Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6444959
-
Patent Number
6,444,959
-
Date Filed
Friday, July 27, 200124 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, September 3, 200222 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 219 216
- 219 497
- 219 501
- 219 506
- 219 492
- 315 194
- 315 291
- 346 761
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
The apparatus and method control preheating temperature of equipment having a device to be preheated and a preheating device for start-up which includes a heat source and a heat source control device which has a plurality of heating patterns to control said heat source. The apparatus includes a temperature measuring device for measuring current temperature of the device to be preheated within the equipment, a computing device for calculating a predicted time that is required by the preheating device to preheat the device from the current temperature to a preset temperature, a comparison device by which the predicted time as calculated by the computing device is compared with a specified start-up time and a selecting device for selecting from the plurality of heating patterns within the heat source control device a heating pattern that makes the predicted time shorter than the start-up time. The method controls such that if the predicted time is longer than the specified start-up time, another heating pattern is selected and the predicted time is calculated again so that an appropriate heating pattern is selected by repeating the selection, the computation and the comparison until the predicted time becomes shorter than the specified start-up time.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to an apparatus and a method for controlling the preheating temperature of equipment having a preheating device for start-up. The invention relates particularly to an apparatus and a method for controlling the preheating temperature to ensure that preheating will end within a specified start-up time.
To record ultrasonic diagnostic images, thermal recording is currently employed that uses thermal films having a heat-sensitive recording layer formed on a transparent film base. Since thermal recording has several advantages such no need for wet development and the ease of handling, its application is not limited to the recording of small-size images as in ultrasonic diagnosis but has recently expanded to uses such as MRI and X-ray diagnoses that require large and high-quality images.
The apparatus for performing heat-sensitive image recording is commonly called a thermal printer and has a thermal head to perform heat-sensitive image recording on the thermal film. In order to record a sharp ultrasonic diagnostic image on the thermal film by device of the thermal head, it is necessary to control the temperature of the thermal head and to this end, the thermal head is equipped with a preheating device for raising the temperature to a specified level, as well as a cooling fan for cooling the thermal head if its temperature is too high.
The preheating device is commonly an electric heater, or a heat source of a type that produces heat upon current impression The life of the heat source is considerably shortened if current is impressed continuously for a prolonged period or if high voltage is applied in order to attain higher temperatures. To avoid this problem, heating is generally performed by impressing an electric current according to a specified pattern that consists of intermittent heating at constant voltage. However, if this approach is taken, the required preheating time varies with the temperature prior to heating and it is difficult to predict the waiting time, or the time the equipment requires to become operable after the power supply is switched on.
In addition to the thermal printer for recording ultrasonic diagnostic images, many models of medical equipment have a device of preheating to a specified temperature before they start to operate. However, such preheating device is only capable of preheating according to a specified pattern after the power supply is switched on and no consideration has been given to controlling the time taken by the preheating step. The waiting time is difficult to predict and even in a case of emergency, an unduly prolonged preheating time is spent.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention has been accomplished under these circumstances and has as an object providing an apparatus for controlling the preheating temperature such that preheating ends within a specified start-up period to ensure positive prediction of the waiting time so that the lapse of an unduly prolonged preheating time can be avoided and which, in a case of emergency, sets a shorter preheating time to minimize the period for which the user has to wait.
Another object of the invention is to provide a method for controlling the preheating temperature with the above-described apparatus.
In order to attain the object described above, the first aspect of the present invention provides an apparatus for controlling preheating temperature of equipment having a device to be preheated and a preheating device for start-up, the preheating device including a heat source and a heat source control device which has a plurality of heating patterns to control the heat source, the apparatus comprising: a temperature measuring device for measuring current temperature of the device to be preheated within the equipment; a computing device for calculating a predicted time that is required by the preheating device to preheat the device from the current temperature to a preset temperature; a comparison device by which the predicted time as calculated by the computing device is compared with a specified start-up time; and a selecting device for selecting from the plurality of heating patterns within the heat source control device a heating pattern that makes the predicted time shorter than the start-up time.
