This disclosure relates to autonomous coverage robots and associated cleaning bins.
Autonomous robots are robots which can perform desired tasks in unstructured environments without continuous human guidance. Many kinds of robots are autonomous to some degree. Different robots can be autonomous in different ways. An autonomous coverage robot traverses a work surface without continuous human guidance to perform one or more tasks. In the field of home, office and/or consumer-oriented robotics, mobile robots that perform household functions such as vacuum cleaning, floor washing, patrolling, lawn cutting and other such tasks have been widely adopted.
In one aspect, an autonomous coverage robot includes a chassis, a drive system mounted on the chassis and configured to maneuver the robot, and a cleaning assembly carried by the chassis. The cleaning assembly includes a cleaning assembly housing and at least one driven sweeper brush rotatably coupled to the cleaning assembly housing. The robot includes a controller carried by the chassis and a removable sweeper bin attached to the chassis. The sweeper bin is configured to receive debris agitated by the driven sweeper brush. The sweeper bin includes an emitter disposed on an interior surface of the bin and a receiver disposed remotely from the emitter on the interior surface of the bin. The receiver is configured to receive a signal emitted by the emitter. The emitter and the receiver are disposed such that a threshold level of accumulation of debris in the sweeper bin blocks the receiver from receiving emissions from the emitter. The robot includes a bin controller disposed in the sweeper bin and monitoring a signal from the detector and initiating a bin full routine upon determining a bin debris accumulation level requiring service.
Implementations of this aspect of the disclosure may include one or more of the following features. The cleaning bin is removably attached to the chassis. In some implementations, a diffuser is positioned over the emitter to diffuse the emitted signal. The receiver receives the diffused emissions. Accumulation of debris in the bin at least partially blocks the diffused emissions from being received by the receiver. The emitter may include an infrared light emitter diffused by a translucent plastic sheet. In some examples, the emitter is disposed on a first interior lateral surface of the bin and the receiver is disposed on an opposing, second interior lateral surface of the bin. The emitter and the receiver may be arranged for a determination of debris accumulation within substantially an entire volume of the bin. In some implementations, the coverage robot bin-full detection system includes a human perceptible indicator providing an indication that autonomous operation may be interrupted for bin servicing. The cleaning bin may include a vacuum assembly having an at least partially separate entrance path into the bin. In some examples, the cleaning bin includes a plurality of teeth disposed substantially along a mouth of the bin between a sweeper bin portion and a vacuum bin portion housing the vacuum assembly. The teeth are configured to strip debris from the rotating sweeper brush and the debris is allowed to accumulate in the sweeper bin portion.
In another aspect, a coverage robot bin-full detection system includes a cleaning bin housing configured to be received by a cleaning robot and a bin capacity sensor system carried by the cleaning bin housing. The bin capacity sensor system includes at least one signal emitter disposed on an interior surface of the cleaning bin housing and at least one signal detector disposed on the interior surface of the cleaning bin housing. The detector is configured to receive a signal emitted by the emitter. The coverage robot bin-full detection system includes a controller carried by the cleaning bin housing and a remote indicator in wireless communication with the controller. The controller monitors a signal from the detector and determines a cleaning service requirement. The remote indicator provides an indication of the cleaning service requirement determined by the controller.
Implementations of this aspect of the disclosure may include one or more of the following features. In some implementations, the cleaning bin housing defines a sweeper bin portion and a vacuum bin portion. The cleaning bin housing may include a vacuum assembly housed by the vacuum bin portion. The emitter may be an infrared light emitter. In some implementations, the controller is configured to determine a robot stuck condition and communicate the robot stuck condition to the wireless remote indicator. The remote indicator may be configured to communicate commands to the bin controller. The bin controller may communicate with a controller of the robot.
In yet another aspect, a method of detecting fullness of a cleaning bin of an autonomous coverage robot includes determining an empty bin threshold signal value by reading a signal received from a bin-fullness detection system while the cleaning bin is empty. After a predetermined period of time, the method includes detecting a present bin signal value by reading the signal from the detection system. The method includes comparing the empty bin threshold signal value with the present bin signal value to determine a signal value difference. Then the method includes, in response to determining that the signal difference is greater than a predetermined amount, activating a bin full indicator.
