The present invention is directed at an anti-pinch system, apparatus and/or method. The system includes an elastomeric tubing with an internal cavity that is connected to a pressure sensor to measure pressure increases within the cavity in the event of a pressure rise. The tubing and pressure sensor can be configured for placement in a vehicle for detecting obstacles positioned between moving closing elements and fixed closing elements, such as between a moving vehicle door and door perimeter cavity.
Various anti-pinch systems have been reported to detect an obstacle in the path of a closing element of a vehicle, such as a vehicle door or window. Such systems are intended to interrupt the closing of such elements, when, e.g., an occupant's hand or finger may be caught between a moving door or window and the corresponding vehicle door frame or window frame. Anti-pinch systems have therefore become a safety feature within vehicles to mitigate the risk of harm to individual occupants.
Accordingly, a continuous need remains to provide relatively more responsive, reliable and less expensive anti-pinching systems for closing elements on a vehicle, which systems would also have the durability to maintain their performance over the lifetime of the vehicle in which they may be installed.
An anti-pinching system comprising one or a plurality of unsealed elastomeric tubing portions and at least one pressure sensor in communication with said one or more elastomeric tubing portions where said pressure sensor is configured to detect a pressure rise of 10 pascals or less over a period of time of 2.0 milliseconds or less.
An anti-pinching system for a vehicle door perimeter cavity configured to engage with a moving vehicle door. The system comprises one or a plurality of unsealed elastomeric tubing portions positioned between said moving vehicle door and vehicle door perimeter cavity and at least one pressure sensor in communication with the one or more elastomeric tubing portions where the pressure sensor is configured to detect a pressure rise of 10 pascals or less over a period of time of 2.0 milliseconds or less.
In method form, the present invention comprises a method for detecting a pinch condition for a movable closing element that engages into a cavity for the closing element, comprising measuring within one or a plurality of unsealed elastomeric tubing portions positioned between the moving closing element and the cavity, a pressure rise of 10 pascals or less over a period of time of 2.0 milliseconds or less and identifying a pinch condition as a consequence of such pressure rise.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are explained in more detail with reference to the drawings, in which:
As therefore shown in
Preferably, the elastomeric tubing portion 14 is sourced from a polymeric material that is capable of repeated flexing where the flexing will cause a reduction in the volume of the cavity 18 and a sufficient pressure change within the tubing to trigger a pressure rise over a selected period of time. Such pressure rise is then detected by the pressure sensor 16. Preferably, the polymeric material may therefore comprise a thermoplastic or thermoset type (crosslinked) polymer. One preferred example includes ethylene-propylene-diene monomer (EPDM) elastomer, which amounts to a copolymer of ethylene and propylene with a selected amount of polymerized diene monomer, which polymerized diene monomer can then facilitate cross-linking reactions. EPDM elastomers herein preferably have a Shore A Hardness in the range of 40-90, an ultimate tensile strength of about 2000 psi to 3000 psi and an elongation at break of about 500% to 600%. Other preferred polymers for use as the elastomeric tubing portion include polyurethanes, polyesters, polsiloxanes, fluroelastomers, flurosilicone elastomers, and styrene-butadiene elastomers. In the case of fluroelastomers, particularly preferred elastomers include copolymers of hexafluoropropylene (HFP) and vinylidene fluoride (VDF) or terpolymers of tetrafluoroethylene (TFE), vinylidene fluoride (VDF) and hexafluropropylene (HFP), some of what are sold under the tradename VITON®.
As illustrated in
Expanding upon the above, the one or more elastomeric tubing portions 12 or 14 preferably have a wall thickness and a cavity diameter that is able to respond to a pinching event and pressure change (e.g., upward pressure change or spike) within the tubing that is capable of detection by pressure sensor 16. In addition, the elastomeric tubing is also one that can preferably provide the requisite elastomeric characteristics required by an OEM to serve as a seal in, e.g., the perimeter door frame of the vehicle.
While
The pressure sensor 16 herein is preferably one that as noted, can detect a pressure rise of 10.0 Pa or less. More preferably, the sensor is one that can detect a pressure rise of 10.0 Pa or less that may occur over a period of time of 2.0 milliseconds or less. The pressure sensor herein is also one that is preferably contemplated to detect a pressure rise of 0.05 Pa to 10.0 Pa over a time period of 0.1 milliseconds to 2.0 milliseconds. Preferably, the pressure sensor for use herein can include the MMR920 or MMR921 pressure sensor that is available from MinebeaMitsumi.
As also illustrated in
In that regard, the controller herein may be more broadly understood as a programmable controller and in electrical communication with a moving closing element (e.g. door, tailgate, window) and capable of instructing such moving closing element to stop moving or return to a safe position.
As may now be appreciated from the above, the present invention provides an anti-pinch system, apparatus and/or method that does not require a sensing element along the entire length of the tubing portions 12 or 14. The elastomeric tubing also does not need to be fully sealed. In addition, the invention herein avoids the issues that may otherwise arise where sensing elements that extend along the entirety of a given door perimeter must be positioned with relatively sharp corners that can lead to sensing failure over time.