1. Technical Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a medicine envelope feeder.
2. Description of the Related Art
As a conventional device for feeding medicine envelopes storing injection medicine such as injection medicine in ampules to a bucket, there has been disclosed, for example in Japanese unexamined patent application No. H11-152113, a device structured such that medicine envelopes storing injection medicine containers can be fed to storage chambers formed in a bucket via a belt conveyer that is provided in a rotatable manner.
However, in the conventional structure, each storage chamber in the bucket needs to be formed such that the medicine envelopes could be accommodated upright and easily in each storage chamber so as to prevent the injection medicine containers stored in the medicine envelopes from leaking. This significantly suppresses the quantity of medicine envelopes than can be accommodated, and necessitates the provision of a bucket whose shape is of specific type. Moreover, without the use of such a specific type of bucket, it is impossible to prevent injection medicine containers from leaking out of the medicine envelopes.
It is a primary object of the present invention to provide a medicine envelope feeder capable of feeding a sufficient quantity of medicine envelopes while preventing injection medicine containers from leaking out of the medicine envelopes even if the shape of a bucket is of a general type.
According to the present invention, as a means to solve the aforementioned problem, there is provided a medicine envelope feeder comprising:
a support member for supporting one face of a medicine envelope storing injection medicine containers excluding a tolerance for bending starting from an upper end opening part;
a vertically movable holding member composed of a guide part for guiding the other face of the medicine envelope at least in a specified range exceeding the tolerance for bending starting from the upper end opening part, and a pressing part which is vertically movable along the guide part and is lowered for folding and pressing the medicine envelope along the support member, wherein
at least a coefficient of friction of the pressing part is made larger than that of the support member so that only the medicine envelope can be raised while being held between the guide part and the pressing part when the holding member is raised.
With this construction, the medicine envelope can be positioned between the guide member and the guide part of the holding member, and the tolerance for bending of the medicine envelope can be bent and pressed by the pressing part. When the holding member is raised, the support member is dropped off due to the difference in a coefficient of friction, by which the medicine envelope is fed while being held between the guide part and the pressing part.
A part of the support member held between the guide part and the pressing part of the holding member should preferably be composed of a rotating piece that is rotatable about one end part.
According to this construction, the rotating piece gradually rotates as the holding member is raised, so that the friction force of the support member exerted on the medicine envelope is gradually reduced. This enables the holding member to hold and feed the medicine envelopes smoothly.
In the medicine envelope feeder, it is preferable that the support member is provided in a rotatable manner around a lower end part and comprises medicine envelope detection means for detecting that the medicine envelope is fed, driving means for rotary-driving the support member by the medicine envelope detection mean detecting the medicine envelope, and rotating position detecting means for detecting that the support member is rotated in a state that the medicine envelope is held between the support member and the guide part of the holding member, so that the medicine envelopes storing injection medicine containers can be automatically and smoothly moved to a feeding operation by the holding member.
The holding member should preferably be capable of moving in a horizontal direction, and comprise a rotatable contact piece which is brought into contact with one surface of the medicine envelope as the holding member moves in the horizontal direction when the held medicine envelope is fed to the bucket, so that a folded part of the medicine envelope can be positioned between the medicine envelopes, which have already been fed into the bucket, and the holding member, thereby preventing the injection containers from leaking.
The holding member should preferably comprise an inclined face which is provided on a lower end part of the guide part and is gradually inclined from the pressing part toward a lower side, so that by moving the pressing part along the inclined face of the guide part, the held medicine envelope can be inclined with a folded side facing down, and thereby allowing the medicine envelopes to be securely positioned sideways and housed horizontally in the bucket.
The holding member should preferably further comprise an elastic pressing piece for pressing an upper folded side of the medicine envelope after retaining the medicine envelope on a bottom surface of the bucket by the contact piece, which makes it possible to ensure prevention of the folded part of the medicine envelope in the bucket from opening.
