This application is a §371 national stage of international application PCT/EP2006/06836, filed Nov. 2, 2006; the application claims the priority of European patent application EP 05110341.4, filed Nov. 4, 2005; the prior applications are herewith incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The invention relates to a method for detecting a fire by means of a fire detector that includes at least two sensor units and monitors a structurally limited space, by which method a first fire characteristic is monitored by means of a first sensor unit of the fire detector according to the scattered-light method.
Conventional point-type detectors such as, for instance, what are termed scattered-light detectors perform measuring virtually without exception in a darkened measuring chamber, referred to as the labyrinth. Disruptive influencing due to light is greatly reduced thereby. The receiver diode's quiescent current and the noise associated therewith are also minimized. The labyrinth has, though, perforce the disadvantage that smoke can penetrate only with a delay and that its density inside the labyrinth will at best asymptotically attain the value of the concentration outside. Any fire will consequently be detected correspondingly late.
The smoke's density generally reduces sharply toward the ceiling in high-ceilinged spaces. Depending on the fire's energy and the ceiling height, the greatest concentration can be far from the ceiling. Any fire can therefore be detected by conventional point-type detectors only with a delay.
The scattered-light method can be applied also outside a darkened measuring chamber in the space being monitored. The number of disruptive influences from the surrounding area will, though, be significantly higher with such an application. Thus insects, for example, that enter the measuring zone or any accidental covering during, say, cleaning need to be reliably distinguishable from a fire or, as the case may be, smoke. Attempts to resolve disadvantages of said kind generally consist in limiting measuring or, as the case may be, monitoring to the fire detector's immediate vicinity. A distance of 4 to 10 cm from the fire detector's surface is generally considered typical in that regard. The extent to which the disadvantages can be reduced thereby is unfortunately only limited.
Linear smoke detectors send a light beam across the space being monitored and will trigger an alarm if the beam is attenuated by smoke (extinction). It is irrelevant in this case whether the sender and receiver are located in separate devices on opposite walls of the space or combined in a single unit. In the case of a single unit a reflector will then be required on the opposite wall. The measuring path being as a rule several meters in length, linear detectors are generally more sensitive than scattered-light detectors. In high-ceilinged spaces they can, moreover, be positioned at a height at which smoke can still be expected. It is with such arrangements naturally far more probable that the light beam will be influenced or even interrupted than if the beam is effective only in the detector's ambient area.
The object of the present invention is to be seen in proposing a simple and efficient way of detecting a fire as early as possible.
Said object is inventively achieved in each case by means of the subject matter of the independent claims. Developments of the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims.
An essential aspect of the invention is to be seen in employing for a fire's earliest possible detection a fire detector having a first sensor unit for monitoring a first fire characteristic according to the scattered-light method and a second sensor unit for monitoring a second fire characteristic according to the extinction method. The first sensor unit consists inventively of at least one light-emitting transmitting unit and at least one receiving unit that receives the emitted light. The second sensor unit consists of at least two transmitting units emitting intensely bundled light and at least one receiving unit that receives the emitted light. The signals of the fire detector's two sensor units can be evaluated either individually or in combination by a suitable evaluation unit such as, for example, a fuzzy processor. The fire detector is therein generally mounted on the ceiling of the structurally limited space. The two sensor units can in part use the same components. That means the at least two transmitting units emitting the intensely bundled light beams can be used jointly by both sensor units. An IR laser diode or IR diode etc. can inventively be used for transmitting units of said kind. The receiving units can then forward the received signals to an evaluation unit, provided therefor, of the fire detector. The intensely bundled light beams emitted by the at least two transmitting units are directed from the ceiling toward the floor and can therein be either parallel or slightly (outwardly) inclined. The angle of inclination is generally less than 10 degrees. Smoke in the immediate vicinity of the fire detector is detected by means of the scattered-light method and extinction method; smoke that is further from the ceiling is detected only by means of the extinction method because the scattered light is too weak. To obtain an assignment of the measuring signals