Implementations of this aspect of the disclosure may include one or more of the following features. The method may include periodically determining the check bin signal and the signal difference, wherein the indicator is activated when the check bin signals is greater than the empty bin threshold signal. The indicator maybe activated when multiple check bin signals over the period of time are greater than the empty bin threshold signal. The emitter may be an infrared light emitter. In some examples, a diffuser positioned over the emitter to diffuse the emitted signal. In some implementations, the emitter is disposed on a first interior surface of the cleaning bin housing and the detector is disposed on an opposing, second interior surface of the cleaning bin housing.
The details of one or more implementations of the disclosure are set fourth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.
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A cleaning head assembly 40 is located towards the middle of the robot 11 and installed within the chassis 31. The cleaning head assembly 40 includes a main 65 brush and a secondary brush 60. A battery 25 is housed within the chassis 31 proximate the cleaning head assembly 40. In some examples, the main 65 and/or the secondary brush 60 are removable. In other examples, the cleaning head assembly 40 includes a fixed main brush 65 and/or secondary brush 60, where fixed refers to a brush permanently installed on the chassis 31.
Installed along either side of the chassis 31 are differentially driven wheels 45 that mobilize the robot 11 and provide two points of support. Also installed along the side of the chassis 31 is a side brush 20 configured to rotate 360 degrees when the robot 11 is operational. The rotation of the side brush 20 allows the robot 11 to better clean areas adjacent the robot's side, and areas otherwise unreachable by the centrally located cleaning head assembly 40.
A removable cleaning bin 50 is located towards the back end 31B of the robot 11 and installed within the outer shell 6. The cleaning bin 50 is removable from the chassis 31 to provide access to bin contents and an internal filter 54. Additional access to the cleaning bin 50 may be provided via an evacuation port 80, as shown in
In some implementations, the robot 11 includes a communication module 90 installed on the bottom of the chassis 31. The communication module 90 provides a communication link between a maintenance station 1250 and the robot 11. The communication module 90, in some instances, includes both an emitter and a detector, and provides an alternative communication path while the robot 11 is located within the maintenance station 1250. In some implementations, the robot 11 includes a brush service sensor assembly 85 installed on either side of and proximate the cleaning head 40. The brush service sensor assembly 85 provides user and system feedback regarding a degree of filament wound about the main brush 65, the secondary brush 60, or both. The brush service sensor assembly 85 includes an emitter 85A for emitting modulated beams and a detector 85B configured to detect the beams. The emitter 85A and the detector 86B are positioned on opposite sides of the cleaning head 60, 65 and aligned to detect filament wound about the cleaning head 60, 65. The brush service sensor assembly 85 includes a signal processing circuit configured to receive and interpret detector output. The emitter 85A is aligned along a rotating axis of the brush 60, 65 and between rows of bristles (or flaps) so that when no errant filaments are present on the brush 60, 65, a signal transmission between the emitter 85A and the detector 86B is not blocked. A presence of a few errant filaments spooled about the brush 60, 65 partially blocks a signal transmission between the emitter 85A and the detector 86B. When accumulation of errant filaments wrapped about the brush 60, 65 circumferentially and longitudinally reaches a certain threshold, a signal transmission between the emitter 85A and the detector 86B is substantially blocked by a corresponding threshold amount. Accumulation of errant filaments across the whole brush or locally in a ring clump are both detected at an appropriate time for maintenance.
The microprocessor 245 is connected to a plurality of assemblies and systems, one of which is the communication system 205 including an RS-232 transceiver, radio, Ethernet, and wireless communicators. The drive assembly 210 is connected to the microprocessor 245 and includes right and left differentially driven wheels 45, right and left wheel motors, and wheel encoders. The drive assembly 210 is operable to receive commands from the microprocessor 245 and generate sensor data transmitted back to the microprocessor 245 via the communication system 205. A separate caster wheel assembly 230 is connected to the microprocessor 245 and includes a caster wheel 35 and a wheel encoder. The cleaning assembly 215 is connected to the microprocessor 245 and includes a primary brush 65, a secondary brush 60, a side brush 20, and brush motors associated with each brush. Also connected to the microprocessor is the sensor assembly 235 which may include infrared proximity sensors 75, an omnidirectional detector 15, mechanical switches installed in the bumper 5, wheel-floor proximity sensors 70, stasis sensors, a gyroscope, and infrared cliff sensors 30.
