The invention primarily relates to a hydro-pneumatic energy storage system and to methods of charging and of discharging the storage system. Hydro-pneumatic energy storage systems typically find application in working machines used in agriculture, mining or construction, for example.
Hydro-pneumatic energy storage systems usually include at least one hydro-pneumatic accumulator, the accumulator comprising a rigid hollow vessel that encloses a storage space. Normally, the storage space is divided into a closed compressible volume filled with an amount of a process gas such as nitrogen and into a variable space for receiving a non-compressible hydraulic fluid such as oil. Typically, the variable space is in fluid communication with an exterior of the vessel through one or more valves.
Energy may be stored in the system by discharging a quantity of a non-compressible hydraulic fluid into the variable space inside the vessel such that the process gas contained in the closed volume inside the vessel is compressed and pressurized. The gas may then be kept in the pressurized state by closing the valve. When needed, the hydrostatic energy stored in the pressurized gas may be released by opening the valve and by letting the gas expand, the expanding gas thereby displacing the non-compressible hydraulic fluid stored within the vessel out of the vessel, thus creating a fluid flow. The flow of hydraulic fluid generated by the expanding gas may then drive a hydraulic device such as a hydraulic motor or a hydraulic piston, for example.
It is known that the amount of energy that may be stored in a hydro-pneumatic energy-storage system may be increased by increasing the system size and/or by increasing the precharge pressure of the process gas. However, space for accommodating the accumulators of the storage system is often limited. Furthermore, the precharge pressure of the process gas usually has to more or less match the operating pressure of the hydraulic circuit to which the storage system is intended to be connected.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to design a hydro-pneumatic energy storage system with an increased energy density which is compatible with the operating conditions of the hydraulic circuit to which it is intended to be connected. It is another object of the present invention to specify methods of charging and of discharging the system.
This problem is solved by the methods of charging and of discharging a hydro-pneumatic energy storage system according to the independent claims and by a hydro-pneumatic energy storage system configured to carry out these methods as specified in the subordinate system claim.
Thus, a method of charging a hydro-pneumatic energy storage system is proposed. The system includes a first hydro-pneumatic accumulator comprising a first rigid hollow vessel. A storage space enclosed by the first vessel comprises a first compressible volume filled with a first amount of gas, and the storage space enclosed by the first vessel comprises a first variable space for receiving a non-compressible hydraulic fluid. The system further includes a second hydro-pneumatic accumulator comprising a second rigid hollow vessel. A storage space enclosed by the second vessel comprises a second compressible volume filled with a second amount of gas, and the storage space enclosed by the second vessel comprises a second variable space for receiving a non-compressible hydraulic fluid.
The method for charging the system comprises the steps of:
The following may illustrate the advantage of the method according to the present invention over a conventional method of charging a hydro-pneumatic energy storage system. It is assumed that both the conventional system and the system according to the invention have the same total precharge volume V0.
According to the conventional method, the entire precharge volume V0 (which may possibly be distributed over different accumulators) is pre-pressurized to the same precharge pressure p01. According to the conventional method, charging the system includes uniformly increasing the pressure throughout the system. That is, according to the conventional method, the pressure is
By contrast, according to the method of the present invention, a fraction of the total precharge volume V0 is pre-pressurized to the same precharge pressure p01 as in the conventional system (the first compressible volume in the first accumulator), while another fraction (the second compressible volume in the second accumulator) is pre-pressurized to a precharge pressure p02 with p02>p01. Further, the total precharge volume V0 is compartmentalized and at least the first volume is charged separately such that any volume of the non-compressible hydraulic fluid that is discharged into the system causes a larger pressure increase and deposits a larger amount of energy in the system according to the invention than in the conventional system.
Furthermore, in many types of hydro-pneumatic accumulators, the maximum attainable compression ratio is limited. For example, in a bladder-type accumulator the pressure of the process gas inside the bladder should not be increased above about 4·p0, where p0 is the precharge pressure. Therefore, the presently proposed compartmentalization may extend the accessible pressure range of the system. For example, assuming that the first accumulator and the second accumulator are bladder-type accumulators, the second precharge pressure p02 may be set to the maximum pressure of the gas in the first accumulator, that is to p02=4·p01. The gas in the second accumulator may then be pressurized up to a maximum pressure of 4·p02=4·4·p01=16·p01.