to one of the emitted light beams, the transmitting units are driven temporally displaced and the light beams hence emitted temporally displaced. Distance measuring will provide information on whether, in the event of a level change, a partially reflecting object extending in the direction of the height of the space is involved. It can then be assumed that an object disrupting the measurement is located between the “normal” reflection site, the location within the space at which monitoring of the second fire characteristic inventively takes place, and the fire detector within the space. If that is the case, then adverse influencing by living things (people, animals etc.) or moving objects can generally be inferred. Distance measuring can be performed with the aid of, for example, the principle disclosed in EP 1391860 A1. Relative distances of a few centimeters can be registered sufficiently fast using said principle. For monitoring the second fire characteristic the receive signals assigned to the individual transmitting units are mutually correlated taking the temporal displacement in sending into account. A strong correlation in terms of time curve and level accompanied by a typical course will characterize smoke or, as the case may be, a fire, as that will exhibit no appreciable local differences in concentration within the distance between the two emitted beams. Receive signals arising owing to changed reflection due to moving objects can be distinguished additionally through the signals' temporal sequence. Large or, as the case may be, long objects will affect a plurality of light beams, whereas in the case of objects that are smaller than the distances between beams (insects, for instance) there will always be a temporal displacement for all received signals so that false alarms can be avoided. To further reduce the risk of a false alarm, an alarm can be triggered only if a fire is detected in accordance with both the scattered-light method and the extinction method.
It is a major advantage of the inventive method that a fire can be detected or identified significantly earlier. Hence a fire alarm can then also be triggered earlier and risks of material damage and personal injury consequently minimized.
Another major advantage of said inventive fire detector is that it can be integrated in the ceiling covering of a space and will hence be flush with the ceiling.
The invention is explained in more detail with reference to an exemplary embodiment shown in
The FIGURE is a schematic view of a fire detector with two sensor units according to the invention.
In undisrupted surroundings, meaning if the emitted light beams reach the floor unimpeded, the reflected light will be measured. The emitted light beams will penetrate any smoke layer at any height. That will result in not only reliable but as a rule also early smoke detection. Since the degree of reflection and distance are not known in advance, the inventive fire detector will adapt to the prevailing situation on power-on and subsequently also while in operation. Although just one emitted light beam could, of course, also be used for the inventive method, a significantly greater number of disruptive influences must then be expected.
The following measures and algorithms are employed for the inventive method so that false alarms can be minimized:
In the undisrupted condition, meaning if there are no living things or moving objects in the structurally limited space, the receive signals according to the scattered-light method and the receive signals according to the extinction method will be combined in such a way (neuro-fuzzy processor) that highly reliable information about the presence of a fire provided by one sensor system in conjunction with more probably unreliable information provided by the other will suffice to trigger a fire alarm. Said kind of triggering of a fire alarm will generally take place significantly earlier than will be the case with point-type detectors that operate only in accordance with the scattered-light method.
The received signals are generally forwarded by the receiving units SLE and EE to an evaluation unit such as, for example, a fuzzy processor for evaluation. If the evaluation indicates a possible fire, an alarm will be triggered. By way of example, the following conditions of the fuzzy processor's input variables characterize a fire:
It will obviously be difficult under the adverse influence of moving objects to measure any development of smoke simultaneously by means of extinction. The signal changes due to the moving objects will be dominant. In this condition fire detection will rely more on monitoring according to the scattered-light method. It is acceptable for sensitivity to be somewhat reduced under those circumstances. The open scattered-light method, meaning the measuring of scattered light in surroundings near the fire detector, is superior to a classical point-type detector in terms of response speed because the smoke does not first have to penetrate a darkened space inside the fire detector.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05110341 | Nov 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/068036 | 11/2/2006 | WO | 00 | 4/10/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/051820 | 5/10/2007 | WO | A |
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