The disclosed embodiments relate to sensing coins and other discrete objects.
A number of devices are required to identify and discriminate between coins or other small discrete objects. Examples of these devices include coin counting or handling devices, vending machines, gaming devices such as slot machines, bus or subway coin or token fare boxes, and telephones. These devices use sensors to provide information that is used to discriminate between coins and non-coin objects. Also, the sensors are used to discriminate among different coin denominations and among coins of different countries.
Examples of coin handling devices and sensors are provided in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,988,348 and 6,196,371. Coins, in these devices, are cleaned and collected by a coin pickup assembly. Following cleaning, the coins pass a coin sensor. The sensor provides an oscillating electromagnetic field generated on a single sensing core. The oscillating electromagnetic field, composed of one or more frequency components, interacts with the passing coin. The interactions are monitored and used to simultaneously obtain data relating to two or more parameters of a coin or other object. This data is used to classify the coin according to its physical properties, like size, core material, and cladding material. Objects recognized as acceptable coins, using the sensor data, are accepted into coin bins.
Typical coin handling devices and the associated sensors, however, can at times suffer from a number of deficiencies, including occasional discrimination errors. One major source of these discrimination errors has been temperature sensitivities associated with the sensor electronics. For example, the frequency components of the sensor magnetic field or oscillator are phase-locked to a common reference frequency. The oscillator frequency control voltage can drift as a result of temperature fluctuations in the oscillator electronics, thereby causing a drift of the reference output signal. As a large portion of the dynamic range of the typical sensor circuitry is used in accomodating the oscillator frequency control voltage drifts, less dynamic range is available for object discrimination. Therefore, the temperature fluctuations can ultimately result in a corresponding increase in discrimination errors and false-reject rates. Because some of these coin counting or handling devices are in outdoor areas where the temperature environment cannot easily be controlled, another solution is necessary.
In the drawings, the same reference numbers identify identical or substantially similar elements or acts. To easily identify the discussion of any particular element or act, the most significant digit or digits in a reference number refer to the Figure number in which that element is first introduced (e.g., element 304 is first introduced and discussed with respect to
Figure numbers followed by the letters “A,” “B,” “C,” etc. indicate that two or more Figures together form a complete Figure (e.g.,
As is conventional in the field of electrical circuit representation, sizes of electrical components are not drawn to scale, and various components can be enlarged or reduced to improve drawing legibility. Component details have been abstracted in the Figures to exclude details such as position of components and certain precise connections between such components when such details are unnecessary to the invention.
The headings provided herein are for convenience only and do not necessarily affect the scope or meaning of the claimed invention.
A coin sensor or coin discrimination system, and in particular, a method and apparatus for providing adaptive operating point (AOP) control in a coin sensor system, is described in detail herein. The AOP control is provided using circuits and associated methods and algorithms connected between measurement circuits of a coin sensor and a coin sensor oscillator. The AOP control automatically monitors and controls quiescent voltage levels of four signals used by the coin sensor to identify coins and discriminate between coin denominations. In addition, the AOP control automatically performs calibration and adjustment functions both during manufacture of the coin sensor system and during its operational life. The automatic monitoring and control functions provided by the AOP control result in a significant increase in the dynamic range of the coin sensor response. This reduces the coin false-reject rate over a temperature range from −5 degrees to +50 degrees Celsius, and improves the coin discrimination accuracy.
In the following description, numerous specific details are described to provide a thorough understanding of, and enabling description for, embodiments of the invention. One skilled in the relevant art, however, will recognize that the invention can be practiced without one or more of the specific details, or with other circuits, methods, etc. In other instances, well-known structures or operations are not shown, or are not described in detail, to avoid obscuring aspects of the invention.
Unless described otherwise below, the construction and operation of the various blocks shown in
In addition to the LF circuitry of the AOP 102, the LF coin sensing signal path 104–112 includes an LF coin sensor phase-locked loop (LF PLL) 104, a low-pass filter 106, LF amplitude detect circuitry 108, LF Q signal (LF-Q) amplifier and filter circuitry 110, and LF D signal (LF-D) amplifier and filter circuitry 112.
