laser
printers how they work.
Houston
713 776 2100
The Process The primary principle at work in a laser printer is static
electricity, the same energy that makes clothes in the dryer stick together or a lightning
bolt travel from a thundercloud to the ground. Static electricity is simply an electrical charge built up on an insulated object, such
as a balloon or your body. Since oppositely charged atoms are attracted to each other,
objects with opposite static electricity fields cling together.
A laser printer uses this core component of this system is the photoreceptor, typically a
revolving drum or cylinder. This assembly is made out of highly photoconductive material
that is discharged by light photons.
Initially, the drum is given a total positive
charge by the charge corona wire, a wire with an electrical current running through it. As
the drum revolves, the printer shines a tiny laser beam across the surface to discharge
certain points. In this way, the laser "draws" the letters and images to be
printed as a pattern of electrical charges -- an electrostatic image. The system can also
work with the charges reversed -- that is, a positive electrostatic image on a negative
background.
After the pattern is set, the printer coats the drum with positively charged toner a
fine, black powder. Since it has a positive charge, the toner clings to the negative
discharged areas of the drum, but not to the positively charged "background."
This is something like writing on a soda can with glue and then rolling it over some
flour: The flour only sticks to the glue-coated part of the can, so you end up with a
message written in powder.
With the powder pattern affixed, the drum
rolls over a sheet of paper, which is moving along a belt below. Before the paper rolls
under the drum, it is given a negative charge by the charged roller. This charge is
stronger than the negative charge of the electrostatic image, so the paper can pull the
toner powder away. Since it is moving at the same speed as the drum, the paper picks up
the image pattern exactly. To keep the paper from clinging to the drum, it is discharged
by the corona wire immediately after picking up the toner.
Finally, the printer passes the paper through
the fuser, a pair of heated rollers. As the paper passes through these rollers, the loose
toner powder melts, fusing with the fibers in the paper. The fuser rolls the paper to the
output tray, and you have your finished page. The fuser also heats up the paper itself, of
course, which is why pages are always hot when they come out of a laser printer or
photocopier.
So what keeps the paper from burning up Speed
-- the paper passes through the rollers so quickly that it doesn't get very hot.
After depositing toner on the paper, the drum
surface passes the discharge lamp. This bright light exposes the entire photoreceptor
surface, erasing the electrical image. The drum surface then passes the charge corona
wire, which reapplies the positive charge.
Conceptually, this is all there is to it. Of
course, actually bringing everything together is a lot more complex. In the following
sections, we'll examine the different components in greater detail to see how they produce
text and images so quickly and precisely.
The Controller
Before a laser printer can do anything else, it needs to
receive the page data and figure out how it's going to put everything on the paper. This
is the job of the printer controller.
The printer controller is the laser printer's
main onboard computer. It talks to the host computer (for example, your PC) through a
communications port, such as a parallel port or USB port. At the start of the printing
job, the laser printer establishes with the host computer how they will exchange data. The
controller may have to start and stop the host computer periodically to process the
information it has received.
In an office, a laser printer will probably
be connected to several separate host computers, so multiple users can print documents
from their machine. The controller handles each one separately, but may be carrying on
many "conversations" concurrently. This ability to handle several jobs at once
is one of the reasons why laser printers are so popular.
For the printer controller and the host
computer to communicate, they need to speak the same page description language. In
earlier printers, the computer sent a special sort of text file and a simple code giving
the printer some basic formatting information. Since these early printers had only a few
fonts, this was a very straightforward process.
These days, you might have hundreds of
different fonts to choose from, and you wouldn't think twice about printing a complex
graphic. To handle all of this diverse information, the printer needs to speak a more
advanced language.
The primary printer languages these days are
Hewlett Packard's Printer Command Language (PCL) and Adobe's Postscript.
Both of these languages describe the page in vector form -- that is, as
mathematical values of geometric shapes, rather than as a series of dots (a bitmap
image). The printer itself takes the vector images and converts them into a bitmap page.
With this system, the printer can receive elaborate, complex pages, featuring any sort of
font or image. Also, since the printer creates the bitmap image itself, it can use its
maximum printer resolution.
Some printers use a graphical device
interface (GDI) format instead of a standard PCL. In this system, the host computer
creates the dot array itself, so the controller doesn't have to process anything -- it
just sends the dot instructions on to the laser.
But in most laser printers, the controller
must organize all of the data it receives from the host computer. This includes all of the
commands that tell the printer what to do -- what paper to use, how to format the page,
how to handle the font, etc. For the controller to work with this data, it has to get it
in the right order.