The first precharge pressure p01 may be a pressure compatible with the operating pressure of a hydraulic system or circuit to which the accumulators are connectable. Furthermore, the non-compressible hydraulic fluid is typically discharged into the two accumulators through the same feed pipe. Initiating the process of discharging the non-compressible hydraulic fluid into the second accumulator only when or only once the pressure of the process gas in the first accumulator has reached the second precharge pressure p02 may therefore guarantee a smooth transition from the process of charging of the first accumulator to the process of the charging of the second accumulator.
The proposed charging method may further include the step of:
Pre-pressurizing the gas contained in the first volume to the first precharge pressure may include adjusting the first amount of gas, and pre-pressurizing the gas contained in the second volume to the second hydrostatic precharge pressure may include adjusting the second amount of gas. For example, the first volume and the second volume may be in fluid communication with a compressor through corresponding valves. As opposed to pre-pressurizing the gas contained in the first and the second volume by discharging a non-compressible hydraulic fluid into the first and the second vessel, respectively, pre-pressurizing the gas contained in the accumulators by adjusting the amount of gas in the first and the second volume does not come at the cost of a decreased precharge volume.
The non-compressible hydraulic fluid may be discharged into the first vessel and into the second vessel through a hydraulic displacement unit driven by an engine or by a vehicle output of an automotive vehicle. For example, the proposed system may be in fluid communication with a hydrostatic circuit of a series hydraulic hybrid transmission of a vehicle, typically an off-highway vehicle.
Also, a method of discharging the above descriebed hydro-pneumatic energy storage system is proposed. As is readily apparent to a skilled person, the proposed discharging method reverses the above described charging method.
The starting point of the method is a state of the system where the first vessel is at least partially filled with the non-compressible hydraulic fluid and the gas in the first volume is pressurized to a first maximum pressure. The first maximum pressure is not necessarily the upper pressure limit of the first accumulator (although it may be). The term is merely intended to indicate that the pressure of the gas in the first volume decreases from here.
Similarly, the starting point of the proposed discharging method includes the second vessel being at least partially filled with the non-compressible hydraulic fluid and the gas in the second volume being pressurized to a second maximum pressure which is equal to or, more typically, higher than the first maximum pressure. Again, the second maximum pressure is not necessarily the upper pressure limit of the second accumulator (although it may be). The term is merely intended to indicate that the pressure of the gas in the second volume decreases from here.
The method of discharging the system comprises the steps of:
The non-compressible hydraulic fluid displaced out of the first vessel and out of the second vessel may be fed into the same feed pipe and diverted to a hydraulic displacement unit drivingly engaged with an engine or with a vehicle output of an automotive vehicle to drive the displacement unit. The vehicle output may comprise at least one of a gearbox, a drive shaft, a final drive, a vehicle axle and one or more wheels, for example.
Referring to both the proposed charging method and the proposed discharging method, the following relation may hold: (pmax,1−p02)/(p02−P01)≤0.2, preferably in (pmax,1−p02)/(p02−p01)≤0.1, more preferably (pmax,1−p02)/(p02−p01)≤0.05, where p01 is the first precharge pressure, p02 is the second precharge pressure and pmax,1 is the first maximum pressure. In other words, the process of pressurizing the gas contained in the first volume is usually stopped right when or only shortly after the pressure in the first volume reaches the second precharge pressure.
Further referring to both the proposed charging method and the proposed discharging method, the first precharge pressure may be at least 10 bar, preferably at least 30 bar, more preferably at least 50 bar. The cited values are typical operating pressure values of the main lines of a hydrostatic circuit of a series hydraulic hybrid transmission, for example.
Further referring to both the proposed charging method and the proposed discharging method, the following relation may hold for the first precharge pressure p01 and the second precharge pressure p02:p02≥2·p01, preferably p02≥3·p01, more preferably p02≥3.5·p01. In other words, the second precharge pressure is preferably close to the maximum feasible/allowable pressure of the gas in the first volume to extend the pressure range of the system as much as possible. For example, the second precharge pressure p02 may be at least 90 percent or at least 95 percent of the maximum feasible/allowable pressure of the gas in the first volume.
Furthermore, a hydro-pneumatic energy storage system is proposed. The system comprises:
When the control unit is in the charge mode, the control unit is configured to selectively fluidly connect the accumulators to the feed pipe and to selectively fluidly disconnect the accumulators from the feed pipe to carry out the steps of the above described charging method. In contrast, when the control unit is in the discharge mode, the control unit is configured to selectively fluidly connect the accumulators to the feed pipe and to selectively fluidly disconnect the accumulators from the feed pipe to carry out the steps of the above described discharging method.