According to the present invention, as a means to solve the aforementioned problem, there is provided a medicine envelope feeder comprising:
a support member for supporting one face of a medicine envelope storing injection excluding a tolerance for bending starting from an upper end opening part;
a vertically movable holding member composed of a pair of nip arms which are provided in a rotatable manner and have nip rollers at respective top ends for folding a tolerance for bending of the medicine envelope by one nip roller as the holding member is horizontally moved, and for holding the medicine envelope in a twofold state by lowering the both nip rollers so as to be positioned on both sides of the support member, wherein
at least a coefficient of friction of the nip rollers is made larger than that of the support member, so that only the medicine envelope can be raised while being held between the both nip rollers when the holding member is raised.
With this construction, it becomes possible to securely fold the opening part of the medicine envelope and hold and feed the medicine envelope despite of the simple constitution.
A rotating angle of the nip arms in the holding member should preferably be changeable according to conditions of the medicine envelope, which implements a smooth operation without opening the opening part when the medicine envelopes are fed and placed.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The support member 5 is composed of a support plate 9 which is made of stainless steel or the like with both lateral sides being folded at right angles, and is mounted in a rotatable manner so as to rotate about a spindle 9a on the lower end by driving of a rotating motor (not shown). As shown in
As shown in
It is to be noted that the bucket 4 can be conveyed by a conveyer device 28 as shown in
Next, the operation of the above-structured medicine envelope feeder 1 will be described with reference to the flowchart of
Once a power supply is turned on (step S1), an initial operation is executed. The initial operation consisting of designating a home position and then sitting in a specified position (step S2) on standby. More specifically, the support member 5 is positioned at a reception position for the medicine envelope 3 (chain double-dashed line in
Then, as shown in
After the lapse of a specified standby time (herein 1 sec.), the pressing arm 16 is lowered so that as shown in
Next, the holding member 6 is moved in a horizontal direction so as to be positioned above the bucket 4 (step S8), and the medicine envelope 3 is lowered until its lower end part reaches a discharge position located in the vicinity of the bottom surface of the bucket 4 as shown in
After that, the medicine envelope 3 is fed to the bucket 4 with the opening part being folded. Whenever the medicine envelope 3 is fed thereto, the movement position of the holding member 6 is gradually changed in conformity to preset position information. This enables the medicine envelopes 3 to be smoothly accommodated in sequence in the bucket 4 while the folded side is held without generating unnecessary spaces.
Although the holding member 6 is structured as shown in
Further, although the upper part of the medicine envelope 3 is simply folded in the aforementioned embodiment, it is also acceptable to partially apply adhesives or the like to the medicine envelope 3, or to thermally seal the medicine envelope 3 by heating a part of the guide plate 15 so as to maintain the folded state.
Further in the aforementioned embodiment, the medicine envelopes 3 are fed in the bucket 4 starting from the left side. However, if the envelopes 3 are accommodated therein starting from the right side, the folded part of the already accommodated medicine envelope 3 can be pressed in sequence by the part of a next medicine envelope 3 in which the injection medicine containers 2 are housed, which further stabilizes the accommodation state and makes it possible to reliably prevent the injection medicine containers 2 from leaking. Moreover, if the medicine envelope 3 is accommodated in this manner, the folded side will not protrude upward, thereby allowing smooth accommodation of the medicine envelopes 3 on the second level.
It is to be noted that the pressing part 53a of the pressing arm 53 should preferably be formed not only in a cylindrical shape but with circular grooves over the entire circumference at specified intervals in the axial direction. According to this construction, a pressure contact force, which is generated when the medicine envelope is held by the pressing part 53a, will be concentrated into a part other than the circular groove, while air in the medicine envelope can be released outside, which achieves a stabilized state.
Next, the operation of the above-structured medicine envelope feeder will be described. Since the operation until the holding member 41 receives the medicine envelope from the support member 5 is similar to that in the aforementioned first embodiment, only the operation of the holding member 41 is herein described based on the flowchart of
That is, the holding member 41 holding the medicine envelope is raised (step S21) and horizontally moved to the right side (step S22) before being lowered to a position shown in
A driven gear 68 that engages with the drive gear 66 is integrated with one end part of the shaft member 67. Moreover, a detection disk 70 having a detection part 69 made of a magnet disposed on three positions on the circumference is fixed to the other end part of the shaft member 67. The second support plate 64 is provided with a sensor 71 for detecting the detection part 69.
