure may be applied in the area of the manifold 23 (rather than merely blocking the vacuumin that area) for positive paper expulsion from the surface 24, utilizing the same air pas-.
  • Another feature which may be provided in the trans-- ferisystem is a system forcleaning the exterior surface 24-continuously as the roller 15 rotates.
  • This is .provided here by a stationary hollow vacuumtube 26 deformably engaging the surface 24 as the surface passes under it.
  • the tube 26 is stationed substantially away from the nip 17 so as not to interfer with the transfer operation.
  • a vacuum is applied through apertures in the wall of the tube engaging surface 24 for removing toner or paper lint, etc., which may otherwise accumulate on surface 24. it may utilize the same, or separate, vacuum means;
  • the initial registration operation is illustrated by the alternate (dashed line view) position of the paper 16 and the registration lip 27, in contrast to the solid line position of these elements.
  • Another alternate position dashed line view of the registration lip 27 shows its fully flattened configuration in the nip 17.
  • the sheet 16 is fed in toward the roller by a feed-in roller 28 and an underlying guide plate 29, or other suitable feed means.
  • the lead edge of the paper 16 is fed into abutment with the surface 24 of the roller 15 substantially spaced from the nip. This is shown by the dashed view (unbuckled) position of the paper 16.
  • the rotation of the roller 15 is coordinated therewith so that the registration lip 27 at that point provides a stop for the lead edge of the paper 16.
  • the input speed of the paper 16 provided by the feed roll 28 is such as to form a buckle of the sheet 16 between the feed roller 28 and the transfer roll 15 as shown.
  • the vacuum applied to the sheet 16 holds it down against the surface 24 behind the registration lip 27 so that it cannot lift or be driven over this lip, i.e., the sheet lead edge may move slightly into abutment with the lip 27, but cannot pass over it.
  • the registration lip 27 is preferably monolithically molded as an extending rib in the same formation process as the rest of the foam material 21 so as to be homogenious therewith.
  • the depth of foraminous material underlying the lip is substantially greater than the height of projection of the lip above the surface 24, it can also be formed of solid rubber or other suitable materials which are integrally molded or bonded in or to the foraminous material.
  • the registration rib will simply emerse itself in the foraminous material in the nip as shown and not affect the nip 17 characteristics.
  • the lip member (or lip forming recess) is pressed into smooth, even alignment with the rest of the'surface 24 in passing through the nip, to provide smooth even contact with the opposing sheet feeding surface (the photoreceptor 11 in this case).
  • the lip forming rib is shown here as rectangular in cross section. However, it could be provided in various other configurations, such as a saw-tooth, etc., since only a trailing face or notch is needed for registration of the sheet lead edge.
  • the drive means for sheet feeding in the disclosed embodiment is the moving photoreceptor 11, which in turn may be driven by its support roll 12. This frictionally drives the roll 15 and sheet 16 through the nip.
  • the roll 15 itself may be rotatably driven if desired.
  • roller electrode In electrostatographic apparatus wherein a transfer bias voltage is applied between a roller electrode and a first support surface to provide an electrical field for image transfer to a sheet providing a second support surface there-between while relative movement is provided between said roller electrode and said first support surface and said sheet, and said roller is variably deformed by said first support surface at a roller nip area with pre-nip and post-nip areas at each side of said nip area, the improvement in said roller electrode comprising:
  • said foraminous material occupying the space between said conductive core and said first-support surface with a multiplicity of small convolute air passage discontinuities provided by said cells in said material and providing an ionization control barrier
  • said foraminousmaterial being compressed between said conductive core and said first support surface in said nip area to a thickness substantially less than said normal uncompressed thickness, to close air passages therein,
  • said foraminous material being less compressed in said pre-nip and post-nip areas than in said nip area and having a greater thickness and porosity be tween said conductive core and said first support surface therein over a substantial area of said surface for ionization control in said pre-nip and postnip areas;
  • vacuum means for applying a vacuum through said roller body for aminous material to provide vacuum retention of said sheet on said roller body.
  • said first support surface is a photoreceptor and said roller electrode is a xerographic bias transfer roller for electrostatic image transfer of xerographic developer material from said first support surface to said second support surface.
  • the apparatus of claim 1 further including air blowing means blowing into said post-nip area for assisting stripping of said sheet from said roller.
  • first support surface is a photoreceptor and said roller electrode is a xerographic bias transfer roller for electrostatic image transfer of xerographic developer material from said first support surface to said second support surface.
  • said conductive core and said roller body are cylindrical and coaxially mounted with said conductive core uniformly wrapped with said foraminous material, and said conductive core is a hollow perforated tube with said vacuum means communicating with the interior thereof.
  • roller electrode in electrostatographic apparatus wherein a transfer bias voltage is applied between a roller electrode and a first support surface to provide an electrical field for image transfer to a sheet providing a second support surface therebetween while relative movement is provided between said roller electrode and said first support surface and said sheet, andsaid roller is variably deformed by said first support surface at a roller nip area with pre-nip and post-nip areas at each side of said nip area, the improvement in said roller electrode comprising:
  • said foraminous material being compressed between said conductive core and said first support surface in said nip area to a thickness substantially less than said normal uncompressed thickness
  • said foraminous material being less compressed in said pre-nip and post-nip areas than in said nip area and having a greater thickness and porosity between said conductive core and said first support surface therein over a substantial area of said sur-- face for ionization control in said pre-nip and postnip areas, and
  • sheet registration lip means providing a sheet edge detaining surface discontinuity in said foraminous material, which discontinuity is suppressed in said nip by said compression of said foraminous material to maintain a smooth and continuous nip engagement by said roller.
  • roller is cylindrical and said sheet registration lip means comprises an integral projecting rib extending along the outer surface of said roller parallel to the axis of said roller.

Abstract

In electrostatographic apparatus for applying a high bias voltage between a bias roller electrode and an original support surface to provide an electrical field for development material transfer to a cut sheet therebetween without arcing or undesired corona, a roller electrode having an electrically conductive core to which said high voltage is applied and a normally thick roller body of foraminous convolute open cell material compressed between the conductive core and the support surface and a vacuum applied through said foraminous material to hold said cut sheet against said roller electrode.

Description

llamaker United States Patent 1191 1 Aug. 27, 1974 Filed:
FORAMINOUS VACUUM BIAS ROLL TRANSFER SYSTEM Ralph A. Hamaker, Penfield, N.Y.
Xerox Corporation, Stamford, Conn.
Jlllle 5, 1973 Appl. No.: 367,279
Inventor:
Assignee:
US. 01. 355/3 R, 96/1.4 Int. Cl G03g 15/16 Field of Search 355/3 R; 96/l.4; 118/621- References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 1/1965 GundlflCh....- 96/14 1/1972 Pitasi 117/175 x 3/1972 Weikel, 355/3 3,697,171 10/1972 Sullivan 96/l.4X
Primary Examiner-Robert P. Greiner ABSTRACT ln electrostatographic apparatus for applying a high bias voltage between a bias roller electrode and an original support surface to provide an electrical field for development material transfer to a cut sheet therebetween without arcing or undesired corona, a roller electrode having an electrically conductive core to which said high voltage is applied and a normally thick roller body of foraminous convolute open cell material compressed between the conductive core and the support surface and a vacuum applied through said foraminous material to hold said out sheet against said roller electrode.