In addition to the HF circuitry of the AOP 102, the HF coin sensing signal path 114–122 includes an HF coin sensor phase-locked loop (HF PLL) 114, a highpass filter 116, HF amplitude detect circuitry 118, HF Q signal (LF-Q) amplifier and filter circuitry 120, and HF D signal (LF-D) amplifier and filter circuitry 122.
Referring to
In operation, generally, both PLLs maintain a constant frequency and respond to the presence of a coin by a change in a PLL voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) control voltage and a change in the oscillator signal amplitude. A sensor transducer or extended field transducer of the PLLs includes a ferrite core with inductive windings for both the HF and LF PLLs. As a coin passes through an opening in the transducer, there is a change in the reluctance of the magnetic circuit. This is seen by the coin sensor circuitry as a decrease in the inductance value and results in a corresponding decrease in the amplitude of the VCO control voltage, as capacitance of a corresponding varactor in the PLL is altered to maintain a constant frequency. This change in VCO control voltage is measured to produce the D signal. Both the HF PLL and the LF PLL generate D signals.
The passing coin, depending on its composition, also causes a decrease in the amplitude of the oscillator's sinusoidal waveform due to eddy current loss, and this is measured as a second coin-identifying factor, i.e., the Q signal. The HF PLL and the LF PLL both generate Q signals.
As a result of generating D and Q signals at two different frequencies, four signals represent the “signature” for identifying coins. The four signals are referred to herein as follows: low frequency D signal (LF-D), high frequency D signal (HF-D), low frequency Q signal (LF-Q), and high frequency Q signal (HF-Q).
The four signature signals are transferred to the AOP 102. In general, the AOP 102 forms a closed control loop that provides a nearly constant quiescent operating point for the D and Q output signals. The AOP monitors the D and Q output signals, as described herein, and automatically makes incremental corrections to independent control voltages in order to maintain the proper output voltage level for the D and Q signals, and thereby maintains an effectively large dynamic range with which to identify and discriminate coins. The independent control voltages are used by the AOP to control the oscillator frequency and oscillator signal amplitude of the PLLs.
Thus, the AOP controls the D and Q baseline signals so as to keep them relatively constant over an extended operating temperature range. It also provides constant operating points from unit-to-unit without special calibration during the manufacturing process, thereby eliminating adjustment potentiometers from the circuitry.
Circuit schematics are now presented for both the LF and HF coin sensing signal path electronics in
With reference to
The oscillator is based on an inductor L3A that is used as a coin sensing transducer. The oscillator uses sinusoidal oscillation across the inductor L3A to periodically trip the comparator U28 and provide positive feedback through the comparator drive circuitry. The sinusoidal oscillation of the inductor L3A is centered at 1.5 volts direct current (DC), but is not so limited. The oscillator signal is provided via a signal path 303 to the low-pass filter 106, LF amplitude detect 108, and LF-Q difference amplifier and output filter 110 circuits for measurement. Oscillator signal amplitude control voltages are received from the AOP circuit 102 via a LQV control signal path 305.
The transducer receives excitation at two frequencies through two coils wrapped on the same ferrite core. A first coil is the inductor L3A operating as a low frequency coil of the LF PLL 104, and it is excited at a nominal frequency of 200 kHz. Referring to
Referring back to
Drive for the oscillator is provided by the comparator U28. The comparator U28 has a fast propagation time to minimize distortion due to phase delay, low input current to minimize loss, and remains stable while operating in its linear region. The comparator U28 operates from a single +5 volt supply.
The output of the comparator U28 provides positive feedback drive for the oscillator through a resistor R61. The amplitude of the oscillating signal varies and is correlated to the change in the tuned circuit quality factor, Q, due to a change in eddy current when a coin passes through the transducer gap.
The embodiment of
The PLL 104 also includes two varactors D4 and D5, as described above. A varactor, or tuning diode, is effectively a voltage-controlled capacitor. The varactor D4 is a component of the AOP circuitry 102, which maintains a quiescent VCO control voltage level of approximately 6.0 volts DC. A capacitance of the varactor D4 is adjusted based on the input signal LDV, as described below.
