BACKGROUND OF THE DISCLOSURE
Field of the Disclosure
[0001] The present disclosure relates to an electrophotographic belt used as an intermediate
transfer member or the like in an electrophotographic image forming apparatus such
as an electrophotographic apparatus, and an electrophotographic image forming apparatus
including the electrophotographic belt.
Description of the Related Art
[0002] Electrophotographic image forming apparatuses, for which an electrophotographic process
is adopted, so-called electrophotographic apparatuses, include an apparatus of a system
in which a toner image is transferred directly onto a transfer material (paper, OHT
sheet, etc.) from a photosensitive member for electrophotography, and an apparatus
of an intermediate transfer system. The intermediate transfer system is a system in
which a toner image is primarily transferred from a photosensitive member onto an
intermediate transfer member, and then secondarily transferred from the intermediate
transfer member onto a transfer material.
[0003] There is a need in an electrophotographic apparatus of the intermediate transfer
system reliably wiping (removing) toner that is not secondarily transferred completely
but remains on an intermediate transfer member (hereinafter, referred to as "transfer
remaining toner"). One of known systems for wiping transfer remaining toner on an
intermediate transfer member is a system in which the transfer remaining toner is
scraped off to be removed with a cleaning blade that is an elasticity body arranged
abutting against a surface of an intermediate transfer member (hereinafter, referred
to as "blade cleaning system"). A widely used intermediate transfer member is one
in a belt shape, that is, an electrophotographic belt.
[0004] As a technique to improve a cleaning performance in the blade cleaning system, Japanese
Patent Application Laid-Open No.
2005-82327 discloses a technique that makes an endless belt being an intermediate transfer member
have a surface roughness of 0.2 to 0.6 µm in terms of 10 point average roughness,
by providing an outer circumferential surface of the belt with grooves extending in
a longitudinal direction of the belt.
[0005] However, the electrophotographic belt according to Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open
No.
2005-82327 experiences a case where, as a result of long term use, transfer remaining toner
begins to slip through a cleaning blade, decreasing its wiping properties.
[0006] The endless belt according to Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No.
2005-82327 may be used as an intermediate transfer member to test a cleaning performance of
the endless belt, with the blade cleaning system adopted. As a result, transfer remaining
toner on the endless belt is removed by the cleaning blade in an early stage. It is
however found that the transfer remaining toner slips through an abutment portion
between the cleaning blade and the endless belt in some cases after long term use
due to wearing of the abutment portion between the cleaning blade and the endless
belt proceeds by so-called stick slip. Here, the stick slip refers to a phenomenon
in which the abutment portion between the cleaning blade and the endless belt is elongated
in a rotating direction of the endless belt, and the abutment portion slips to return
in an opposite direction to the rotating direction after reaching its limit of elongation.
The worn cleaning blade increases its surface adhered to the endless belt as well
as its slip distance, and therefore fails to obtain a sufficient abutment load in
slipping, making it easy for the transfer remaining toner to slip through the abutment
portion.
SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE
[0007] An aspect of the present disclosure is directed to providing an electrophotographic
belt that is excellent in transfer remaining toner wiping properties with a cleaning
blade.
[0008] Another aspect of the present disclosure is directed to providing an electrophotographic
image forming apparatus capable of forming a high-grade electrophotographic image
stably.
[0009] According to an aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided an electrophotographic
belt having an endless shape, the electrophotographic belt comprising, on an outer
circumferential surface thereof, grooves and lands, the grooves extending in a circumferential
direction of the belt, the lands being positioned between the grooves, wherein the
belt further has on the outer circumferential surface, one or more convex portion(s)
between at least one of the grooves and one of the lands adjacent to the one of the
grooves, and in a cross section of the belt in a direction orthogonal to a direction
of which the grooves extend, the convex portion(s) projects more than the lands.
[0010] According to another aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided an electrophotographic
image forming apparatus comprising an electrophotographic belt and a cleaning blade
configured to abut against an outer circumferential surface of the belt, the cleaning
blade is so provided as to intersect with the grooves at an abutment nip of the cleaning
blade and the outer circumferential surface of the belt the electrophotographic belt.
[0011] Further features and aspects of the present disclosure will become apparent from
the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached
drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012]
FIGS. 1A, 1B, and 1C are schematic cross-sectional views each illustrating configuration
examples of surfaces of belts for electrophotography according to the present disclosure.
FIG. 2 is a diagram used for describing an angle of concaves and convexes constituting
a surface of the electrophotographic belt.
FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating an example of a configuration of an electrophotographic
image forming apparatus of an intermediate transfer system.
FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating a configuration of a machining device for forming
concaves and convexes on a surface of an electrophotographic belt.
FIGS. 5A, 5B, and 5C are diagrams each illustrating a configuration of a cutting device
for forming concaves and convexes on a surface of an electrophotographic belt.
FIGS. 6A, 6B, and 6C are diagrams each illustrating a configuration of a grinding
apparatus for forming grooves on a surface of an electrophotographic belt.
FIGS. 7A and 7B are diagrams each illustrating a contact portion between an electrophotographic
belt and a cleaning blade.
DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0013] Embodiments, features and aspects of the present disclosure will now be described
in detail in accordance with the accompanying drawings.
[0014] First, an electrophotographic belt according to an aspect of the present disclosure
will be described with reference to the drawings. Note that, in the following description,
surface roughnesses Rz and average distances Sm of concaves and convexes are both
measured in accordance with Japanese Industrial Standards (JIS) B0601 (2001).
[0015] The electrophotographic belt according to the present disclosure is used as an intermediate
transfer member in an electrophotographic image forming apparatus such as an electrophotographic
apparatus. An electrophotographic image forming apparatus including the electrophotographic
belt according to the present disclosure is provided with a cleaning blade that abuts
against a surface of this electrophotographic belt to remove transfer remaining toner.
The electrophotographic belt according to the present disclosure includes a surface
on which a plurality of grooves are formed extending in a direction that intersects
an abutment nip of the cleaning blade.
[0016] One aspect of the disclosure provides a solution on how to reduce slip-through of
the transfer remaining toner and blade wearing due to the stick slip described above,
by making a shape of an outer circumferential surface of an electrophotographic belt
into a specific shape is herein disclosed below.
[0017] As illustrated in FIG. 1A to FIG. 1C, the disclosure provides formation of a land
111 at a position between every adjacent two grooves 110, and formation of convex
portions 112 between the land 111 and the two grooves 110 adjacent to the land 111.
[0018] Here, the lands 111 and the convex portions 112 appear on the outer circumferential
surface of the electrophotographic belt in a cross section of the electrophotographic
belt on a plane orthogonal to a direction in which a plurality of grooves 110 extend,
and the convex portions 112 project more than the land 111. The convex portions 112
each have a ridge-line shape that extends in parallel to the direction in which the
grooves 110 extend. Since the belt has the outer surface with aforementioned profile,
at the time when a cleaning blade 11 is brought into contact with the outer surface
of the belt 5, a nip is created between the land 111 and the cleaning blade 11, and
the nip prevents transfer remaining toner on the outer surface of the belt from slip-through.
[0019] In addition, the grooves 110 extending on the outer circumferential surface of the
electrophotographic belt 5 can reduce a frictional resistance produced between the
cleaning blade 11 and the electrophotographic belt 5. Furthermore, the cleaning blade
11 is lifted by the ridge-line-shaped convex portions 112 higher than the lands 111
adjacent to the extending grooves 110, which can restrain excessive adhesion (stick)
to the electrophotographic belt 5. As a result, occurrence of the stick slip is prevented.
[0020] As is apparent from Examples described below, let S denote a distance between every
closest grooves 110, the lands 111 can each have a length of 0.3 × S or more in the
direction orthogonal to the direction in which the grooves 110 extend.