The system may comprise a compressor unit in fluid communication with the first volume and with the second volume, the compressor being configured to pre-pressurize the gas contained in the first volume to the first precharge pressure by adjusting the first amount of gas, and the compressor being configured to pre-pressurize the gas contained in the second volume to the second precharge pressure by adjusting the second amount of gas.
The first volume and/or the second volume may be formed by one of a closed bladder, an elastic diaphragm and a floating piston, for example.
Preferred embodiments of the presently proposed system are described in the following detailed description and are depicted in the accompanying drawing in which:
It is understood that the specific devices and processes illustrated in the attached drawings, and described in the following specification are simply exemplary embodiments of the inventive concepts defined herein. Hence, specific dimensions, directions or other physical characteristics relating to the embodiments disclosed are not to be considered as limiting, unless expressly stated otherwise.
In a hydraulic hybrid vehicle, the optimal volume and precharge pressure of hydraulic accumulators depend on vehicle and duty cycle characteristics. Normally, accumulator sizing is determined at the design stage and the precharge is defined as a tuning parameter that can be changed at the vehicle setup stage (but not during operation). These parameters are the result of a compromise and may be far from optimal in certain cases.
The invention as described herein uses a rack of accumulators as energy storage, arranged in order to allow a dynamic modification of total volume and/or precharge level, thus increasing the degrees of freedom for the hybrid powertrain control and improving the overall performance by matching the accumulator parameters to the current operating conditions.
Hybrid vehicles typically include a reversible energy storage system (RESS) paired with an internal combustion engine. The RESS enables the following typical hybrid vehicle features:
A hydraulic rechargeable energy storage device (HRESS) is typically comprised of one or more accumulators, of the bladder or piston type, which store energy by compressing a fixed mass of air, thus increasing its pressure. The pressure increase is directly linked to the thermodynamic transformation of the gas in the accumulator, which can be modeled as a polytropic transformation as represented in
One of the most challenging features of hydraulic hybrid systems is the rapid pressure decrease during accumulator discharge, due to the steep change in the pressure-volume curve. This makes the accumulator available only in part of its operating range, where the pressure is sufficiently high, or—if the precharge is set to high values—decreased the overall system efficiency by introducing losses due to flow or displacement partialization. For these reasons, the ideal hydraulic accumulator would maintain its pressure almost constant, so as to be maintained at the most appropriate pressure for the entire volume range. Ideally, the pressure level should be set according to the application and the operating conditions.
On the other hand, given a certain volume of oil exchanged, working in the steep range of the pressure-volume curves increases the accumulator energy density.
In most hybrid applications, the total volume of energy storage is split up into several accumulators, for packaging and cost issues. In the standard configuration, the accumulators are all at the same precharge pressure (at least nominally) and the flow is shared equally among them.
The proposed invention comprises an arrangement of several accumulators that aims at maximizing the HRESS energy density. The solution is shown in
Each accumulator can be precharged at a different level and can be individually connected to the main pressure line, using either hydraulic controls or electronic controls. In the typical operation, the accumulators are charged in order of increasing precharge: when a pressure threshold is reached on the first accumulator, the corresponding valve closes and the second accumulator is connected, thus changing the pressure-volume characteristics because of the different precharge pressure. The process is then repeated with the third accumulator when the pressure threshold in the second is reached, and so on. Even if all accumulators are precharged at the same level, the individual connection allows for dynamic resizing of the total volume.
The connection/disconnection logic can be implemented as a purely hydraulic control with an appropriate combination of pressure-operated valves, or it can be implemented using electronically controlled valves for greater flexibility. In the first case, the resulting HRESS can be integrated into the overall system as a passive component equivalent to a standard accumulator (only with different operating characteristics), with the advantage of increased energy density, as shown in
The first accumulator 2a includes a first rigid vessel 5a enclosing a first storage space 6a. The first vessel 5a is configured to withstand hydrostatic pressures up to a maximum pressure of at least 400 bar, for example. The first storage space 6a comprises a first compressible volume 7a and a first variable space 8a. The first compressible volume 7a is formed by a closed elastic bladder filled with a first amount of a process gas, for example nitrogen. A volume of the process gas contained in the first compressible volume 7a may be expanded up to a first precharge volume of V01=10 L. The first accumulator 2a further includes a first pressure sensor 9a configured to determine a hydraulic pressure of non-compressible hydraulic fluid in the first variable volume 8a which is indicative of the pressure of the gas contained in the first volume 7a.
