The present invention relates to the field of environmental sensors. In most premises and other locations dirt and dust builds up and many of these places should be kept clean for reasons of hygiene, safety and pest control. Visual inspection by a trained technician is often needed to decide when cleaning needs to take place. In the case of hard to reach places such an inspection is onerous. Examples of such places are roof girders in food factories, or within kitchen ventilation systems. To make an inspection safety procedures may have to be carried out, for example those for working at height, involving, for example, provision of ladders or platforms, and the whole area below may even have to be closed while the inspection is carried out, which of course leads to further financial loss in terms of production or sales in addition to the considerable expense of the inspection itself.
No alternative to this inspection procedure has been proposed.
According to the present invention there is provided a dirt sensor comprising: a dirt collecting surface exposed to allow dirt from the environment to build-up on the dirt collecting surface, and a transducer located in relation to the dirt collecting surface and responsive to dirt thereon to provide an output of the sensor dependent on the amount of dirt built-up on the dirt collecting surface.
The dirt sensor may comprise a sensor for measuring an environmental variable other than dirt build-up, which may be, for example, a temperature sensor, or a humidity sensor, or a light level sensor.
The transducer may be responsive to an electrical property of dirt. The transducer may be arranged to sense the dirt capacitively.
The transducer may comprise electrodes in proximity to the dirt collecting surface. The electrodes may be interdigitated. The transducer may comprise a protective layer between the electrodes and the dirt collecting surface. The protective layer may provide the dirt collecting surface. The electrodes may be formed on a circuit board and the protective layer may cover the electrodes. The sensor may comprise a housing containing the transducer and the protective layer may be formed by a wall of the housing. The protective layer may be a removable film covering the electrodes.
The dirt collecting sensor may comprise an electronic circuit connected to the transducer to provide the output of the sensor. The electronic circuit may be connected to the transducer to drive the transducer. The electronic circuit may be arranged to provide a communications link to a remote location and to transmit the output of the sensor thereto. The communications link may be a radio communications link.
The dirt collecting sensor may comprise a power supply. The power supply may comprise a battery. The power supply may comprise a solar cell.
The present invention also provides a method of measuring the build-up of dirt in a location, comprising the steps of: locating a dirt collecting surface in a location where it is exposed to allow dirt to collect on it, locating a transducer in relation to the dirt collecting surface to provide an output dependent on the amount of dirt built-up on the dirt collecting surface, allowing dirt to build up over time on the dirt collecting surface, reading the output of the transducer.
The transducer may be, in providing the said output, responsive to an electrical property of the dirt built up on the dirt collecting surface. The transducer may sense the dirt build-up capacitively.
The method may comprise transmitting a value produced by the reading to a remote location.
The method may comprise cleaning or replacing the dirt collecting surface from time to time. The method may comprise cleaning the environment around the sensor at the same time as cleaning or replacing the dirt collecting surface.
The method may comprise cleaning the environment around the sensor in response to the reading.
The cleaning the environment around the sensor may comprise: measuring and recording one or more environmental variables for the location of the sensor, and recording the dirt transducer readings, analyzing dirt transducer measurements against the measurements of the one or more environmental variables and determining a relationship between them, and using the relationship to predict build-up of dirt in the location, and cleaning the environment around the sensor in response to the prediction.
The one or more environmental variables measured and recorded may comprise temperature. The one or more environmental variables measured and recorded may comprise humidity. The one or more environmental variables measured and recorded may comprise light level.
The method may comprise a cleaner gaining access to the sensor or the environment around it to perform the cleaning with equipment for working at height.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
The interdigitated electrodes 7, 8 form a capacitor.
(Note that it is not necessary for the circuit board material to have a greater permittivity than air, although it generally does. Even if the circuit board had a low relative permittivity, the build-up of dirt would cause an increase of electric field lines passing through the dirt and hence an increase in capacitance.)