Once the data is structured, the controller
begins putting the page together. It sets the text margins, arranges the words and places
any graphics. When the page is arranged, the raster image processor (RIP) takes the
page data, either as a whole or piece by piece, and breaks it down into an array of tiny
dots. As we'll see in the next section, the printer needs the page in this form so the
laser can write it out on the photoreceptor drum.
In most laser printers, the controller saves
all print-job data in its own memory. This lets the controller put different printing jobs
into a queue so it can work through them one at a time. It also saves time when
printing multiple copies of a document, since the host computer only has to send the data
once.
The Laser
Since it actually draws the page, the printer's laser system --
or laser scanning assembly -- must be incredibly precise. The traditional laser
scanning assembly includes
The laser receives the page data -- the tiny
dots that make up the text and images -- one horizontal line at a time. As the beam moves
across the drum, the laser emits a pulse of light for every dot to be printed, and no
pulse for every dot of empty space.
The laser doesn't actually move the beam
itself. It bounces the beam off a movable mirror instead. As the mirror moves, it
shines the beam through a series of lenses. This system compensates for the image
distortion caused by the varying distance between the mirror and points along the drum.
The laser assembly moves in only one plane,
horizontally. After each horizontal scan, the printer moves the photoreceptor drum up a
notch so the laser assembly can draw the next line. A small print-engine computer
synchronizes all of this perfectly, even at dizzying speeds.
Some laser printers use a strip of light
emitting diodes (LEDs) to write the page image, instead of a single laser. Each dot
position has its own dedicated light, which means the printer has one set print
resolution. These systems cost less to manufacture than true laser assemblies, but they
produce inferior results. Typically, you'll only find them in less expensive printers.
Toner
One of the most distinctive things about a laser printer (or photocopier) is the toner.
It's such a strange concept for the paper to grab the "ink" rather than the
printer applying it. And it's even stranger that the "ink" isn't really ink at
all.
So what is toner? The short answer is: It's
an electrically-charged powder with two main ingredients: pigment and plastic.
The role of the pigment is fairly obvious --
it provides the coloring (black, in a monochrome printer) that fills in the text and
images. This pigment is blended into plastic particles, so the toner will melt when it
passes through the heat of the fuser. This quality gives toner a number of advantages over
liquid ink. Chiefly, it firmly binds to the fibers in almost any type of paper, which
means the text won't smudge or bleed easily.
So how does the printer apply this toner to
the electrostatic image on the drum? The powder is stored in the toner hopper, a
small container built into a removable casing. The printer gathers the toner from the
hopper with the developer unit. The "developer" is actually a collection
of small, negatively charged magnetic beads. These beads are attached to a rotating metal
roller, which moves them through the toner in the toner hopper.
Because they are negatively charged, the
developer beads collect the positive toner particles as they pass through. The roller then
brushes the beads past the drum assembly. The electrostatic image has a stronger negative
charge than the developer beads, so the drum pulls the toner particles away.
The drum then moves over the paper, which has
an even stronger charge and so grabs the toner. After collecting the toner, the paper is
immediately discharged by the detac corona wire. At this point, the only thing keeping the
toner on the page is gravity -- if you were to blow on the page, you would completely lose
the image. The page must pass through the fuser to affix the toner. The fuser rollers are
heated by internal quartz tube lamps, so the plastic in the toner melts as it
passes through.
But what keeps the toner from collecting on
the fuser rolls, rather than sticking to the page? To keep this from happening, the fuser
rolls must be coated with Teflon, the same non-stick material that keeps your
breakfast from sticking to the bottom of the frying pan.
Advantages of a
Laser
So why get a laser printer rather than a cheaper inkjet printer? The main advantages of
laser printers are speed, precision and economy. A laser can move very quickly, so it can
"write" with much greater speed than an ink jet. And because the laser beam has
an unvarying diameter, it can draw more precisely, without spilling any excess ink.
Laser printers tend to be more expensive than
inkjet printers, but it doesn't cost as much to keep them running -- toner powder is cheap
and lasts a long time, while you can use up expensive ink cartridges very quickly. This is
why offices typically use a laser printer as their "work horse," their machine
for printing long text documents. In most models, this mechanical efficiency is
complemented by advanced processing efficiency. A typical laser-printer controller can
serve everybody in a small office.
When they were first introduced, laser
printers were too expensive to use as a personal printer. Since that time, however, laser
printers have gotten much more affordable. Now you can pick up a basic model for just a
little bit more than a nice inkjet printer.
As technology advances, laser-printer prices
should continue to drop, while performance improves. We'll also see a number of innovative
design variations, and possibly brand-new applications of electrostatic printing. Many
inventors believe we've only scratched the surface of what we can do with simple static
electricity!
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