Dynamic control of the oscillator frequency is provided by way of varactor D5. As the voltage input to the varactor D5 is changed, the varactor D5 changes the capacitive component of the oscillator. As the reverse diode voltage increases, capacitance correspondingly decreases. Thus, the PLL dynamically changes the VCO control voltage 302 in accordance with the change in inductance due to the presence of a coin, in order to maintain a constant frequency of oscillation. It should be noted that this VCO control voltage 302 is the signal used to indirectly monitor change of inductance in this circuit.
The phase/frequency detector U27 performs control functions in the PLL 104. It compares the output frequency of the comparator U28 to a synchronized reference clock signal, and has an output that varies as the two signals diverge. The output of the comparator U28 is directed through a loop filter-configured operational amplifier U25C having depicted resistor and capacitor component values calculated to provide a circuit response of 200 microseconds when there is a step change in the inductor value L3A. This filtered output, which can vary through the range from approximately 3.5 to 7.0 volts, couples to the VCO control voltage measurement signal path 302. Also, the VCO control voltage measurement signal 302 is monitored to detect any change of inductance, correlating to coin diameter, and is used to identify out-of-range signal levels.
The quiescent operating point of the VCO control voltage 302 is adaptively maintained by the varactor D4 via LDV 304. The capacitance of varactor D4 is dynamically adjusted, by way of the AOP control circuitry loop, to compensate for changes in the circuit electronics so that a constant quiescent VCO control voltage 302 operating point is maintained.
Referring to
The input signal 303 to the circuit, received from the LF PLL 104 is a sinusoidal signal centered at a known DC reference voltage. The input signal 303 is filtered with a low-pass filter 106. The filtered signal is demodulated by an analog closed-loop diode peak detector 108. Demodulation is accomplished using a high-speed comparator-configured operational amplifier U26, a Schottky diode D3, and a hold-up capacitor C58. An RC network consisting of resistors R53, R56 and capacitor C58 drains the amplitude tracking signal at a rate commensurate with the time constant of the network. This time constant, approximately 50 milliseconds in this embodiment, is long compared to the period of the sinusoidal input, but short when compared to the time rate of change as a coin passes through the sensor. This relationship allows the peak detector 108 to react quickly to a change in amplitude caused by a coin event. The analog closed-loop peak detector 108 avoids the potential phase error problems that filter-stage phase lag and dynamic PLL phase shifts might create for a sample-and-hold implementation, and eliminates the need for a sampling clock.
The Schottky diode D3 provides a fast signal response and low forward voltage drop. When a worst case forward voltage drop across the diode D3 is considered along with the dynamic input signal range of the comparator U26, the DC center voltage for the input signal 303 is predetermined. Resistor R52 prevents oscillation at the comparator U26 output by isolating the capacitive load. The comparator U26, with a high slew rate, is stable when operating in its linear region.
The output of the peak detector 108 is compared to a difference voltage reference generator 344 in the amplifier and filter circuitry 110. Following comparison, the output is scaled and filtered with a difference amplifier and filter 346 using an op-amp U24B implemented as a difference amplifier. The difference amplifier U24B is configured to subtract the reference voltage level from the sine wave amplitude (peak detector 108 output) and multiply the difference by a scaling factor. In the LF PLL 104, the scaling factor is approximately 7.3. The HF PLL 114 scales the output using a factor of approximately 30.1.
The output of the difference amplifier U24B is a low-pass filter comprising resistor R50 and capacitor C55 in the feedback path with a corner frequency at approximately 160 Hz. Also, there is a filter comprising resistor R51 and capacitor C57 at the circuit output to filter high frequency transients caused by switching in the ADC. An output signal LF-Q 348 produced by the amplifier and filter circuitry 110 is coupled to the LF circuitry 500 of the AOP 102, as described below.
The HF D signal (HF-D) amplifier and filter circuitry 122 is now described, with reference to
This amplifier and filter circuit 122 functions to subtract a reference DC voltage level from the input signal 402 and amplify the resulting difference by a scaling factor selected to maximize the use of the ADC input range. The input signal 402 is approximately 6.0 volts DC, and the quiescent output level (no coin state) is controlled at a level of approximately 4.5 volts DC via the AOP circuit 102. The scaling factors provide a gain of approximately 10 for the HF signal, and a gain of approximately 4.02 for the LF signal.
