[0001] The present invention relates to a contact charging brush and to a method of charging
an insulating layer with such a brush.
[0002] In an electrostatographic reproducing apparatus commonly used today, a photoconductive
insulating member is charged to a negative potential, thereafter exposed to a light
image of an original document to be reproduced. The exposure discharges the photoconductive
insulating surface in exposed or background areas and creates an electrostatic latent
image on the member which corresponds to the image areas contained within the original
document. Subsequently, the electrostatic latent image on the photoconductive insulating
surface is made visible by developing the image with a developing powder referred
to in the art as toner. During development the toner particles are attracted from
the carrier particles by the charge pattern of the image areas on the photoconductive
insulating area to form a powder image on the photoconductive area. This image may
be subsequently transferred to a support surface such as copy paper to which it may
be permanently affixed by heating or by the application of pressure. Following transfer
of the toner image to the support surface the photoconductive insulating surface may
be discharged and cleaned of residual toner to prepare for the next imaging cycle.
[0003] In such electrostatographic apparatus in use today various types of charging device
have been used to charge the photoconductive insulating layer. In commercial use,
for example, are various types of corona generating devices to which a high voltage
of 5,000 to 8,000 volts may be applied to the corotron device thereby producing a
corona spray which imparts electrostatic charge to the surface of the photoreceptor.
In addition, the corona spray generates ozone and other species which have to be collected
or neutralized. Alternatively, the photoconductive insulating layer may be charged
with a brush charging device which is brought into contact with the photoconductive
insulating layer and to which a potential of the order of 1,200 volts is applied during
the charging process. This provides a constant voltage charging process wherein, for
example, if a thousand volts is applied to the brush the insulating layer maybe charged
to 800 volts. This is in contrast to the corona generating devices which are based
on a constant current process and therefore have large fluctation in the potential
eventually developed on a conductive insulating layer. In brush charging there is
a dramatic reduction in ozone generation compared to corona charging despite the fact
that there may be a small amount of corona. Brush charging is 100% efficient in terms
of the current going to the photoreceptor whereas corotron charging is only about
10% efficient in terms of the current going to the photoreceptor. Generally, contact
brush charging has the advantage of being relatively insensitive to process speed
or photoconductive insulating layer electrical history within normal operating range.
In other words, in contact brush charging devices if in one cycle the photoreceptor
is charged and subsequently discharged by exposure to the light and shadow pattern
to provide varying potential levels, upon subsequent charging with a contact brush
charging for making subsequent copies the photoreceptor will be recharged only to
the initial uniform potential.
[0004] While contact brush charging provides these advantages, it also suffers from serious
deficiencies in that the individual brush fibers are typically made from electrically
conductive materials which may upon contact with imperfect areas of the insulating
surface result in shorting of portions of the insulating surface giving rise to deletions
in the output copy. In the commercial manufacture of photoreceptors (photoconductive
insulating layers) it is very difficult to produce a whole layer whether it be a drum
or belt wherein the dielectric strength of the layer is precisely uniform throughout
the entire layer. It often happens as a result of a manufacturing defect, or contamination,
or other matters that are not fully understood, that certain imperfections exist in
these photoreceptors. In particular, they may have areas of relatively low dielectric
strength which may be visible or invisible to the unaided eye. These defects usually
are within the photoreceptor layer and randomly distributed throughout the layer.
When such photoreceptors are used in commercial embodiments with contact charging
apparatus employing conductive fibers the fibers contact the photoreceptor and in
those areas of imperfection in the photoreceptor a path where high current densities
can flow produces electrical shorting to the conductive backing on the photoreceptor
layer. This shorting can produce localized heating, melting, and oxidation of the
polymeric materials followed by out gassing of vaporized polymeric causing devastating
irreversible damage. The result is a mechanical flaw in the photoreceptor which is
either a crater or a hole in the photoreceptor layer. While initially this flaw may
have been an invisible defect, it now becomes visible appearing as a hole of 1 to
2 mm in the photoreceptor surface. This "pinhole" shows up as a copy quality defect
since it can act as a mechanical toner trap during the development cycle and can develop
out as a black spot. It can also appear as an undeveloped area, as a result of this
particular small portion no longer behaving as a photoconductive insulating layer.