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The robotic cleaner 11 receives a number of different cleaning bins 50. Referring to
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By comparing the signals generated by the detectors 760 when the bin 50 does not contain debris to subsequent signal readings obtained by the detectors 760 as the robot 11 sweeps and vacuums debris into the bin 50 during a cleaning cycle, the presence of debris within the bin 50 may be determined. For example, when the subsequently polled detector signals are compared to initial detector signals (taken when the bin 50 is empty), a determination can be made whether the debris accumulated within the bin 50 has reached a level sufficient to trigger a bin-full condition.
One example bin configuration includes one emitter 755 and two detectors 760. Another configuration includes positioning one or more emitters 755 and detectors 760 in cross-directed in mutually orthogonal directions. The robot 11 may determine that heavy debris has accumulated on the bottom of the bin 50 but has not filled the bin 50, when signals generated by a first detector 760 on the inner top surface 52 is relatively low and signals generated by a second detector 760 on an inner side wall (which detects horizontally-transmitted light) does not meet a bin-full threshold. On the other hand, when both detectors 760 report a relatively low received-light signal, it may be determined that the bin 50 is full.
Multiple emitter arrays 788 and detectors 760 provide more accurate and reliable bin fullness detection. In the example shown, the multiple emitter arrays 788 provide cross-bin signals to detect potential bin blockages. One possible blockage location is near an intruding vacuum holding bulkhead 59, which partially divides the bin 50 into two lateral compartments. This does not apply to all bins 50. A blockage may occur when received artifact debris of a large enough size (e.g. paper or hairball) becomes a blocking and compartmentalizing bulkhead in the bin 50. A blockage may occur when shifting, clumping, moving, vibrated, or pushed debris within the bin creates one or more compartments via systematic patterns of accumulation. If debris accumulates in one lateral compartment, but not another, a single detector pair may miss it. A single detector pair may also provide a false-positive signal from a large debris item or clump. Multiple emitter arrays 788 located on the bottom interior surface 51 of the bin 50 and multiple detectors 760 located on the top interior surface 52 of the bin 50 in two different lateral or front-to-back locations covers more potential volume of the bin 50 for more accurate and reliable bin fullness detection. A histogram or averaging of the bin detector signals or using XOR or AND on the results of more than one break-beam may be used to get more true positives (even depending on the time since accumulation began).
The robot 11, in some implementations, measures or detects air flow to determine the presence of debris within the bin 50.
In some examples, the bin 50 includes a rotating member 812 which influences an air volume to flow within the bin 50, guided by the inner surface 55 of the bin 50. The rotating member 812 may be disposed inside or outside of the bin 50 (anchored or free, e.g., a wire, a vane, a brush, a blade, a beam, a membrane, a fork, a flap). In some instances, the rotating member 812 is an existing fan or blower from which air is diverted. In other instances, the rotating member 812 includes a brush or paddle having a primary purpose of moving debris or particulates. The rotating member 812 may be diverted from a wheel chamber or other moving member chamber. “Rotation” and “rotating” as used herein, for sensors and/or cleaning members, includes transformations of rotation into linear motion, and thereby expressly includes reciprocating and sweeping movements. The air flow sensor 810 is disposed in the air volume that generates a signal corresponding to a change in an air flow characteristic within the bin 50 in response to a presence of material collected in the bin 50.