In order to attain another object described above, the second aspect of the present invention provides a method for controlling preheating temperature of equipment having a device to be preheated and a preheating device for start-up, comprising: a current temperature measuring step for measuring current temperature of the device to be preheated within the equipment at start of preheating the device to be preheated by the preheating device; a selection step for selecting one of the heating patterns possessed by the preheating device within the equipment; a computing step for calculating a predicted time that is required to preheat the device to be preheated from the current temperature to a preset temperature; and a comparison step for comparing the predicted time with a specified start-up time; wherein if the predicted time is longer than the specified start-up time, another heating pattern is selected and the predicted time is calculated again so that an appropriate heating pattern is selected by repeating respective selection, computing and comparison steps until the predicted time becomes shorter than the specified start-up time.
Preferably, the specified start-up time can be set at a desired value.
Preferably, the equipment is medical equipment.
Preferably, the preheating device is one for the medical equipment.
Preferably, the device to be preheated is a thermal head in a thermal printer which prints out image data being output from the medical equipment and the preheating device is one for preheating the thermal head.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
shows in conceptual form a thermal printer that adopts the apparatus of the invention for controlling the preheating temperature;
FIG. 2
is a perspective view of a heat source
66
c
as a preheating device which is provided around the heating elements in a thermal head body
66
a
which is to be preheated by the method of the invention;
FIG. 3
is a graph showing the time-dependent change in the temperature of the thermal head body
66
a
being preheated;
FIG. 4
is a block diagram for the apparatus of the invention for controlling the preheating temperature as it is applied to the thermal printer; and
FIG. 5
is a flowchart illustrating the operation of the apparatus shown in FIG.
4
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1
shows in conceptual form a thermal printer that adopts the apparatus and method of the invention for controlling the preheating temperature. The thermal printer generally indicated at
10
is intended to perform heat-sensitive image recording on a thermal recording film F (hereunder referred to simply as “film F”) of a specified size, say, B
4
size. As shown, the thermal printer
10
has the following sections as main components: a loading section
14
which is loaded with a magazine
24
for holding the film F in position; a transport supply section
16
through which the film F is transported between transport guides
44
to be supplied to a position beneath a thermal head
66
; an image recording section
20
in which the as-supplied film F is subjected to thermal image recording with the thermal head
66
; and an ejecting section
22
for ejecting the thermally recorded film F into a tray
18
.
The film F comprises a transparent film base such as a transparent polyethylene terephthalate (PET) film having a heat-sensitive recording layer formed on one side. A specified number of films F, say,
100
films are stacked within the magazine
24
and picked up one by one at a specified timing so that thermal recording is done on the heat-sensitive recording layer by device of the thermal head
66
.
The loading section
14
has a slot
30
formed in the housing
28
of the thermal printer
10
and it has a guide plate
32
, guide rolls
34
and a stopper member
36
as basic components. The magazine
24
is inserted into the loading section
14
via the slot
30
and as it passes by the guide plate
32
and guide rolls
34
, the magazine
24
is pushed forward until it contacts the stopper member
36
, whereupon it is loaded in a specified position within the thermal printer
10
.
In the transport supply section
16
, each film F as picked up from the magazine
24
in the loading section
14
is transported and supplied to the image recording section
20
. The transport supply section
16
consists basically of a film pickup mechanism, a nip roller drive mechanism and transport guides
44
. The film pickup mechanism picks up films F in the magazine
24
one by one by device of suckers
40
and feeds each film F until its leading end gets into a nip roller pair
42
. The nip roller drive mechanism drives the nip rollers
42
to rotate at specified timings and at a specified rotating speed. The transport guides
44
are used to guide the film F as it is transported by the rotation of the nip rollers
42
.
The image recording section
20
consists of the following basic components: thermal head
66
, a platen roller
60
, a cooling fan (not shown) for cooling the thermal head
66
, a cleaning roller
56
and its backup roller
52
, guides
58
and
62
, and an ejection roller pair
63
.
The thermal head
66
is typically designed to perform thermal image recording at a recording (pixel) density of 300 dpi and as shown in
FIG. 2
, it has a thermal head body
66
a
and a heat sink
66
b
fixed thereto. The thermal head body
66
a
has a glaze which is a unidirectional array of heating elements for performing one line of thermal recording on the film F. Heat source
66
c
working as the preheating device is provided around the heating elements in the thermal head body
66
a.
