Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to cleaning apparatus, such as machines for washing kitchenware or laundry; and in particular to systems for automatically dispensing chemicals used by such cleaning apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
Commercial kitchens have equipment to clean and sanitize glassware, dishes, silverware, pot, pans and cooking utensils, which are collectively referred to as “kitchenware.” Such equipment, commonly known as a “dishwasher” or more generically as a “warewasher”, has a cabinet defining an internal chamber into which trays of kitchenware are placed for washing. A washing and rinsing assembly within the chamber has a plurality of nozzles from which water sprays onto the kitchenware being cleaned. The lower part of the cabinet forms a reservoir that collects the water which is repeatedly circulated through the nozzles by a pump during the wash cycle. Thereafter during a rinse cycle, fresh water from an external supply line is fed through the nozzles. When the rinse water flows into the reservoir, a portion of the reservoir water overflows into a drain thus replacing some of the water from the wash cycle.
At various times during the cleaning process, different chemicals are dispensed from supply containers into the warewasher. These chemicals commonly include a detergent, a rinse additive, and a sanitizer. Conventional warewashing equipment have separate receptacles into which the supply containers are placed, with each receptacle dedicated to only one type of chemical. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,322,242 discloses a dispensing system that has separate caps for chemical containers with supply lines running from each cap to the apparatus in which the chemicals are used. Each cap or supply line is color coded to designate the chemical that is dispensed there through. Other types of marking have been used to indicate to employees which chemical container connects to each receptacle.
Chemicals for use in automatic warewashing machines are available from many manufacturers. The same type of chemical, detergent for example, may vary in concentration depending upon the specific manufacturer and even the same manufacturer may produce the same chemical in different concentrations. A lesser amount of a more concentrated chemical is required during each operating cycle than a less concentrated version of the same chemical. Therefore the amount of a chemical to dispense into the warewasher varies depending upon the particular brand.
When switching brands of a chemical, the amount of that chemical to be dispensed during each operating cycle often has to be manually adjusted. However, only a service technician is able to make that adjustment. If the operator used the machine with a different chemical without a required adjustment, either too much chemical was used, which was costly, or too little chemical was used, which did not properly clean the kitchenware.
Therefore, a need still exists for a control system that does not require an operator to adjust the dispenser when a chemical container is changed on a cleaning machine.
An apparatus is provided for dispensing a chemical into a cleaning machine, wherein the chemical is stored in a container that has data recorded thereon. The apparatus has a dispenser port to receive the chemical from the container. In a preferred embodiment, the port is configured to mate with an outlet on the container. A flow control device, such as a pump or a valve, is connected to the dispenser port and governs the flow of the chemical from the dispenser port to the cleaning machine. A data reader reads the data from the container. A controller, receives the data obtained by the data reader and operates flow control device in response to that data to control an amount of chemical that is dispensed. Thus the dispensing system is automatically reconfigured when different concentrations of the chemical fed into the dispenser port.
Various mechanisms can be used to record the data on the containers. In one case, the data are recorded as indicia on a label and the reader optically senses the indicia. For example, the indicia may be a printed barcode that is read by a conventional barcode scanner. In another case, the data are recorded in a radio frequency tag on the container and the data reader comprises an electronic device that interrogates the radio frequency tag to obtain the data.
In different aspects of the apparatus, the flow control device is operated to control the amount of chemical that is dispensed by controlling one of a length of time that the chemical is dispensed and a rate at which the chemical is dispensed.
An optional feature of the dispensing apparatus is erasing the data from a container that is empty, so that the container cannot be refilled, possibly with a different chemical, and then reused in the machine.
The present inventive dispensing system will be described in the context of a warewasher for cleaning kitchenware, however it should be appreciated that this dispensing system can be utilized with other types of cleaning equipment, such as apparatus for washing laundry, cleaning floors, and cleaning vehicles to name but a few examples.