Further, a drive disk 72 is fixed on the central part of the shaft member 67. A guide shaft 73 is provided on an outer peripheral part of the drive disk 72, and a first arm 74 and a second arm 75 are disposed on both sides of the drive disk 72.
The first arm 74 has a long hole 76 on one end side, which is slidably connected to the guide shaft 73. A first connecting shaft 77 is provided on the other end part of the first arm 74, and a first nip arm 79 is rotatably connected to the end parts of the first connecting shaft 77 via a one-way clutch 78. With the one-way clutch 78, the first nip arm 79 can rotate clockwise in the drawing, and achieves counterclockwise rotation by following the rotation of a later-described second nip arm 82. A first nip roller 80 is rotatably provided on the top end of the first nip arm 79.
Moreover, one end part of the second arm 75 is rotatably connected to the guide axis 73, while the other end part is provided with a second connecting shaft 81. The end parts of the second connecting shaft 81 are rotatably connected to a middle part of the second nip arm 82. A spindle 82a on one end part of the second nip arm 82 is rotatably connected to the one end side of the first nip arm 79, and is in contact with the one-way clutch 78. Further, a second nip roller 83, which is rotatably provided on the other end part of the second nip arm 82, comes into contact with or clears away from the first nip roller 80 in a relative manner so as to hold and release the medicine envelope.
It is to be noted that the first nip roller 80 and the second nip roller 83 use elastic materials such as rubber.
Description is now given of the operation of the above-structured holding member 61.
First, as with the first embodiment, the holding member 61 is moved to a medicine envelope reception position. Once the medicine envelope is fed, the support plate 9 is moved from an inclined reception position to a standing delivery position. At this point, the motor 65 is driven to rotate the drive disk 72 counterclockwise so as to position the nip rollers 80 and 83 closer to each other as shown in
The medicine envelope lifted from the support plate 9 is moved toward the upper side of the bucket 4 by the horizontal movement of the holding member 61. Then, as shown in
When the medicine envelope is moved obliquely downward, the motor 65 is driven to rotate the drive disk 72 clockwise as shown in
After that, the motor 65 is driven to further rotate the drive disk 72 clockwise. Consequently, as shown in
Thus, with the holding member 61, it becomes possible to implement a natural operation such as holding the medicine envelope manually and accommodating it in the bucket 4, and to securely prevent the opening part of the medicine envelope from opening and the inside injection medication containers from leaking.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2002-007583 | Jan 2002 | JP | national |
2002-032703 | Feb 2002 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP03/00142 | 1/10/2003 | WO | 00 | 3/17/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/059744 | 7/24/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1605737 | Hume | Nov 1926 | A |
3653708 | Merola | Apr 1972 | A |
4549760 | Minenko et al. | Oct 1985 | A |
4632444 | Martinez et al. | Dec 1986 | A |
4648233 | Holland | Mar 1987 | A |
4831693 | Veith et al. | May 1989 | A |
4852927 | Minenko et al. | Aug 1989 | A |
4996820 | Harrison, Jr. | Mar 1991 | A |
5060455 | Schmeisser | Oct 1991 | A |
5172950 | Benecke | Dec 1992 | A |
5303531 | Senaratne | Apr 1994 | A |
5611193 | Farrelly | Mar 1997 | A |
5771667 | McGregor et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
5893595 | Corbett | Apr 1999 | A |
6024221 | Yuyama et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6508497 | Nerger | Jan 2003 | B1 |
6554337 | Kazerooni et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
6691490 | Yuyama et al. | Feb 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
197 46 378 | Apr 1999 | DE |
11-152113 | Jun 1999 | JP |
2000-79908 | Mar 2000 | JP |
2000-085707 | Mar 2000 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050161875 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |