The present invention generally relates to water detection and alarm activation in safety showers, eyewash units, and the like. More specifically, the present invention relates to a water detection sensor integrated into an emergency safety shower head and/or an emergency eyewash unit, for detecting the presence of water therein and, thereafter, activating an alarm when water is present.
Water flow detection systems and related alarm activation systems that activate in the presence of water flow are generally known in the art. In particular, water flow detection systems and related alarm activation systems are also well known in the art of emergency safety showers and emergency eyewash units. Although, water flow activation is typically detected by some sort of flow switch (e.g., a mechanical, thermal, magnetic, or pressure-differential) placed in the water supply pipe, and before the water reaches the emergency safety shower dispense outlet or the eyewash unit. When the emergency safety shower and/or the emergency eyewash unit are off, water in the supply pipe is stationary or otherwise cut-off (i.e., a “no flow” condition). When the emergency safety shower and/or the emergency eyewash unit are activated, water in the supply pipe starts to move. Known sensors detect movement of water through the supply pipe, and before the water reaches the emergency safety shower dispense outlet or emergency eyewash unit. Sensed water flowing through the supply pipe may cause activation of an audible or visual alarm, thereby notifying those nearby of the emergency; or at least that water is flowing through the supply pipe.
Another known water flow detection system utilizes a proximity switch that detects movement of a valve or joint (e.g., a ball valve), which may be used to open water flow to the emergency safety shower or the emergency eyewash unit. For example, when the handle of the ball valve is initially in the closed or “no-flow” position, the handle may position a proximity sensor a sufficient distance away from a detector so the water flow detection system identifies the current “no flow” or closed state. Although, when the handle is rotated, thereby turning the emergency safety shower or the emergency eyewash unit to an “on” or “flow” condition, the corresponding proximity sensor may also be repositioned into contact with or an identifiable distance from a reader—sensing the proximity sensor allows the system to identify an “on” or “flow” condition. Accordingly, the water flow detection system may trigger an alarm or other audio or visual notification that the emergency safety shower head and/or the emergency eyewash unit have been activated and are dispensing water.
While these systems may be adequate for water flow detection within a supply pipe, such as one that feeds an emergency safety shower or an emergency eyewash unit, such systems do have drawbacks. For instance, systems that incorporate a flow switch or proximity sensor to sense water movement within a supply pipe, or otherwise rely on detection of valve or joint movement, tend to be relatively expensive and are difficult to quickly and easily retrofit into existing emergency safety shower heads and/or emergency eyewash units. In this respect, retrofit installation oftentimes requires difficult disassembly of the emergency safety shower and/or emergency eyewash components to access the inside of the supply pipe, where the mechanical, thermal, magnetic, or pressure-differential can be positioned to detect water flow through the supply pipe. The same is true with proximity sensors, namely the valve or joint must be disassembled and a proximity sensor placed therein with enough precision and clearance such that movement of the valve or joint positions the proximity sensor close enough to a reader to trip an alarm indicating the valve or joint has been moved from an “off” or “no flow” condition to an “on” or “flow” condition. This may undesirably require modification of the operational components of the valve or joint. Installation costs can also rise in the event the supply pipe or valve or joint are not readily accessible (e.g., hidden behind a wall unit or difficult to reach and disassemble). As such, the complexity of retrofitting the supply pipe or valve or joint of the emergency safety shower or emergency eyewash unit can be time consuming, thereby undesirably increasing the cost of installation on top of the added component cost. Moreover, once the flow switch or proximity sensor has been installed, the emergency safety shower or emergency eyewash unit must be reassembled, which may require additional undesired work or repair, depending on the location and accessibility of the supply pipe and/or the valve or joint. As such, it may be cost prohibitive to retrofit existing equipment. Such water detection systems can also trigger false alarms as a result of freeze or scald protection valves—these are typically considered “nuisance alarms” since an emergency condition does not actually exist.
There exists, therefore, a significant need for an emergency safety shower head and/or eyewash unit with an integrated water detection sensor that can be easily retrofitted into existing emergency safety shower heads and/or eyewash units such as by way of integration of the water detection sensor into the dispense outlet of the emergency safety shower head and/or the emergency eyewash unit. The present invention fulfills these needs and provides further related advantages.