[0021] The cleaning blade 11 is lifted by the ridge-line-shaped convex portion 112 higher
than the lands 111. Here, the convex portion 112 is disposed at least one side of
the land 111. In the present disclosure, when the lands 111 are positioned between
the grooves 110, it is only required that, for at least one of the grooves 110, a
convex portion 112 is formed between the one groove 110 and a land 111 adjacent to
the one groove 110. In the configuration illustrated in FIG. 1A to FIG. 1C, the convex
portions 112 are provided on both sides of each land 111, but for example, the convex
portions 112 may be provided on single sides of the lands 111. However, in order to
prevent the wearing of the blade and provide particularly durability, the convex portions
112 can be formed on both sides of the grooves 110, as will be described below.
[0022] In the electrophotographic belt illustrated in FIG. 1A to FIG. 1C, an angle θ formed
by the direction in which the grooves 110 extend and a longitudinal direction of an
abutment nip 115 made by the cleaning blade 11 in the electrophotographic image forming
apparatus can be a right angle or close to the right angle. FIG. 2 illustrates a surface
of the electrophotographic belt 5 in an enlarging manner, illustrating this angle
θ. An angle close to the right angle means that an angle is 60° or larger and 90°
or smaller. The angle θ is more preferably set at 71° or larger and 90° or smaller,
still more preferably from 85° to the right angle. By specifying the angle θ having
such a value, a force by which the abutment nip of the cleaning blade 11 climbs over
a side wall portion constituting a convex portion 112 higher than the lands 111 is
kept low. It is considered that this reduces the wearing of the nip portion of the
cleaning blade 11, restrains the slip-through of transfer remaining toner reliably
for a long time, and can attain a good blade cleaning property.
[0023] An example embodiment of the present disclosure will be described below more in detail,
but the present disclosure is not limited to this embodiment.
<Example Electrophotographic Image Forming Apparatus>
[0024] FIG. 3 illustrates an example of an electrophotographic image forming apparatus equipped
with an electrophotographic belt according to the present disclosure as an intermediate
transfer member, and the electrophotographic image forming apparatus is configured
in a form of an electrophotographic apparatus. This electrophotographic image forming
apparatus is an electrophotographic image forming apparatus that uses four colors
of toner expressed as C, M, Y, and K to form a color image on a recording medium S
such as a sheet of paper fed from a paper feeding cassette 20, and includes image
forming stations for the respective colors installed adjacent to one another in a
substantially horizontal direction. An average particle diameter of the toner is 6
µm, and a particle size distribution of the toner can be regarded substantially as
a normal distribution, and a toner having a particle diameter of 2 µm or smaller accounts
for 1% of the particle size distribution.
[0025] The image forming stations for the respective colors include photosensitive drums
1c, 1m, 1y and 1k, respectively. Each of indices "c", "m", "y" and "k" following each
reference numeral herein indicates an image forming station of what color a member
followed by the reference numeral with the index belongs to. The electrophotographic
image forming apparatus is provided with a scanner 3 being a laser optical unit, from
which laser light beams 3c, 3m, 3y and 3k corresponding to image signals of the colors
are radiated toward the photosensitive drums 1c, 1m, 1y and 1k, respectively. The
image forming stations all have the same structure, and thus the image forming station
for the color K will be described here. Surrounding the photosensitive drum 1k, a
conductive roller 2k being a contact electrostatic-charging device, a developing device
4k, a conductive roller 8k being a primary transfer roller, and a blade 14k used for
wiping the photosensitive drum 1k are arranged. The developing device 4k is provided
with a developer roller 41k being a developer bearing member that develops a latent
image on the photosensitive drum 1k, a developer container 42k that retains toner
to be supplied to the developer roller 41k, and a developing blade 43k that regulates
an amount of toner on the developer roller 41k and applies electrical charge to the
developer roller 41k.
[0026] The electrophotographic belt 5 is configured as a belt having an endless shape, is
provided to all of the image forming stations of the colors, is looped around an opposing
roller 92, a tension roller 6, and a driving roller 7, and is rotated in a direction
of an illustrated arrow a by the driving roller 7. In a section between the tension
roller 6 and the driving roller 7, the electrophotographic belt 5 comes into contact
with surfaces of the photosensitive drums 1c, 1m, 1y and 1k one after another, and
pressed against the photosensitive drums 1c, 1m, 1y and 1k by conductive rollers 8c,
8m, 8y and 8k.
[0027] This causes a toner image formed on the surfaces of the photosensitive drums 1c,
1m, 1y and 1k to be transferred onto the surface of the electrophotographic belt 5
being an intermediate transfer member. Being opposed to the opposing roller 92, a
secondary transfer roller 9 is provided, and the secondary transfer roller 9 presses
the electrophotographic belt 5 against the opposing roller 92.
[0028] To the secondary transfer roller 9, a secondary transfer voltage is applied from
an electric power source via a current sensing circuit 10. The secondary transfer
roller 9 and the opposing roller 92 constitute a secondary transfer unit. The recording
medium S passes via a feeding roller 12 and conveyance rollers 13 and through a nip
portion between the electrophotographic belt 5 and the secondary transfer roller 9
at a position of the opposing roller 92, by which a toner image retained on the outer
circumferential surface of the electrophotographic belt 5 is transferred onto the
recording medium S. This forms an image on the surface of the recording medium S.
The recording medium S onto which the toner image is transferred passes a fuser 15
constituted by a pair of rollers: a heating roller 151 and a pressing roller 152,
by which the image is fused on the recording medium S, and the recording medium S
is ejected to an output tray 21. At a position of the tension roller 6, the cleaning
blade 11 that abuts against the outer circumferential surface of the electrophotographic
belt 5 is provided. Toner that is not transferred onto the recording medium S but
remains on the outer circumferential surface of the electrophotographic belt 5 is
to be scraped off to be removed by the cleaning blade 11. The cleaning blade 11 is
a member extending in a direction that is substantially orthogonal to a moving direction
of the electrophotographic belt 5.
<Example Electrophotographic Belt>
[0029] The electrophotographic belt having an endless shape according to the present disclosure
includes, as illustrated in FIG. 1A, the lands 111, the convex portions 112 projecting
more than the lands 111, and the grooves 110 extending parallel to each other, on
a surface on a side facing the photosensitive drums, namely, the outer circumferential
surface of the electrophotographic belt. FIG. 1A illustrates a cross section of the
electrophotographic belt on a plane that is parallel to the outer circumferential
surface of the electrophotographic belt and orthogonal to a direction in which the
grooves 110 extend. The lands 111 are provided to provide a nip which is formed with
the cleaning blade abutting against the outer circumferential surface of this electrophotographic
belt. The grooves 110 reduce a frictional resistance produced between the blade and
the electrophotographic belt. The convex portions 112 are provided to restrain stick
slip of the blade. The grooves 110, the lands 111, and the convex portions 112 constitute
a concave-convex shape 113 on the outer circumferential surface of the electrophotographic
belt. In order to provide a stable nip, a surface roughness Rz of the concave-convex
shape 113 can be 0.2 µm or higher and 0.6 µm or lower. The concave-convex shape 113
illustrated in FIG. 1A is formed directly on a base layer 101 of the electrophotographic
belt. The grooves 110 are provided so as to extend in a direction that intersects
the abutment nip 115 of the cleaning blade 11 (see FIG. 2). The lands 111 are each
positioned between two of the adjacent grooves as a flat area having a surface whose
surface roughness is not more than a specified value which will be mentioned later.
[0030] Known machining methods for forming fine concaves and convexes include grinding machining,
cutting machining, imprinting processing, and the like; for forming the grooves 110,
the lands 111, and the convex portions 112 described above, cutting machining, imprinting
processing, and the like can be used.