17 Claims, 1 Drawing Figure FORAMINOUS VACUUM BIAS ROLL TRANSFER SYSTEM The present invention relates to the transfer of image developing charges or materials from one support surface to another in electrostatography, and more particularly to the use of endless foraminous members in connection with electrical fields for such transfers. 1t provides advantages of vacuum sheet retention to a generic transfer system disclosed and claimed in a copending U.S. Pat. application No. by Robert W. Gundlach entitled, Foraminous Electrostagographic Transfer System filed May 29, 1973 as Ser. 'No. 364,463 and having the same assignee.
The best known example of such transfer is the conventional transfer step in xerography wherein toner is transferred from the photoreceptor (the original support surface) to the copy paper (the final surface). However, such development material transfers are required in other electrostatographic processing steps.
In xerography, developer transfer is most commonly achieved by electrostatic force fields created by DC. C. charges applied to the back of the copy paper (opposite from the side contacting the toner-bearing photoreceptor) sufficient to overcome the charges holding the toner to the photoreceptor and to attract most of the toner to transfer onto the paper. These xerographic transfer fields are generally provided in one of two ways, by ion emission from a transfer corotron onto the paper, as in U.S. Pat. No. 2,807,233, why A DC. biased transfer roller or belt rolling along the back of the paper. Examples of bias roller transfer systems are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,807,233; 3,043,684; 3,267,840; 3,598,580; 3,625,146; 3,630,591; 3,691,993; 3,702,482; and 3,684,364. Also, French Pat. No. 2,065,390, German Application OLS 2,102,634 and British Pat. Nos. 1,210,666 and 1,302,922. U.S. Pat.,No. 2,968,555 issued Jan. 17, 1961, to R. W. Gundlach in FIG. 3 and Column briefly discloses a xerographic transfer system utilizing a soft resilient sponge rubber coated transfer roller, preferably electrically conductive. However, no substantial deformation of this roller is shown or suggested.
Foraminous members have, of course, been utilized in other different applications in electrostatography, such as paper handling, or photoelectrophoretic development rollers. c.g., Canadian Pat. No. 876,045. Also, aplanar. evenly compressed conductive pressure pad for intermittent latent.(charge) image transfer is disclosed in U.S.-Pat. No. 3,635,556. issued Jan. 18, 1972, to R. L. Levy.
Various solid porous vacuum roll paper transport rolls are known in the art. U.S. Pat. No. 3 ,633,543 issued Jan. 11, 1972.,to Carl R. Pitasi discloses a xerographic biased transfer roller having a resilient material surface layer capable of passing air'therethrough for sheet retention. The specified material is either conductive rubber or a thin insulator, and the air passages are formed by pinholes through the material. This patent also discloses a recessed lip portion on the roll circumference for registration stopping of the copysheet.
:The transfer of the development materials involves the difficult and critical physical detachment and transfer over of such particulate materials by high intensity electrostatic force fields from one surface into attachment with another surface, maintaining the same pattern and intensity as the original latent electrostatic image being reproduced without scattering or smearing of the developer material. This difficult requirement can only be met by careful control of the electrostatic fields, which must be high enough for transfer yet not cause arcing or excessive corona generation at undesired locations, since such electrical disturbances can easily cause scattering or smearing of the development materials. Further, especially where the second surface is a cut sheet, it must be precisely registered with the image on the first surface prior to transfer.
The critical function of pre and post-nip corona in xerographic bias 'roll transfer is discussed, for example, in co-pending application Ser. No. 309,562filed Nov. 22, 1972, by Thomas Meagher, entitled Constant CurrentBiasing Transfer System issued as U.S. Pat. No. 3,781,101 on Dec. 25, 1973, and in U.S. Pat. No.
3,702,482 by C. Dolcimascolo, et 211., issued Nov. 7,v
1972. Controlled generation of corona in post-nip for electrostatic tacking of toner to paper after transfer may be provided along with suppression of pre-nip corona.
Perhaps the most difficult technical problem in all of the roll or belt electrode systems for transferring of electrostatographic imaging development materials between supports is that discussed above of controlling or suppressing arcing and undesired corona generations. This is primarily due to the fact that in practical such systems the transfer of materials must be effected while the two surfaces between which the material is being transferred are both moving at the same speed. This as a practical matter requires the material transferring electrode to be an effectively endless surface of a cylindrical roller or small endless belt. This in turn means that the surface of the roller or belt electrode must continuously move in and out of contact with the original support surface. This creates varying width (exponential) air gaps at each side of the actual contact area (the nip region). The upstream or entrance air gap is conventionally referred-to as the pre-nip region and the downstream air gap as the post-nip region. Due to the fact that the breakdown voltage across an air gap is very non-linear with changes in the gap dimensions (this characteristic is known as the Paschen curve) control of arcing or ionization in such air gaps when there is a high biasing voltage on the electrodeis very difficult. The higher the applied bias voltage the more difficult such control becomes, yet in many applications high voltages are either required or highly desirable for efficient transferring of the material fromthe original surface or liquid suspension to the second surface. Further, since the field intensity for material transfer is a function of the spacingas well as the applied potential the biasing voltage charge is'desirably applied as closely as possible to the original support, again further increasing the difficulty of preventing voltage breakdown by arcing or excessive corona generation in the nip itself as well as the pre andpost-nip gaps. Further, both vector direction and intensity of the applied electrical fields varies at different locations and times relative to the roller electrode because the electrical fields are geometrically dependent upon the electrode configurations, and change as the electrode moves. The presentinvention provides a system inwhich such desired high biasing voltages and close arrangement also providing desired suppression of arcing and suppression or control of corona emissions in all of the nip, pre-nip and post-nip regions, for more efficient and reliable transfer of development materials.
Discussing in further detail the xerographic bias roller transfer process, the paper contact with the photoreceptor must precede the applied build up of high electrostatic fields by the transfer roller for two reasons. First, if excessive fields exist when the paper is still approaching the toner image on the photoreceptor, then toner particles can prematurely transfer, spreading as they jump the pre-nip gap, resulting in fuzzy images. Secondly, air ionization in the pre-nip gap can occur, reversing the polarity of toner particle charges and therefore preventing their subsequent transfer in the nip. The latter effect usually occurs intermittently, because it is self-quenching, and so manifests itself in what has been called zebra stripe transfer. In the nip an electrostatic field of about volts per micron is sufficient to transfer loose charged toner particles from the photoreceptor to the paper surface. However, in order to establish a stable electrostatic bond between the toner and the paper after it is transferred, a net charge should be applied to the back of the paper opposite from the toner charge sufficient to tack the transferred toner to the paper so that it will not be dislodged in the subsequent paper handling, which includes the stripping of the paper from the photoreceptor. As disclosed in the Thomas Meagher U.S. Pat. No. 3,78 l ,lOl, supra, and the Dolcimascolo et al. US. Pat. No. 3,702,482, this tacking charge may be created by deliberately inducing, but controlling, corona generation in the post-nip gap with a transfer roller of an electrically relaxable material. A constant current bias voltage supply can compensate for resistance charges in the relaxable material. Alternatively, if the roller and paper are conductive enough, this tacking charge may be applied to the paper in the nip by the contact between the roller and the paper. It will be noted that post-nip corona generation to generate toner tacking charges is not required for conventional xerographic corona transfer systems, where both transfer and tacking are effected by ionicly depositing charges on the back of the paper.
An embodiment of the present invention is shown and described hereinbelow as incorporated in otherwise conventional exemplary electrostatographic apparatus and processes. Accordingly, said processes and apparatus need not be described in detail herein, since the above-cited and other references teach details of various suitable exemplary structures, materials and functions to those skilled in the art. Further examples are disclosed in the books Electrophotography By R. M. Schaffert, and Xerography and Related Processes by John H. Dessauer and. Harold E. Clark, both first published in 1965 by Focal Press Ltd, London. England. All of the references cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference in this specification.
Further objects, features and advantages of the present invention pertain to the particular apparatus, steps and details whereby the above-mentioned aspects of the invention are attained. Accordingly, the'invention will be better understood by reference to the following description and to the'drawing forming a part thereof, which .is substantially to scale, except as noted,
wherein: W
The FIGURE is a plan view, partially in cross-section, of an exemplary xerographic bias roller transfer system in accordance with the present invention.
Referring to the Figure, it may be seen that there is illustrated a xerographic transfer station 50 incorporating a vacuum foraminous bias transfer roller 15 in accordance with the invention. Other details of the transfer system 50 such as the photoreceptor l1 and the related xerographic systems known in the art are taught in the above-incorporated references on bias roller' transfer systems and need not be described in detail herein.
It may be seen from the partial cross-sectioning of this axial plan view that the roller 15 illustrated here is normally cylindrical and the vast majority of its crosssectional area and outer volume comprises a roller body 21 of foraminous open cell material uniformly coaxially surrounding a smaller cylindrical hollow central core 22 of conductive material, such as a perforated metal roller. A vacuum is applied to the interior of the core 22 by conventional vacuum means, such as the blower 18 illustrated schematically. The foraminous material here is shown as normally cylindrical and bonded to the outside of the central core 22 surface, extending over the perforations 37. However, it will be appreciated that the terms roller electrode or roller as used herein are not intended to be limited to integral cylindrical rollers. They are also intended to read broadly on equivalent structures such as moving endless belts of the same foraminous materials with either rolling or stationary (sliding contact) arcuate conductive vacuum backing members. Examples of such equivalent structures are disclosed in the above-cited references.
The foraminous material of the roller 15 is open cell material rather than closed cell, i.e., having open voids or pores which allow expulsion or transfer of the contents of individual cells when the cells are compressed, and movement of air through the material. This material is preferably highly foraminous, i.e., the principal volume of the material in its normal uncompressed state comprises a multiplicity of convolute and separated random voids or pores closely interspaced throughout the material, so that the solid material itself can be considered primarily as discontinuous cell walls separating these voids and occupying only a minor portion of the total volume of the foamed material. Examples of suitable materials are 45 pore (45 cells per inch) or pore open celled polyurethane foam, which may be commercially obtained, for example, from the Scott Paper Company. The present invention is applicable to many different foraminous materials, many of which ler 15 is highly compressed from its normal uncompressed radius into close to the radius of the conductive core 22. The maximum compression of the roller body 2], due to the curvature of the core 22 (which is not compressed), occurs at the normal nip area 17, and the compression is substantially less in the pre-nip and post-nip areas. However, the low durometer resiliencyof the foam roller body provides a large area of roller surface contact with the photoreceptor 11 surface extending well into the pre-nip andpostmip areas and covering an area much larger than a normal solid roller nip contact area.
The minimum (compressed) distance between the core 22 and the outer surface 24 of the roller 15 is here preferably less than half the normal umcompressed thickness of the foraminous material, so that a substantial number of the normally open cells in the nip 17 are closed by compression. However, full compression (closing of substantially all cells in the center of the nip) is not desired where registration lips are provided as subsequently discussed. With 50 percent compression (not practicably achievable with a solid roller) the transfer field in the nip can be twice the field in the pre and post-nip air gaps. An uncompressed foraminous layer of approximately one centimeter in thickness can be utilized, or a deep pillow roller may be utilized.
in comparison, even very soft rubber rollers which are solid cannot achieve the desired forms and close nip spacings of the disclosed foraminous roller electrodes. Solid rollers can only be somewhat deformed, rather than compressed, causing severe internal stresses on the material in an attempt to bring the roller core close to the support surface. Further, with a foam roller a much lower effective durometer can be achieved than with a solid roller without having to go to a material which is so soft as to have poor strength and wear resistance properties. The much greater roller surface deformation which can be achieved with relatively light compression pressures in foam rollers provides a much greater surface contact area for improved transfer and paper hold-down, with much more even and reduced pressures for reduced wear and reduced distortion of components, in addition to the significant electrical advantages disclosed.
An air permiable coating may be provided on the circumferential exterior surface 24 of the roller electrode 15 which is sufficiently elastic and resiliently conformable to the compression of the foraminous material. An example is mil perforated polyurethane. Such a surface coating of non-compressible material can be used to permit surface speed synchronization of the system, and to provide increased wear resistance and cleanability.
Considering further the exemplary xerographic transfer bias roller 15, it has a foraminous roller body 21 with a conductive core 22 connected to a conventional transfer bias voltage source 33 by wiper contact 20. The bias source 33 may be connected through common grounds 13 to a conductive backing roll 12 against which the roller 15 is highly compressed with moderate pressure. Through the nip 17 between the two rollers passes a flexible belt photoreceptor 11 and paper or other final support sheet 16. Negatively charged toner particles 14 previously developed onto the photoconductor 11 surface are retained thereon by positive latent image charges until transfer is effected. Here. transfer by the bias source 23 occurs from the high fields in the nip area 17 created by the foraminous roller body 21 being highly compressed so that the conductive core 22 is closely spaced in the nip from the photoconductor.
The disclosed structure provides greatly improved control capabilities as compared to an ordinary transfer roller which maintains a generally cylindrical configuration and simple pre and post-nip air gap configurations. Not only is the shape and contact area of the nip different here, but also the foraminous material fills the space between the conductive coreand the contacting support surface with a multiplicity of small discontinuities provided by the cells in the material, thereby providing a greatly improved air ionization control barrier. The foraminous material is significantly less compressed (less dense) in the pre-nip and post-nip areas than in the nip area. That is, it has a much greater thickness and porosity between the conductive core and the support surface in the normal pre-nip and postnip areas. The foraminous material extends much further laterally into the pre-nip and post-nip areas, due to its greater deformation, i.-e., it has a much larger surface contact area. This increasing thickness and porosity of the foraminous material can be utilized to provide a varying ionization control barrier in the pre-nip and post-nip areas. Further, as previously noted, even further ionization control variability between the nip area and the pre and post-nip areas can be provided by the degree of compression of the foraminous material in the nip. As the compression is increased, the individual cells may be collapsed, whereby the tops and bottoms of the cell walls contact one another. As more cells are collapsed, the electrical properties of the roller in the nip can change dramatically from those of the normal uncompressed porous material to those of a thinner solid roller in the same material. This greatly adds to the effect of the increase in field strength due to the closer conductor spacing geometry of the nip.
It will be noted that the deformed radius of curvature of the roller 15 surface 24 at the post-nip exit is much less than the normal roll radius. This sharp curvature, together with the paper beam strength, assists in assuring stripping of the paper from the transfer roll 15.
The foraminous bias roller systems disclosed herein may be utilized in different material modes, with different operational properties and functions, although the above-described features and advantages are applicable to all of them. One mode is to provide a foraminous material 21 which is highly insulative, and therefore non-conductive to the bias voltage supply. Another modeis to provide a foraminous materialwhich is resistive, but at least semi-conductive, such as an electrically relaxable material as disclosed in the above-cited references on bias transfer rollers. In this second mode at least part of the transfer bias charge will'be conducted out toward the outer surface of the transfer roller.
Considering first the mode wherein the foraminous roller body is insulative and the pores are air filled, it may be seen that in this case the foraminous material does not affect the vector direction or intensity of the transfer fields. These fields will be controlled entirely by the geometry of the spacing between the conductive core and the opposing conductive support 12 surface.
In this case the above-described function of the foraminous material in breaking up the air gap into many smaller individual air gaps separated by cell walls provides an important function. The foraminous material allows the application of biasing potentials of over 1,000 to 3,000 volts between the conductive core and the support surface with very close nip proximity there between to provide very high field intensities. The'foraminous material can allow such high field intensities while either totally suppressing ionization in the entire air gap, or allowing some ionization in post-nip and suppressing it in the pre-nip and nip areas.
As will be recalled, the electrical field intensity at which any air breakdown occurs is a function of the air gap distance, and a smaller gap will support a much higher field intensity without breakdown. This is represented by the characteristic Paschen curve. The wide lateral extent of the roller contact area and its relatively even pressure insures that the air gap between the outer surface of the roller and the support surface is small and substantially constant to well outside of the normal nip areas, thereby suppressing arcing or undesired corona. No larger air gaps which would induce ionization are formed until the distance from the conductive core is so great that the field intensity or stress in the air gaps is below the ionization potential, i.e., the field intensity is greatly reduced by the time the larger pre or post-nip air gap is formed. With the foraminous roller, the normal position of the pre-nip and post-nip gaps can be greatly laterally displaced, yet simultaneously the distance between the conductors forming the transfer field can be made very small. These two inter-related desired criteria cannot be effectively met by a solid roller. They can be readily met by a foraminous roller body which is sufficiently thick and sufficiently compressible.
Considering now the materials mode in which the foraminous material of the bias roll is resistive rather than insulative, as noted above this mode can be used to pro vide unsymmetrical fields. That is, the internal resistivity relaxation properties of the material can provide suppression of ionization in the pre-nip air gap while simultaneously encouraging it in the post-nip air gap. Suitable material resistivities for such relaxable transfer operations are discussed in above-cited references such as the Dolcimascolo, et al., US. Pat. No. 3,702,482 and the Thomas Meagher US. Pat. No. 3,781,101 supra.
The foraminous material of the invention can provide significant improvements in such systems because the bulk resistivity (resistance per unit volume) of the foraminous material can be changed substantially by its compression. That is, as the foraminous material is compressed in the nip the actual resistance between the conductive core and the roller surface decreases. Therefore, the roller resistance and relaxation time in the nip is greatly lower than in the uncompressed prenip area of the roller. This allows a faster relaxation of the material in the nip, which in turn provides higher fields between the roller surface and the support surface in the nip and in post-nip over a much greater area. Accordingly. the effective latitudes for transfer are much greater electrically as well as mechanically. This allows a relatively higher resistivity material to be used, which material can be less humidity sensitive as to its resistivity and, therefore, more reliable. Such higher resistivityv material, where foraminous, can insure pre-nip corona suppression even with substantial variations in humidity and paper, yet also prevent inadequate relaxation (excessive roll internal fields) which could cause inadequate transfer fields or inadequate post-nip gap ionization fields. In fact, the foraminous relaxable material can effectively act as a complete insulator on the uncompressed entrance side of the nip.
Resistivity changes under compression for foraminous relaxable materials of several orders of magnitude I have been experimentally observed, which clearly allows greatly improved design and operating control over charge relaxations. That is, once the tops and bottoms of the cell walls touch one another in compression the resistivity has been observed to sharply drop immediately. Conductivity changes of to 1,000 times have been measured between the fully expanded foam and a practical degree of high compression achievable with low pressures.
A much larger and more uniform mechanical contact area of a foraminous roller surface with any paper between it and a photoreceptor provides greatly improved mechanical tacking of the paper to the photoreceptor. Thus, the chances of premature toner transfer across any significant air gap between the paper and the photoreceptor are greatly reduced, since the paper is already mechanically held against the photoreceptor before it can be subjected to fields sufficient for toner transfer, either from the transfer roll or from charges deposited on the paper from pre-nip corona. This is even more true of the fully insulative foraminous material mode previously described. .Uniform and positive paper/photoreceptor contact, especially at the leading and trailing edges, is, of course, one of the principal advantages of a bias roll transfer system as opposed to a corotron transfer system and a foraminous roll is superior in this regard.
Due to the fact that the foraminous material 22 of the transfer roller 15 expands to its normal thickness everywhere except in the nip area 17 (and its entrance and exit), the outer surface 24 of the roller can be substantially spacedfrom the conductive core 22. This allows a sheet of paper 16 or other second support to be held against the roll surface 24 before and after the sheet contacts the photoreceptor 11 without being charged by the bias voltage and in sufficiently low fields so that undesired arcing or corona in the feeding or stripping off of the sheet from the transfer roll 15 is not a problem.
The transfer roll 15 provides positive vacuum retention of the cut sheet 16 on its outer surface 24 from before the pre-nip area until substantially after the postnip area. This is provided here by applying a uniform vacuum on the interior of the foraminous material in these areas so that the paper is uniformly positively mechanically tacked by air pressure to the surface 24. Even though the foraminous material 22 is relatively thick the open cell structure provides a multiplicity of small air passages from the outer surface 24 to the interior surface, where the air then passes through the perforations 37 in the perforated conductive core tube 22. Only the portion of the roller 15 encompassing the initial sheet registration, pre-nip and post-nip areas need to be subjected to the vacuum. Blocking of the vacuum to the rest of the roll may be accomplished as shown here by a stationary semi-cylindrical manifold tube 23 which slideably abuts most of the interior surface of the perforated tubular core 22 to block the air passageways 37 in all but the desired vacuum area (in which the manifold 23 is cutaway). A Teflon or other lubricant surface may be provided therebetween. With this configuration the manifold 23 may also provide the support for rotation of the roll 15. However, the roll 15 may also be rotatably mounted by the core 22 providing suitable electrical insulation is provided at the ends of the tube. The vacuum means l8'may be applied at one end of the interior of the manifold 23,'and the other end sealed.
The foraminous vacuum transfer roller 15 provides a fer roller exemplified by the US. Pat. No. 3,633,543 disclosure noted in the introduction. That reference discloses a thin transfer roller surface material wherein the vacuum air passages are formed by pinholes directly through the material. While these pinholes provide the necessary air passageways for vacuum retention of sheets on the roll surface, they increase the danger of air' breakdown in the nip, pre-nip and post-nip areas. This is because for-effective transfer a relatively high bias voltage must be applied between the bias roll conductive element and the opposing surface, and air breakdown therebetween is a function of the air path length, as modified by an effective interposed dielectric. With a pinhole arrangement the air path length is axial and effectively limited to the thickness of the insulative material through which pinholes are formed. Such pinholes cannot be lengthened without using a thicker solid insulative material layer, but that would increase the nip spacing and therefore lower the effective transfer fields. The pinholes provide direct uninterrupted spark discharge paths inthe nip, in effect rendering the insulative layer relatively ineffective for spark suppression, other by than maintaining an air gap distance equal to the thickness of the layer. While such a system is nevertheless operative in that it can provide effective controlled spacing and vacuum retention of the sheet thereon, the foraminous roller of the invention is a substantial improvement thereon allowing higher intensity transfer fields yet reduced sparking danger. I
Specifically the foraminous roller provides significant advantages over a perforated roller in that the air path length is not limited to the thickness of the insulative material. Rather the foraminous open cell material has highly convolute air passageways therethrough. These passageways have extensive lateral convolutions and discontinuities and do not provide direct axial spark discharge paths therethrough. Thus, the foraminous material provides a substantial ionization control barrier capable of controlling or suppressing much higher intensity electrostatic fields than anair gap of equivalent thickness. The spark discharge air paths through the material are very much longer than the radius or thickness of the foam layer even when the material is uncompressed. Thus, the foraminous material provides a cellular structure which is sufficiently convolute so as to effectively not provide air breakdown paths. yet provides sufficient air permiability for applying a vacuum to its outer surface 24.
As the foraminous material of the roller is compressed in the nip l7 and its adjacent areas the air passageways through the pores thereof becomes even more convolute relative to the material thickness. As the foraminous materials compresses the pores providing the air passages become constricted and then begin to close completely. Under sufficient compression, which may be achieved with relatively low pressures, the air passages in the nip may be substantially all effectively closed. This provides an even more unique function and operating advantage'since it means that the transfer bias roller can effectively operate in the nip region with a continuous uninterrupted'insulative (or semi-conductive if desired) outerlayer (without any rous vacuum sheet retention function in the pre and post-nip areas. It will be noted that vacuum retention of the sheet 16 is not needed in the nip region 17 in any case, since the sheet 16 is being held betweenthe photoreceptor 11 and the transfer roll in this area.
The greatly improved spark discharge barrier as well as the much higher compressibility of the foraminous roll allows much closer nip transfer spacings, with resulting higher transfer field intensities, thus providing higher transfer efficiencies, yet without sacrificing vacuum sheet retention. Thus, it may be seen that the disclosed foraminous transfer roller provides very signifiblowing air into the post-nip area. This assists in the stripping of the sheet 16 from the roller 15. As the leading edge of the sheet 16 comes out of the nip 17 it may tend to adhere to the photo-receptor 11 in spite of the vacuum being applied to it by the vacuum means 18 through the foraminous material 21 as the material expands in the post-nip area. This is because air cannot easily get under the paper 16 (between it and the photoreceptor) except by surface irregularities to provide the necessary air pressure differential lift. The puffer 25, although not essential, assists in blowing air under the sheet 16 and giving it sufficient lift to make its initial separation from the photoreceptor 11. Once that is effected the vacuum force from the transfer roller 15 is sufficient to overcome the gravitational and/or beam strength forces of the sheet and to hold the sheet on the roller 15 until the sheet passes through the post-nip region and reaches the area of the transfer roller 15 in which the vacuum force is cut off by the stationary manifold 23. At that point the spacing of the surface 24 away from the charged core 22 and the weight and beam strength of the paper allows the. paper to readily strip itself away from the surface 24 so that it can be carried away by conventional sheet feed-out means 26.
It will also be noted that theconvolute and small di ameter air passageways through the foraminous layer provide a relatively high resistance to rapid air flow therethrough. This protects against excessive vacuum losses in areas of the roller surface 24 which are not' covered by a sheet 16 at any given time, so that the vacuum in other areas is not effected. I
It will be noted that with the disclosed arrangement that the transfer roller 15. is preferably positioned abovethe photoreceptor 11 at the nip, and that the segment of the transfer roller 15 to which the vacuum is applied (i.e., the pre-nip and post-nip areas) is in the lower-most sector of the transfer roller. With this arrangement the weight of the paper maybe utilized in stripping it from the transfer roller 15. However, this arrangement is merely exemplary and if a reversed arrangement is utilized a positive air pressure may be applied in the area of the manifold 23 (rather than merely blocking the vacuumin that area) for positive paper expulsion from the surface 24, utilizing the same air pas-.
sageways in the foraminous material.
Another feature which may be provided in the trans-- ferisystem is a system forcleaning the exterior surface 24-continuously as the roller 15 rotates. This is .provided here by a stationary hollow vacuumtube 26 deformably engaging the surface 24 as the surface passes under it. The tube 26 is stationed substantially away from the nip 17 so as not to interfer with the transfer operation. A vacuum is applied through apertures in the wall of the tube engaging surface 24 for removing toner or paper lint, etc., which may otherwise accumulate on surface 24. it may utilize the same, or separate, vacuum means;
Accurate registration of the incoming sheet of paper 16 or other final support member in the transfer station 50 is extremely important. The sheet 16 must be accurately aligned with the position of the electrostatic latent image on the photoreceptor 11 in order for that image to transfer to the paper 16 in the proper position. This registration is normally accomplished by control of the position and timing of the lead edge of the paper 16 at it directly enters the transfer nip 17. However, there is disclosed herein, and claimed in a contemporaneous application by the same inventor and assignee entitled, Foraminous Sheet Registration System, Ser. No. 367,280, filed June 5, 1973, a simple and inexpensive novel registration means made possible by a foraminous roller. This is illustrated here by the exemplary registration lip 27 on the outer surface 24 of the roller 15. The initial registration operation is illustrated by the alternate (dashed line view) position of the paper 16 and the registration lip 27, in contrast to the solid line position of these elements. Another alternate position dashed line view of the registration lip 27 shows its fully flattened configuration in the nip 17.