In one embodiment, an integrated fluid detection sensor as disclosed herein may include a fluid conduit having a central channel for passage of fluid therethrough. The fluid conduit may be an existing fluid conduit formed as part of an emergency wash unit, such as an emergency shower or eyewash unit. Alternatively, the fluid conduit may be a separate unit that may be selectively coupled to the emergency wash unit, such as by threaded engagement. Moreover, a bore in a sidewall of the fluid conduit may provide external accessibility to the central channel. Here, a fluid sensor may extend into the central channel through the bore for placement therein by at least one guide wire. The fluid sensor is designed to identify the presence or absence of fluid within the central channel, to determine whether fluid (e.g., water) is flowing through the central channel. In this respect, fluid flow may signal that the emergency wash unit has been activated. Accordingly, a controller in communication with the fluid sensor may identify a first nonuse state when the fluid sensor identifies the absence of fluid within the central channel (i.e., a no flow state) and a second use state when the fluid sensor identifies the presence of fluid within the central channel. Here, an alarm in communication with the controller may be responsive to an activation signal generated by the controller when the fluid detection sensor identifies the second use state.
Additionally, the fluid sensor may include a pair of electrodes that extend into the central channel by a respective pair of guide wires. Here, the pair of electrodes may include an anode and a cathode that are able to conduct electricity therebetween in the presence of a fluid medium, thereby identifying that the emergency wash system is in a second use state (i.e., fluid flowing therethrough). In one aspect of this embodiment, the anode and the cathode may terminate at approximately the same height within the central channel. Alternatively or in addition to, the anode and the cathode may couple to an interior surface of the central channel in non-conductive relation in the absence of a fluid medium and in conductive relation in the presence of the fluid medium.
The fluid conduit may include an inlet and a relatively smaller outlet. As such, the inlet may have a relatively higher fluid volume capacity than the relatively smaller outlet such that the activation of the emergency wash unit may cause inflow of pressurized water that generally relatively quickly fills the central passage, thereby allowing the fluid sensor to detect fluid therein and indicate to the controller the second use state. The inlet may selectively removably couple to a feed pipe in fluid communication with a pressurized fluid source, when fluid flows therethrough in the second use state, and the outlet may selectively removably couple to a safety shower head by way of snap-fit engagement therewith. A housing may enclose the controller and at least fluidly seal to a mount in the sidewall of the fluid conduit and over or otherwise generally circumscribing relationship relative to the bore, which may be located downstream of an activation valve. In this embodiment, the at least one guide wire may be hermetically sealed within the bore and the mount may include a square mount forged as part of the fluid conduit.
In another aspect of the embodiments disclosed herein, the integrated water detection sensor may be interchangeable with an emergency shower head, an emergency eyewash dispenser, or inline within a feed pipe. The controller may be positioned locally within the housing or remotely and in wireless communication with the fluid sensor. In this respect, the controller may be in hardwire or wireless communication with the fluid sensor. Moreover, the alarm may include an audible alarm or a visual alarm.
In another aspect of these embodiments, the fluid sensor may include a mechanical switch (e.g., a flow sensor), a magnetic flow switch, a thermal flow switch, or the combination of an optical transmitter and an optical receiver disposed within the central channel. More specifically, the optical transmitter may be located on one side of the central conduit and generally in alignment with the optical receiver on an opposite side thereof. Here, the presence of fluid in the central channel may interrupt conveyance of a beam from the optical transmitter to the optical receiver thereby allowing the sensor to identify the presence of fluid such that the emergency wash system is in the second use state.
In another embodiment as disclosed herein, an integrated fluid detection sensor retrofit system for an emergency wash system may include a housing having a size and shape hermetically sealable to a fluid conduit, a controller associated within the housing, and a fluid sensor at least partially enclosed within the housing and in communication with the controller. The fluid sensor may be extendable from the housing into a central channel of the fluid conduit for identifying the absence of fluid therein when the emergency wash system is in a first nonuse state and detecting the presence of fluid therein when the emergency wash system is in a second use state. Accordingly, an alarm may be associated with the controller and responsive to an activation signal generated by the controller when the emergency wash system is in the second use state.