[0031] From a viewpoint of a machining cost, a material containing at least a thermoplastic
resin can be used for the base layer 101 of the electrophotographic belt, and the
imprinting processing can be performed on the outer circumferential surface of this
electrophotographic belt.
[0032] Examples of a thermoplastic resin material that can be used for the base layer 101
of the electrophotographic belt include polyamide, polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene
naphthalate, polyphenylene sulfide, thermoplastic polyimide, polyether ether ketone,
and the like. Two or more of these thermoplastic resin materials can be mixed to be
used. The electrophotographic belt according to the present disclosure may have, as
illustrated in FIG. 1B, a dual structure that includes the base layer 101 and a surface
layer 102 formed on the base layer 101, and the concave-convex shape 113 may be provided
on the surface layer 102. For example, the surface layer 102 can be provided on a
side of the electrophotographic belt 5 that is to face and come into contact with
the photosensitive drum 1k and the cleaning blade 11, from a viewpoint of improving
a durability (wear resistance) of the electrophotographic belt 5. For the surface
layer 102, a curable resin material, which cures by heat or irradiation with an active
energy beam or the like, such as an acrylic material, can be used. In this case, a
coating thickness of the surface layer 102 can be less than 3.0 µm. If the coating
thickness of the surface layer 102 is not less than 5.0 µm, the grooves 110 sandwiching
the lands 111 cannot be fabricated stably, assuming that a thermoplastic material
is used for the base layer 101.
[0033] Here, in a case where the electrophotographic belt 5 is installed in an electrophotographic
image forming apparatus illustrated in FIG. 3, the abutment nip of the cleaning blade
11 is not parallel to a circumferential direction of the electrophotographic belt
5 due to a function of the abutment nip being to remove toner. Therefore, examples
of the electrophotographic belt 5 according to the present disclosure include an electrophotographic
belt in which grooves 110 are formed in a direction intersecting a circumferential
direction of the electrophotographic belt, and the lands 111 and the convex portions
112 described above are formed in a cross section that is orthogonal to the direction
in which the grooves 110 extend.
[0034] According to an aspect of the present disclosure, an electrophotographic belt that
is excellent in transfer remaining toner wiping properties with a cleaning blade can
be provided. In addition, according to another aspect of the present disclosure, an
electrophotographic image forming apparatus capable of forming a high-grade electrophotographic
image stably can be provided.
[EXAMPLES]
[0035] Next, the present disclosure will be described more specifically with reference to
examples and comparative examples. Note that the present disclosure is not limited
to the following examples. In the examples and the comparative example, belts for
electrophotography were manufactured by a procedure described below, and measurement
and evaluation of shapes of the belts for electrophotography were conducted.
(Example Methods for Measuring and Evaluating Shapes)
[0036] Methods for measuring and evaluating characteristic values of the belts for electrophotography
manufactured in the examples and the comparative examples were as follows. In the
following description, a direction that is orthogonal to the direction in which the
grooves 110 extend and parallel to an outer circumferential surface of an electrophotographic
belt will be referred to as a reference direction. The reference direction is a direction
illustrated by an arrow A in FIG. 1A.
(1) Evaluating Lands
[0037] As a measurement apparatus for a surface shape, a non-contact three-dimensional surface
shape measurement apparatus (Trade name: NewView 6300, from Zygo Corporation) was
used, and the surface shape was obtained in a form of a shape that is provided based
on low frequency components (measurement modes of the apparatus were set as Filter:
Low Pass, Filter Type: Average).
[0038] As illustrated in FIG. 1C, in a surface shape of an outer circumferential surface
of an electrophotographic belt, concave surface shapes each sandwiched between given
convex shapes were regarded as extreme points 116, and zones including these extreme
points 116, extending along the reference direction, and each sandwiched between the
given convex shapes were set as candidates for a land. Then, of the candidates, a
zone that had a height falling within a range of 20 nm from the extreme point 116
in a height direction and continued along the reference direction by 30% or larger
of an average distance Sm of concaves and convexes was defined as a land 111.
[0039] Therefore, variations of the land 111 in the height direction were within 20 nm.
In a case where a value obtained by dividing a length of a zone having variations
in the height direction falling within the range of 20 nm (here, the length along
the reference direction) by the average distance Sm of the concaves and convexes (hereinafter,
referred to as a "land ratio L") is 30% or higher, it can be said that the area is
a land 111. The measurement was conducted at eight spots including two spots in a
width direction × four spots in a circumferential direction, on an electrophotographic
belt that was taken out randomly, and over a zone having an evaluation length of 300
µm for each spot, and based on the measurement, a determination as to the lands was
conducted.
[0040] With consideration given to normal values of a height H of a convex portion 112 and
a depth D of a groove 110, it can be considered that the measurement of the average
distance Sm of the concaves and convexes actually provides a distance S between grooves
110, and thus a measured average distance Sm of the concaves and convexes can be treated
as the distance S between the grooves 110.
[0041] Therefore, a land ratio L of not less than 30% is synonymous with a length of a land
111 in the direction orthogonal to the direction in which the grooves 110 extend (i.e.,
reference direction) that is as much as 0.3 times or more of the distance S between
the grooves 110.
(2) Evaluating Convex Portions
[0042] For measuring a height H of convex portions 112 formed on an outer circumferential
surface of an electrophotographic belt, the non-contact three-dimensional surface
shape measurement apparatus (trade name: NewView 6300, from Zygo Corporation) was
used as a measurement apparatus.
[0043] The height H is defined as a height from a center of the land 111, and in a case
where a portion having a height of 50 nm or higher was found, the portion was defined
as a convex portion 112. In a case where there was no land 111, a height from an average
line was considered to be the height H, and in a case where a portion having a height
H of 50 nm or higher was found, the portion was defined as a convex portion 112. The
measurement was conducted at eight spots including two spots in a width direction
× four spots in a circumferential direction, on an electrophotographic belt that was
taken out randomly, and over a zone having an evaluation length of 300 µm for each
spot, and based on the measurement, a determination as to whether a convex portion
112 is present was conducted.
(3) Evaluating Grooves
[0044] Grooves were determined based on a difference between the height H and a surface
roughness Rz described below. A portion having a depth D of not less than 100 nm was
defined as a groove 110.
(4) Evaluating Surface Roughness Rz and Average Distance Sm of Concaves and convexes
[0045] For measuring the surface roughness Rz and the average distance Sm of the concaves
and convexes, a surface roughness measuring instrument (trade name: SURFCOM 1500SD,
from TOKYO SEIMITSU CO., LTD.) was used as a measurement apparatus. Parameters relating
to the surface roughness Rz and the average distance Sm of the concaves and convexes
conformed to JIS B0601(2001); the measurement was conducted under conditions including
a cut-off wavelength of 0.25 mm, a measurement sampling length of 0.25 mm, and a measurement
length of 1.25 mm. Here, a ten point height of roughness profile Rz of a surface of
an electrophotographic belt and the average distance Sm of the concaves and convexes
were measured by scanning a stylus of the measuring instrument on an outer circumferential
surface of the electrophotographic belt in a direction orthogonal to a direction in
which ridge-line-shaped convex portions 112 or grooves 110 extend, namely, in the
reference direction. This measurement was conducted at eight spots including two spots
in a width direction × four spots in a circumferential direction, on an electrophotographic
belt that was taken out randomly, and obtained values are averaged and treated as
the surface roughness Rz and the average distance Sm of the concaves and convexes.
In a case where neither convex portion 112 nor groove 110 was recognized on the outer
circumferential surface of the electrophotographic belt, the evaluation described
above was conducted in a direction orthogonal to a rotary drive direction of the electrophotographic
belt.