When a hydrostatic pressure of a non-compressible hydraulic fluid in the feed pipe 3 is higher than a hydrostatic pressure of the process gas contained in the first compressible volume 7a, the non-compressible hydraulic fluid may be discharged into the first variable space 8a by opening the shut-off valve 4a, thereby pressurizing the process gas contained in the first compressible space 7a. Similarly, when the hydrostatic pressure of the process gas contained in the first compressible volume 7a is higher than the hydrostatic pressure of the non-compressible fluid in the feed pipe 3, the non-compressible hydraulic fluid contained in the first variable space 8a may be at least partially displaced out of the first variable space 8a and into the feed pipe 3 by opening the valve 4a and thus letting the process gas contained in the first compressible volume 7a expand, thereby creating a fluid flow. The first variable space 8a may be fluidly disconnected from the feed pipe 3 by closing the valve 4a.
Here, the second accumulator 2b is identical to the first accumulator 2a. The second accumulator 2b includes a second rigid vessel 5b enclosing a second storage space 6b. The second storage space 6b comprises a second compressible volume 7b formed by a closed elastic bladder filled with a second amount of the process gas, and a second variable space 8b. A volume of the process gas contained in the second compressible volume 7b may be expanded up to a second precharge volume of V02=10 L. Like the first accumulator 4a, the second accumulator 2b includes a second pressure sensor 9b configured to determine a hydraulic pressure of non-compressible hydraulic fluid in the second variable space 8b which is indicative of the pressure of the gas contained in the second volume 7b.
The gas contained in the second compressible volume 7b may be pressurized and depressurized by opening and closing the valve 4b, thereby discharging non-compressible hydraulic fluid from the feed pipe 3 into the second variable space 8b or displacing non-compressible hydraulic fluid contained in the second variable space 8b out of the second variable space 8b and into the feed pipe 3, in the same manner as explained above with respect to the first accumulator 2a.
The feed pipe 3 may be in fluid communication with a hydraulic circuit including at least one hydraulic displacement unit such as a hydrostatic pump and/or a hydrostatic motor. The hydraulic displacement unit may be drivingly engaged or selectively drivingly engaged with an engine of an automotive vehicle or with an output of an automotive vehicle. For example, the feed pipe may provide fluid communication between the hydro-pneumatic energy storage system 1 and the main fluid lines of a hydrostatic circuit of a hydrostatic transmission between the engine of an automotive vehicle and the vehicle output.
The system 1 further includes a compressor 10 in fluid communication with the first compressible volume 7a and with the second compressible volume 7b through compressor valves 11a, 11b, respectively. Here, the valves 11a, 11b are configured as 2/2-way shut-off valves. Through the compressor 10 and the compressor valves 11a, 11b the first amount of the process gas contained in the first compressible volume 7a and the second amount of the process gas contained in the second compressible volume 7b may be increased or decreased. In particular, the compressor 10 may be used to regulate the first precharge pressure p01 of the process gas in the first volume 7a and to regulate the first precharge pressure p02 of the process gas in the second volume 7b. The precharge pressures p01, p02 may be regulated independently.
The system 1 further includes an electronic control unit 12 configured to control the valves 4a, 4b, 11a, 11b and the compressor 10. The control unit 10 may include one or more processors, for example. The control unit 12 may control the valves 4a, 4b, 11a, 11b and the compressor 10 independently. The control unit 12 may control the valves 4a, 4b based on an input from an operator and/or based on pressure signals from the pressure sensors 9a, 9b, the pressure signals being indicative of the hydrostatic pressure of the process gas contained in the first and the second compressible volume 7a, 7b, respectively. In particular, the control unit 12 may be operated in a charge mode and in a discharge mode. When operated in the charge mode, the control unit 12 actuates the valves 4a, 4b, 11a, 11b and the compressor 10 according to a method of charging the system 1. When operated in the discharge mode, the control unit 12 actuates the valves 4a, 4b according to a method of discharging the system 1. The charging method and the discharging method are explained in more detail further below.
In a first step shown in
According to the known charging method of
In
In a known method of discharging the accumulators 13a, 13b of
The thermodynamic transformation of a fixed amount of a process gas during a compression or expansion may be described by a polytropic transformation:
pVk=p0V0k. Eq. (1)
The amount of energy E deposited in or gained from the gas when changing the volume of the gas from V1 to V2 is given by the following integral:
From Eq. (1) and Eq. (2) it follows that the amount of energy E stored in a gas having a pressure p and a volume V, a precharge pressure p0 and a precharge volume V0 can be expressed as:
The practically realizable maximum amount of energy that may be deposited in the gas can be determined by replacing the pressure p in Eq. (3) by the maximum feasible pressure. For a bladder-type accumulator that value is given by pmax≈4·p0, yielding:
For nitrogen (k=1.4) that value is given by Emax,bladder≈1.215·p0·V0.
After the first volume 7a and the second volume 7b have been pre-pressurized, the accumulators 2a, 2b are ready for non-compressible hydraulic fluid to be discharged into the variable space 8a of the first accumulator. The value of the first precharge pressure p01 is preferably chosen such that it matches a typical operating pressure of the hydraulic circuit to which the system 1 is coupled for the charging process. Depending on the particular situation, different values of the first precharge pressure p01 may be chosen.
Once the pressure in the common feed pipe 3 of the accumulators 2a, 2b reaches or exceeds the first precharge pressure p01 of the first accumulator 2a, the control unit 12 commands the first accumulator valve 4a to open to fluidly connect the first variable space 8a of the first accumulator 2a to the feed pipe 3. At the same time, the second accumulator valve 4b remains closed, thereby fluidly disconnecting the second accumulator 2b from the feed pipe 3.
Upon opening the first accumulator valve 4a, non-compressible hydraulic fluid, typically oil, is discharged into the first variable space 8a of the first accumulator 2a through the feed pipe 3, thereby compressing the first volume 7a and increasing the hydrostatic pressure p1 of the nitrogen gas contained in the first volume 7a. The feed pipe 3 may be pressurized by a hydrostatic pump/motor of a hydrostatic transmission of a vehicle which is driven by an internal combustion engine of the vehicle, or by a vehicle output of the vehicle during a regenerative braking procedure, for example. During the charging of the first accumulator 2a, the control unit 12 keeps the second accumulator valve 4b shut to keep the hydrostatic pressure of the second accumulator 4b at the second precharge pressure p02.
The first volume 7a is further pressurized until the hydrostatic pressure p1 of the gas contained in the first volume reaches the second precharge pressure p02. Up to this point, the second accumulator valve 4b is kept closed. The situation now reached is illustrated in
In
This is further illustrated in
In
However, it is conceivable that the disconnection of the first accumulator 2a from the feed pipe 3 and the connection of the second accumulator 2b to the feed pipe 3 do not occur at the same time. For example, once the second accumulator 2b is fluidly connected to the feed pipe 3 the first accumulator 2a could remain fluidly connected to the feed pipe 3 until the gas in the first volume 7a reaches the maximum feasible pressure pmax,14·p01. In other words, for some time non-compressible hydraulic fluid can be discharged into the two accumulators 2a, 2b in parallel/simulataneously. This may smoothen the transition from the charging of the first accumulator 2a to the charging of the second accumulator 2b.