In some implementations, the air flow sensor 810 includes a thermal sensor 862, such as a thermistor, thermocouple, bimetallic element, IR photo-element, or the like. The thermal sensor 862 may have a long or short time constant, and can be arranged to measure static temperature, temperature change, rate of temperature change, or transient characteristics or spikes. The thermal sensor 862 may be passive, active, or excited. An example of a thermal sensor 862 that is excited is a self-heating thermistor, which is cyclically excited for a fixed time at a fixed voltage, in which the cooling behavior of the thermistor is responsive to air flow over the thermistor. Different thermistors and thermistor packaging may be used, e.g. beads or glass packages, having different nominal resistances and negative temperature coefficient of resistance vs. positive temperature coefficient of resistance.
Placing the thermistor 862 in a location of the bin 50 empirically determined to have more or less air flow in general, it is possible to tune the sensitivity of air flow inference by the thermistors 862. The thermistor 862 may be shielded or define holes to obtain better air flow over the thermistor, enhancing thermistor sensitivity. The fluid dynamics of a bin 50 actively filling with randomly shaped debris and randomly perturbed air flow is inherently predictable, and routine experimentation is necessary to determine the best location for any sensors mentioned herein.
By adopting a total heating/cooling cycle time of about one minute (30 seconds heating, 30 seconds cooling, although this could be varied by an order of magnitude), the long thermal time constant of the system may prevent the thermistor 862 from responding too quickly. Air flow may also affect the time constant and the peak-to-peak change in temperature during cycling as well as reducing the long-term average temperature over many cycles.
Convection may be used if heating occurs at the bottom and temperature sensing at the top of the thermistor 862. Convection be used in the vacuum bin 50 to sense a clogged filter (usually equivalent to a full bin for the vacuum chamber, which tends to collect microscopic material only). Air flow decreases when the filter 54 is clogged. If the air flow decreases, a higher temperature change is produced. Alternatively, the slope of the heating/cooling cycle, averaged, may also be used to detect filter clogging and/or blocked air flow.
A relatively small air pathway 868 (herein a “Venturi tube”) extends orthogonally from the interior surface 55 of the bin 50. The robot 11 determines bin fullness based on the relative pressure detected by the pressure transducer 863 at a distal end 869 of the Venturi tube 868. When air flow along the interior surface of the bin 50 is high, the pressure at the distal end 869 of the Venturi tube 868 is relatively low. The pressure readings may be combined with thermistor and/or optical sensor readings to more accurately determine the presence of debris, for example.
Referring to
In some examples, at various periods the agitator 894, under the control of the analyzer circuit 896, perturbs the air remaining within the bin 50 with a known vibration strength. At the same time, the vibration sensor 892 measures a vibration response of the air in the bin 50 and transmits the measured values to the analyzer circuit 896. With respective known empty and full characteristic vibration responses of the bin 50, the analyzer circuit 896 analyzes the response from the vibration sensor 892 using methods such as frequency-domain transforms and comparisons (e.g., LaPlace or Fourier transforms, etc.) and returns an appropriate bin state.
When an acoustic signal is emitted from an acoustic emitter 894 at time T1, the transmitted signal initially traverses the interior of the bin 50 from the acoustic emitter 894 to an acoustic detector 892 located horizontally opposite the acoustic emitter 894. At time T2, the signal is detected by the transmissive acoustic detector 892A, after one time period τ1 has elapsed. The acoustic signal also reflects off the interior surface 55 of the bin 50 and re-traverses the interior of the bin 50 until it is received by the reflective acoustic detector 892B at time T3, following another time period equal to τ1. When the detectors 892A and 892B are of similar sensitivity, the signal detected at time T3 is lower than the signal detected at time T2 (the difference in amplitude between the signal detected at T2 and the signal detected at T3 is referred to as Δ1).
A similar signal analysis is performed when the interior of the bin 50 is full of debris. The signals received by the detectors 892A and 892B at times T2 and T3, respectively, may decline monotonically with respect to the initial signal emitted from emitter 894 at time T1. However, the amplitude difference between the signals detected at T2 and T3, designated Δ2, is greater than a corresponding amplitude difference Δ1. A time-of-flight that elapses as the acoustic signal traverses the interior of the bin 50 (herein referred to as τ2) is also greater than the time period τ1 corresponding to the bin-empty state. The bin-full state can be determined using a signal analysis when a signal emitted from the acoustic emitter 894 and detected by the transmissive acoustic detector 892A and the reflective acoustic detector 892B is compared to a bin empty condition (which may be initially recorded as a reference level when the bin is known to be empty, for example).
Any of these fore-mentioned methods for detecting, measuring, inferring or quantifying air flow and/or bin capacity may also be combined in any suitable permutation thereof, to further enhance the accuracy of bin capacity measuring results; in particular, for example, at least two differing bin capacity-measuring techniques may be employed such that if there is a weakness in one of the techniques—for example, where air flow may be halted due to a factor other than bin fullness, a straight pressure transducer might still produce accurate measurements of bin capacity, etc.
Referring to
Existing robots 11 which do not include bin-sensing features may be retrofitted with a bin 50 including a bin-full sensor system 700. Signals generated by the bin-full sensor system 700 are transmitted to the robot microprocessor 245 (e.g. via snap-in wires, a serial line, or a card edge for interfacing a bus controlled by a microcontroller; using wireless transmission, etc.). Alternatively, an existing actuator (e.g. a fan) monitored by the home robot is “hijacked” (i.e., a property of it is modified for new use). For example, when the bin 50 is full, a cleaning assembly microprocessor 215 energizes the fan motor in a pattern (e.g., three times in a row with predetermined timing). The retrofitted and firmware-updated robot processor 245 detects the distinctive current pattern on the fan and communicates to a user that the bin 50 is full. In another example, an existing sensor is “hijacked.” For example, an IR emitter disposed on top of the bin 50 in a visible range of an omnidirectional virtual wall/docking sensor. A distinctive modulated IR chirp or pulse train emitted by the retrofitted bin 50 indicates that the bin 50 is full without overwhelming the virtual wall sensor. In yet another example, communications are made just to the user but not to any automated system. For example, a flashing light on the bin 50, or a klaxon or other audio signaler, notifies the user that the bin 50 is full. Such retrofitting is not necessarily limited to the bin-capacity-sensing function, but may be extended to any suitable features amenable to similar retrofitting.
Using a manufacturer's server, a robot user may create a website containing information regarding his or her customized (or standard) robot 11 and share the information with other robot users. The server can also receive information from robots 11 pertaining to battery usage, bin fullness, scheduled cleaning times, required maintenance, cleaning patterns, room-size estimates, etc. Such information may be stored on the server and sent (e.g. with other information) to the user via e-mail from the manufacturer's server, for example.
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An existing robot 11, which does not include any communication path or wiring for communicating with a bin-full sensor system 700 on the bin 50, is nonetheless retrofitted with a bin 50 including a bin-full sensor system 700 and a transmitter 1201. “Retrofitting” generally means associating the bin with an existing, in-service robot, but for the purposes of this disclosure, at least additionally includes forward fitting, i.e., associating the bin with a newly produced robot in a compatible manner. Although the robot 11 cannot communicate with the bin-full sensor system 700 and may possibly not include any program or behavioral routines for responding to a bin-full condition, the bin 50 may nonetheless indicate to a user that the bin 50 is full by transmitting an appropriate signal via the transmitter 1201 to a remote indicator 1202. The remote indicator 1202 may be located in a different room from the robot 11 and receives signals from the bin 50 wirelessly using any appropriate wireless communication method, such as IEEE 801.11/WiFi, BlueTooth, Zigbee, wireless USB, a frequency modulated signal, an amplitude modulated signal, or the like.
In some implementations, as shown in
In some examples, the remote indicator 1202 is a table-top device or a component of a computer system. The remote indicator 1202 may be provided with a mounting device such as a chain, a clip or magnet on a reverse side, permitting it to be kept in a kitchen, pendant, or on a belt. The transmitter 1201 may communicate using WiFi or other home radio frequency (RF) network to the remote indicator 1202 that is part of the computer system 1204, which may in turn cause the computer system to display a window informing the user of the bin-full status.
Referring to
A normal operating routine begins, as illustrated in
For example, the bin processor 217 may have an idle or low-power mode that is active when the robot 11 is not powered and/or the bin 50 is detached.