As may be seen, the sheet 16 is fed in toward the roller by a feed-in roller 28 and an underlying guide plate 29, or other suitable feed means. However, rather than being fed directly into the nip 17 with registration fully controlled by the feed roller 28, in this case the lead edge of the paper 16 is fed into abutment with the surface 24 of the roller 15 substantially spaced from the nip. This is shown by the dashed view (unbuckled) position of the paper 16. The rotation of the roller 15 is coordinated therewith so that the registration lip 27 at that point provides a stop for the lead edge of the paper 16. The input speed of the paper 16 provided by the feed roll 28 is such as to form a buckle of the sheet 16 between the feed roller 28 and the transfer roll 15 as shown. The registration lip 27, however, prevents the lead edge of the paper from sliding on the surface 24 and therefore maintains the registration of the sheet 16 at all times until it is fed into the nip 17. The vacuum applied to the sheet 16 holds it down against the surface 24 behind the registration lip 27 so that it cannot lift or be driven over this lip, i.e., the sheet lead edge may move slightly into abutment with the lip 27, but cannot pass over it.
The general function of grippers or paper stop recesses in transferrollers and their function is known in the art, as exemplified by the above-discussed US. Pat. No.
3,633,543, and'accordingly need not be discussed in detail herein. The unique structure and function of this particular registration means relates to the foraminous layer 21 of the roller 15. In prior art devices the sheet registration gripper or lip has generally necessitated a discontinuity in the roller surface. This discontinuity, continuing as the registration lip passes through the nip region, interferes with the transfer operation by creating uneven fields or air gaps or by'masking from transfer a portion of the lead edge. In contrast, the registration system disclosed herein provides positive mechanical sheet registration lips which do not create any discontinuity or interruptions in the nip region and does not affect transfer in any way.
This is possible because the registration lip 27, even though it may extend radially substantially above or below the normal surface 24 of the roller 15, can be fully crushed or compressed in the nip to the same surface level as the adjacent areas of surface 24. As long as the foraminous material 21 is not compressed or crushed in the nip to its full extend (its solid height) the lip will not even cause a bump Thus, in addition to eliminating any air gap discontinuities, vibration or uneven pressure problems associated with the passage of the registration lip through the nip are also eliminated. The lip is easily compressed into the layer of underlying foraminous material 21.
The registration lip 27 is preferably monolithically molded as an extending rib in the same formation process as the rest of the foam material 21 so as to be homogenious therewith. However, where, as here, the depth of foraminous material underlying the lip is substantially greater than the height of projection of the lip above the surface 24, it can also be formed of solid rubber or other suitable materials which are integrally molded or bonded in or to the foraminous material. As long as the foraminous material is not fully compressed, the registration rib will simply emerse itself in the foraminous material in the nip as shown and not affect the nip 17 characteristics. The lip member (or lip forming recess) is pressed into smooth, even alignment with the rest of the'surface 24 in passing through the nip, to provide smooth even contact with the opposing sheet feeding surface (the photoreceptor 11 in this case). The lip forming rib is shown here as rectangular in cross section. However, it could be provided in various other configurations, such as a saw-tooth, etc., since only a trailing face or notch is needed for registration of the sheet lead edge.
The drive means for sheet feeding in the disclosed embodiment is the moving photoreceptor 11, which in turn may be driven by its support roll 12. This frictionally drives the roll 15 and sheet 16 through the nip. However, the roll 15 itself may be rotatably driven if desired.
In conclusion, it may be seen that there has been described herein a foraminous roll transfer system providing greatly improved operating properties and paper handling and capable of overcoming many problems in electrostatographic systems. It will be obvious that the disclosed system is applicable to many other electro,
' statographic systems than those specifically discussed contemplated that further variations and modifications within the purview of those. skilled in the art can be made herein. The following claims are intended to cover all such variations and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
What is claimed is:
1. In electrostatographic apparatus wherein a transfer bias voltage is applied between a roller electrode and a first support surface to provide an electrical field for image transfer to a sheet providing a second support surface there-between while relative movement is provided between said roller electrode and said first support surface and said sheet, and said roller is variably deformed by said first support surface at a roller nip area with pre-nip and post-nip areas at each side of said nip area, the improvement in said roller electrode comprising:
an electrically conductive core to which said bias voltage is applied, spaced from said first support surface; and
a highly compressible and air permeable roller body of foraminous convolute open cell material extending between said conductive core and said first support surface and having a substantial normal uncompressed thickness,
said foraminous material occupying the space between said conductive core and said first-support surface with a multiplicity of small convolute air passage discontinuities provided by said cells in said material and providing an ionization control barrier,
said foraminousmaterial being compressed between said conductive core and said first support surface in said nip area to a thickness substantially less than said normal uncompressed thickness, to close air passages therein,
said foraminous material being less compressed in said pre-nip and post-nip areas than in said nip area and having a greater thickness and porosity be tween said conductive core and said first support surface therein over a substantial area of said surface for ionization control in said pre-nip and postnip areas; and
vacuum means for applying a vacuum through said roller body for aminous material to provide vacuum retention of said sheet on said roller body.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said first support surface is a photoreceptor and said roller electrode is a xerographic bias transfer roller for electrostatic image transfer of xerographic developer material from said first support surface to said second support surface.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said foraminous roller body is non-conductive to said bias voltage and electrically insulates said conductive core from said first support surface and does not affect the electrical field therebetween.
4. The apparatus of claiml wherein said conductive core and said foraminous roller body are curvalinear and said core has a radius greatly smaller than the normal uncompressed radius of said foraminous roller body.
5. The apparatus of claim! wherein said open cells of said foraminous roller body are air filled.
6. The apparatus of claim l'wherein said foraminous material in said nip is compressed to at least approximately one-half of said normal uncompressed thickness.
7. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said foraminous material in said nip is compressed sufficiently to. collapse a substantial portion of said open cells in said nip to correspondingly close said air passages in said nip.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said conductive core and said roller body are cylindrical and coaxially mounted with said conductive core uniformly wrapped with said foraminous material, and said conductive core is a hollow perforated tube with said vacuum means communicating with the interior thereof.
9. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said foraminous material is electrically resistive and conducts said transfer bias, and wherein the resistivity of said material in said nonnal state is rendered substantially greater than its compressed resistivity in said nip by a substantial percentage of compressively collapsed cells in said nip, to provide increased nip transfer field strength.
10. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein foraminous material in said nip is compressed to at least approximately one-half of said normal uncompressed thick- HBSS.
11. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said conductive core is hollow and air permeable and said vacuum means communicates with the interior thereof.
12. The apparatus of claim 1 further including air blowing means blowing into said post-nip area for assisting stripping of said sheet from said roller.
13. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said first support surface is a photoreceptor and said roller electrode is a xerographic bias transfer roller for electrostatic image transfer of xerographic developer material from said first support surface to said second support surface.
said conductive core and said roller body are cylindrical and coaxially mounted with said conductive core uniformly wrapped with said foraminous material, and said conductive core is a hollow perforated tube with said vacuum means communicating with the interior thereof.