[0005] Photoreceptors exhibiting this "pinhole" effect can be in a variety of different
configurations including plates, drums, flexible belts and the like. Typical photoreceptors
include one or more photoconductive layers on a supporting substrate. The supporting
substrate may be conductive or it may be coated with a conductive layer over which
photoconductive layers may be coated. Alternatively, the multilayered electrophotoconductive
imaging photoreceptor may comprise at least two electrically operative layers, a photogenerating
or charge generating layer and a charge transport layer which are typically applied
to the conductive layer. For further details of such a layer, attention is directed
to U.S. Patent 4,265,990. In all these varying structures several of the layers may
be applied through vacuum deposition techniques for very thin layers. During the several
fabrication processes one or more of the layers may be exposed to contamination by
foreign matter (dust) or experience other process deviations. Small imperfections
give rise to "pinhole" effects with which the present invention is concerned.
[0006] Typical of devices wherein conductive, thin carbon fibers may be used in a brush
form as a charging or transfer device are those described in Japanese Patent Applications
53-102630 and 53-102631. Both these applications disclose conductive materials such
as carbon fibers or stainless steel fibers having a resistivity somewhere in the range
from 10-
5 to 10-
3 ohms-cm.
[0007] US-A-2,774,921 (to Walkup) describes a brush charging apparatus for electrostatically
charging an insulating imaging surface for electrophotography. Walkup recognized that
if a highly conductive fiber were to come in contact with a hole or weak spot in the
insulating surface it would act to short circuit the current and that it would be
particularly objectionable in the case of printing plates for electrical printing.
In addition to recognizing that the pliable element should not be too electrically
conductive, he also recognized that it must not be too resistant to electric current
flow and described materials having surface resistances in the range of 10,000 ohms
to 100,000 megaohms. Walkup excluded materials such as copper, silver, and other common
metals. Examples he discloses at column 3, lines 22 - 28 include paper, cloth, certain
vegatable fibers, glass cloth which had been rendered slightly conductive by metalizing
or coating with hygroscopic salts such as glycerin or various salts.
[0008] We have now found that the materials suggested by Walkup are deficient in that they
are all moisture sensitive materials having electrical resistivities that vary with
relative humidity and temperature over time. Thus, while any one of the materials
described as suitable by Walkup may be adequate at a particular point in time under
certain conditions, over continued use the material being sensitive to the presence
of moisture causes unpredictability in its operation. In other words, with increased
water content a reduction in the resistivity would take place to the point where the
fiber would once again act as conductor and electrically short the photoreceptor.
US-A-4,336,565 (Murray et al) describes a brush charging apparatus wherein the brush
is comprised of electrically conductive carbon fiber filaments to which a potential
may be applied and which may be used to contact charge an electrically insulating
surfaces.
[0009] According to the present invention there is provided a contact brush charging device
and a method for charging an insulating surface using such a device. The brush charging
device comprises a plurality of resiliently, flexible, thin fibers arranged in a brush
like configuration with the fibers being held by a support means so that the distal
ends of the fibers may contact the insulating layer. Further the fibers have an electrical
resistivity in the range from about 10
2 ohms-cm to about 10
6 ohms-cm and are substantially resistivity stable to changes in relative humidity
and temperature over the normal operating range and ageing.
[0010] The invention thus provides a contact brush charging device wherein the individual
fibers themselves are self limiting in terms of current flow. Because the electrical
resistivity of the individual fibers is maintained within relatively narrow limits,
the "pinhole" effect discussed above may be avoided, and also adequate current may
be provided to the photoconductor insulating layer for necessary charging. Thus, when
an insulating surface to be charged is contacted by a contact brush charge device
in accordance with the invention the individual fibers do not short out or otherwise
interfere with the electrical properties of the insulating surface as a result of
imperfections therein. Also, because the fibers are resiliently flexible they are
mechanically non-destructive to the insulating layer.