In the no-power mode, the bin 50 may have set a flag specifying notification is to be activated. If this is the case, a low-power notification is preferable. An optional step S15-2 would change the notification from a continuous to a more intermittent notification (rapid flashing to slower flashing, continuous on to flashing, i.e., from a higher power consumption notification to a lower power consumption notification). This is less important when the bin 50 does not rely on robot power to recharge its own power supply.
Another optional step in the no-power routine is a sleep/wake check, as shown in step S15-3. If the bin 50 maintains the intermittent or regular notification S15-2 (i.e., each step in the no-power routine is independent and optional, and may or may not depend on the execution of preceding steps), the bin 50 may enter a sleep state after a certain number of no-power (robot off), no-change (bin not disconnected from robot, bin not moved, no change in bin sensor states) minutes (e.g., 5 mins to 1 hour) elapses. The bin may wake upon disconnection from the robot 11, movement of the bin 50 or robot 11, any relevant change in bin sensor states; and may re-activate or activate checking and wake-state activities.
Another optional step in the no-power routine is an emptied check S15-4, which checks whether conditions reflect that the bin 50 has been emptied (including changes in internal sensor state indicative of emptying, tilt sensing, assumptions made). A subsequent step upon detection of bin emptying directly or indirectly is the deactivation of the notification (step S15-5) and resetting or restarting the processes.
Referring again to
Once the transducers are active, a not empty check is executed at step S13-3. “Not empty”, in this context, describes positive, negative, and inferred sensor interpretations that may directly or indirectly check whether the bin is full, empty, and/or not empty and/or not full. Steps S13-2 and 13-3 starts, and continues, a not-empty check via the transducer(s) until the same is registered, and may constitute the only such check, i.e., confirmation or verification is optional.
Optionally, a not empty verify routine may be executed at step S13-4. “Verify”, in this context, describes repeating or extending the checks performed in step S13-3, or a different kind of check upon a same or different kind of criteria. A preferred example of the step S13-4 correlates verification with sufficient elapsed time under a positive not-empty condition. Optionally, step S13-4 includes routines to reject false positives.
Once the not-empty or bin full state is detected and optionally checked as stable, in one direction or the other, the controller 217 may activate notification in step S13-5. The notification may be kept on for a certain time period, and/or may be kept on until the bin is detected as emptied at step S13-6. Notification is turned off at step S13-7. Thereafter, the process is restarted at S13-8.
Examples of start transducer routines are illustrated in
In a third example, illustrated in
A fourth example of a not empty check routine is illustrated in
At step S29-1, an illumination cycle of a transducer is started. For example, the emitters 755 may be activated and the transmitted signal detected by detectors 760, when it is known (or assumed) that the bin 50 is empty. The thresholds are then checked and set to the detected values at step S29-3. For example, each threshold is set proportional to a dark reading with the lights off.
In a measuring step S29-4, the illumination signal received by each transducer 1 . . . N (e.g., the detectors 760) is measured. In step S44-5, it is determined whether the received illumination is greater than a corresponding set of threshold values. The thresholds are set as a score to be exceeded, but may be set as a negative or low dark current value checked via a greater than or less than comparison. For example, a full bin 50 may register 80% of the absolute dark score in each compartment. The comparison step is intended to detect a nearly absolute dark level, even when the lights are illuminated, when most of the light is being blocked by debris. If one of the receivers is below the threshold (registers a dark level less than expected for a full or near-full bin), the routine returns to step S29-3 (e.g., at least one side is not full or nearing full). Otherwise, the routine proceeds to step S29-6, in which the bin 50 is presumed full and a verification timer is started. At step S29-7, the illumination cycle continues, and the thresholds remain the same, set to a less sensitive level, or decaying slowly. At step S29-8, it is determined whether the received signals are greater than the set of thresholds (e.g., all sensors continue to read more than 80% of a full dark level). If one of the received signals fails the threshold test, the process may return to S29-2 to restart the check process (i.e., the stability test fails, and the entire check restarts, including the “first” detection of all sensors almost dark).