In these embodiments, the emergency wash system may include an emergency shower or an emergency eyewash unit and the integrated fluid detection sensor retrofit system may be installable to the emergency wash system without disassembly. The fluid sensor may include an anode and a cathode extending into the central channel by a respective pair of guide wires. Here, the anode and the cathode may conduct electricity therebetween in the presence of fluid. Additionally, the housing may enclose the controller, the alarm, and at least partially enclose the fluid sensor. Here, each of the alarm and the fluid sensor may be in hardwired or wireless communication with the controller for relaying sensing information and/or activating/deactivating the alarm, depending whether the sensor detects fluid within the central channel. The housing may be of a size and shape for selectively removably coupling to a mount forged as part of the fluid conduit and generally circumscribing a bore therein located downstream of an activation valve in the emergency wash system.
In another aspect of these embodiments, the alarm may include an audible alarm or a visual alarm and the fluid sensor may include at least one guide wire hermetically sealed within the bore. More specifically, the fluid sensor may include a flow sensor, a magnetic flow switch, a thermal flow switch, or the combination of an optical transmitter and an optical receiver disposed within the central channel. In this embodiment, the optical transmitter may be located on one side of the central conduit and generally in alignment with the optical receiver on an opposite side thereof, whereby the presence of fluid in the central channel interrupts conveyance of a beam from the optical transmitter to the optical receiver thereby identifying the presence of fluid in the second use state.
In another embodiment as disclosed herein, an integrated fluid detection sensor interchangeable with an emergency shower head or an emergency eyewash dispenser may include a fluid conduit having an inlet and an outlet with a central channel therebetween for passage of fluid therethrough. Here, the inlet may have a relatively higher fluid volume capacity than the relatively smaller outlet to help ensure that the fluid conduit fills with pressurized fluid during use. A hermetically sealable bore in a sidewall of the fluid conduit may provide external accessibility to the central channel, such as to allow a fluid sensor to extend into the central channel through the bore for placement therein. The fluid sensor may include probes for identifying the presence or absence of fluid, to determine if the emergency shower head or the emergency eyewash are in an activated state. In this respect, a controller in hardwire or wireless communication with the fluid sensor may identify a first nonuse state when the fluid sensor identifies the absence of fluid within the central channel and may identify a second use state when the fluid sensor detects the presence of fluid within the central channel. Accordingly, an alarm in communication with the controller may be responsive to an activation signal generated by the controller when the fluid detection sensor identifies the second use state. A housing may enclose the controller and at least fluidly seal to a mount in the sidewall of the fluid conduit and generally circumscribe the bore.
In another aspect of this embodiment, the fluid sensor may include a pair of electrodes extending into the central channel by a respective pair of guide wires. Here, the pair of electrodes may include an anode and a cathode that couple to an interior surface of the central channel in non-conductive relation in the absence of a fluid medium and couple in conductive relation in the presence of the fluid medium. The anode and the cathode may terminate within the central channel at approximately the same height.
Additionally, the inlet may selectively removably couple to a feed pipe in fluid communication with a pressurized mains water supply when in the second use state and the outlet may selectively removably couple to a safety shower head by way of snap-fit engagement therewith. In one embodiment, the bore may be located downstream of an activation valve coupled to the pressurized mains water supply. The aforementioned mount may include a square mount forged as part of the fluid conduit. The fluid sensor may alternatively include a mechanical switch, a magnetic flow switch, a thermal flow switch, or the combination of an optical transmitter and an optical receiver disposed within the central channel. The controller may also be positioned locally within the housing or remotely and in wireless communication with the fluid sensor. In one embodiment, the optical transmitter may be located on one side of the central conduit and generally in alignment with the optical receiver on an opposite side thereof. The presence of fluid in the central channel may interrupt conveyance of a beam from the optical transmitter to the optical receiver, thereby identifying the presence of fluid in the second use state.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following more detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, which illustrate, by way of example, the principles of the invention.