With initial reference to
A dispensing system 20 is connected to the warewasher 10 to mete out different chemicals into the cabinet 12 at specific times during the cleaning process. The dispensing system 20 has a dispenser 21 that holds three containers 22, 23 and 24 that store a detergent, a rinse additive, and a sanitizer, for example. A different electrically operated pump is provided to feed each liquid chemical from the respective container 22, 23 or 24 through supply tubes 29 to the warewasher cabinet 12. Each container 22, 23 and 24 is inverted so that its neck 25 fits into a separate port 26, 27 and 28 of the dispenser 21 as shown in
Alternatively, the dispensing system 20 can mete out powdered or granulated chemicals using a dispenser 200 shown in
Referring to
Upon being placed into the dispenser 200 as shown in
Referring again to
The data reader 33 has four separate pairs 86, 87, 88 and 89 of light emitters 91 and detectors 92. Each emitter-detector pair 86-89 is focused on a different one of the label areas 81-84, respectively, to produce a signal that indicates the degree of reflectivity of the associated label, e.g. whether the area is white or black. For example, in the first emitter-detector pair 86, the light emitter 91 transmits a beam 93 of light which is directed toward label area 84 on the container 22. Depending on the reflectivity of the label area, the beam may be reflected back to the associated detector 92. Even a black label area may reflect some light back to the associated detector. The emitter-detector pair may operate at a narrow band of wavelengths (for example in the infrared spectrum) to distinguish the sensing light from ambient light. The intensity of the reflected light is a function of the reflectivity of the associated label area 81. Specifically, a white label area will reflect a greater amount of light than a black label area, thereby producing analog electrical signals of different magnitudes from the detector 92. Therefore by comparing the signals from each light detector 92 to a threshold level, each analog signal is converted into a digital bit that indicates whether the associated label area is white or black. The four digital bits from the plurality of light detectors 92 of the data reader 33 designate the data about the chemical that is encoded by the indicia 32, e.g. one of the sixteen chemical types. Because a black label area reflects some light, the failure of the detectors 92 to sense any reflected light indicates the absence of a container at that particular dispenser port.
Where a need to encode a greater number of chemical types is required, other kinds of data recording mechanisms may be utilized. For example as shown in
There is a trend toward providing radio frequency identification tags on products, thereby enabling the products to be tracked during distribution from manufacturer to the ultimate consumer. Conventional radio frequency tags act as a transponder and respond to being interrogated by a radio frequency (RF) signal by producing a reply signal that carries information identifying the particular piece of merchandise. Such radio frequency identification tags can be utilized on the chemical containers 22-24 as the indicia 32 to identify the particular type of chemical contained therein, the concentration of that chemical, and other product information. As shown in
Referring to
The controller 37 has several output drivers 42, one of which activates an annunciator 44, such as a buzzer or a lamp which produce an audible or visible warning. Another output driver 42 operates a solenoid water valve 50 during the rinse cycle to send fresh water through the nozzles 16. A manually operated supply valve 52 is provided to fill the reservoir 15 at the bottom of the cabinet 12 prior to operating the warewasher 10. A drain valve 54 is manually operated to empty the reservoir 15. Another output of the controller 37 activates the wash pump 56 during the wash cycle. The controller 37 also automatically governs dispensing detergent and additives into the warewasher cabinet 12. Specifically, the microcomputer 38 determines when to activate a detergent pump 58 in response to a signal from a conductivity sensor 59, that is located below the water line of the reservoir 15. Other output drivers 42 operate pumps 64 and 66 to introduce the rinse additive and the sanitizer chemicals into the warewasher cabinet 12 at appropriate times during the cleaning cycle. Alternatively the chemicals can flow to the warewasher cabinet by gravity in which case the pumps 58, 64 and 66 can be replaced by electrically operated valves to control that flow. Such pumps and valves are generically referred to as “flow control devices.”
Several different types of sensors can be connected to the input circuits 40 of the controller 37. A water temperature (WT) sensor 68 is located in the reservoir 15 to produce a signal indicating the temperature of the water. The controller 37 responds to that temperature signal by activating a water heater 70 that has a heating element within the reservoir. Another temperature sensor 72 is mounted in a conduit that carries water during the rinse cycle and thus provides an indication of the rinse water temperature (RT) to ensure that the proper water temperature is being maintained. If the rinse water is not at the proper temperature the controller 37 adds the sanitizer chemical from the dispensing system 20. A pair of sensor switches (DR) 74 provide signals indicating when either side door 14 is open and the controller 37 suspends operation in those cases. A set of three sensors 75, 76 and 77 respectively detect when the chemical containers 22, 23 and 24 are empty.
The present invention relates to a mechanism which dispenses chemicals from the dispenser 21 based on the information read from the data recorded on the containers 22-24 placed into the dispenser. Occasionally, the microcomputer 38 reads the data signals from the three data readers 33-35 to determine characteristics of the chemical at each dispenser port 26-28. In the preferred embodiment, the data readers are polled each time a washing operation commences. However, in other cases, the signals from the data readers may be inspected by the microcomputer 38 whenever the operator changes a chemical container and presses a button on the dispenser 21 to indicate that event. In a system in which each dispenser port 26-28 has a reservoir that holds the chemical received from a container, the data reader scans the indicia when an operator fills the reservoir from the container.