Alternatively, the process returns to S29-7 rather than S29-2, i.e., the stability test is set to register a bin full after a continuous detection of almost full over a certain period time for all the sensors. In this case, rather than restarting the check for a “first” bin full detection, the verify timer may be restarted in step S29-6 when transient non-full conditions are detected. A bin-full state is notified after a consistent full condition is detected.
In either case, after the bin 50 (e.g. each side of the bin 50) has registered an almost full dark condition for the specified verify timer period, checked in step S29-9, a bin-full notification is turned on at step S29-10 in order to indicate to the user that the bin is full. Optionally, at step S29-11, the illumination cycle may be altered or changed, in order to reduce power consumption or to check for an emptied bin 50 more or less often than a full bin 50.
The thresholds for the verification steps are set at step S29-12. The thresholds may be set to a dark level that is less dark than previously employed. The verify level in step S29-12 is not the same as the verification timer of steps S29-6 or S29-9, and in this case is a verification that the bin 50 has not yet been emptied. This level is set to, e.g., 50% of the full dark score, to detect an emptied condition when either sides of the bin 50 has a sufficient increase in detected illumination. A significant amount of material must be removed from the bin 50 for either side to reach a level where a sensor receives, e.g., 50% of illumination received in an unobstructed condition, or 50% greater illumination than when the sensors are in an absolute dark level condition. The thresholds are calibrated or set at step S29-13 on every cycle, e.g., the dark level is set with reference to a no-illumination state. If it is determined at step S29-14 that one received signals is less than the new thresholds (e.g., that all of the sensors no longer register an almost or 80% of dark condition, and at least one of them registers a partially illuminated or 50% dark condition), notification is turned off at step S29-15.
By increasing the light threshold for comparison with the received illumination signal from the transducers, the sensitivity for turning the bin-full indicators on or off is decreased. The bin-full notification therefore becomes less likely to be turned off, because a more substantial change in the received illumination signal of the transducers is necessary to exceed the increased threshold. As a result, rapid shifting of the bin-full notification from on to off and back again may be avoided.
At step S31-10, it is determined whether grand_total is greater than a milestone value. The milestone may represent a predetermined time period that may be significant, or the milestone may correspond to an arbitrarily chosen time period, for example. If the result of step S31-10 is negative, the routine returns to step S31-2; otherwise, the illumination threshold is incremented at step S31-11 in order to desensitize measurement of the polled transducer values at step S31-11, before the routine returns to step S31-2.
The sensitivity of the illumination thresholds for the transducers may be changed or modified based not only on the total amount of time the robot 11 has spent turned on, but instead, in proportion to the amount of time the robot 11 has spent in the cleaning mode. Furthermore, the criteria of whether the robot 11 is in cleaning mode or not can be defined such that the cleaning mode corresponds to times when a high level of debris intake is detected; or simply when the vacuum or sweeper motors are turned on, for example. False bin-full conditions may arise in situations where the robot 11 traverses a large (but relatively clean) area and therefore does not pick up much debris, or where the robot 11 is turned on for a long period time but does not pick up much debris. The false bin-full conditions may be avoided by focusing on the cleaning mode status rather than general run time.
Other details and features combinable with those described herein may be found in the following U.S. patent applications filed concurrently herewith, entitled “CLEANING ROBOT ROLLER PROCESSING” having assigned Ser. No. 11/751,413; and “REMOVING DEBRIS FROM CLEANING ROBOTS” having assigned Ser. No. 11/751,470, the entire contents of the aforementioned applications are hereby incorporated by reference.
A number of implementations have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. Accordingly, other implementations are within the scope of the following claims.
This U.S. patent application is a continuation of and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 120 to U.S. application Ser. No. 11/751,267, filed May 21, 2007, which claims priority, under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) to U.S. provisional patent applications 60/747,791, filed on May 19, 2006, 60/803,504, filed on May 30, 2006, and 60/807,442, filed on Jul. 14, 2006. The entire contents of the aforementioned applications are hereby incorporated by reference.
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