1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is broadly concerned with clothing items such as footwear and apparel which can be inductively heated for cold weather use. More particularly, the invention is concerned with such clothing items and methods of use thereof wherein the items include an induction heatable element which is heated when subjected to an alternating magnetic field. The invention also pertains to assemblies including such heatable clothing along with an induction heater designed to heat the elements of the clothing. In preferred forms, the clothing items include a device serving to limit the maximum temperature of the heatable elements, and closed loop, wireless temperature feedback allowing temperature control and maintenance.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Heated clothing such as footwear or apparel has a number of advantages, particularly for those who work outside in cold climates or for those engaged in cold-weather sports such as skiing. Such heated clothing can improve physical performance, minimize cold-related discomfort, and can provide a degree of safety during prolonged winter time exposure.
Many methods for heating clothing have been proposed in the past. The two most common techniques utilized either battery power or chemical energy. Battery powered heatable clothing items include relatively heavy batteries and associated resistance heating circuitry. Such systems can be a problem because the circuit wiring may be broken during extended use and can be difficult to launder. Moreover, the batteries tend to be bulky and are often placed in awkward positions, such as on the wrist for heated gloves. Chemical energy systems use chemical packs that heat when exposed to oxygen. The user places these packs inside pockets of apparel or, in the case of footwear, as inserts placed adjacent the soles of the footwear. These heating packs do not perform well where airflow is restricted, such as in footwear applications. Further, these packs are designed for single use only, which significantly increases costs and creates waste disposal problems.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,956,866 and 5,140,131 describe battery/resistance heating systems in footwear and other clothing items. Similarly, U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,620,621 and 5,977,517 describe battery powered heatable apparel. The '621 patent specifically discloses battery-warmed gloves requiring a battery on each glove. The '517 patent employs heatable panels placed inside a vest, and powered by a battery. U.S. Pat. No. 6,148,545 uses an external heater applied to footwear. This patent also suggests use of phase change material to store heat produced by the external device. This system does not permit reheating while the footwear is worn, and requires long warming times owing to restricted heat transfer over small surface areas. All of these systems suffer from the problems of excess weight, lack of durability and cleanability issues.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,701,639 describes a removable shoe insole heated by an exothermic chemical reaction. In this system, the user must remove the footwear and the associated insole in order to insert the heating source. Again, this type of heating is deficient in that the heating elements are of single use design and must be periodically replaced by the user.
There is accordingly a need in the art for improved heatable clothing which does not add significant weight or complexity to the clothing, which can be readily reheated without removal of the clothing, and which provides closed loop temperature feedback control during heating.
The present invention overcomes the problems outlined above and provides improved induction-heatable clothing items (e.g., footwear and apparel), as well as clothing assemblies including such clothing items and associated induction heaters. Broadly speaking, the clothing items of the invention include a clothing body with an induction heatable element operably associated with the body. The element is operable to be heated when subjected to an alternating magnetic field so as to provide warmth to a wearer of the clothing item. In order to prevent undue heating which may be dangerous, the clothing item is preferably provided with a device operably coupled with the heating element in order to limit the maximum temperature thereof during the course of heating. The clothing assemblies further have an induction heater configured for placement in proximity to the heating element and operable to generate an alternating magnetic field for induction heating purposes. In use, a clothing item is placed on or near the induction heater and the latter is operated to heat the element, and thus the clothing item, to a desired extent.
The heatable elements of the clothing items can take a number of forms. For example, susceptor coils can be placed on or embedded within a particular item of clothing. Alternately, thin sheets of metallic material could be used in this context. Another possibility is the use of a susceptible material such as graphite embedded within a synthetic resin matrix. If desired, the clothing item may also include heat-retentive phase change material to serve as a heat sink.
Normally, the clothing items include a temperature sensor associated with the heating element, as well as a thermal switch or fuse which limits the maximum temperature of the element during heating. In particularly preferred forms, wireless closed-loop temperature feedback control is also provided. For example, the clothing item may include an RFID tag operably coupled with the temperature sensor. In such an embodiment the induction heater is equipped with an RFID antenna and controller allowing the heater to interrogate the RFID tag and receive temperature information derived from the sensor. Such information is then used to at least in part control the operation of the induction heater. In this fashion, the heatable element can be continuously heated within a range of desired temperatures. RFID temperature feedback control is described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,320,169 and 6,953,919, incorporated by reference herein. In other embodiments, microwire temperature sensors are used with the clothing items and the induction heater includes a microwire reader, as disclosed in U.S. Patent Publication 2007/0263699, incorporated by reference herein. Similarly, the temperature control method disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/496,683 (incorporated by reference herein) may be used. An impedance detection temperature feedback system may also be employed, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,232,585, incorporated by reference herein.
In another embodiment, a battery powered, resistance-heated clothing item may be improved by providing an inductively powered battery charging assembly with the clothing item. Such a charging assembly includes an induction coil operably coupled with the battery and operable to generate a charging current when subjected to an alternating magnetic field.
The present invention can be used with virtually all types of clothing items worn by humans or animals. For example, clothing items selected from the group consisting of footwear, stockings, gloves, hats, trousers, shirts, jackets, and coats can all be improved using the principles of the invention.
Turning now to the drawings, an induction footwear assembly 20 is illustrated in
The shoe 22 in
The body 34 may also include heat retentive phase change material blended into the polymer matrix, such as microencapsulated paraffin. The element 36 may be in sheet form of graphite or an appropriate ferromagnetic metal or as graphite blended into the body 34. Preferably, however, the element 36 is of the type illustrated in
The element 36 further includes an RFID tag 58 in the heel area of the sheet 38, and a temperature sensor 60 positioned in the forward central area of the sheet 38. Appropriate connection wires or etched copper traces 62 serve to interconnect sensor 60 and RFID tag 58. Additionally, either the separate, complete RFID tag assembly and/or temperature sensor or the components comprising the same (e.g. integrated circuit, antenna traces, temperature sensor) may be directly attached to the sheet 38.
The induction heater 26 comprises a rectifier 64 coupled with an alternating current source 66 in order to convert the alternating current to direct current. The rectifier 64 is coupled to a solid state inverter 68 in order to convert the direct current into ultrasonic frequency current (preferably from about 20-100 kHz). The inverter 68 is coupled to an induction work coil 70 for powering the latter. A microprocessor-based control circuit 72 also forms a part of the heater 26 and has a microprocessor 74 operably coupled with a controlling the inverter 68. The circuitry 72 may also control other of the heater's internal and user-interface functions. The control circuitry 72 also includes a circuit parameter sensor 76 coupled with microprocessor 74 to measure a parameter related to or depending upon the load experienced by the heater 26 during use; in practice, this may be a current sensor within inverter 68 which measures current through one of the inverter's switching transistors or may be a current sensor located at some point prior to the rectifier 64 that measures current through the current-carrying line connecting the commercial power source 66 to the rectifier 64. The heater 26 is equipped with a support plate 78 that is located above work coil 70 and is designed to support shoe 22 as illustrated.
The heater 26 is also equipped with an RFID reader/writer 80 connected with microprocessor 74; this connection preferably allows RS-232 protocol communications. The preferred reader/writer 80 is Tagsys' Medio P031. This unit has a serial TTL communication protocol and can transmit data at up to 9600 baud. A RFID antenna 82 is operatively coupled with reader/writer 80 via appropriate cabling, and is located beneath the RFID tag 58 of insert 24. The preferred antenna 82 is commercialized by Tagsys, Inc. The heater 26 may also include a real-time clock and backup power supply (not shown). The microprocessor 74 may also include reprogrammable memory allowing a user to modify the software control algorithms for the heater 26.
In use, the user places shoe 22 on heater 26 as illustrated
Of course once insert 24 is heated to the desired temperature, the shoe 22 will provide prolonged warmth to the wearer. This long lasting warmth is present after removal from the induction heater due to the heat retentive phase change material within the body 34.
The embodiment of
Other modifications can be made to the induction heater 26 or mat 84. For example, mechanical stops may be affixed to the heater or mat so as to align the shoes 22 in optimal positions for maximum energy transfer between the work coils 70 and 90, 92 and the associated susceptor coils of the inserts 24. In addition, the heater 26 or mat 84 may be designed so that no heating will occur unless the shoes 22 are in an optimal heating location. Thus, energy transfer would not be allowed to occur unless and until there was a successful reading of the RFID tags of the heating elements 36, where the alignment of an RFID tag directly over an RFID antenna (and thus alignment of the susceptor coil with the work coil of the induction heater) is required for a successful reading. Power monitoring may also be employed to determine that the shoes 22 were properly positioned over the associated work coils. The determination of low energy transfer could be employed to give the user a visual or aural prompt to move the shoes 22 to a more optimal charging position.
The susceptor coil heating elements 36 can also be modified in a number of ways. Exemplary embodiments are illustrated in FIGS. 4 and 6-7, which are similar to the
Finally,
In many magnetic induction heating devices, the impedance that the external load presents to the resonant circuit is indirectly detected by measuring the amplitude of the resonance current flowing through the work coil or through the AC line coming in from the commercial power supply to the inverter. A variety of resonant circuit parameters may be used for such detection. Regardless of the exact circuit parameter measured, every no-load detection system ultimately reacts to a threshold value of load impedance, below which the continuous magnetic field production is interrupted. In this technique, a heating element is magnetically coupled to the work coil and provides an impedance to the heater's resonant circuit that changes in a predictable, controlled fashion such that the amplitude of the resonant current (or current flowing to the rectifier) consistently moves through the threshold resonant current value (or current value of the load at the same temperature). When this occurs, the heater's no-load detector de-energizes the work coil, thereby eliminating field production and thus interrupting the joule heat of the heating element at the temperature corresponding to the threshold value of resonant current amplitude (or threshold value of current flowing to the rectifier).
A still further type of heating element 116 is illustrated in
Specifically, the sensor 120 comprises at least one, and in this embodiment three, magnetically susceptible microwires 122 supported on a heat-resistive synthetic resin substrate 124. The microwires 122 have a characteristic re-magnetization response under the influence of an applied alternating magnetic field in the form of at least one short, detectible pulse of magnetic field perturbation of defined short duration and which is different below and above at least one set point temperature, and is preferentially detectibly different over a small range of temperatures below the set point temperature. The set point temperature of each microwire 122 is preferably the Curie temperature thereof, or a temperature close (usually within about 25° C.) of the Curie temperature. When an alternating magnetic field is applied to the sensor 120 of sufficient magnitude to cause the desired re-magnetization response, the sensor 120 operates in the manner of a “temperature switch.” That is, when the heating element 116 is below the set point temperature of the sensor 120, a re-magnetization response from the sensor 120 is observed; when the element 116 reaches or exceeds maximum set point temperature of the sensor 120 either no re-magnetization is observed, or the observed response is altered. This information is then used to control the induction heating of element 116.
Normally, and as shown in
In order to most effectively make use of the microwire temperature sensor 120, use is made of a detector correlated with the sensor elements. Such a detector generally has a device for generating an alternating magnetic field of sufficient magnitude to interrogate the sensor elements (i.e., to cause re-magnetization responses of the sensor elements based upon the temperature of the object), and a device for detecting such responses. In practice, the detector has a magnetic field generator coil and a field receiving coil both coupled with a signal processing unit. In use, the detector generates the requisite alternating magnetic field, and the field receiving coil detects the re-magnetization responses of the sensor elements, issuing output signals to the signal processing unit. The signal processing unit, preferably in the form of a microprocessor, employs a decoding algorithm which allows determination of the object temperature. In preferred forms, the decoding algorithm comprises one or more look-up tables correlating the re-magnetization responses of the sensor elements with object temperature. In the context of heater 26, the described microwire detector should be employed in lieu of the RFID reader/writer 80.
The magnetically susceptible microwires 122 are advantageously formed as metallic bodies in an amorphous or nanocrystalline state. Such metallic bodies are preferably in the form of very thin elongated wires or strips having a maximum cross-sectional dimension (e.g., diameter) of up to about 100 nm and can be produced in a variety of manners. One particularly suitable form of the metallic bodies is the microwire form, comprising an inner metallic core and an optional outer glass coating. Such microwires can be produced by the well-known Taylor method or as water-cast amorphous bodies.
The invention has been described above in connection with induction heating of footwear. However, the invention is not limited to footwear, but is applicable to virtually any type of clothing item. Thus,
In order to heat glove 160, the glove is located adjacent a magnetic induction heater with the work coil thereof proximal to the primary coil section 166. When the heater is actuated, the alternating magnetic field will induce a heating current in the susceptor coil 164. Again, this current will flow completely through the coil 164, including the primary section 166 and secondary section 168, with consequent joule heating of the entire glove 160. Preferably, the glove 160 has heat retentive phase change material therein so that thermal energy is released over time to warm the hand of the wearer.
The battery charging assembly 176 includes a circular susceptor coil 186 having an inner end 188 coupled to switch 182 via lead 190, and an outer end 192 coupled to battery lead 183a. The coil 186 has a tuning capacitor 194 as shown. A wireless battery charge status sensor 196 (e.g., an RFID tag or microwire sensor) is operably connected to leads 183a and 190, and to switch 182.
When the battery 180 needs recharging as indicated by sensor 196, the glove 172 is placed adjacent an appropriately configured induction heating device, and switch 182 is moved to the charging position, either manually or automatically, creating a complete circuit through coil 186, lead 183a, battery 180, lead 183b, switch 182, and lead 190. Upon activation of the heating device, operating data is retrieved from the sensor 196, such as type of object, maximum recharge time, optimum operating voltage, and maximum power transfer. The heating device, which in this instance serves as a re-charging device, will then use such retrieved parameters to control the field strength of the alternating magnetic field to create an appropriate recharge condition for the battery 180. This is achieved by periodically monitoring the sensor 196 to determine the charge state of the battery 180. Battery charging occurs owing to the flow of current generated in coil 186 and flowing through battery 180. Normally, the battery 180 or the sensor 196 would include circuitry for active termination of charging when the recharge cycle is complete. The induction heater would then detect a drop in the output energy so as to wirelessly detect the completion of the charge cycle, and at this point the work coil of the heater would be de-energized.
Like glove 160, glove 172 also preferably includes heat retentive phase change material in the body of the glove, which is heated during charging of battery 180. Thus, the glove 172 provides sustained warming as it is worn. Additionally, the inclusion of a manual switch 182 allows for on-demand warming.
This application claims the benefit of Application Ser. No. 60/901,703, filed Feb. 16, 2007, and this application is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
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