Not applicable
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1. Field of the Invention
The present disclosure relates generally to a volatile material dispensing system and, more specifically, to a plug-in volatile material dispensing system including multiple heating elements to assist in the diffusion of multiple volatile materials.
2. Description of the Background of the Invention
Volatile material dispensing systems that provide multiple sources of heat to assist in the diffusion of multiple volatile materials into the atmosphere are known in the art. For example, one dispensing system utilizes multiple porous containers, each having a reservoir filled with a fragrance laden gel. Each container is releasably inserted into a housing disposed above and spaced from an annular heating element that may be energized sequentially. An electrical plug extending from the body supplies power from a wall outlet. Heat from each heating element assists in the volatilization of a fragrance from each corresponding container. An LED corresponding to each heating element is lit up when the heating element is energized.
In another dispensing system, a container includes two independent reservoirs each filled with a gel, liquid, or solid composition. The container is releasably held within a housing and an independently controllable heating element is provided for each reservoir to increase the discharge rate of the gel composition therefrom. The dispensing system can be electronically controlled and linked to the operation of other devices.
The present disclosure contemplates a volatile material dispensing system including a multi-reservoir volatile material holder that provides for the diffusion of multiple fragrances, non-fragrancing deodorizers, insecticides, or other volatile materials as known in the art into the atmosphere. Independently controllable heating elements provide several modes of possible operation depending upon user and environmental inputs.
According to one aspect of the present invention, a fragrance dispenser comprises a housing and a plurality of heating pans disposed in the housing, wherein each of the plurality of heating pans includes a corresponding heating element centrally disposed therein. A controller is disposed in the housing to control the amount and temporal distribution of power distributed to each heating element independently. Prongs extend from the housing to provide power to the controller. A volatile material holder is held within the housing and includes a plurality of reservoirs adapted to align with the corresponding plurality of heating pans, wherein each of the plurality of reservoirs includes a volatile material.
In a different aspect of the present invention, a fragrance dispenser comprises a housing and a plurality of heating pans disposed in the housing, wherein each of the plurality of heating pans includes a corresponding heating element centrally disposed therein. A controller is disposed in the housing to control the amount and temporal distribution of power distributed to each heating element independently. Prongs extend from the housing to provide power to the controller. A volatile material holder is held within the housing and includes a plurality of reservoirs adapted to align with the corresponding plurality of heating pans, wherein each of the plurality of reservoirs includes a volatile material. A mode selector switch is disposed on the housing, wherein the amount and temporal distribution of power distributed by the controller to each heating element is at least partly determined by a setting of the mode selector switch.
In yet another aspect of the present invention, a fragrance dispenser comprises a housing and a plurality of heating pans disposed in the housing, wherein each of the plurality of heating pans includes a corresponding heating element centrally disposed therein. A controller is disposed in the housing to control the amount and temporal distribution of power distributed to each heating element independently. Prongs extend from the housing to provide power to the controller. A volatile material holder is held within the housing and includes a plurality of reservoirs adapted to align with the corresponding plurality of heating pans, wherein each of the plurality of reservoirs includes a volatile material. A mode selector switch is disposed on the housing, wherein the amount and temporal distribution of power distributed by the controller to each heating element is at least partly determined by a setting of the mode selector switch. A light source is disposed proximate to each heating pan, wherein the light source is activated with a brightness that is proportional to the amount of the power provided to each corresponding heating element.
Other aspects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description, wherein similar structures have similar reference numerals.
Referring to
Referring to
Angled recesses 72 disposed in a front surface 74 of the base portion 52, 52a receive angled teeth 76 (see
Referring to
The base portion 52, 52a may also include one or more sensors 82, for example, a light sensor, a sound sensor, or a gas sensor. The one or more sensors 82 may be disposed on any region of the base portion 52, 52a, for example, within one of the heating pans 64 such that light reaching the one or more sensors 82 must pass through the corresponding individual reservoir 60 when the volatile material holder 58 is held within the housing 56, 56a. Each such sensor 82 is in electrical communication with the controller 70 and may provide an input signal to the controller 70 that the controller 70 uses to determine the amount and temporal distribution of power distributed to each heating element 66. Further, the one or more light sources 80 may have various sizes, shapes, and colors and may be configured to change color and/or intensity based on a triggering event detected by the one or more sensors 82, for example, an elapsed time period, or an environmental light level change. Each sensor 82 may provide an input signal to the controller 70 that the controller 70 uses in conjunction with the amount of the power provided to each heating element 66 to determine the brightness and/or color of each corresponding light source 80. Such controlling input from the sensor 82 may, for example, result in each light source 80 being illuminated with a greater brightness when the sensor 82 is exposed to a brighter environment, and each light source being illuminated with a lesser brightness when the sensor 82 is exposed to a more dimly lit environment. In another embodiment, one or more of the light sources 80, or another light source (not shown), may be illuminated as a night light that is on only when the sensor 82 is exposed to a dimly lit or dark environment.