When it is desired to read the signals from the three data readers 33, 34 and 35, the microcomputer 38 executes a software routine 100 depicted in
Next at step 110, the microcomputer 38 determines the appropriate dose of this chemical to dispense during each operation of the warewasher. In one version of the present invention, the microcomputer 38 utilizes the indication of the particular type of chemical to address a look-up table within the memory 41 that contains a dose value for each commonly used type of chemical. For example, various types of detergent may require that different amounts be dispensed during each wash cycle of the warewasher 10. Even the same general type of detergent may come in different concentrations, which also require that different amounts be dispensed for optimum cleaning and economy. The dose value preferably is defined by a particular amount of time that the pump 58 for the first dispenser port 26 should be operated in order to dispense the proper amount of chemical. Alternatively, for dispensing systems 20 that utilize a radio frequency identification tag 96 on the container, the information obtained from that tag may indicate not only the type of chemical, but also its physio-chemical parameters, such as viscosity, density, and concentration. The concentration is used to address in a look-up table to determine the pump operating time. In other situations, the control system 36 may be configured with the proper dispenser pump operating interval for a detergent, rinsing agent or sanitizer that has a predefined concentration. When the same general type of chemical is found with a different concentration, the microcomputer 38 executes a preprogrammed equation to derive the proper pump operating time for that different concentration, based on the pump operating time for the predefined concentration. In either situation, the appropriate pump operating time for the particular chemical in the container inserted in the first port 26 is then stored at step 112 as a the value of a dose variable for that port. This completes the configuration of the first port 26 with the type of chemical and the chemical dose.
The software routine 100 then advances to step 114 at which the Port Pointer is incremented to read and process the indicia for the container in the next port. At step 116, the program then returns to step 104 to process that data. When all three ports 26-28 have been configured in this manner, the software routine 100 terminates and normal washing operation of the warewasher 10 commences. At that time the memory 41 contains a designation of which port 26-28 contains each type of chemical (detergent, rinsing agent and sanitizer) and the pump operating time for that port.
When the controller 37 gets to a point during the cleaning cycle at which detergent is to be dispensed into the cabinet 12, the microcomputer 38 accesses the table within memory 41 that specifies the type of chemical inserted into each port 26, 27 and 28 of the dispenser 21. Specifically, the microcomputer accesses a memory location that indicates the port into which a container of detergent has been inserted. That port designation determines which dispenser pumps 58, 64 or 66 to activate for the detergent. The table in memory 41 also specifies the amount of time that this pump should be operated to feed the proper dose of the detergent into the warewasher cabinet 12. The microcomputer 38 then activates the respective dispenser pump for that prescribed period of time. A similar operation is conducted at the appropriate times during the cleaning cycle to dispense the rinsing agent and the sanitizer from the dispensing system 20. Alternatively variable speed dispenser pumps 58, 64 or 66 could be employed and the dose of each chemical is controlled by varying the pump speed and thus the rate at which the chemical is supplied to the warewasher.
Therefore, the present system properly dispenses the different chemicals regardless of into which port 26, 27 or 28 the operator has inserted a container of a particular chemical. In other words, unlike previous systems in which a particular port was designated to always receive a container of a given chemical, detergent for example, a particular chemical may be placed into any port and the operation of the machine is automatically reconfigured to properly dispense that chemical. The present dispensing system also detects when the same chemical is placed into more than one dispenser ports 26-28, in which case the operator is alerted to that occurrence.
Furthermore, if the signals from a data readers 33-35 indicate the absence of a particular chemical that is critical to proper cleaning, an alarm annunciation is issued. In addition, operation of the warewasher may be suspended by the controller 37 until a container of that chemical is inserted into the dispensing system 20. It should be understood that not all of the different chemicals are essential to cleaning in all circumstances. A sanitizer typically only is required if the rinse water is below a defined temperature, e.g. 74° C., as water above that temperature will sanitize the kitchenware without requiring chemical augmentation. Therefore, operation of the warewasher 10 may continue after the supply of sanitizer is exhausted, as long as the rinse water is above the defined temperature.
The foregoing description was primarily directed to a preferred embodiment of the invention. Although some attention was given to various alternatives within the scope of the invention, it is anticipated that one skilled in the art will likely realize additional alternatives that are now apparent from disclosure of embodiments of the invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be determined from the following claims and not limited by the above disclosure.
This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/712,369 filed on Aug. 30, 2005.
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