The present invention relates to call input in an elevator system. In particular, the invention concerns a method and system for verifying an entered destination call using identification of the person having entered the call.
In the operation of an elevator system, an essential piece of information is the call data entered by users to define their destination floor. A passenger using the elevator system has to inform the control system of the elevator system regarding both his/her own arrival floor and his/her destination floor that the user is heading for. Traditionally, these call data items are entered by the passenger in two steps by first entering a hall call on his/her arrival floor typically by pressing arrow buttons and then, upon arrival of an elevator at the passenger's starting floor, entering his/her destination floor data to the system by pressing a car call button placed in a control panel inside the elevator car. Due to its two-step nature, the traditional system requires that the elevator passenger enter two separate calls for one elevator ride, unless an elevator happens to be present at the passenger's arrival floor or unless another person traveling in the same direction has entered a hall call.
The number of calls to be entered for one elevator ride can be reduced to one by using a so-called destination control system. In the destination control system, the passenger feeds his/her destination floor call into a destination call device while still outside the elevator on a floor level. Thus, the user only has to enter a call once as the up and down calls are omitted. Based on this one call, the elevator system allocates the most suitable elevator to the customer, and when the customer boards the elevator car no separate destination call needs to be entered in the car.
Destination control requires the use of a special destination call device that allows the input of all possible floor numbers and floor identifiers to the elevator control system. Often the destination call device contains numeric keys 0-9 for the input of calls. A destination call can also be entered to the elevator system via a wireless and portable transmitter. The call can be registered in the elevator control system in the same way as if the call had been entered via a traditional control panel in the car. The destination floor can be selected by keying in the desired floor into the portable transmitter. A receiver for receiving the destination call as well as the associated antenna may be placed in the lobby or in the control panel of the elevator car. It is thus possible to input a destination call by wireless means from the lobby from outside the car.
The destination call regarding the destination floor entered by the user as well as the starting floor data obtained from the destination call device are transmitted to the elevator control system for elevator allocation. The person having entered the destination call is guided by means of the call device to the elevator allocated to him/her.
A problem with prior art solutions is that the user does not necessarily board the elevator allocated to him/her. The elevator control system never gets information indicating that the person having entered a call does not board the elevator intended for him/her e.g. in a case where the elevator allocated to the person is full. Neither is the elevator control system informed that the person having originally entered the destination call is still waiting for an elevator and that a new elevator should be allocated to him/her.
The object of the present invention is to disclose a method and system for verifying a destination call by identifying the person having entered the call in the lobby by means of an identifier and by identifying the person having entered the call again in the elevator car.
As for the features of the invention, reference is made to the claims.
The method and system of the invention are characterized by what is disclosed in the characterization parts of claims 1 and 9. Other embodiments of the invention are characterized by what is disclosed in the other claims. Inventive embodiments are also presented in the description part and drawings of the present application. The inventive content disclosed in the application can also be defined in other ways than is done in the claims below. The inventive content may also consist of several separate inventions, especially if the invention is considered in the light of explicit or implicit sub-tasks or in respect of advantages or sets of advantages achieved. In this case, some of the attributes contained in the claims below may be superfluous from the point of view of separate inventive concepts. Within the framework of the basic concept of the invention, features of different embodiments of the invention can be applied in connection with other embodiments.
The present invention defines a method and an apparatus for verifying destination calls in an elevator system by identifying the person having entered a call first outside the elevator and again in the elevator car allocated to the person having entered the call.
In an embodiment, Bluetooth technology is used as the user interface of the elevator system and the user's portable telephone serves as a call device. A connection can be established e.g. when the user arrives in the elevator lobby. To allow a connection to be set up, the lobby on each floor is provided with one or more base stations, which are connected to the control system of the elevator system and which are used to establish a wireless connection to the terminals.
Another embodiment allows utilization of RFID technology in the communication between the person entering the call and the elevator system control. The user has an RFID identifier whereby a remote reader placed in the lobby automatically identifies the user. The RFID identifier may be e.g. an access card of a regular user of the building, containing one or more quick selection alternatives programmed specifically for each user. The access card thus functions as a means of user identification and as a call device for the entry of a destination call.
One embodiment of the invention is the use of bar codes in the call device and the use of a bar code reader connected to the system control. A call is entered by showing the desired code to the optical reader and covering the other codes visible on the card.
In another embodiment of the invention, the destination call device provides a possibility to display a number of user-specific favorite floors and to enter a call to one of these favorite floors of the user. When the owner of the call device is identified, the system control takes into use the user profile concerning the user in question and presents this user's quick selection alternatives on the display.