14. in electrostatographic apparatus wherein a transfer bias voltage is applied between a roller electrode and a first support surface to provide an electrical field for image transfer to a sheet providing a second support surface therebetween while relative movement is provided between said roller electrode and said first support surface and said sheet, andsaid roller is variably deformed by said first support surface at a roller nip area with pre-nip and post-nip areas at each side of said nip area, the improvement in said roller electrode comprising:
an electrically conductive core to which said bias voltage is applied, spaced from said first support surface; and
a highly compressible and air permeable roller body' of foraminous convolute open cell material extending between said conductive core and said first support surface and having a substantial normal uncompressed thickness, a said foraminous material occupying the space between said conductive core and said firstsupport surface with a multiplicity of small convolute air passage discontinuities provided by said cells in said material and providing an ionization control barrier, I said foraminous material being compressed between said conductive core and said first support surface in said nip area toa thickness substantially less than said normal uncompressed thickness, said foraminous material being less compressed in said pre-nip and post-nip areas than in said nip area and having a greater thickness and porosity between said conductive core and said first support surface therein over a substantial area of saidsurfer bias voltage is applied between a roller electrode and a first support surface to provide an electrical field for image transfer to a sheet providing a second support surface there-between while relative movement is provided between said roller electrode and said first support surface and said sheet, and said roller is variably deformed by said first support surface at a roller nip area with pre-nip and post-nip areas at each side of said nip area, the improvement in said roller electrode comprising:
face for ionization control in said pre-nip and postnip areas; and
vacuum'means for applying a vacuum through said roller body foraminous material to provide vacuum retention of said sheet on said roller body, 5
further including vacuum cleaning apparatus spaced from said nip area deformably engaging the surface of said roller for vacuum cleaning it.
15. In electrostatographic apparatus wherein a transbarrier,
said foraminous material being compressed between said conductive core and said first support surface in said nip area to a thickness substantially less than said normal uncompressed thickness,
said foraminous material being less compressed in said pre-nip and post-nip areas than in said nip area and having a greater thickness and porosity between said conductive core and said first support surface therein over a substantial area of said sur-- face for ionization control in said pre-nip and postnip areas, and
vacuum means for applying a vacuum through said roller body foraminous material to provide vacuum retention of said sheet on said roller body, I
further including sheet registration lip means providing a sheet edge detaining surface discontinuity in said foraminous material, which discontinuity is suppressed in said nip by said compression of said foraminous material to maintain a smooth and continuous nip engagement by said roller.
16. The apparatus of claim 15 wherein the dimensions of said sheet registration lip means are substantially less than the thickness of said foraminous'material.
17. The apparatus of claim 16 wherein said roller is cylindrical and said sheet registration lip means comprises an integral projecting rib extending along the outer surface of said roller parallel to the axis of said roller.

Claims (17)

1. In electrostatographic apparatus wherein a transfer bias voltage is applied between a roller electrode and a first support surface to provide an electrical field for image transfer to a sheet providing a second support surface there-between while relative movement is provided between said roller electrode and said first support surface and said sheet, and said roller is variably deformed by said first support surface at a roller nip area with pre-nip and post-nip areas at each side of said Nip area, the improvement in said roller electrode comprising: an electrically conductive core to which said bias voltage is applied, spaced from said first support surface; and a highly compressible and air permeable roller body of foraminous convolute open cell material extending between said conductive core and said first support surface and having a substantial normal uncompressed thickness, said foraminous material occupying the space between said conductive core and said first support surface with a multiplicity of small convolute air passage discontinuities provided by said cells in said material and providing an ionization control barrier, said foraminous material being compressed between said conductive core and said first support surface in said nip area to a thickness substantially less than said normal uncompressed thickness, to close air passages therein, said foraminous material being less compressed in said pre-nip and post-nip areas than in said nip area and having a greater thickness and porosity between said conductive core and said first support surface therein over a substantial area of said surface for ionization control in said pre-nip and post-nip areas; and vacuum means for applying a vacuum through said roller body for aminous material to provide vacuum retention of said sheet on said roller body.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said first support surface is a photoreceptor and said roller electrode is a xerographic bias transfer roller for electrostatic image transfer of xerographic developer material from said first support surface to said second support surface.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said foraminous roller body is non-conductive to said bias voltage and electrically insulates said conductive core from said first support surface and does not affect the electrical field therebetween.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said conductive core and said foraminous roller body are curvalinear and said core has a radius greatly smaller than the normal uncompressed radius of said foraminous roller body.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said open cells of said foraminous roller body are air filled.
6. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said foraminous material in said nip is compressed to at least approximately one-half of said normal uncompressed thickness.
7. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said foraminous material in said nip is compressed sufficiently to collapse a substantial portion of said open cells in said nip to correspondingly close said air passages in said nip.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said conductive core and said roller body are cylindrical and coaxially mounted with said conductive core uniformly wrapped with said foraminous material, and said conductive core is a hollow perforated tube with said vacuum means communicating with the interior thereof.
9. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said foraminous material is electrically resistive and conducts said transfer bias, and wherein the resistivity of said material in said normal state is rendered substantially greater than its compressed resistivity in said nip by a substantial percentage of compressively collapsed cells in said nip, to provide increased nip transfer field strength.
10. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein foraminous material in said nip is compressed to at least approximately one-half of said normal uncompressed thickness.
11. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said conductive core is hollow and air permeable and said vacuum means communicates with the interior thereof.
12. The apparatus of claim 1 further including air blowing means blowing into said post-nip area for assisting stripping of said sheet from said roller.
13. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said first support surface is a photoreceptor and said roller electrode is a xerographic bias transfer roller for electrostatic image transfer of xerographic developer material from said first support surface to said second support surfAce. said conductive core and said roller body are cylindrical and coaxially mounted with said conductive core uniformly wrapped with said foraminous material, and said conductive core is a hollow perforated tube with said vacuum means communicating with the interior thereof.
14. In electrostatographic apparatus wherein a transfer bias voltage is applied between a roller electrode and a first support surface to provide an electrical field for image transfer to a sheet providing a second support surface therebetween while relative movement is provided between said roller electrode and said first support surface and said sheet, and said roller is variably deformed by said first support surface at a roller nip area with pre-nip and post-nip areas at each side of said nip area, the improvement in said roller electrode comprising: an electrically conductive core to which said bias voltage is applied, spaced from said first support surface; and a highly compressible and air permeable roller body of foraminous convolute open cell material extending between said conductive core and said first support surface and having a substantial normal uncompressed thickness, said foraminous material occupying the space between said conductive core and said first support surface with a multiplicity of small convolute air passage discontinuities provided by said cells in said material and providing an ionization control barrier, said foraminous material being compressed between said conductive core and said first support surface in said nip area to a thickness substantially less than said normal uncompressed thickness, said foraminous material being less compressed in said pre-nip and post-nip areas than in said nip area and having a greater thickness and porosity between said conductive core and said first support surface therein over a substantial area of said surface for ionization control in said pre-nip and post-nip areas; and vacuum means for applying a vacuum through said roller body foraminous material to provide vacuum retention of said sheet on said roller body, further including vacuum cleaning apparatus spaced from said nip area deformably engaging the surface of said roller for vacuum cleaning it.
15. In electrostatographic apparatus wherein a transfer bias voltage is applied between a roller electrode and a first support surface to provide an electrical field for image transfer to a sheet providing a second support surface there-between while relative movement is provided between said roller electrode and said first support surface and said sheet, and said roller is variably deformed by said first support surface at a roller nip area with pre-nip and post-nip areas at each side of said nip area, the improvement in said roller electrode comprising: an electrically conductive core to which said bias voltage is applied, spaced from said first support surface; and a highly compressible and air permeable roller body of foraminous convolute open cell material extending between said conductive core and said first support surface and having a substantial normal uncompressed thickness, said foraminous material occupying the space between said conductive core and said first support surface with a multiplicity of small convolute air passage discontinuities provided by said cells in said material and providing an ionization control barrier, said foraminous material being compressed between said conductive core and said first support surface in said nip area to a thickness substantially less than said normal uncompressed thickness, said foraminous material being less compressed in said pre-nip and post-nip areas than in said nip area and having a greater thickness and porosity between said conductive core and said first support surface therein over a substantial area of said surface for ionization control in said pre-nip and post-nip areas; and vacuum means for applying a vacuum through said roller body foraminous materiAl to provide vacuum retention of said sheet on said roller body, further including sheet registration lip means providing a sheet edge detaining surface discontinuity in said foraminous material, which discontinuity is suppressed in said nip by said compression of said foraminous material to maintain a smooth and continuous nip engagement by said roller.
16. The apparatus of claim 15 wherein the dimensions of said sheet registration lip means are substantially less than the thickness of said foraminous material.
17. The apparatus of claim 16 wherein said roller is cylindrical and said sheet registration lip means comprises an integral projecting rib extending along the outer surface of said roller parallel to the axis of said roller.
US00367279A 1973-05-29 1973-06-05 Foraminous vacuum bias roll transfer system Expired - Lifetime US3832055A (en)

Priority Applications (9)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00367279A US3832055A (en) 1973-06-05 1973-06-05 Foraminous vacuum bias roll transfer system
CA197,264A CA1009504A (en) 1973-06-05 1974-04-10 Foraminous vacuum bias roll transfer system
JP5776874A JPS611745B2 (en) 1973-05-29 1974-05-22
GB2324874A GB1448386A (en) 1973-05-29 1974-05-24 Electrostatographic transfer system
IT2321274A IT1012842B (en) 1973-05-29 1974-05-27 AC ELECTROSTATOGRAPH EQUIPMENT WITH TRANSFER OF CHARGES OR MATERIALS THROUGH THE USE OF POROUS ORGANS WITHOUT END
DE19742425609 DE2425609A1 (en) 1973-05-29 1974-05-27 ELECTROSTATOGRAPHIC DEVICE WITH DEFORMABLE ROLLER ELECTRODE
BR439574A BR7404395D0 (en) 1973-05-29 1974-05-29 ELECTROSTATOGRAPHIC APPLIANCE
ES426760A ES426760A1 (en) 1973-05-29 1974-05-29 Electrostatographic transfer system
FR7418641A FR2231994B1 (en) 1973-05-29 1974-05-29

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US3969114A (en) * 1973-07-26 1976-07-13 Xerox Corporation Method for monitoring copy quality
US4066352A (en) * 1973-10-23 1978-01-03 Minolta Camera Kabushiki Kaisha Electroconductive elastic spone member and electrostatic image transfer mechanism
US4023894A (en) * 1973-11-30 1977-05-17 Xerox Corporation Transfer apparatus
US4143961A (en) * 1974-04-15 1979-03-13 Hiroo Nakamoto Electrophotographic duplication apparatus
US3959574A (en) * 1974-04-26 1976-05-25 Xerox Corporation Biasable member and method for making
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US4403847A (en) * 1982-03-29 1983-09-13 Eastman Kodak Company Electrographic transfer apparatus
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EP0297911A2 (en) * 1987-06-30 1989-01-04 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha An image forming apparatus
EP0297911A3 (en) * 1987-06-30 1989-08-23 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha An image forming apparatus
US5006902A (en) * 1987-06-30 1991-04-09 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image forming apparatus having a predetermined voltage applied to the transfer member
US5745829A (en) * 1989-01-04 1998-04-28 Indigo N.V. Imaging apparatus and intermediate transfer blanket therefor
US4974027A (en) * 1989-02-06 1990-11-27 Spectrum Sciences B.V. Imaging system with compactor and squeegee
US4984025A (en) * 1989-02-06 1991-01-08 Spectrum Sciences B.V. Imaging system with intermediate transfer member
US5497222A (en) * 1989-02-06 1996-03-05 Indigo N.V. Image transfer apparatus incorporating an integral heater
US5028964A (en) * 1989-02-06 1991-07-02 Spectrum Sciences B.V. Imaging system with rigidizer and intermediate transfer member
US5155535A (en) * 1989-07-03 1992-10-13 Eastman Kodak Company Transfer apparatus having a transfer member with vacuum means
US5006900A (en) * 1989-07-03 1991-04-09 Eastman Kodak Company Transfer apparatus having vacuum holes and method of making such apparatus
US4941020A (en) * 1989-07-03 1990-07-10 Eastman Kodak Company Transfer apparatus having vacuum holes for holding a receiving sheet
US5119550A (en) * 1989-07-03 1992-06-09 Eastman Kodak Company Method of making transfer apparatus having vacuum holes
US5040029A (en) * 1989-11-01 1991-08-13 Eastman Kodak Company Multicolor image transfer method and apparatus
US5943082A (en) * 1989-12-27 1999-08-24 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Image recording apparatus using optical beam for applying a transfer bias of a polarity so as not to repel adhesive toner
US5390007A (en) * 1992-02-13 1995-02-14 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Charging member, charging device, process cartridge and image forming apparatus
US5849399A (en) * 1996-04-19 1998-12-15 Xerox Corporation Bias transfer members with fluorinated carbon filled fluoroelastomer outer layer
US6548154B1 (en) 2000-11-28 2003-04-15 Xerox Corporation Electrical charge relaxable wear resistant coating for bias charging or transfer member
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US6584296B1 (en) 2001-11-30 2003-06-24 Xerox Corporation Electro-mechanical roll with core and segments
US6606477B2 (en) 2002-01-16 2003-08-12 Xerox Corporation Method to control pre- and post-nip fields for transfer
US20040077474A1 (en) * 2002-10-16 2004-04-22 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method and apparatus for wrapping pads
US20040074052A1 (en) * 2002-10-16 2004-04-22 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Fiber blending apparatus and method
US20040074053A1 (en) * 2002-10-16 2004-04-22 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Apparatus and method for forming a layer of blended fibers into a continuous web
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US20040110618A1 (en) * 2002-10-16 2004-06-10 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method and apparatus for making pads
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US6971981B2 (en) 2002-10-16 2005-12-06 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method and apparatus for making interlabial pads
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