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electrophotographic |
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electrophotographic The printing technique used in copy machines, laser and LED printers. It uses electrostatic charges, dry ink (toner) and light. A selenium-coated, photoconductive drum is positively charged. Using a laser or LEDs, a negative of the image is beamed onto the drum, cancelling the charge and leaving a positively charged replica of the original image.A negatively charged toner is attracted to the positive image on the drum. The toner is then attracted to the paper, which is also positively charged. The final stage is fusing, which uses heat and pressure, pressure alone or light to cause the toner to permanently adhere to the paper. Back to the Late 1930s Electrophotography was invented by Chester F. Carlson in his Queens, New York laboratory in 1938. His first of 28 patents on the subject was issued in 1940. By 1947, the Haloid Corporation in conjunction with Batelle Development Corporation were working with Carlson on his invention, and xerography was officially announced in 1948. Xerography replaced the messy liquid ink of the duplicating machines of the day with a dry, granular ink, which is how the name came about. In Greek, xerography means "dry writing." Xero means "dry," and graphy means "write."
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