[0011] In a specific embodiment of the present invention, the fibers are partially carbonized
polyacrylonitrile fibers which are uniformly distributed along the length of the brush
and have an electrical resistivity of from about 10
3 ohms-cm to about 10
5 ohms-cm. Preferably, the fibers are substantially homogeneous in composition, are
generally circular in cross section and from about 8 to 10 microns in diameter. The
fibers are arranged in the brush to have a fiber fill density of from about 5 x 10
4 to 4 x 10
6 fibers per square inch.
[0012] Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference
to the accompanying drawings, in which:-
Figure 1 is a schematic representation in cross section of an automatic electrostatographic
reproducing machine with the contact brush charging device of the present invention.
Figure 2 is an isometric view of an embodiment of a charging brush of the present
invention.
Figure 3 is a graphical representation of the D.C. resistivity dependence upon process
temperature for preferred fibers for the charging brush of the present invention.
Figure 4 is an isometric view of an alternative embodiment of a charging brush of
the present invention.
[0013] Referring now to Figure 1, there is shown by way of example an automatic xerographic
reproducing machine 10 which includes the contact brush charging device of the present
invention. The reproducing machine 10 depicted in Figure 1 illustrates the various
components utilized therein for producing copies from an original document. Although
the charging device of the present invention is particularly well adapted for use
in an automatic xerographic reproducing machine 10, it should become evident from
the following description that it is equally well suited for use in a wide variety
of processing systems including other electrostatographic systems and it is not necessarily
limited in the application to the particular embodiments shown herein.
[0014] The reproducing machine 10, illustrated in Figure 1 employs an image recording drum-like
member 12, the outer periphery of which is coated with a suitable photoconductive
material 13. The drum 12 is suitably journaled for rotation within a machine frame
(not shown) by means of shaft 14 and rotates in the direction indicated by arrow 15
to bring the image-bearing surface 13 thereon past a plurality of xerographic processing
stations. Suitable drive means (not shown) are provided to power and coordinate the
motion of the various cooperating machine components whereby a faithful reproduction
of the original input scene information is recorded upon a sheet of final support
material 16 such as paper or the like.
[0015] Initially, the drum 12 moves the photoconductive surface 13 through a charging station
17 comprising a contact charging brush 11 where an electrostatic charge is placed
uniformly over the photoconductive surface 13 in known manner preparatory to imaging.
Thereafter, the drum 12 rotates to exposure station 18 where the charged photoconductive
surface 13 is exposed to a light image of the original input scene information whereby
the charge is selectively dissipated in the light exposed regions to record the original
input scene in the form of an electrostatic latent image. After exposure, drum 12
rotates the electrostatic latent image recorded on the photoconductive surface 13
to development station 19 wherein a conventional developer mix is applied to the photoconductive
surface 13 of the drum 12 rendering the latent image visible. Typically a suitable
development station could include a magnetic brush development system utilizing a
magnetizable developer mix having coarse ferromagnetic carrier granules and toner
colorant particles.
[0016] Sheets 16 of the final support material are supported in a stack arrangement on an
elevating stack support tray 20. With the stack at its elevated position a sheet separator
feed belt 21 feeds individual sheets therefrom to the registration pinch rolls 22.
The sheet is then forwarded to the transfer station 23 in proper registration with
the image on the drum. The developed image on the photoconductive surface 13 is brought
into contact with the sheet 16 of final support material within the transfer station
23 and the toner image is transferred from the photoconductive surface 13 to the contacting
side of the final support sheet 16. Following transfer of the image the final support
material which may be paper, plastic, etc., as desired is transported through detack
station where detack corotron 27 uniformly charges the support material to separate
it from the drum 12.