This design allows the combination of the above-mentioned cooling fan and the heat source
66
c
to maintain the thermal head body
66
a
at a specified temperature, say, 25° C.±3° C. The thermal head
66
of this design is supported by a support member
68
which is capable of pivoting about a fulcrum
68
a
in two directions, one being indicated by arrow a and the other being opposite.
Platen roller
60
not only holds the film F in a specified position but also rotates to provide a specified image recording speed so that the film F is transported in an auxiliary scanning direction which is substantially perpendicular to the main scanning direction in which the glaze is formed on the thermal head
66
. Cleaning roller
56
and its backup roller
52
are respectively an adhesive rubber roller and an ordinary rubber roller, and the cleaning roller
56
made of an adhesive rubber cleans the surface of the heat-sensitive layer of the film F.
By device of guide
58
, the film F which has been cleaned by passage between cleaning roller
56
and its backup roller
52
is guided and transported to a position beneath the thermal head
66
. By device of guide
62
, the film F which has been thermally recorded with the thermal head
66
is directed toward the ejection roller pair
63
.
The film F which has been transported to a position beneath the ejection roller pair
63
is ejected into the tray
18
by rotation of the ejection roller pair
63
. The cleaning roller
56
and its backup roller
52
, the platen roller
60
and the ejection roller pair
63
should be rotated in synchronism so that they provide completely identical transport speeds to prevent the formation of wrinkles and other surface defects on the film F.
Thermal printer
10
of the example under discussion operates in the following manner. In response to a command for the start of recording, the mechanism (not shown) for opening and closing the magazine
24
is activated and the cover
26
of the magazine
24
is opened as shown in
FIG. 1
; then, suckers
40
in the film pickup mechanism suck one of the films F in the magazine
24
, pick it up and bring its leading end into the gap between the two nip rollers
42
. As the nip roller pair
42
is driven with the nip roller drive mechanism, the suckers
40
release the film F, which is then passed between the transport guides
44
and transported toward the image recording section
20
by rotation of the nip rollers
42
.
At the point in time when its leading end has reached a position beneath the cleaning roller
56
, the film F makes a temporary stop and a check is made of the temperature of the thermal head
66
. If the temperature of the thermal head
66
is normal, the film F is transported to the image recording section
20
by rotation of the cleaning roller
56
and its backup roller
52
.
Thermal head
66
in the image recording section
20
is such that before the transport of the film F is started, the support member
68
has pivoted up (opposite the direction indicated by arrow a) so that the glaze in the thermal head
66
maintains a certain clearance from the platen roller
60
(the two do not contact each other). If the film F is pinched between the cleaning roller
56
and the backup roller
52
and transported past the guide
58
until its leading end reaches the recording start position (which corresponds to the glaze), the support member
68
pivots down (in the direction indicated by arrow a) so that the film F is pinched between the glaze in the thermal head
66
and the platen roller
60
, causing the glaze to come into contact with the heat-sensitive recording layer of the film F. Thereafter, the film F is not only held in a specified position by the platen roller
60
but also transported by its rotation.
In synchronism with the transport of the film F, heating elements in the glaze are heated in accordance with input image data, thereby recording an image on the film F that corresponds to the image data. The film F which has passed through the step of thermal image recording is moved past the guide
62
and transported by the platen roller
60
and the ejection roller pair
63
so that it is ejected into the tray
18
in the ejecting section
22
. Tray
18
projects outwardly from the thermal printer
10
, so the film F with the recorded image can be recovered from the tray
18
if this is necessary.
As already mentioned, the thermal printer
10
of the example under discussion is such that the preheating device
66
c
is provided around the thermal head body
66
a
having the glaze. For preheating the thermal head body
66
a,
an intermittent heating mode of the pattern depicted in
FIG. 3
is employed.
FIG. 3
is a graph showing the time-dependent change in the temperature of the device being preheated (in the case under discussion, the device is the thermal head body
66
a
).
