The present invention relates to elevator systems. In particular, the present invention is an elevator system having wireless hall call buttons.
In a typical elevator system hall call buttons are used by passengers to request elevator service. The hall call buttons are usually positioned on a wall adjacent the elevator doors. Most hall call buttons have an associated lamp which turns on (illuminates one or more hall call buttons) when the person presses the button to call the elevator. The elevator controller turns the lamp off when the elevator car arrives at the floor.
Typical elevator systems also have hall lanterns or displays that indicate when an elevator car has arrived, and may also indicate the current location of the car. A typical hall lantern includes up and down arrows or triangles, and is located at the upper part of the hoistway door for better visibility. One of the two triangles is lit when a car arrives, depending upon the direction in which the car will be traveling when it departs.
The elevator system of the present invention includes a wireless hall call switch module including a hall call button and a wireless transmitter that is powered by actuation of the button to transmit a hall call signal. A hall lantern module performs both the button indication and hall indication functions. The hall lantern module includes an RF transceiver that receives the wireless hall call signal, transmits hall call information to the elevator controller and receives car arrival information from the controller. The transceiver controls operation of the hall lantern module to provide both button indication and hall indication functions based upon signals from the hall call switch module and the elevator controller.
Hall lantern module 24 is an indicator module that performs both a button indication and a hall indication function. In other words, it provides a elevator status information whenever an up or down button on hall call switch module 22 has been pressed. That status information is provided until an elevator car 18 has arrived. At that time, hall lantern module 24 provides elevator status information indicating that car 18 has arrived and indicating the direction in which car 18 will be traveling. In order to provide such status information, hall lantern module 24 includes a display that can be visual (e.g., an LCD, LED, or other lighted display), audible, or tactile (e.g., a Braille display).
In addition, the display provided by hall lantern module 24 may also include an indication of the location (i.e. current floor) of elevator 18. This is particularly desirable at the first or lobby floor.
Hall lantern module 24 communicates wirelessly with both hall call switch module 22 and elevator control 14. Upon receiving and recognizing a unique code transmitted by switch module 22, hall lantern module 24 activates a display to indicate which button has been pressed. It also routes the code from switch module 22 wirelessly to control 14 using an antenna that protrudes into the elevator hoistway. The transmission from module 24 may be a single hop (i.e. directly from hall lantern module 24 to elevator control 14) or may be multi-hop (i.e. from one hall lantern module to another until the code reaches elevator 14). In that respect, hall lantern module 24 can be understood as a wireless node capable of receiving, displaying, and transmitting elevator status information in a wireless sensor/device network.
Elevator control 14 schedules movement of elevator car 18 and provides necessary control signals to elevator drive 16. In the simplified diagram shown in
When car 18 approaches the particular floor that has requested service, elevator control 14 sends a wireless message to hall lantern module 24 associated with that floor. Upon being notified of car arrival, hall lantern module 24 turns off the button lamp and turns on the hall lantern to indicate car arrival. Elevator control 14 also may send wireless messages containing car location information to modules 24 so that the current location of car 18 can also be displayed.
Elevator system 10 avoids the need to connect hall lantern modules 24 to elevator controller 14, since communication is performed wirelessly. This leads to savings due to a simpler interface on controller 14, and fewer wires connected to elevator controller 14.
The use of batteryless wireless hall call switch modules 22 eliminates the need for any wiring to hall call switch modules 22. No power is required to module 22, because it generates its own power for transmission of the coded message to hall lantern module 24, and the buttons on switch module 22 do not light. Instead, the button lamp indicator function is performed by hall lantern module 24. Nor are wires required for communication between modules 22 and 24, since the communication is performed wirelessly.
Because no wiring is required for hall call switch module 22, the time and expense required to drill a hole through the hoistway wall and install and wire hall call buttons is eliminated. In addition, much greater flexibility in the location of the hall call switch module is possible, because no wiring is required as long as switch module 22 is close enough to hall lantern module 24 so that its wireless transmission is received. This allows simplified installation of switch module 22 at greater distances from elevator doors 20 to allow for early elevator calling. In addition, mobile hall call button capability can be provided for frequent users and very important persons, because there is no requirement that module 22 be wired or even attached to building 10. It is also possible for elevator control 14 to automatically set the destination for a user of a mobile switch module by recognizing the unique ID from that particular module.
Hall call switch module 22 includes housing 30, up button 32, down button 34, piezoelectric generators 36, signal processing circuitry 38, and RF transmitter 40. Switch module 22 is both batteryless and wireless. All power for signal processing circuitry 38 and RF transmitter 40 is derived from piezoelectric generators 36, which are actuated by pressing of buttons 32 and 34. Batteryless, wireless switch modules are available from, for example, EnOcean GmbH, Obeshaching Germany. Further description of these types of switches can be found in Gerlach et al. U.S. Pat. No. 6,747,573 and Albsmeier et al. U.S. Patent Application No. US 2005/0073221.
Hall lantern module 24 includes housing 50, up button lamp 52, up hall lantern 54, down button lamp 56, down hall lantern 58, antennas 60 and 62, RF receiver 64, processor 66, and switches 68. Housing 50 is mounted on hoistway wall 70. Electrical power for hall lantern module 50 is provided from power line 72 which extends along the interface of hoistway wall 70.
Antenna 60 is located within housing 50 of hall lantern module 24 to receive wireless communications from RF transmitter 40 of switch module 22. Energy received by antenna 60 is provided to RF transceiver 64, which, together with processor 66, decodes the RF signal and determines the source of the signal and whether up button 32 or down button 34 have been pressed.
Based upon receiving either an up or down button press signal, processor 66 controls switches 68 to turn on either up button lamp 52 or down button lamp 56. In the embodiment shown in
Processor 66 also causes RF transceiver 64 to transmit a signal on antenna 62. This signal identifies the source of the hall call request, and whether the passenger desires to travel up or down in elevator 18. Antenna 62 extends through an opening in hoistway wall 70 and into the hoistway.
The button lamp 52 or 56 remains lit until elevator controller 14 sends a wireless signal back to hall lantern module 24 indicating that a car is about to arrive and the direction in which the car will be traveling. The wireless signal from elevator controller 14 is received at antenna 62 and decoded by RF transceiver 64 and processor 66. Processor 66 then controls switches 68 to turn off button lamp 52 or 56, and to turn on the appropriate hall lantern 54 or 58.
Once the elevator doors are closed and car 18 has departed, antenna 62 will receive another transmission from elevator control 14 indicating that the car has departed. The transmission is decoded by transceiver 64 and processor 66, and switches 68 are reset to turn off all lantern module 24 is then back in a ready state, waiting a next transmission from module 22 or from elevator control 14.
In
In
When car 18 arrives, lantern module 24 receives a signal from elevator control 14. This causes button lamp 52 to turn off, and hall lantern 54 to turn on, as illustrated in
After car 18 departs, hall lantern 24 receives communication from elevator control 14. As a result, hall lantern 54 is turned off. As shown in
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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WO2007/030109 | 3/15/2007 | WO | A |
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