Laser
printers have become ubiquitous in the office and copying environment.
The first was developed in 1971 by Xerox, and in 1977, it was brought to
the commercial market. The rapid, crisp printing soon made these
printers a popular choice for many consumers, although the internal
workings of the printer remained mysterious to many. Because of the
name, some consumers think that these devices use a laser actively on
the paper in some way. In fact, they actually harness static electricity to print, although lasers do play a role in the printing process.
A
print job begins when data from a computer is received by the printer,
which sends it through a central controller, a small computer inside the
printer. Many laser printers have a controller that is capable of
handling several jobs at once, putting them in a queue and then printing
them. This ability to handle multiple sets of data makes this type of
printer quite popular. After the controller has determined what is going
to be printed, the process begins.
Inside
the printer, there is a drum that holds an electric charge. Next to the
drum is a transfer corona roller, which can negatively or positively
charge the drum as needed, as well as a toner unit. In most laser
printers, the drum starts out positively charged, although this process
can also work in reverse. The controller manipulates a small laser to
“write” on the drum with a negative charge, creating an electrostatic
image.
Then, the drum is rolled
through the toner, which is positively charged so that it will cling to
the areas of negative charge on the printer drum. The printer feeds a
piece of paper, which is given an even stronger negative charge by the
transfer corona wire before being rolled past the drum. The
electrostatic image on the drum will transfer to the paper, which is
then discharged to prevent it from clinging to the drum. Then it is fed
through a fuser, which heats the toner and causes it to bind with the
fibers in the paper.
Meanwhile, the drum passes
a discharge lamp, which will expose the entire surface of the drum and
erase the electrostatic image. The transfer corona wire applies another positive charge, and the printer is ready for the next page or job.
Color laser printers work
by performing multiple passes. Most printers have blue, red, and yellow
ink, in addition to black, which can be combined to form any color. Some
printers progressively lay the ink onto the drum so that the image will
print with one pass of the paper, while others recirculate the paper
multiple times to apply progressive layers of color. Large color
printers sometimes have separate drum and toner assemblies for each
color, with the paper passing each drum separately.
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