The output is filtered in the feedback loop that includes capacitor C69 and resistor R75. This feedback loop provides a cut-off frequency of approximately 160 Hz. Also, there is a filter comprising resistor R70 and capacitor C68 at the output of the operational amplifier U29A, and it filters high frequency transients caused by switching the ADC. Finally, a transient voltage clamp is provided by Zener diode D6 to protect the ADC. The output control signal HF-D 468 is coupled to the HF circuitry 550 of the AOP 102 of
To monitor and control the LF and HF signals, as described above, the AOP circuitry 102 is used that includes two identical AOP control circuits 500 and 550.
In general, the AOP control circuits form a closed control loop with the PLL circuits that provides a nearly constant quiescent operating point for the D and Q output signals. The AOP circuits monitor the D and Q output signals as described above and automatically makes incremental corrections to independent control voltages in order to maintain a proper output voltage level for the D and Q signals. Thus, the AOP circuits allow the D and Q base-line signals to remain constant over an extended operating temperature range. It also provides constant operating points from unit-to-unit without special calibration during the manufacturing process, thereby eliminating adjustment potentiometers from the circuitry.
In controlling the D and Q signals, the AOP circuits 102 monitor the signals and send a compensating voltage to control the operating points described above. For example, the LF AOP circuit 500 and HF AOP circuit 550 detect an out-of-range VCO operating point voltage level and adjust a compensation voltage of signals LDV 304 and HDV 404 provided to varactors D4 and D6, all respectively, until the VCO operating point is in range. Thus, this includes monitoring the D signal, and a DAC of the LF AOP circuit 500 adjusts the voltage applied to the compensating varactor D5.
The LF AOP circuit 500 and HF AOP circuit 550 also detect an out-of-range sine-wave amplitude operating point level and adjust the oscillator feedback voltage level LQV 305 and HQV 405, respectively, until the amplitude operating point is in range. Thus, this includes monitoring the Q signal, and the DAC of the LF AOP circuit 500 adjusts the voltage applied to a pull-up resistor R57 in the oscillator feedback path of the LF PLL 104 of
The depicted microcontroller U13, manufactured by Microchip Technologies, part number PIC 12C671, includes not only a processor and two ADCs, but on-chip programmability, non-volatile memory and is configured to use three output lines.
Referring to
The microcontroller U13 is coupled to provide serial output data to two 16-bit serial input digital-to-analog converters (DACs) U14 and U32. The microcontroller U13 monitors input voltages and adjusts outputs every 200 milliseconds. There is, however, no output adjustment during coin present events; this is controlled using a 4.0 volt coin threshold on the LF-D 368 input.
A D signal is received at the on-chip ADC of the microcontroller U13, which has an input resolution of 19.53 mV per bit for a 5 volt range. The microcontroller U13 provides the D signal to the DAC U32, which has a 165.3 microvolt least significant bit resolution at its output. Since the output resolution is much finer than the input resolution, and the sampling rate is slow relative to the settling time, the AOP circuit will not suffer from control loop oscillation.
A 2X-amplifier and signal conditioning stage that includes operational amplifier U15A follows the DAC U32 to produce the LDV 304 signal. Signal conditioning includes removing high frequency noise (via resistor R9 and capacitor C23). The output voltage of the LDV output signal 304 is initialized at approximately 3.0 volts, as described below.
With reference to
An increase in the AOP-D output voltage results in a decrease in the D output signal level. The D signal is the gating signal for “coin present” hysteresis. If the D signal falls below approximately 4.0 volts DC, the AOP 102 halts incremental signal level adjustments for both the D and Q signals. Signal level adjustments resume when the signal recovers to a level above approximately 4 volts.
Referring back to
With reference to
With reference to
If the D signal value is not low, or following decrementing of the DAC value, the microcontroller determines whether the D signal value is high, or above the quiescent operating point, at block 614. If the D signal value is high, the microcontroller U13 outputs an appropriate signal to command the DAC U32 to output an incremented value, at block 624.