[0017] After the toner image has been transferred to the sheet of final support material
16 the sheet with the image thereon is advanced to a suitable fuser 24 which coalesces
the transferred powder image thereto. After the fusing process the sheet 16 is advanced
to a suitable output device such as tray 25.
[0018] Although a preponderance of toner powder is transferred to the final support material
16, invariably some residual toner remains on the photoconductive surface 13 after
the transfer of the toner powder image to the final support material. Following transfer
of the toner image to the final support material, the residual charge remaining on
the drum is reduced by the corona generated from the pre-clean corotron 28 according
to the present invention. Thereafter the residual toner particles remaining on the
photoconductor surface 13 after transfer of the tomer image may be removed by cleaner
26.
[0019] Normally, when the copier is operated in a conventional mode, the original document
to be reproduced is placed image side down upon a horizontal transparent viewing platen
30 which transports the original past an optical arrangement here illustrated as Selfoc
lens 18. The speed of the moving platen and the speed of the photoconductive belt
are synchronized to provide a faithful reproduction of the original document.
[0020] It is believed that the foregoing general description is sufficient for the purposes
of the present application to illustrate the general operation of an automatic xerographic
copier which can embody the device of the present invention.
[0021] In Figure 2 the contact brush charging device 11 is illustrated wherein a plurality
of resiliently flexible thin fibers 31 are wrapped around a support rod 32. Individual
fibers which are uniformly distributed along the length of the brush are retained
in position on the rod by a U-shaped conductive exterior shield 34 which includes
a pair of pierced tabs 36 at its ends to provide means for mounting and connecting
the device to an electrical circuit. The brush may be used in a stationary position
or if desired, may be oscillated in a direction transverse to the direction of movement
of the photoconductive insulating layer with which it is in contact. In addition,
to insure charge uniformity, more than one brush may be used in a parallel array of
brushes. While Figure 2 illustrates the contact charging brush in the form of a planar
bristle brush, it will be understood that the device and method of the present invention
may incorporate a brush in a roller configuration as illustrated in Figure 4. In such
a configuration individual fibers 31 are mounted on or woven or knitted into a conductive
resilient base 38 which is then wrapped around a conductive roller 40 connected to
an electrical power supply. Such a rotary brush maximizes charge uniformity.
[0022] We have found that if contact brush charging devices are made from fibers having
D.C. electrical resisitivity of from about 10
2 ohms-cm to about 10
6 ohms-cm and are substantially resistivity stable in terms of changes in relative
humidity and temperature that the pinhole effect and associated copy quality defect
described above can be substantially eliminated. With fiber materials having a resistivity
less than 10
2 ohms-cm the amount of power dissipated at the point of the imperfection goes up giving
rise to an increase in the pin hole effect and associated copy quality defect. With
resistivities greater than 10
6 ohms-cm and applied voltages of about 1200 volts there will be insufficient current
flowing to the photoreceptor to perfect adequate charging of the photoreceptor to
be used in the imaging process. We have also found that the preferred balance between
electrical resisitivity and conductivity within this range is in the small resistivity
range of from about 10
3 ohms-cm to about 10
5 ohms-cm. Fibers having resistivities less than about 10
5 ohms-cm are the most stable in terms of ongoing growth in resistivity. At this point
it should be noted that all resistive fibers tend to grow slightly in resistivity
with aging.
[0023] Fibers having resistivities greater than 10
3 ohm-cm have better current surge limiting capabilities and therefore are less likely
to cause pinholing. While materials exhibiting the general and preferred electrical
resistivities have existed in the prior art, it is noted that those materials were
generally of the nature described in US-A-2 774 921 and not resistivity stable with
respect to changes in relative humidity. In this context what we mean by substantially
resistivity stable is less than an order of magnitude change in resistivity based
on changes in temperature and relative humidity over normal operating range and ageing.