The user can enter his/her destination floor selection on the floor level already before arriving to the elevator. The destination floor selection is combined with the starting floor data obtained about the user's location, and this pair of call data items is transmitted to the elevator control system for elevator allocation.
Once the call has been processed and an elevator assigned to serve it, the user is identified again as he/she enters the allocated elevator car. The elevator car is provided with a second remote reader, base station or other identifying device, which identifies in the elevator car the person having entered the destination call and indicates to the elevator group control system that the call relating to the person can be acknowledged. However, if the passenger does not enter the elevator allocated to him/her, an elevator serving the user is allocated again.
For example, in a situation where the elevator allocated to the person having entered a destination call is full, the user may have to wait for the next elevator. In this case, the elevator control system infers or is informed that the original destination call should still be valid and the control system should allocate a new elevator to the person having entered the destination call.
The invention makes it possible for the elevator control system to be accurately informed as to whether a passenger having entered a call boarded the elevator car allocated to him/her or not. This enables the control system to allocate elevators to passengers more accurately on the basis of calls entered.
a and 3b present two separate examples of the display of the elevator call device according to the invention, and,
The present invention discloses a method and an apparatus for verifying a destination call in an elevator system.
When the elevator allocated to the person having entered the destination call arrives at the starting floor and the person having entered the destination call boards the elevator, a second remote reader, base station or other identifying device identifies the user again (15). Once the person having entered the destination call has been identified, the destination call is acknowledged in the elevator control system as executed (17). If the person having entered the call does not board the elevator allocated to him/her, then the previously entered destination call is kept valid (18) and another elevator is allocated to the person having entered the call.
Thus, when walking past a remote reader, the user can enter a destination call using his/her own access card by closing the desired resonant circuit by pressing a bubble switch. Each bubble switch on the card corresponds to one preselection alternative programmed for the user's favorite floor on the basis of the user profile or, in the case of a low building, each floor can be set separately behind a given switch. In this way, the resonant circuit functions as a transponder, i.e. as an identification tag while an RFID transmitter connected to the system control serves as a reader device. When the identification tag comes within the range of the field transmitted by the reader device, the identification tag sends the information stored in it to the reader device. In addition to user identification, the user's RFID card can thus also function as a destination call device or in user access control so that each access card holder is only allowed access to certain destinations.
The access card can also be provided with bar codes on either side. The reader device in the system is a bar code reader, such as those used e.g. with cash registers at grocery stores. A call is entered by showing the desired code to the reader while hiding the other codes visible on the card. When showing the card to the reader, the user can hide one of the two codes, there being four preselectable floors. By modifying the card, more alternatives regarding selectable floors can be obtained.
For regular users of the system, it is possible to define a personal profile in which the user's favorite floors can be programmed beforehand. The user can also define his/her own favorite floors himself/herself via a data network, e.g. via an appointed or authorized data network person. The favorite floors can be defined automatically by statistically observing the user's most favored destination floor selections from the starting floor in question.
The personal identifier included in the card also enables the use of special functions. For example, in the case of a handicapped customer, the elevator door can be held open for a somewhat longer time by default than usual. By defining personal quick selection alternatives, the user can e.g. reach a given floor. One possibility is to provide faster elevator service to so-called priority customers than to others, in other words, a priority customer's call is served first regardless of other calls valid.
The identifier card according to the embodiment example may be a building-specific card or it may be a general-purpose card. In the case of a general-purpose card, the floors have to be programmed e.g. in such a way that each bubble switch or bar code represents that floor to which the user arriving in the building is going (e.g. the floor on which the user's home is located or the floor where the work room at his/her job is located), while similarly another bubble switch or bar code represents the exit floor or lobby floor.
In the example according to
When a person identified by the system approaches an RFID reader, base station or other identifying device, the terminal automatically shows the user's favorite floors, from which the user selects a desired destination floor.
It is also possible to add the favorite floors to a keypad in the manner illustrated in
The destination call device illustrated in
Although in the examples described above an access card or a fixed destination call device placed on a building floor is proposed as a destination call device, it is equally possible to use the user's own mobile station, PDA device (Personal Digital Assistant) or similar terminal for user identification or for the entry of a destination call.
It is obvious to the person skilled in the art that the invention is not limited to the embodiments described above, in which the invention is described by way of example, but that many variations and different embodiments of the invention are possible within the scope of the inventive concept defined in the claims presented below.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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FI20050130 | Feb 2005 | FI | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/FI05/00486 | Nov 2005 | US |
Child | 11812670 | Jun 2007 | US |