As
FIG. 3
shows, the thermal head body
66
a
is heated intermittently with the electric heater in a heating mode
80
, so that its temperature increases stepwise from the current temperature T
0
to a preset temperature T
1
by following the curve
82
. The preheating step ends at the point in time when the temperature of the thermal head body
66
a
has increased up to a value within the tolerable range of T
1
±ΔT. If the temperature of the thermal head body
66
a
decreases by subsequent heat dissipation, the electric heater may be operated to impart a sufficient amount of heat in a temperature-holding mode
84
to maintain the temperature within the tolerable range of T
1
±ΔT.
If the current temperature T
0
, preset temperature T
1
, heater's temperature (which is related to the applied voltage) and the period of intermittent heating are given, the time the thermal head
66
a
requires to be heated to the preset temperature T
1
, namely, the initial heating time t
2
to achieve preheating, can be determined either experimentally or empirically.
FIG. 4
is a block diagram for the apparatus of the invention for controlling the preheating temperature as it is applied to the thermal printer.
FIG. 5
is a flowchart for the operation of the apparatus. As
FIG. 4
shows, the apparatus of the invention for controlling the preheating temperature in the example under consideration comprises equipment
102
(which is the thermal head
66
in its entirety in the case under consideration) which includes the thermal head body
66
a
as a device
100
to be preheated, a preheating device
104
for preheating the device
100
, a control device
106
for controlling the preheating device
104
, and a control panel
108
.
The device to be preheated
100
is fitted with a temperature measuring device
110
which measures the current temperature T
0
at the start of preheating and which also performs subsequent temperature measurement as necessary to detect the elevation to the preset temperature T
1
. Preheating device
104
comprises a heat source
112
and a heat source control section
114
which controls the heat source
112
. According to a specified heating pattern as read from a control pattern storage section
116
, the heat source control section
114
controls the heat source
112
so that the thermal head
66
a
which is the device to be preheated
100
is heated intermittently with the electric heater working as the heat source
112
.
Control panel
108
is supplied with a preheat START signal
118
and it comprises a start-up time setting section
120
which sets a selected start-up time t
1
and a start-up time storage section
122
which stores the set value of start-up time t
1
. Control device
106
also includes a computing section
124
and a comparing section
126
. Computing section
124
determines the initial heating time t
2
, or the time necessary to preheat the device
100
to the preset temperature T
1
, by calculation on the basis of both the temperature detected by the temperature measuring device
110
on the device
100
and the specified heating pattern as read from the control pattern storage section
116
. Comparing section
126
compares the thus predicted initial heating time t
2
with the start-up time t
1
.
Being thus constructed, the apparatus for controlling the preheating temperature of equipment having a preheating device according to the example under consideration operates according to the flowchart shown in FIG.
5
.
START signal
118
causes the control sequence to start. In a heating pattern selection step
150
, a specified heating pattern is selected from the heating patterns stored in the control pattern storage section
116
. Preferably, a standard heating pattern preset in the control pattern storage section
116
may first be chosen in step
150
.
Then, on the basis of the selected heating pattern and the current temperature T
0
detected by the temperature measuring device
110
, the initial heating time t
2
necessary to preheat the device
100
to the preset temperature T
1
is predicted in a computing step
152
by calculation with the computing section
124
. In the next comparison step
154
, the predicted initial heating time t
2
is compared with the start-up time t
1
by device of the comparing section
126
. If t
1
≦t
2
, it is concluded that preheating will end within the specified start-up time t
1
and the sequence goes to a heating step
156
, where heating is started using the first selected standard heating pattern.
While the device
100
is being preheated in the heating step
156
, its temperature is measured by the temperature measuring device
110
at appropriate intervals and checked up in a check step
158
together with the rate of its elevation. In a decision step
160
, the measured temperature and the rate of its elevation are evaluated for their appropriateness. This procedure is repeated until the end of the heating process is confirmed in an end confirming step
162
.
If t
1
is found to be greater than t
2
in the comparison step
154
, the prediction is such that the preheating process will not end within the specified start-up time t
1
and more rapid heating is necessary. In this case, the sequence branches to a heating mode selection step
164
and a question is asked if the need for rapid heating can be met by the usual heating mode (i.e., without increasing the electric heater's temperature through application of a higher voltage but by merely shortening the non-heating time interval). If the answer is positive, a next heating pattern having a shorter non-heating time interval is selected in the heating pattern selection step
150
and the initial heating time t
2
is calculated again in the computing step
152
and compared with the preset start-up time t
1
in the comparison step
154
. If this procedure is still incapable of producing the desired relationship t
1
≦t
2
, it is repeated until a heating pattern is determined that gives the relationship t
1
≦t
2
.