If the D signal value is not high, or following incrementing of the DAC value, the microcontroller determines whether the Q signal value (channel AD-1) is low, or below the quiescent operating point, at block 616. If the Q signal value is low, the microcontroller U13 outputs an appropriate signal to command the DAC U32 to output an incremented value, at block 626.
If the Q signal value is not low, or following incrementing of the DAC value, the microcontroller determines whether the Q signal value is high, or above the quiescent operating point, at block 618. If the Q signal value is high, the microcontroller U13 outputs an appropriate signal to command the DAC U32 to output a decremented value, at block 628.
If the Q signal value is not high, or following decrementing of the DAC value, the new DAC value is written to the DAC, at block 630. A determination is made, at block 632, whether the counter is equal to zero. If not, operation returns to block 608 and proceeds as described above. If the counter is equal to zero, power-up initialization is complete and operation proceeds to controlling operating point voltages during operation of the AOP circuitry under
With reference to
If no coin pass has occurred, a determination is made, at block 662, whether the D signal value is low, or below the quiescent operating point of 4.5 volts DC. If the D signal value is low, the DAC value decrements, at block 672.
If the D signal value is not low, or following decrementing of the DAC value, a determination is made whether the D signal value is high, or above the quiescent operating point, at block 664. If the D signal value is high, the DAC value is incremented, at block 674.
If the D signal value is not high, or following incrementing of the DAC value, a determination is made whether the Q signal value is low, or below the quiescent operating point, at block 666. If the Q signal value is low, the DAC value is incremented, at block 676.
If the Q signal value is not low, or following incrementing of the DAC value, a determination is made whether the Q signal value is high, or above the quiescent operating point, at block 668. If the Q signal value is high, the DAC value is decremented, at block 678. If the Q signal value is not high, following decrementing of the DAC value, or if a coin is passing, the new DAC value is written to the DAC, at block 680.
Each of the steps depicted in
Unless described otherwise herein, the method and apparatus described and shown herein are well known or described in detail in the above-noted and cross-referenced provisional patent application. Indeed, much of the detailed description provided herein is explicitly disclosed in the provisional patent application; most or all of the additional material of aspects of the invention will be recognized by those skilled in the relevant art as being inherent in the detailed description provided in such provisional patent application, or well known to those skilled in the relevant art. Those skilled in the relevant art can implement aspects of the invention based on the detailed description provided in the provisional patent application.
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, throughout the description and the claims, the words “comprise,” “comprising,” and the like are to be construed in an inclusive sense as opposed to an exclusive or exhaustive sense; that is to say, in a sense of “including, but not limited to.” Words using the singular or plural number also include the plural or singular number respectively. Additionally, the words “herein,” “hereunder,” and words of similar import, when used in this application, shall refer to this application as a whole and not to any particular portions of this application.
The above description of illustrated embodiments of the invention is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. While specific embodiments of, and examples for, the invention are described herein for illustrative purposes, various equivalent modifications are possible within the scope of the invention, as those skilled in the relevant art will recognize. The teachings of the invention provided herein can be applied to other sensing or oscillator systems, not only for the coin sensor described above. Further, the elements and acts of the various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments.
All of the above related applications are incorporated herein by reference. Aspects of the invention can be modified, if necessary, to employ the systems, functions and concepts of the various patents and applications described above to provide yet further embodiments of the invention.
These and other changes can be made to the invention in light of the above detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the invention to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all sensor, oscillator, or PLL systems that operate under the claims. Accordingly, the invention is not limited by the disclosure, but instead the scope of the invention is to be determined entirely by the claims.
While certain aspects of the invention are presented below in certain claim forms, the inventors contemplate the various aspects of the invention in any number of claim forms. For example, while only one aspect of the invention is recited as embodied in a computer-readable medium, other aspects may likewise be embodied in a computer-readable medium. Accordingly, the inventors reserve the right to add additional claims after filing the application to pursue such additional claim forms for other aspects of the invention.
This application relates to and claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/324,154 filed Sep. 21, 2001, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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20030057054 A1 | Mar 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60324154 | Sep 2001 | US |