In each of the embodiments above the sensor is provided with a source of electrical power. While, for example, the sensor could be designed to work from mains power (or from that via a transformer), the difficult locations for the sensor will often not have mains power available so the sensor is provided preferably with a battery. This may be replaceable and/or rechargeable. Other power supplies such as a solar cell may be provided.
In each of the embodiments the sensor is provided with a data link for transmitting the data from the sensor to a remote location. This may be for example, a wireless data link, for example, radio, infra-red or even visible, or a wired link, for example a LAN cable. Transmitter and receiver circuitry for the communications link is, in these embodiments, included on the circuit board 5.
In electronics many different circuits are known for measuring capacitance, so the measuring circuit is not described in detail here. However many for example, employ a reference capacitor to deal with drift in the sensor output and one is used in the electronic circuit of the embodiments described above.
The guard ring 10, in these embodiments, is driven to a constant potential to avoid electrical signals near the sensor from interfering with the capacitor.
The “reference” in the table in
The measurements were taken as follows. The sensing surface was cleaned and the sensor left to settle, which was generally at a point where “signal” and “reference” readings were close. A volume of a material, which would in use be deposited on the sensor as dirt, was then pipetted onto the surface of the sensor and the sensor was left for 30 seconds for reading to normalize before “reading after” was taken. The change was then calculated. This process was then repeated for each type of material. The change in the signal values show that the dirt material causes significant change in the capacitance and hence that the sensor can be used to measure dirt build-up.
Other materials that cause dirt build-up and which may be detected by the sensor are: animal fats; vegetable fats; vegetable oils; nut oils; seed oils; flour of all kinds; dust (e.g., skin particles); material fibers/dust (e.g. cotton dust); carbon build up from burnt materials; insect body parts; grease and build up from animals; hair; and wood dust (e.g., saw dust).
Some of these dirt materials can cause explosive atmospheres and the invention may be of use in helping monitor their build-up and hence likelihood of an explosion occurring.
Other electrical properties of the dirt may be used by the sensor to detect it. More generally the sensor may use other physical properties to detect it, for example, its thermal conductivity, or optical sensing, for example using reflectivity or color.
An embodiment of a method of operating the sensor will now be described. From time to time an operator takes note of the reading transmitted by the sensor. If this shows that the environment around the sensor needs cleaning, or indeed the sensor itself needs cleaning to be able to continue to provide reliable readings the operator arranges for that environment and/or the sensor to be cleaned. A cleaner then gains access to the environment and/or the sensor, using, if needed, proper equipment for working at height, for example a ladder. When cleaning the sensor the cleaner cleans the dirt collecting surface carefully to avoid damaging the electrodes, removes the film 13 if that is being used and replaces it, or a set of films, as necessary.
As shown in
Sensor 22 is shown mounted on the circuit board. Sensor 20 is one needing access to the environment through a hole 21 in the housing of the sensor, for example a light level sensor. In these embodiments sensor 20 is conveniently mounted on the housing to enable it to be located easily in alignment with the hole 21. Sensor 20 is then connected to the circuit of the circuit board by jumper wires (not shown). In other embodiments sensor 20 is mounted on the circuit board 5 and that is mounted so that sensor 20 lines up with its hole 21. In these embodiments the additional sensors are also connected to the communications link to send their data via that also.
Some physical variables, for example, light levels will not be the same in all directions from the dirt sensor housing. To allow for that the sensor housing may be provided with several sensors of the same type but each mounted to point in a different direction to sense the physical variable in those directions.
In one embodiment of a method using the sensor, the data from the additional sensors is analyzed against the dirt sensor data to look for relationships between them, which relationships are then used to predict the level of dirt build-up over a coming period. Action is then taken to clean the environment of the sensor, or not, based on the prediction, for example to clean at a particular time, for example, on a particular date.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1618859.1 | Nov 2016 | GB | national |
This Application is a continuation of PCT International Application PCT/GB2017/053354, filed Nov. 8, 2017, which claims priority to United Kingdom (GB) Application No. 1618859.1, filed Nov. 8, 2016, the contents of both of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/GB2017/053354 | Nov 2017 | US |
Child | 16405890 | US |