In
Once the second accumulator valve 4b is opened, non-compressible hydraulic fluid is discharged into the second variable volume 8b of the second accumulator 2b and the second gas volume 7b of the second accumulator 2b is compressed until it reaches its maximum feasible value of pmax,2≈4·p02=4·230 bar=920 bar. During this state, the first accumulator valve 4a is kept closed to keep the quantity of oil in the first variable space 8a and the pressure in the first volume 7a constant. The accumulators 2a, 2b in their state of maximum charge are illustrated in
A skilled person readily understands that the charging method proposed herein and illustrated in
From the foregoing description of the method of charging the system 1 it is immediately apparent to a skilled person how the system can be discharged in order to arrive at the precharge state depicted in
The present document claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent App. No. 61/935,665 filed on Feb. 4, 2014, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2015/052211 | 2/3/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/117961 | 8/13/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4760697 | Heggie et al. | Aug 1988 | A |
4815334 | Lexen | Mar 1989 | A |
5518461 | Pfordt | May 1996 | A |
5579640 | Gray, Jr. et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
5887674 | Gray, Jr. | Mar 1999 | A |
6622484 | Hopkins | Sep 2003 | B2 |
6719080 | Gray, Jr. | Apr 2004 | B1 |
7669414 | Loeffler | Mar 2010 | B2 |
7870727 | Mueller et al. | Jan 2011 | B2 |
7926265 | Mueller et al. | Apr 2011 | B2 |
7934779 | Kodama | May 2011 | B2 |
7984783 | Gray, Jr. et al. | Jul 2011 | B2 |
8108111 | Stein et al. | Jan 2012 | B2 |
8162094 | Gray, Jr. et al. | Apr 2012 | B2 |
8616323 | Gurin | Dec 2013 | B1 |
8959905 | Baltes et al. | Feb 2015 | B2 |
8991167 | Yuan et al. | Mar 2015 | B2 |
9032723 | Haugen | May 2015 | B2 |
9057389 | Opdenbosch | Jun 2015 | B2 |
9096115 | Ho | Aug 2015 | B2 |
9765502 | Heybroek | Sep 2017 | B2 |
9802469 | Ornella | Oct 2017 | B2 |
20040251067 | Gray, Jr. et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20060243515 | Okada et al. | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20090165451 | Mueller | Jul 2009 | A1 |
20110232418 | Gray, Jr. et al. | Sep 2011 | A1 |
20110314801 | Baltes et al. | Dec 2011 | A1 |
20120090308 | Yuan et al. | Apr 2012 | A1 |
20120178570 | Gray, Jr. et al. | Jul 2012 | A1 |
20120233991 | Ivantysynova et al. | Sep 2012 | A1 |
20120240564 | Wesolowski et al. | Sep 2012 | A1 |
20130081385 | Opdenbosch | Apr 2013 | A1 |
20130133318 | Vogl et al. | May 2013 | A1 |
20130240068 | Samara-Rubio | Sep 2013 | A1 |
20150113969 | Kochhan et al. | Apr 2015 | A1 |
20160059694 | Heren | Mar 2016 | A1 |
20160341309 | Serrao | Nov 2016 | A1 |
20160361986 | Ornella | Dec 2016 | A1 |
20170015197 | Lambey | Jan 2017 | A1 |
20170067489 | Versteyhe | Mar 2017 | A1 |
20170072778 | Ornella | Mar 2017 | A1 |
20170305267 | Ornella | Oct 2017 | A1 |
20170335867 | Meehan | Nov 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1394273 | Jan 2003 | CN |
201176978 | Jan 2009 | CN |
102518169 | Jun 2012 | CN |
102734237 | Oct 2012 | CN |
19931208 | Jan 2001 | DE |
102006017581 | Sep 2007 | DE |
102006060014 | May 2009 | DE |
102009056153 | Jun 2011 | DE |
102011005356 | Sep 2012 | DE |
102011055178 | May 2013 | DE |
0615077 | Sep 1994 | EP |
1963686 | Oct 2011 | EP |
2971741 | Aug 2012 | FR |
9634213 | Oct 1996 | WO |
9713650 | Apr 1997 | WO |
0151870 | Jul 2001 | WO |
2007035997 | Apr 2007 | WO |
2008012558 | Jan 2008 | WO |
2010072299 | Jul 2010 | WO |
2011112663 | Sep 2011 | WO |
2012125798 | Sep 2012 | WO |
2013121126 | Aug 2013 | WO |
2013159851 | Oct 2013 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Machine-generated English Translation of DE19931208, obtained via Espacenet Patent Search. |
Machine-generated English Translation of CN201176978, obtained via Espacenet Patent Search. |
Machine-generated English Translation of CN102518169, obtained via Espacenet Patent Search. |
Machine-generated English Translation of CN102734237, obtained via Espacenet Patent Search. |
Chinese Office Action issued by the Chinese State Intellectual Property Office dated Sep. 20, 2017. |
The State Intellectual Property Office of the People's Republic of China; Office Action issued in the parallel Chinese application No. CN201580006877.4; dated Apr. 21, 2017; 15 pages; The State Intellectual Property Office of the People's Republic of China, Beijing, Republic of China. |
European Patent Office, International Search Report and Written Opinion of PCT/EP2015/052211, dated May 15, 2015, 11 pages, European Patent Office, Rijswijk, Netherlands. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170037875 A1 | Feb 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61935665 | Feb 2014 | US |