Accordingly we are talking about a stability generally in the range of 60°F to 90°F
and 10 to 80% relative humidity. In addition, many of the materials previously available
such as stainless steel, brass and aluminized fiber glass do not have other desirable
physical characteristics in that they were too hard or brittle, thereby causing damage
to the photoreceptor when they came in contact with it. Furthermore some materials
having the necessary properties have previously been made by a sophisticated manufacturing
techniques such as by doping and loading with pigments all of which leads to a mechanical
degradation in the mechanical properties of the materials.
[0024] Fibers of the present charging brush are resiliently flexible in that if they are
deflected by a sheet passing their location they spring back into their original position
after the trailing edge of the sheet has passed. Furthermore, if the fibers are compressed
for an extended period of time they will return to their original orientation when
the compression is removed. They are preferably relatively non-brittle or soft in
order to reduce any possible physical deterioration of the photoreceptor. Typically
the fibers have an elongation of the tensile stress of from about 1.2% to about 3%
of their initial length before they fracture. In addition, the resistive fibers of
the present invention are generally circular in cross section having a diameter of
from about 5 microns to about 50 microns and preferably from about 8 microns to about
10 microns which provides them with a reduced tendency to fracture or break.
[0025] Any suitable material may be used for the individual fibers in the contact brush
charging device of the present invention as long as the fibers exhibit or possess
the above described properties. Typically the fibers are carbonaceous or have a carbonaceous
core. A preferred fiber that may be used in a contact charging brush of the present
invention are those carbon fibers that are obtained from the low heat treatment temperature
processing to yield partial carbonization of the polyacrylonitrile (PAN) precursor
fibers. It has been found for such fibers that by carefully controlling the temperature
of carbonization within certain limits that precise electrical resistivities for the
carbonized carbon fibers may be obtained. In this regard attention is directed to
Figure 3 which shows a graph of resistivity and its dependence on process temperature
for the carbonization process. The polyacrylonitrile precursor fibers are commercially
produced by the Stackpole Company, Celanese Corporation and others in yarn bundles
of 1,000 filaments to 180,000 filaments. The yarn bundles are partially carbonized
in a two stage process involving stabilizing the pan fibers at temperatures of the
order of 300
0C in an oxygen atmosphere to produce preox-stabilized PAN followed by carbonization
at elevated temperatures in an inert (nitrogen) atmosphere. The D.C. electrical resistivity
of the resulting fibers is controlled by the selection of the temperature of carbonization.
For example, as illustrated in Figure 3 carbon fibers having an electrical resistivity
of from about 10
2 to about 10
6 ohms-cm are obtained if the carbonization temperature is controlled in the range
of from about 500
oC to 750
0C. Fibers resulting from such a process are stable to changes in temperature and relative
humidity in that the electrical resistivity does not change with relative humidity.
This is in sharp contrast with materials described in US-A-2 774 921 above referred
to above wherein electrical resistivity could change many orders of magnitude with
changes in relative humidity. Furthermore, the fibers are produced or made without
the use of fillers, plasticizers, waxes or other agents that can leach out of the
body of the fiber and subsequently lead to contamination of the photoreceptor. As
a result the fiber produced is substantially homogenous in composition and is relatively
pure in the sense that no additives including unbound species are present. Furthermore,
all the nitrogen and oxygen left in the fiber are bound in some form to the carbon
or each other as part of the residual polymer chain.
[0026] The stable nature of the electrical resistivity with regard to temperature and relative
humidity is in contrast to most polymeric fibers wherein the conductivity is obtained
by adding carbon black and other additives which are physically admixed in one form
or another. In the use of such fibers it typically happens that the carbon black or
other additives may end up becoming deposited on the photoreceptor.
[0027] The fibers present fibers are capable of being packed very tightly to provide a high
fiber fill density (the number of free fiber ends per unit area). Typically the contact
brush charging devices of the present invention have fiber fill densities of from
about 5 x 10
4 to 4 x 10
6 fibers per square inch. These fibers lend themselves to weaving and can therefore
be woven into a fabric if desired. In operation, each individual fiber acts as a charging
element without mechanically eroding or otherwise defacing the photoreceptor area.
Accordingly, the contact charging brush according to the present invention posesses
great functional life.
[0028] The preferred carbon fibers used in the practice of the present invention are commercially
available from Celanese as CELECT 675. They are made by a variety of processes which
are taught generally in the literature. For further reference to the processes that
may be employed in making these carbonized fibers attention is directed to the following
sources in the literature. "Carbon Fiber Production at Low Temperatures from Polyacryonitrile",
D. E. Cagliostro, Textile Research Journal, October 1980, pages 632 - 638; "Description
of the Carbonization Process of Polyacrylonitrile Fibers in Terms of Electrical Characteristics:,
L. Brehmer et al, Plaste und Kautschuk, 1980, Vol. 27, No. 6, pages 309 - 313. "Electrical
Resistance of Carbon Fibers", D. B. Fischbach et al., Department of Mining, Metallurgical
and Ceramic Engineering. FB-10, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, pages
191, 192.
[0029] Figure 3 represents the variation in resistivity with process temperature as the
log of resistivity versus process temperature. From this representation it is clear
that precision control of the resistivity may be obtained by controlling the temperature
of carbonization. Furthermore as pointed out preferred fibers employed in the practice
of the present invention are stable in that their resistivity does not change with
relative humidity or temperature, they are highly flexible, fine in diameter, exhibit
substantially no compression set and an elongation of only 1.2 to 3%.
[0030] The following chart indicates contact brush charging performance for several fibers
having different D.C. electrical resistivities. In each instance a brush having a
fiber fill density of about 40,000 fibers per inch and the same geometric dimension
was constructed. The conductive graphite and stainless steel fibers were made according
to the mandrel winding technique of US-A-4,330,349 (Swift et al) wherein a strip of
double backed foam adhesive tape was placed on the mandrel, the fibers wound around
the mandrel followed by alternate double backed foam adhesive tape and additional
fiber windings until a brush having four fiber winding layers was obtained. Aluminum
strips were then placed on the outside tapes to enclose and laminate the brush and
provide electrical contact to the fibers. The ends of the brushes were trimmed to
a projecting length of about one half inch with a guillotine cutter. Then the back
side of the brush was coated with conductive silver paint to assure electrical contact
to all fibers and seal the fibers into the brush.
[0031] The Stackpole fibers mentioned in the chart below were supplied as four inch wide
tows of 40,000 per inch. These tows were manually layered using strips of double backed
foam tape, then aluminum stips were used to enclose the laminate and form the brush
root or handle as well as the electrical contact to the fibers. The tows projected
perhaps an inch or so from the aluminum and were trimmed to a projecting length of
typically one half inch with a guillotine cutter.
[0032] The four inch long brushes with a free fiber length of one half inch were then individually
tested by being mounted over a rotating drum bearing a photoconductive surface such
as that described in US-A-4,265,990 and in contact with this surface. In one revolution
of the drum, the voltage applied to the brush was ramped from zero to -1500 volts,
to deposit a linearly increasing charge density on the photoreceptor which was measured
as the drum rotated under an electrometer. The slope of the V (photoreceptor) vs.
V (applied) line is a measure of charging ability. For the brushes of the invention,
this slope is very nearly unity, i.e., the photoreceptor surface potential tracks
the applied voltage independent of other process variations such as speed, hence the
term "constant voltage charging". When the resistivity of carbon fiber is too high,
the slope of this charging curve is much less than unity so that V (photoreceptor)
is increasingly less than V (applied). This means that V (applied) must increase to
achieve the same result as with a more conductive brush and thereby some of the advantage
of brush charging is lost. When the fibers are too conductive, pinhole damage occurs
in the photoreceptor during the act of charging and the size and number of such pinholes
will increase as the conductivity of the fibers increases. The performance is summarized
in the following chart.