The accompanying drawings illustrate the invention. In such drawings:
As shown in the exemplary drawings for purposes of illustration, one embodiment for a water detection sensor as disclosed herein is generally referred to by reference numeral 10 in
More specifically with respect to
At least initially, the central fluid conduit 30 is empty, i.e., the emergency safety shower head 12 is in an “off” or “no flow” condition, as shown in
Of course, the central fluid conduit 30 does not necessarily need to backfill (or be completely full), only that enough water must pass therethrough to enable an electrical connection between the anode 44 and the cathode 46 therein. The wire 54 may electrically couple to the water conductivity circuit 38 within the water-proof housing 36 by way of a junction box 62 or the like attached thereto, as shown best in
Additionally, in another aspect of this embodiment, the water-proof housing 36 may be configured for retrofit attachment to a conventional dispense outlet (not shown). In this embodiment, a relatively small wire conduit may be drilled or bored into the outer surface of the conventional dispense outlet and threaded with the guidewires 40, 42. Once threaded, the bore may be soldered shut or otherwise hermetically sealed so that the anode 44 and the cathode 46 reside within the interior of the conventional dispense outlet and electrically couple to the externally placed water conductivity circuit. This embodiment operates similar to the dispense outlet 16 described above, namely the anode 44 and the cathode 46 are able to conduct electricity therebetween thereby completing an electrical circuit when the conventional dispense outlet receives or fills with water. As such, this triggers a relay in the water conductivity circuit 38 that the conventional dispense outlet is filled with or otherwise dispensing water. Such a condition may be relayed to the aforementioned controller 56 for sounding the audio alarm 58 or activating the visual alarm 60.
The emergency eyewash unit 14 may be retrofitted with the water detection sensor 10 in a similar manner as the emergency safety shower head 12, as shown in more detail with respect to
In operation, water flows up into the water conduit 70 along directional arrow 74 (
In an alternative embodiment, the water detection sensor 10 could be provided as part of a combination emergency safety shower and emergency eyewash system, with a control box (e.g., comparable to the controller 56) to make a complete, self-contained alarm retrofit package. In this embodiment, the shower head and eyewash sensors 10′, 10″ (e.g., as shown in
Of course, the water detection sensor 10 could be one of several different types, not necessarily limited to a sensor with the pair of guidewires 40, 42 that extend into the interior of the water flow path thereby sensing water therein when the water acts as an electrical conduit coupling the anode 44 with the cathode 46. For example, in one alternative embodiment, the guidewires 40, 42 may terminate in an LED transmitter and a receiver. In this embodiment, the LED transmitter may be positioned at one side, e.g., of the central fluid conduit 30 (
Additionally, the water detection sensor 10 could be hardwired, as described above, wherein the water detection sensor 10 connects to a physical cable supplying a low-voltage power supply (not shown). In another alternative embodiment, the water detection sensor 10 may be wireless, such as including a built-in wireless transmitter powered by an internal battery or an external wired power source. In this embodiment, flow condition information (i.e., whether in the “on” or “flow” condition, or whether in the “off” or “no flow” condition) may be relayed wirelessly to the controller 56.
In an additional aspect of the embodiments disclosed herein, the water detection sensor 10 may interface directly with a safety monitoring system (e.g., communicating through a wired connection or wireless transmission), or the water detection sensor 10 may interface with a supplied control box (e.g., the controller 56) that functions as a stand-alone alarm system. The customer could also interface with the control box (i.e., the controller 56) directly.
Additionally, as shown in
The advantages of the embodiments disclosed herein are that integration of the water detection sensor 10 with the water conductivity circuit 38 is relatively inexpensive when compared to the cost of a flow switch or proximity switch in the supply pipe. The embodiments disclosed herein also place the point of detection downstream of the activation valve, thereby significantly reducing and preferably eliminating “nuisance” alarms caused by a flow switch. Additionally, the embodiments disclosed herein allow the customer to easily retrofit existing safety showers with activation sensors by simply replacing the shower head and/or eyewash. No other modifications to the emergency safety shower are required and the retrofit can be performed while the emergency shower head and emergency eyewash unit remain in service. Consequently, this eliminates the need for expensive flow switches or proximity switches, which allows the sensors to be easily retrofitted onto existing showers. The sensor probes can be molded directly into the shower head and the use of common electrical housing connectors provide water-tight protection for the electronics.
Although several embodiments have been described in detail for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not to be limited, except as by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62291435 | Feb 2016 | US |