If it is concluded in the heating mode selection step
164
that a heating pattern that produces the relationship t
1
≦t
2
cannot be determined by using the usual heating mode, the sequence goes to a heating mode change step
166
and a suitable rapid heating mode such as the application of a higher voltage to the electric heater is chosen. Thereafter, the initial heating time t
2
is calculated again in the computing step
152
and compared with the preset start-up time t
1
in the comparison step
154
. This procedure is repeated until a pattern that produces the relationship t
1
≦t
2
is determined.
As already mentioned, shortening the initial heating time t
2
by impressing a current on the electric heater continuously for a prolonged period or applying high voltage to provide a higher temperature will also shorten the life of the electric heater as heat source
66
c.
To avoid this problem, the standard heating pattern is preferably employed except in a case of emergency, where a shorter start-up time is set and preheating is finished within this time period.
If the preheating temperature or the rate of its elevation is found inappropriate in the decision step
160
, the sequence branches to a recalculation step
168
to perform a second calculation of the temperature and the rate of its elevation. If the result is still inappropriate, there is high possibility that something abnormal has occurred to the equipment being preheated and it is preferable to display an alarm and stop the equipment to have it checked up.
While the apparatus and method of the present invention for controlling the preheating temperature have been described above in detail, the invention is by no device limited to the foregoing example and various improvements and modifications can of course be made without departing from its scope and spirit.
Thus, according to the present invention, preheating can be finished within a specified start-up period to ensure positive prediction of the waiting time so that the lapse of an unduly prolonged preheating time can be avoided. The invention offers a particular advantage when it is applied to medical equipment since in a case of emergency, a shorter preheating time can be set to minimize the period for which the patient has to wait.
Claims
- 1. An apparatus for controlling preheating temperature of equipment having a device to be preheated and a preheating device for start-up, said preheating device including a heat source and a heat source control device which has a plurality of heating patterns to control said heat source, said apparatus comprising:a temperature measuring device for measuring current temperature of said device to be preheated within said equipment; a computing device for calculating a predicted time that is required by said preheating device to preheat said device from the current temperature to a preset temperature; a comparison device by which said predicted time as calculated by said computing device is compared with a specified start-up time; and a selecting device for selecting from said plurality of heating patterns within said heat source control device a heating pattern that makes said predicted time shorter than said start-up time.
- 2. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said specified start-up time can be set at a desired value.
- 3. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said equipment is medical equipment.
- 4. The apparatus according to claim 3, wherein said preheating device is one for said medical equipment.
- 5. The apparatus according to claim 3, wherein said device to be preheated is a thermal head in a thermal printer which prints out image data being output from said medical equipment and said preheating device is one for preheating said thermal head.
- 6. A method for controlling preheating temperature of equipment having a device to be preheated and a preheating device for start-up, comprising:a current temperature measuring step for measuring current temperature of said device to be preheated within said equipment at start of preheating said device to be preheated by said preheating device; a selection step for selecting one of the heating patterns possessed by said preheating device within said equipment; a computing step for calculating a predicted time that is required to preheat said device to be preheated from said current temperature to a preset temperature; and a comparison step for comparing said predicted time with a specified start-up time; wherein if said predicted time is longer than said specified start-up time, another heating pattern is selected and said predicted time is calculated again so that an appropriate heating pattern is selected by repeating respective selection, computing and comparison steps until said predicted time becomes shorter than said specified start-up time.
- 7. The apparatus according to claim 5, wherein said specified start-up time can be set at a desired value.
- 8. The apparatus according to claim 5, wherein said equipment is medical equipment.
- 9. The apparatus according to claim 8, wherein said preheating device is one for said medical equipment.
- 10. The apparatus according to claim 8, wherein said device to be preheated is a thermal head in a thermal printer which prints out image data being output from said medical equipment and said preheating device is one for preheating said thermal head.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2000-228728 |
Jul 2000 |
JP |
|
US Referenced Citations (4)