This invention is related to automated robotic wheeled devices, such as robotic vacuums, floor cleaners and floor scrubbers, robotic lawn mowers, robotic floor polishers, etc.
The following is a tabulation of some prior art that presently appears relevant:
Various types of automated robotic devices are used in home and commercial settings to carry out routine tasks like vacuuming, mopping, and polishing floors. These and similar devices usually have to move from one floor type to another in order to complete jobs. Frequently, changes in flooring are accompanied by small elevation changes or thresholds. In some cases, thresholds, bumps, or other elevation changes may be too tall for the device to move across. In the case of an automated robotic vacuum, this problem could result in the device getting stuck on a threshold and not finishing the job or requiring human intervention to move over the obstacle.
Although prior art has provided several methods for autonomous robotic devices to avoid obstacles, causing a robotic vacuum to avoid threshold transitions and other small elevation changes altogether would limit the cleanable area to only substantially flat workspaces. Because thresholds and small elevation changes are unavoidable in many homes, a need exists for a method to aid automated robotic devices in crossing such elevation changes.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,594,844 (iRobot Corp.) provides a means to detect and avoid different obstacle types with an optical emitter, however, this solution offers no method to help an automated robotic device travel across a change in elevation or release the device in the event that it gets stuck.
One solution is to increase the wheel size of an automated robotic device to provide more space between the bottom of the chassis and the surface on which the device is traveling. However, this solution increases the overall height of the device, which may introduce new problems, such as getting stuck under furniture or not being able to enter beneath as many pieces of furniture. A need exists for a method to improve an automated robotic wheeled device's ability to overcome obstacles that does not limit its mobility.
It is a goal of the present invention to provide a method for a wheeled device to overcome changes in elevation, such as flooring transitions.
It is a goal of the present invention to provide a solution that does not reduce the effectiveness of an automated robotic device that services an area.
It is a goal of the present invention to reduce the amount of human intervention needed to operate an automated robotic device that services an area.
It is a goal of the present invention to increase the autonomy of automated robotic devices.
The present invention achieves the aforementioned goals through a set of oval-shaped auxiliary wheels installed on an automated robotic wheeled device that is activated whenever the device detects that it has become stuck. When activated, the auxiliary wheels turn and propel the device forward and upward, helping it move over small changes in elevation, such as flooring transitions that are commonly found in homes.
Such a system could be useful in robotic vacuums that frequently encounter raised thresholds and other obstacles while traveling in homes. In one embodiment, the system can be paired with a brush vibrator and reverse brush spin mechanism, so that when a robotic vacuum detects that it has become stuck, it simultaneously engages its oval wheels, vibrates its brush, and spins its brush backward to release and untangle any potentially caught debris. This system would be an effective method for untangling a robotic vacuum from cords, cables or strings that are commonly found on floors in homes.
Although the following disclosure relates to robotic vacuums, the invention hereof is not limited to such devices and may be useful in other devices or systems wherein one or more of the design criteria listed above are important.
The present invention proposes a method for automated robotic wheeled devices to overcome obstacles. In particular, the proposed invention seeks to assist automated robotic wheeled devices in crossing thresholds or other relatively small vertical elevation changes. A set of auxiliary wheels in the form of ellipsoids or elliptical cylinders are proposed to propel the device upward and over such obstacles.
According to the present invention, an automated robotic wheeled device, such as a robotic vacuum, is equipped with a set of auxiliary wheels in the shape of ellipsoids or elliptic cylinders. One or more electric motors or servomotors are used as a means to turn the auxiliary wheels.
As shown in the two-dimensional view
Depending on the application of the auxiliary wheel and other parameters, the suitable value of the extension 102 can be pre-calculated for the particular needs of the situation.
In the preferred embodiment, a set of gears is used as a means to engage and disengage the auxiliary wheels. In their engaged position, the auxiliary wheels function as described above. In their disengaged position, the auxiliary wheels do not make contact with the surface on which the automated robotic device is driving and thus have substantially no effect on the device's movement. Thus, a robotic vacuum or other similar device operates as normally when the auxiliary wheels are disengaged.
In the preferred embodiment, the automated robotic wheeled device is further equipped with a means to sense when its forward movement is hampered, such condition causing the auxiliary wheels to be engaged. Any available means for detecting that forward movement is hampered, such as resistance sensors, light tracking mechanisms, or any other method could be used.
In some embodiments, the auxiliary wheels are engaged for a predetermined length of time or number of wheel rotations.
In some embodiments, the auxiliary wheels are engaged only for as long as the automated robotic wheeled device senses that its forward movement is hampered.
In some embodiments, the auxiliary wheels are turned in succession, one after the other.
In some embodiments, the auxiliary wheels are turned simultaneously.
In some embodiments, the surface of auxiliary wheels is textured to increase traction.
In some embodiments, the auxiliary wheels are covered with a layer of high-friction material to increase traction.
In some embodiments, the method for overcoming obstacles further comprises rotating a main brush of the automated robotic wheeled device in a reverse direction from the normal rotation of said main brush. In a robotic vacuum, for example, detection of a hampering in forward movement also triggers a mechanism to rotate a main brush of the device in reverse while engaging the auxiliary wheels to assist in disentangling the device from any potentially trapped debris, which is another form of obstacle encountered by automated robotic wheeled devices. Any available means may be used to rotate said main brush in a reverse direction, such as a motor or a set of gears.
In some embodiments, the method for overcoming obstacles further comprises vibrating a main brush of the automated robotic wheeled device. In a robotic vacuum, for example, detection of a hampering in forward movement also triggers a mechanism to vibrate a main brush while engaging the auxiliary wheels to assist in disentangling the device from any potentially trapped debris. Any available means may be used to vibrate said main brush, such as a motor or a set of gears.
Although specific features of the invention are shown in some drawings and not in others, this is for convenience only as each feature may be combined with any or all of the other features in accordance with the invention. The words “including”, “comprising”, “having”, and “with” as used herein are to be interpreted broadly and comprehensively and are not limited to any physical interconnection. Moreover, any embodiments disclosed in the subject application are not to be taken as the only possible embodiments.
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/988,187, filed May 3, 2014 by the present inventor.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61988187 | May 2014 | US |