A quantity of ambient light or light from one or more of the light sources 80 may be transmitted through the volatile material 62 in the reservoirs 60, and as the reservoirs 60 empty of the volatile material 62 therein, the quantity of transmitted light may increase. In another embodiment, an optical sensor may be utilized to determine the fill level of one or more of the reservoirs 60 based on the quantity of transmitted light reaching the sensor and to send an input to the controller 70 to illuminate one of the light sources 80, or another light source (not shown), to indicate that the volatile material holder 58 is empty and should be replaced. In a further example, a gas sensor sensitive to the fragrance being dispensed may be utilized to determine the fill level of one or more of the reservoirs by sending an input signal to the controller 70 in response to a sensed intensity of fragrance. In one embodiment, insertion of the volatile material holder 58 into the housing 56, 56a triggers the sensor 82, for example, a light sensor disposed on a region of the base portion 52, 52a and oriented to receive light transmitted through one of the reservoirs 60, or engages a switch (not shown) internal to the housing 56, 56a. The sensor 82 in response to a change in transmitted light, or the switch upon being engaged, may in conjunction with the controller 70 start timer circuitry within the controller to count down a predetermined time period, for example, 250 hours, at the conclusion of which one or more of the light sources 80, or another light source (not shown), is illuminated to indicate that the volatile material holder 58 is empty and should be replaced.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The permeable membrane 96 is illustrated in
During a non-use state of the volatile material holder 58, the impermeable laminate 98 substantially inhibits diffusion of the volatile material 62 through the permeable membrane 96. During an in use state, the impermeable laminate 98 is removed from the volatile material holder 58. A user removes the impermeable laminate 98 by grasping an end thereof and peeling it off the volatile material holder 58. A tab, extension, or other means for grasping (not shown) may be included as an extension of the impermeable laminate 98 to aid in removal of same. The extension (not shown) is preferably provided at a corner of the impermeable laminate 98, but may extend from any portion thereof.
Removal of the impermeable laminate 98 from the volatile material holder 58 allows for the volatile material 62 to be dispersed into the atmosphere through the permeable membrane 96. In one embodiment, the permeable membrane 96 has an approximately constant permeability with temperature. In another embodiment, the permeable membrane 96 has a permeability that may vary with temperature. For example, the permeable membrane 96 may be approximately impermeable to the volatile material 62 at ambient temperature but may become substantially permeable to the volatile material 62 at a predetermined elevated temperature above ambient. This predetermined elevated temperature may be reached by heat input from the heating elements 66.
In use, as best illustrated by
The surface 68 of each heating element 66 may make contact with a bottom surface 102 of each independent reservoir 60, as shown in
Each of the independent reservoirs 60 is heated by independent application of power via the controller 70 to each of the heating elements 66 to accelerate diffusion of the volatile material 62 into the atmosphere. The heating elements 66 are thermally isolated from one another by a wall 100 therebetween. Thermal isolation between the heating elements 66 helps to minimize thermal cross-talk between the heating pans 64, which allows more precise independent control of the volatilization of the volatile material 62 from each of the independent reservoirs 60.
To further minimize cross-talk between the heating pans 64, independent ventilation passages may be provided through the base 52, 52a for each of the heating pans 64. For example, a plurality of ventilation holes 101, as illustrated in
Alternatively, a series of ventilation slots 101a may be disposed through bottom and top edges of the base portion 52, 52a, as illustrated in
It is contemplated that another embodiment may include a single heating element (not shown) that may be moved with respect to multiple independent and thermally isolated reservoirs (not shown). This may be accomplished by moving the single heating element with respect to fixed reservoirs, moving one or more of the reservoirs with respect to a fixed single heating element, or some combination of motion of the single heating element and the reservoirs.
Referring to
Another embodiment of a volatile material dispensing system 150, as shown in
In the present embodiment the base portion 152 includes three light sources 180, each disposed proximate to a corresponding heating pan 164. The modular cover portion 154 includes three lighting orifices 186 and a central opening 190 that may be partially occluded by multiple decorative features 192, for example, two flower patterns as illustrated in
Any of the embodiments described hereinabove may be operated in any one or all of several modes of operation. Each mode of operation is defined by a temporal relationship of application of power to the plurality of heating elements. The several modes of operation may be broadly classified into three general classes of sequential, concurrent, and mixed. It is contemplated that in addition to the possible modes of operation described hereinabove, the profile of power applied to each of the plurality of heating elements 66, 166 may be varied as a function of time. For example, the controller may distribute power to a heating element as an approximate step function, a ramp-up or ramp-down that is approximately linear with time, an approximate exponential function that asymptotically approaches a maximum or minimum value, or some other relationship. Alternatively, the controller 70 may distribute power to a heating element using a pulse width modulation scheme of repeated short bursts as is known in the art. The pulse width modulation scheme may be overlaid on any of the above-mentioned power profiles. During operation, each of the plurality of heating elements 66, 166 may have a different profile of power applied thereto. In addition, during operation within any of the above-described modes of operation, one or all of the plurality of heating elements may have profiles of power application that change from one cycle of the mode of operation to the next cycle of the mode of operation.
Any of the embodiments described herein may be modified to include any of the structures or methodologies disclosed in connection with different embodiments. Further, the present disclosure is not limited to volatile material dispensing systems of the type specifically shown. For example, the base portion 52, 52a and the cover portion 54, 54a may have any regular or irregular polygonal shape as desired including rectangular as illustrated hereinabove, trapezoidal, pentagonal, hexagonal, heptagonal, octagonal or may have any number of sides or a smooth continuous edge in the form of a circle, an ellipse, a snowman, a letter or word, a logo, a pattern, or any combination of curvilinear and straight edges. The cartridges may have rectangular reservoirs as illustrated hereinabove, or may have reservoirs having any polygonal shape as can be accommodated by the cartridge. For example, several possible reservoir configurations are illustrated in
A fragrance dispenser including multiple volatile fragrances supplied in a single volatile material holder is presented. The fragrance dispenser includes independently controllable heating elements to provide heat to each volatile fragrance. A mode selector switch and input from one or more sensors may be used to determine a mode of operation of the multiple heating elements of the fragrance dispenser. Several modes of operation are possible as well as several underlying temporal profiles for the application of power to each individual heating element.
Numerous modifications to the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art in view of the foregoing description. Accordingly, this description is to be construed as illustrative only and is presented for the purpose of enabling those skilled in the art to make and use the invention and to teach the best mode of carrying out same. The exclusive rights to all modifications which come within the scope of the appended claims are reserved.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100178042 A1 | Jul 2010 | US |