[0033] The conventional conductive graphite fibers referred to above are available from
Hercules, Celanese and Union Carbide were Celion 6000 carbon fibers, Celanese, Chatam,
New Jersey; Thornel 50 and 300 (PAN) carbon fibers, Union Carbide, Chicago, Illinois;
Magnamite AS4 PAN based graphite fiber Hercules, Wilmington, Delaware. The stainless
steel fiber is available from Schlegel Corporation, Rochester, New York. Panex 30
is available from Stackpole Fibers Company, Lowell, Massachusetts. Fibers 1-6 are
PAN fibers made by Stackpole and carbonized at the temperature indicated made for
Xerox Corporation.
[0034] As may be observed from the table the pinhole effect was observed with the conductive
fibers (the conventional conductive graphite, stainless steel and Panex 30). Stackpole
numbers 1, 2, 3 were too insulating to provide reliable uniform charging. Stackpole
numbers 4, 5 and 6 which exhibited resistivity from 1.8 x 10
3 to 4.0 x 10
6 charged the photoreceptor with acceptable charging being obtained from Stackpole
fibers numbered 5 and 6.
[0035] Thus a contact brush charging device together with a method for charging a photoreceptor
has been provided in accordance with the present invention wherein commercially produceable
long life materials can be selected which are compatible with the photoreceptor surface
and do not produce the "pin hole effect" referred to above. Furthermore the resistivity
of the brush charging device can be controlled according to the carbonization temperature.
The brushes so produced are soft being non-destructive to the photoreceptor in a mechanical
sense. Furthermore any shorting out of individual fibers will not adversely effect
the charging performance of the brush in that the fibers are self limited in terms
of current flow since the current flow in a single fiber during shorting will go to
ground on the photoreceptor without decreasing the voltage in the entire brush because
of the high resistivity of each individual fiber. Furthermore the preferred fibers
according to the present invention do not deposit anything on the photoreceptor in
terms of wear, debris, and do not abrade the photoreceptor.
[0036] While the invention has been described in detail with specific reference to contact
brush charging device for use in electrostatographic reproducing apparatus it will
be understood that a brush charging device may have application in many different
fields. They may, for example, be used as static eliminator brushes or biased and
unbiased photoreceptor devices. Furthermore while the invention has been exemplified
with specific reference to the preferred partially carbonized polyacrylonitrile fibers,
it should be understood that it has application with any fibers having the specified
electrical properties. It will be appreciated that various modifications may be made
from the specific details described herein without departing from the scope of the
invention specified in the appended claims.
1. A contact brush charging device for charging an insulating layer comprising a plurality
of thin fibers arranged in a brush like configuration, said fibers being supported
by a support means so that the distal ends of the fibers may contact the insulating
layer and having an electrical resistivity in the range from about 102 ohms-cm to about 106 ohms-cm characterized in that said fibers are resiliently flexible and are substantially
resistivity stable to changes in relative humidity and temperature over the normal
operating range and ageing.
2. The device of Claim 1, wherein said fibers have an electrical resistivity in the
range from about 103 ohms-em to about 105 ohms-cm.
3. The device of claim 1 or claim 2, wherein said plurality of fibers are arranged
in a uniform distribution along the length of the brush.
4. The device of any preceding claim, wherein said fibers are substantially homogenous
in composition.
5. The device of any preceding claim, wherein said fibers are partially carbonized
polyacrylonitrile fibers.
6. The device of any preceding claim, wherein said fibers are generally circular in
cross section and have a diameter in the range from about 5 microns to about 50 microns,
and preferably from about 8 microns to about 10 microns.
7. The device of any preceding claim, wherein said fibers are arranged in said brush
to have a fiber fill density of from about 5 x 104 to 4 x 106 fibers per square inch.
8. The device of any preceding claim, wherein said fibers are arranged in a rotary
brush configuration around a cylindrical conductive sleeve.
9. A method of charging an insulating layer comprising contacting the surface with
the contact brush charging device claimed in any preceding claim, and applying to
said charging device an electrical potential.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the insulating layer is contacted by at least two
contact brush charging devices claimed in any of claims 1 to 8, said charging devices
being arranged in mutually parallel relationship.