(5) Evaluating Angles of Grooves or Convex Portions
[0046] An angle formed by a direction in which grooves 110 or convex portions 112 extend
and an abutment nip 115 of a cleaning blade 11 (see FIG. 2) was measured. A non-contact
three-dimensional surface shape measurement apparatus (Trade name: New View 6300,
from Zygo Corporation) was used as a measurement apparatus, and a surface shape was
obtained in a form of a shape that is provided based on low frequency components (measurement
modes of the apparatus were set as Filter: Low Pass, Filter Type: Average). Of Angles
formed by an extending direction of the abutment nip 115 of the cleaning blade 11
and an extending direction of the grooves 110 or the convex portions 112 when an electrophotographic
belt is attached to an electrophotographic image forming apparatus, smaller one (an
angle of not more than 90°) was defined as an angle θ of the grooves 110 or the convex
portions 112. The measurement was conducted at eight spots including two spots in
a width direction × four spots in a circumferential direction, on an electrophotographic
belt that was taken out randomly, and over a zone having an evaluation length of 300
µm for each spot, and based on the measurement, an evaluation of the angle was conducted.
(6) Evaluating Cleaning Performance of the Belt
[0047] An electrophotographic image forming apparatus having the configuration illustrated
in FIG. 3 with the belt installed as an intermediate transfer belt was prepared, and
blade cleaning was performed to evaluate a cleanability of the belt. This evaluation
was conducted under an environment at a temperature of 25C° and a relative humidity
of 50%, and A4-sized sheet of paper (Trade name: Extra, manufactured by Canon Production
Printing Co., Ltd) was used as a recording media S.
Specifically, the evaluation of the belt was conducted by outputting 250000 of A4-sized
sheets of paper on each of which "E-letter image" was formed. The "E-letter image"
includes an alphabet characters "E" with a size of 6 point drawn with yellow, magenta,
cyan and black toners so that the densities with respective toners were 1%. During
the outputting of 250000 sheets, at the every time of 100000 sheet-output, 150000
sheet-output, 175000 sheet-output, 200000 sheet-output and 250000 sheet-output, the
following procedures were conducted.
- (i) First, an electrophotographic image forming process for forming a solid red toner
image was conducted by using yellow and magenta toners while a second transfer bias
was not applied, i.e. a second transfer bias = 0V. As a result of this procedure,
a solid red toner image was formed on an outer surface of the belt, but since the
second transfer bias was not applied, the solid red toner image on the belt was not
transferred to a sheet of paper. Thus, the solid red image on the belt was conveyed
to a nip of the cleaning blade and the outer surface of the belt, and at the nip point,
cleaning process for removing the solid red toner image was conducted.
- (ii) Next, 3 of A4-sized sheets of paper were passed while a second transfer bias
was applied.
[0048] In the case that the solid red toner image on the belt was completely removed in
the step (i), any toner is not transferred to the sheets passed in the step (ii),
but in the case that the solid red toner image on the belt is not fully cleaned, a
toner remained on the belt is transferred to at least one of the sheets passed in
the step (ii). That is, the cleanability of the belt can be evaluated by observing
the sheets passed in the step (ii) whether or not toner is transferred.
[0049] In this evaluation, the observation results of the output sheets in the step (ii),
i.e. total 15 sheets, were rated in accordance with the following five ranks.
Rank S: poor cleaning was not occurred even at the time when 250000 sheets were output.
Rank A: poor cleaning was not occurred at the time when 200000 sheets were output.
Rank B: poor cleaning was not occurred at the time when 175000 sheets were output.
Rank C: poor cleaning was not occurred at the time when 150000 sheets were output.
Rank D: poor cleaning was occurred at the time when 150000 sheets were output.
[0050] As the cleaning blade 11, one having a hardness degree of 77° according to JIS K6253
standard was used. Conditions for attaching the cleaning blade 11 included a set angle
φ of 24°, an intrusion amount δ of 1.5 mm, and an abutting pressure of the cleaning
blade 11 of 0.6 N/cm. The set angle φ refers to an angle that is formed by the cleaning
blade 11 and a tangent plane of the tension roller 6 at an intersection point of the
electrophotographic belt 5 and the cleaning blade 11, and the intrusion amount δ refers
to a length in a thickness direction for which the cleaning blade 11 overlaps with
the tension roller 6.
(Example 1)
[0051] An electrophotographic belt made of a base layer 101 illustrated in FIG. 1A was fabricated.
First, a polyethylene naphthalate resin was subjected to blow molding to be formed
into a bottle-shaped molded body, which was cut by an ultrasonic cutter to be formed
into an endless belt body. The polyethylene naphthalate resin contained a quaternary
ammonium salt (tetrabutylammonium hydrogen sulfate) as a resistance adjustment agent.
In this manner, a polyethylene-naphthalate-resin belt having a thickness of 70 µm
(glass transition temperature: approximately 120°C) was obtained.
[0052] Next, surface shape machining was performed on a resin-made belt 60 with a machining
device illustrated in FIG. 4. This machining device is configured to allow the resin-made
belt 60 to be disposed around an outer circumference of a column-shaped core 90, to
press a mold 81 against the resin-made belt 60, and to allow the mold 81 and the core
90 to rotate in directions illustrated by arrows.
[0053] The resin-made belt 60 (circumferential length 712 mm, width 260 mm) was press-fitted
to the core 90 (diameter 227 mm, metallic). Thereafter, a pressing force (abutting
surface pressure 8.0 MPa) was applied to the mold 81, of which a surface was heated
to 130°C and which includes a plurality of triangular convex portions extending parallel
to a circumferential direction, to cause this mold 81 to abut against the resin-made
belt 60 in such a manner that axis center lines of the resin-made belt 60 and the
mold 81 are parallel to each other. The mold 81 was metallic and had a diameter of
50 mm, a convex height of 3.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest
width of 0.2 µm, and an inter-convex distance of 20 µm. This mold will be referred
to as a mold A. The heating temperature, 130°C, is higher than the glass transition
temperature of the resin-made belt 60 made of polyethylene naphthalate, by 5 to 15°C.
Thereafter, the surface shape machining was performed on the resin-made belt 60 by
rotating the core 90 once at a circumferential speed of 264 mm/sec and thereby driving
the mold 81 while causing the core 90 to abut against the resin-made belt 60.
[0054] A surface of the resin-made belt 60 obtained by the surface shape machining had an
average distance Sm of concaves and convexes of 20.2 µm and a surface roughness Rz
of 0.60 µm.
[0055] A depth D of grooves formed by the surface shape machining was 465 nm, which was
not less than 100 nm, and thus it is determined that grooves 110 were formed. Aland
ratio L of lands formed on the surface was 37%, which was not less than 30%, and thus
it is determined that lands 111 were formed.
[0056] A height H measured on the surface was 130 nm, which was not less than 50 nm, and
thus it is determined that convex portions 112 were formed. The resin-made belt 60,
of which the surface shape was machined in this manner, was treated as an electrophotographic
belt, and this electrophotographic belt was installed as an intermediate transfer
member in an electrophotographic image forming apparatus illustrated in FIG. 3, and
cleaning evaluation was conducted. At that time, in the electrophotographic image
forming apparatus, a direction of an abutment nip formed by the cleaning blade 11
and the electrophotographic belt 5 and an extending direction of the grooves 110 on
the surface of the electrophotographic belt 5 formed an angle θ of 90°. The electrophotographic
belt 5 in this embodiment caused no poor cleaning at a time of feeding 250000 of recording
media, and thus rated as an electrophotographic belt of the Grade S.
[0057] Results of the above are shown in Table 1. In Table 1, columns of GROOVE, LAND, and
CONVEX PORTION respectively indicate whether the grooves 110, the lands 111, and the
convex portions 112 according to the definitions described above were present.
[0058] In a column of CLEANING EVALUATION, "G" and "NG" for each number of sheets fed indicate
the poor cleaning not occurring ("G") and the poor cleaning occurring ("NG"), respectively.
(Example 2)
[0059] As the mold 81, a mold that was metallic and had a diameter of 50 mm, a convex height
of 2.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest width of 0.2 µm, and an
inter-convex distance of 20 µm was used. This mold will be referred to as a mold B.
A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Example 1 except that
the mold B was used, and the same evaluation as in Example 1 was conducted. Results
of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 3)
[0060] As the mold 81, a mold that was metallic and had a diameter of 50 mm, a convex height
of 1.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest width of 0.2 µm, and an
inter-convex distance of 20 µm was used. This mold will be referred to as a mold C.
A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Example 1 except that
the mold C was used, and the same evaluation as in Example 1 was conducted. Results
of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 4)
[0061] As the electrophotographic belt, as illustrated in FIG. 1B, an electrophotographic
belt in which a surface layer 102 was formed on a base layer 101 was fabricated. As
the base layer 101, the same belt body as the endless belt body in Example 1 was used.
[0062] To this belt body being the base layer 101, ultraviolet-light-curing acrylic material
was applied, and the belt body was irradiated with ultraviolet light. As a result,
a curing resin film having a thickness 2.5 µm was formed on a surface of the base
layer 101, and the curing resin film was treated as the surface layer 102 of the resin-made
belt 60. Then, a surface shape of the surface layer 102 was machined with the mold
A used in Example 1 under the same conditions as in Example 1 except that the abutting
surface pressure was set at 13.3 MPa. Thereafter, the resultant resin-made belt 60
was treated as the electrophotographic belt in the present example, and the same evaluation
as in Example 1 was conducted on the electrophotographic belt. Note that the shape
and other factors belong to the surface layer 102. Results of the evaluation are shown
in Table 1.
(Example 5)
[0063] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Example 4 except that
the mold B described in Example 2 was used as the mold 81, and the same evaluation
as in Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 6)
[0064] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Example 4 except that
the mold C described in Example 3 was used as the mold 81, and the same evaluation
as in Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 7)
[0065] In Example 7, the same electrophotographic belt as in Examples 4 to 6 was used, but
the machining of a surface shape of its surface layer 102 was changed to cutting machining
to obtain the electrophotographic belt.
[0066] FIG. 5A to FIG. 5C are diagrams for describing a cutting apparatus used in Example
7; FIG. 5A is a schematic diagram of a configuration of the cutting apparatus, FIG.
5B is a cross-sectional view illustrating how to machine a convex portion 112 and
a groove 110 with the cutting apparatus, and FIG. 5C is a cross-sectional view illustrating
how to machine a groove 110, a convex portion 112, and a land 111. This cutting apparatus
includes a cutting bit 91 for cutting a surface of a resin-made belt 60 and is configured
to allow the resin-made belt 60 to be disposed around an outer circumference of a
column-shaped core 54 and to rotate the core 54 for performing surface machining with
the cutting bit 91.
[0067] The resin-made belt 60 (circumferential length 712 mm, width 260 mm) was press-fitted
to the core 54 (diameter 227 mm, metallic), and the cutting bit 91 (diamond bit, from
A.L.M.T. Corp.) was caused to abut against the surface of the resin-made belt 60.
Thereafter, the core 54 was rotated once at a circumferential speed of 2.2 m/sec,
and then the cutting bit 91 was moved in a width direction of the resin-made belt
60 at a feed rate of 0.005 mm/sec with the core 54 caused to abut against the resin-made
belt 60. In the surface shape machining, cutting conditions of the cutting bit were
controlled in such a manner that the cutting bit can form free-form curves with respect
to the width direction of the resin-made belt 60.
[0068] After the surface shape machining, the evaluation of the surface shape and the cleaning
evaluation were conducted as in Example 4. Results of the evaluation are shown in
Table 1.
[0069] In Examples 1 to 7, the angle θ formed by the direction in which the grooves 110
formed on each electrophotographic belt extend and the abutment nip of the cleaning
blade 11 was set at 90°, namely, the right angle, but in the following embodiments,
θ was changed from 90° by changing the mold to be used.
(Example 8)
[0070] As the mold 81, a mold made of metal and having a diameter of 50 mm, a convex height
of 2.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest width of 0.2 µm, and an
inter-convex distance of 20 µm, and in which an extending direction of its axis center
forms an angle of 85° with an extending direction of the convex height, was used.
This mold will be referred to as a mold D. A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in
the same manner as in Example 4 except that the mold D was used, and the same evaluation
as in Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 9)
[0071] As the mold 81, a mold made of metal and having a diameter of 50 mm, a convex height
of 2.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest width of 0.2 µm, and an
inter-convex distance of 20 µm, and in which an extending direction of its axis center
forms an angle of 80° with an extending direction of the projection height, was used.
This mold will be referred to as a mold E. A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in
the same manner as in Example 4 except that the mold E was used, and the same evaluation
as in Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 10)
[0072] As the mold 81, a mold made of metal and having a diameter of 50 mm, a convex height
of 2.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest width of 0.2 µm, and an
inter-convex distance of 20 µm, and in which an extending direction of its axis center
forms an angle of 72° with an extending direction of the convex height, was used.
This mold will be referred to as a mold F. A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in
the same manner as in Example 4 except that the mold F was used, and the same evaluation
as in Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 11)
[0073] As the mold 81, a mold made of metal and having a diameter of 50 mm, a convex height
of 2.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest width of 0.2 µm, and an
inter-convex distance of 20 µm, and in which an extending direction of its axis center
forms an angle of 68° with an extending direction of the convex height, was used.
This mold will be referred to as a mold G. A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in
the same manner as in Example 4 except that the mold G was used, and the same evaluation
as in Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 12)
[0074] As the mold 81, a mold made of metal and having a diameter of 50 mm, a convex height
of 2.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest width of 0.2 µm, and an
inter-convex distance of 20 µm, and in which an extending direction of its axis center
forms an angle of 60° with an extending direction of the convex height, was used.
This mold will be referred to as a mold H. A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in
the same manner as in Example 4 except that the mold H was used, and the same evaluation
as in Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Example 13)
[0075] As the mold 81, a mold made of metal and having a diameter of 50 mm, a convex height
of 2.5 µm, a convex bottom width of 2.0 µm, a convex crest width of 0.2 µm, and an
inter-convex distance of 3.8 µm, and in which an extending direction of its axis center
forms an angle of 90° with an extending direction of the convex height, was used.
This mold is referred to as a mold I. A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same
manner as in Example 4 except that the mold I was used, and the same evaluation as
in Example 4 was conducted. Result of the evaluation are shown in Table 1.
(Comparative Example 1)
[0076] A grinding apparatus illustrated in FIGS. 6A to 6C was used to fabricate an electrophotographic
belt in which the concave-convex shape 113 was formed on the base layer 101 illustrated
in FIG. 1A by grinding.
[0077] As illustrated in FIG. 6A, the grinding apparatus is configured to dispose a resin-made
belt 60 around an outer circumference of a column-shaped core 54 and grind a surface
of the resin-made belt 60 with a grinding sheet 50. The grinding sheet 50 is looped
around a feeding roller 52, an additional roller 51, and a retracting roller 53, and
is configured to be pressed against the resin-made belt 60 by the additional roller
51. By feeding the grinding sheet 50 while rotating the core 54, the surface of the
resin-made belt 60 is ground. FIG. 6B illustrates how this grinding apparatus machines
the base layer 101, and FIG. 6C illustrates how this grinding apparatus machines a
surface layer 102 in a case where the surface layer 102 is formed on the base layer
101.
[0078] The resin-made belt 60 (circumferential length 712 mm, width 260 mm) was press-fitted
to the core 54 (diameter 227 mm, metallic), and the grinding sheet 50 (trade name:
Lapika WA2000, from KOVAX Corporation) was caused to abut against the surface of the
resin-made belt 60 by applying a pressing force (abutting surface pressure 0.08 kg/mm
2) to the grinding sheet 50 with the additional roller 51 (diameter 100 mm, nitrile
rubber made, hardness degree 70). The hardness degree is a value according to JIS
K6253 standard.
[0079] Thereafter, grinding machining was performed on the surface of the resin-made belt
60 to be used as an electrophotographic belt by moving the grinding sheet 50 at a
feed rate of 1.3 mm/sec while causing the grinding sheet 50 to abut against the resin-made
belt 60 and by rotating the core 54 at 14 rev/min. Here, a rotating direction of the
core 54 is a direction such that moving directions of the grinding sheet 50 and the
core 54 abutting against each other match.
[0080] In the grinding machining, grinding sheets 50 having a surface roughness Rz of 10.0
µm were used from among three lots of grinding sheets 50. Thereafter, the evaluation
of the surface shape and the cleaning evaluation were conducted as in Example 1. Results
of the evaluation are shown in Table 1. In this comparative example, its height H
was 17 µm, and it was determined that the convex portions 112 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 2)
[0081] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Comparative Example
1 except that a grinding sheet having a surface roughness Rz of 7.4 µm was used as
the grinding sheet 50, and the same evaluation as in Example 1 was conducted. Results
of the evaluation are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 2, it was determined
that the convex portions 112 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 3)
[0082] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Comparative Example
1 except that a grinding sheet having a surface roughness Rz of 5.9 µm was used as
the grinding sheet 50, and the same evaluation as in Example 1 was conducted. Results
of the evaluation are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 3, it was determined
that the convex portions 112 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 4)
[0083] As the electrophotographic belt, as illustrated in FIG. 1B, an electrophotographic
belt in which a surface layer 102 was formed on a base layer 101 was fabricated. As
the base layer 101, the same belt body as the endless belt body in Example 1 was used,
and to this belt body being the base layer 101, ultraviolet-light-curing acrylic material
was applied, and the belt body was irradiated with ultraviolet light.
[0084] As a result, a curing resin film having a thickness of 2.5 µm was formed on a surface
of the base layer 101, and the curing resin film was treated as the surface layer
102 of the resin-made belt 60. Then, a surface shape of the surface layer 102 was
machined under the same grinding conditions as in Comparative Example 1 except that
the abutting surface pressure was set at 0.12 kgf/mm
2. Thereafter, the same evaluation as in Example 1 was conducted on the resultant resin-made
belt 60. Note that the shape and other factors belong to the surface layer 102. Results
of the evaluation are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 4, it was determined
that the convex portions 112 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 5)
[0085] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Comparative Example
4 except that a grinding sheet having a surface roughness Rz of 7.4 µm used in Comparative
Example 2 was used as the grinding sheet 50, and the same evaluation as in Comparative
Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1. In Comparative
Example 5, it was determined that the convex portions 112 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 6)
[0086] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Comparative Example
4 except that a grinding sheet having a surface roughness Rz of 5.9 µm used in Comparative
Example 3 was used as the grinding sheet 50, and the same evaluation as in Comparative
Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1. In Comparative
Example 6, it was determined that the convex portions 112 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 7)
[0087] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in the same manner as in Comparative Example
4 except that the grinding apparatus illustrated in FIG. 6A was used to grind a surface
of a surface layer 102 ten times, and the same evaluation as in Comparative Example
4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example
7, it was determined that the convex portions 112 were not formed, and it was determined
that the lands 111 were not formed, either because its land ratio L was lower than
30%.
(Comparative Example 8)
[0088] In Comparative Example 8, the same electrophotographic belt as in Comparative Example
4 to 6 was used, but the machining of a surface shape of its surface layer 102 was
changed to the cutting machining performed with the cutting apparatus illustrated
in FIG. 5A to obtain the electrophotographic belt.
[0089] The resin-made belt 60 (circumferential length 712 mm, width 260 mm) was first press-fitted
to the core 54 (diameter 227 mm, metallic), and the cutting bit 91 (diamond bit, from
A.L.M.T. Corp.) was caused to abut against the surface of the resin-made belt 60.
Thereafter, the core 54 was rotated once at a circumferential speed of 2.2 m/sec,
and then the cutting bit 91 was moved in a width direction of the resin-made belt
60 at a feed rate of 0.005 mm/sec with the core 54 caused to abut against the resin-made
belt 60. In the surface shape machining, cutting conditions of the cutting bit were
controlled in such a manner that the cutting bit can form sinusoidal wave forms (period
20 µm, amplitude 150 nm) with respect to the width direction of the resin-made belt
60.
[0090] After the surface shape machining, the evaluation of the surface shape and the cleaning
evaluation were conducted as in Comparative Example 4. Results of the evaluation are
shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 8, it was determined that the convex portions
112 were formed but the lands 111 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 9)
[0091] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in substantially the same manner as in Comparative
Example 8 except that the cutting conditions of the cutting bit 91 were changed, and
the same evaluation as in Comparative Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation
are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 9, it was determined that the convex
portions 112 were formed but the lands 111 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 10)
[0092] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in substantially the same manner as in Comparative
Example 8 except that the cutting conditions of the cutting bit 91 were changed, and
the same evaluation as in Comparative Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation
are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 10, it was determined that the grooves
110 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 11)
[0093] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in substantially the same manner as in Comparative
Example 8 except that the cutting conditions of the cutting bit 91 were changed, and
the same evaluation as in Comparative Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation
are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 11, it was determined that the convex
portions 112 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 12)
[0094] A resin-made belt 60 in Comparative Example 4 before subjected to the grinding machining
was used as an electrophotographic belt in Comparative Example 12, in which the concave-convex
shape was not formed on its surface, and the same evaluation as in Comparative Example
4 was conducted on the electrophotographic belt. Results of the evaluation are shown
in Table 1. In Comparative Example 12, although it was determined that the lands 111
were formed, it was determined that neither the grooves 110 nor the convex portions
112 were formed.
(Comparative Examples 13)
[0095] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in substantially the same manner as in Comparative
Example 8 except that the cutting conditions of the cutting bit 91 were changed, and
the same evaluation as in Comparative Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation
are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 13, it was determined that the convex
portions 112 were not formed.
(Comparative Example 14)
[0096] A resin-made belt 60 was fabricated in substantially the same manner as in Comparative
Example 8 except that the cutting conditions of the cutting bit 91 were changed, and
the same evaluation as in Comparative Example 4 was conducted. Results of the evaluation
are shown in Table 1. In Comparative Example 14, it was determined that the lands
111 were not formed.
[Table 1]
| |
GROOVE DEPTH |
LAND RATIO |
CONVEX PORTION HEIGHT |
GROOVE |
LAND |
CONVEX PORTION |
Sm |
θ |
Rz |
CLEANING EVALUATION |
| D (nm) |
L (%) |
H (nm) |
YN |
YN |
YN |
(µm) |
(°) |
(µm) |
100K |
150K |
175K |
200K |
250K |
GRADE |
| EXAMPLE 1 |
465 |
37 |
130 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.2 |
90 |
0.6 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
G |
S |
| EXAMPLE 2 |
324 |
45 |
101 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.4 |
90 |
0.43 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
G |
S |
| EXAMPLE 3 |
193 |
42 |
62 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.1 |
90 |
0.26 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
NG |
A |
| EXAMPLE 4 |
380 |
32 |
110 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.2 |
90 |
0.49 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
G |
S |
| EXAMPLE 5 |
280 |
51 |
70 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.3 |
90 |
0.35 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
NG |
A |
| EXAMPLE 6 |
158 |
56 |
52 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.1 |
90 |
0.21 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
NG |
A |
| EXAMPLE 7 |
102 |
49 |
99 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.7 |
90 |
0.2 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
NG |
A |
| EXAMPLE 8 |
283 |
52 |
73 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.5 |
85 |
0.36 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
NG |
A |
| EXAMPLE 9 |
279 |
48 |
68 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.3 |
81 |
0.35 |
G |
G |
G |
NG |
NG |
B |
| EXAMPLE 10 |
282 |
51 |
73 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.1 |
71 |
0.36 |
G |
G |
G |
NG |
NG |
B |
| EXAMPLE 11 |
285 |
48 |
75 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.4 |
68 |
0.36 |
G |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
C |
| EXAMPLE 12 |
284 |
53 |
74 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
20.3 |
60 |
0.36 |
G |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
C |
| EXAMPLE13 |
326 |
49 |
77 |
Y |
Y |
Y |
3.8 |
90 |
0.38 |
G |
G |
G |
G |
G |
S |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 1 |
513 |
72 |
17 |
Y |
Y |
N |
18.7 |
90 |
0.53 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 2 |
365 |
75 |
15 |
Y |
Y |
N |
20.5 |
90 |
0.38 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 3 |
249 |
74 |
11 |
Y |
Y |
N |
19.4 |
90 |
0.26 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 4 |
561 |
71 |
19 |
Y |
Y |
N |
16.9 |
90 |
0.58 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 5 |
381 |
76 |
13 |
Y |
Y |
N |
17.3 |
90 |
0.39 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 6 |
274 |
77 |
10 |
Y |
Y |
N |
18.4 |
90 |
0.28 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 7 |
512 |
27 |
17 |
Y |
N |
N |
20.1 |
90 |
0.53 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 8 |
149 |
11 |
141 |
Y |
N |
Y |
19.6 |
90 |
0.29 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 9 |
432 |
28 |
92 |
Y |
N |
Y |
20.3 |
90 |
0.52 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 10 |
98 |
53 |
112 |
N |
Y |
Y |
20.6 |
90 |
0.21 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 11 |
183 |
53 |
47 |
Y |
Y |
N |
20.2 |
90 |
0.23 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 12 |
78 |
98 |
12 |
N |
Y |
N |
0.1 |
- |
0.09 |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 13 |
361 |
46 |
40 |
Y |
Y |
N |
3.5 |
90 |
0.38 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
| COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 14 |
342 |
25 |
73 |
Y |
N |
Y |
3.7 |
90 |
0.39 |
G |
NG |
NG |
NG |
NG |
D |
[0097] The land ratio L is obtained by dividing a length along the reference direction of
a zone having variations in the height direction falling within the range of 20 nm
by the average distance Sm of the concaves and convexes, and as described above, the
average distance Sm of the concaves and convexes can be regarded as the distance S
between the grooves 110. As shown in Table 1, by forming grooves having a depth D
of not less than 100 nm, lands having lengths accounting for not less than 30% of
the distance S between the grooves, and convex portions having a height H of not less
than 50 nm, satisfactory blade cleaning lasting for a long time was enabled, satisfying
a performance requirement for an electrophotographic belt.
[0098] As a result of repeating blade cleaning, the belts for electrophotography in Comparative
Examples 1 to 14 all caused poor cleaning before the feeding of 150000 recording media
is reached. A possible reason for the poor cleaning occurring by such a relatively
low number of recording media S fed is as follows.
[0099] An outer circumferential surface of each electrophotographic belt in Comparative
Examples 1 to 6, 11 and 13 has a shape such that lands 111 form a nip with the cleaning
blade 11 to prevent slip-through of transfer remaining toner, and grooves 110 reduce
a frictional resistance.
[0100] However, in these comparative examples, no convex portions 112 having a height H
of not less than 50 nm were not formed. It is considered that this causes the nip
to wear, increasing an adhered surface between an abutment portion of the blade and
the outer circumferential surface of each electrophotographic belt, and this abutment
portion of the blade was elongated significantly in a rotating direction of the electrophotographic
belt to bring about stick slip, making it easy for transfer remaining toner to slip
through the abutment portion.
[0101] In Comparative Example 7, a stable nip was not obtained because there were no lands
present on the outer circumferential surface of its electrophotographic belt, and
it is considered that, as a result of repeating the blade cleaning, the nip wore,
and transfer remaining toner slipped through a spot where a nip region was narrow.
In addition, in Comparative Example 7, since no convex portions were formed, it is
considered that the adhered surface between the abutment portion of the blade and
the outer circumferential surface of its electrophotographic belt was increased, and
the abutment portion of the blade was elongated significantly to bring about stick
slip, making it easy for transfer remaining toner to slip through the abutment portion,
in the above manner.
[0102] In each of Comparative Examples 8, 9 and 14, a stable nip was not obtained because
no lands were formed on the outer circumferential surface of its electrophotographic
belt, and it is considered that, as a result of repeating the blade cleaning, the
nip wore, and transfer remaining toner slipped through a spot where a nip region is
narrow.
[0103] In Comparative Example 10, since no grooves 110 were formed on an outer circumferential
surface of its electrophotographic belt, the electrophotographic belt had a shape
that increased a frictional resistance produced between the cleaning blade 11 and
the electrophotographic belt from the beginning. It is considered that, as a result,
a nip wore by repeating the blade cleaning, which causes transfer remaining toner
to slip through the nip.
[0104] In Comparative Example 11, since no convex portions were formed on an outer circumferential
surface of its electrophotographic belt, it is considered that the adhered surface
between the abutment portion of the blade and the outer circumferential surface of
its electrophotographic belt was increased, and stick slip occurred, making it easy
for transfer remaining toner to slip through the abutment portion, in the above manner.
[0105] In Comparative Example 12, since neither grooves 110 nor convex portions 112 were
formed on an outer circumferential surface of its electrophotographic belt, the electrophotographic
belt had a shape that increased a frictional resistance produced between the cleaning
blade 11 and the electrophotographic belt from the beginning. For that reason, it
is considered that a nip significantly wore when the blade cleaning was repeated,
the adhered surface between the abutment portion of the blade and the outer circumferential
surface of its electrophotographic belt was increased, and stick slip occurred, making
it easy for transfer remaining toner to slip through the abutment portion, in the
above manner.
[0106] In contrast, the outer circumferential surface of the electrophotographic belt according
to the present disclosure is provided not only the grooves 110 but also the lands
111 and the convex portions 112. The lands 111 form a nip between the cleaning blade
11 and the electrophotographic belt to prevent slip-through of transfer remaining
toner.
[0107] The grooves 110 reduce a frictional resistance produced between the cleaning blade
11 and the electrophotographic belt. The convex portions 112 each have a shape that
lifts the cleaning blade 11 to restrain excessive adhesion (stick) to the electrophotographic
belt. As a result, with the electrophotographic belt according to the present disclosure,
occurrence of the stick slip is kept low, and as described in Examples 1 to 13, the
poor cleaning does not occur even at a time of feeding 150000 recording media.
[0108] Here, an influence of the angle θ formed by the direction in which the grooves 110
extend and the longitudinal direction of the abutment nip 115 made by the cleaning
blade 11 will be discussed. As shown in Table 1, in a case where this angle θ is not
less than 60°, poor cleaning did not occur at a time of feeding 150000 recording media,
and in a case where this angle θ is not less than 71°, poor cleaning did not occur
at a time of feeding 175000 recording media. In particular, in a case where this angle
θ is not less than 85°, poor cleaning did not occur at a time of feeding 200000 recording
media.
[0109] This is considered to be due to setting the angle θ at the right angle or an angle
close to the right angle (60° ≤ θ ≤ 90°), so that a force by which the abutment nip
climbs over a side wall portion of a convex portion 112 higher than lands 111 adjacent
to grooves 110 is kept low, which reduces the wearing of the nip portion. As long
as the wearing of the nip portion is reduced, it is expected that the slip-through
of transfer remaining toner can be reliably restrained for a long time, and a good
blade cleaning property is attained. According to the results of the examples, θ is
preferably set at 71° or larger and 90° or smaller, still more preferably from 85°
to the right angle.
[0110] Next, importance of forming the convex portions 112 will be further described based
on results of observations. On each of Examples 1 to 13 described above, the cleaning
evaluation after feeding 250000 recording media, and after the cleaning evaluation
on each example, the cleaning blade 11 and the electrophotographic belt 5 were observed.
[0111] As a result, in Examples 3 and 5 to 12, in which the slip-through of transfer remaining
toner was recognized at a time of feeding 250000 recording media, their cleaning blades
11 were observed wearing. In contrast, in Examples 1, 2, 4 and 13 in which the slip-through
of transfer remaining toner was not recognized even at a time of feeding 250000 recording
media, grooves 110 of their belts for electrophotography 5 were observed to be left
while partially covered with paper dust and external additive of toner. From these
results of the observation, it is considered that the grooves 110 left reduced the
increase in a contact area between the cleaning blade 11 and the endless-shaped electrophotographic
belt 5, which restrained the increase in the frictional force and reduced the wearing
of the cleaning blade 11. It is considered that, as a result of the reduction in the
wearing in this manner, no poor cleaning occurred even after feeding 250000 recording
media in Examples 1, 2, 4 and 13, that is, Examples 1, 2, and 4 were rated as Grade
S, the highest quality.
[0112] FIG. 7A is a diagram illustrating a vicinity of a position at which the electrophotographic
belt 5 and the cleaning blade 11 viewed from a direction of a rotation axis of the
tension roller 6, and FIG. 7B is an enlarged view of a portion indicated by a broken
line B in FIG. 7A.
[0113] In FIG. 7A and FIG. 7B, the intrusion amount δ of the cleaning blade 11 is drawn
smaller than its actual size, for convenience of illustration. The cleaning blade
11, which is made of an elasticity body and have a thickness of, for example, 2 mm,
is attached to a mounting bracket 11a having an L-shaped cross section.
[0114] In FIG. 7A, reference character Nb indicates the abutment nip that is formed between
the cleaning blade 11 and the outer circumferential surface of the electrophotographic
belt 5. As illustrated in FIG. 7A and FIG. 7B, the cleaning blade 11 is disposed pointing
in a counter direction to the rotating direction a of the endless-shaped electrophotographic
belt 5. Therefore, a leading edge portion of the cleaning blade 11 to come into contact
with the electrophotographic belt 5 receives a frictional force opposite to a belt
conveyance direction. The frictional force received by the leading edge portion of
the cleaning blade 11 serves as a force that causes the leading edge portion of the
cleaning blade 11 to bend to follow in a belt conveyance direction. As a result, the
frictional force acting on the contact portion curves a contact portion of the cleaning
blade 11 as illustrated in FIG. 7B, which forms a caught portion M. In the caught
portion M, the cleaning blade 11 is in contact with the electrophotographic belt 5
in a form of a surface. A length of the caught portion M in the belt conveyance direction
is indicated as m in the diagram.
[0115] The wearing of the cleaning blade 11 will be discussed. In a case where the grooves
110 are buried in paper dust and the like, a substantial contact area between the
cleaning blade 11 and the electrophotographic belt 5 increases. The increase in the
contact area is considered to hinder a proper caught portion M from being kept and
bring about a stick slip phenomenon, leading to the wearing of the cleaning blade
11. It is therefore considered that, if the grooves 110 are not buried even after
the test about the cleaning performance described above including a large number of
repetitions, the contact area in the cleaning blade 11 is not increased, the proper
caught portion M is kept, and therefore the wearing of the blade can be ameliorated.
From this viewpoint, in order to obtain a durability as a product life that allows
the feeding of more than 200000 recording media, it is necessary to further increase
the depth D of the grooves 110 to reduce the burying of the grooves 110 in the paper
dust and the external additive. In a case where the convex portions 112 are formed
on the surface of the electrophotographic belt 5, it is considered that the depth
D of the grooves can be set at not less than 0.40 µm to reduce the burying of the
grooves 110 and in turn prevent the wearing of the cleaning blade 11.
[0116] In a case where the grooves 110 are formed on the surface of the electrophotographic
belt 5 by causing the mold to abut against the surface, it is necessary to increase
the abutting surface pressure of the mold for increasing the depth D of the grooves.
As with the belts for electrophotography 5 in Examples 4 to 6, in a configuration
in which an ultraviolet light curing acrylic material is applied to a surface layer,
the surface layer is hard, and thus if the abutting surface pressure of the mold is
increased, a crack can be created on the surface layer in forming the grooves 110.
The creation of the crack on the surface layer can be prevented by adjusting the abutting
surface pressure, but this case fails to obtain a sufficient depth D of the grooves.
[0117] According to the molds made by the present inventors seeing the durability that allows
the feeding of more than 200000 recording media, it was found that the wearing of
the blade is further restrained by forming the convex portions 112 on both sides of
each groove 110. Specifically, a land 111 is formed at a position between every adjacent
two grooves 110, and in addition, convex portions 112 are formed between the land
111 and the two grooves 110 adj acent to the land 111. With such a configuration,
an effective depth of the grooves 110 regarding the burying can be considered to be
a sum of the height H of the convex portions 112 and the depth D of the grooves defined
as described with reference to FIG. 1A to FIG. 1C. Therefore, the effective depth
can be made large as compared with an actual depth D of the grooves 110 formed by
the mold, which enables the wearing of the blade to be reduced while decreasing the
abutting surface pressure of the mold to form the grooves 110. The sum of the depth
D of the grooves and the height H of the convex portions of each of Examples 1 to
13 was calculated as: 595 nm in Example 1,425 nm in Example 2,490 nm in Example 4
and 403 nm in Example 13. In contrast, in each of Examples 3 and 5 to 12, the sum
of the depth D of the grooves and the height H of the convex portions was not more
than 360 nm. In each of Examples 1 to 13, the height H of the convex portions fell
within a range from 24% to 97% of the depth D of the grooves. This means that the
effective depth of the grooves 110 fell within a range from 124% to 197% of the depth
D of the grooves, and thus an optimal effective depth could be obtained for a necessary
product life even when the abutting surface pressure of the mold was decreased.
[0118] Note that the present disclosure is not limited to the above-described embodiment
and examples and can be modified into variations based on the gist of the present
disclosure, and the variations should not be excluded from the scope of the present
disclosure.
[0119] While the present disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments,
it is to be understood that the disclosure is not limited to the disclosed exemplary
embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation
so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
[0120] An endless-shaped electrophotographic belt with a cleaning blade provides improvement
in transfer remaining toner wiping properties. The electrophotographic belt has an
endless shape including, on an outer circumferential surface thereof, grooves and
lands. The grooves extend in a circumferential direction of the belt and the lands
are positioned between the grooves. The belt further has on the outer circumferential
surface, one or more convex portion(s) between at least one of the grooves and one
of the lands adjacent to the one of the grooves, and in a cross section of the belt
in a direction orthogonal to a direction of which the grooves extend, the convex portion(s)
projects more than the lands.