The invention relates to an apparatus for brewing ingredients in a solvent.
The invention may be used in the field of beverage preparation.
Preparing beverages by brewing (raw) ingredients in a solvent is a known process. For example, tea is prepared by brewing (i.e. infusing) tea leaves (or tea bags) used as ingredients, in hot/boiling water used as the solvent. The same process may be used when beverages are prepared from different ingredients, such as various herbs, plant leaves or plant roots.
After a given time duration, ingredients are taken out of the solvent, and the resulting solvent corresponds to the prepared beverage. Such beverages are usually prepared using dedicated domestic appliances, such as a tea maker. To facilitate users to get information on the operating state of such domestic appliances, appliances often include some visual indication. For example, the most basic indication uses a green light which is switched-on when the domestic appliance is switched-on, and uses a red light which is switched-on when the appliance is switched-off.
More sophisticated solutions for displaying visual indications are also known, for example from published patent application WO/2003020096A1. This document discloses a domestic appliance such as a kettle, coffee maker, and toaster or similar, that includes a fluid chamber which is provided with a light to diffuse through the fluid and which light is visible through a transparent or translucent portion in the exterior wall of the wall of the chamber. The light may be controlled to show different operative states of the appliance and provide a visual area of indication of the operative state. For example, a first light emitting a specific color is switched-on during the heating of water by a heating element. When the water reaches the boiling point, the heating element is switched-off entirely or reduced to simply maintain heat in the water. During this period, a second light can be used to diffuse a different color through the water to provide an immediate visual indication to a user of the change of the operative state.
However, although those advanced solutions for displaying a visual indication may help users understand in which operating state the appliance is working, those solutions are still limited for the reason that the visual indication provided is based on pre-set operation modes, meaning that a user cannot have any visual indication directly linked to characteristics of the beverage being prepared. As a result, those visual indications are not very accurate.
It is an object of the invention to propose an apparatus for brewing ingredients in a solvent, comprising a lighting system for providing an improved visual indication.
To this end, the system according to the invention comprises:
According to such an invention, the visual indication is directly based on characteristics of the beverage being prepared, which provides a user with more accurate visual information on the state of preparation, and also greatly improves user-experience of a person using the apparatus.
The invention also relates to a method comprising various steps carried out by an apparatus according to the invention.
Detailed explanations and other aspects of the invention will be given below.
The particular aspects of the invention will now be explained with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter and considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which identical parts or sub-steps are designated in the same manner:
For example, ingredients may correspond to any types of tea leaves, coffee, herbs, roots, fruits, or a mix of those ingredients. For example, the solvent may correspond to water, mineral water, tap water, salted water, alcohol, or a mix of those solvents. The solvent may be heated by a heating system placed at the bottom part of the container (not shown).
The light beam is illustrated in
In a first embodiment, the sensor 5 is a pH sensor, and the measured characteristic is the pH value of the solvent. As known in the art, pH measures the acidity/causticity of a given solution. In the present case, the pH sensor is dedicated to measure the pH value of the solvent. During brewing, as the amount (i.e. concentration) of solids/compounds extracted from ingredients increases with time, the pH value of the solvent may decrease with time. Any kind of known pH sensor may be used. The pH sensor is for example placed along a wall of container 4, and is connected to the circuit 7, for example electrically connected if the pH sensor is adapted to deliver a voltage/current signal reflecting the pH value of the solvent. The voltage/current signal may for example be proportional to the pH value of the solvent. The circuit 7 is adapted to change a lighting property of the light beam LB, based on the voltage/current signal. The light beam LB can be generated by any types of lamps L, as long as the property of the light beam LB generated by those lamps can be modified by circuit 7. Preferably, the lighting system comprises light emitting diodes (LED) to generate the light beam LB. For example, three LEDs (not shown) are placed next to each other: one red LED, one green LED, one blue LED. When the three LEDs are switched-on at the same time, varying the intensity of each LED independently will result in a change of a lighting property of the light beam. In the present case, the voltage/current signal is directly used by circuit 7 to change (i.e. increase or decrease) the intensity of the LEDs.
The lighting property which is changed may correspond to the color of the light beam LB.
The lighting property which is changed may also correspond to the intensity of the light beam LB.
The lighting property which is changed may also correspond to a light pattern of the light beam: For example, based on the description given for
The lighting property which is changed may also correspond to the direction of the light beam. In a first example as illustrated in
In a second example as illustrated in
In a second embodiment of an apparatus as depicted in
Such a type of sensor can be used, in a similar way as the pH sensor, to change the lighting property of the light beam LB, i.e. either the color, intensity, light pattern or direction.
In a third embodiment of an apparatus as depicted in
The light beam's lighting property which is changed can be the color of the light beam LB. For example, the circuit 7 can set the intensity of the RGB components of the LEDs to the same value as the RGB components generated by the color sensor, so as to generate a light beam having the same color as the solvent. The circuit 7 can also set the intensity of the RGB components of the LEDs so as to be complementary in value (e.g. according to the standard and well-known “RYB Color Wheel”) to the RGB components generated by the color sensor, in order to generate a light beam whose color is complementary to that of the solvent.
The lighting property of the light beam which is changed can also be the intensity of the light beam LB. For example, the circuit 7 can set the intensity of the RGB components of the LEDs so as to generate a light beam having a high intensity if the color sensor indicates a dark color for the solvent, or so as to generate a light beam having a low intensity if the color sensor indicates a bright color for the solvent.
The lighting property of the light beam which is changed can also be the light pattern of the light beam. For example, the circuit 7 can periodically switch-on the LEDs with a given frequency so as to cause blinking if the color of the solvent reaches a given threshold, or it can make this frequency proportional to the color value indicated by the color sensor so as to cause the blinking to accelerate with time during brewing.
In a preferred embodiment, instead of using a lighting system comprising lamps L, L1, L2 corresponding to three (or a different number of) light emitting diodes (LED) to generate the light beam LB, a so-called light skin element, known per se in the art, can be used. The light skin element is equivalent to a two-dimensional array of LEDs which can be individually controlled by the circuit 7, in a similar way to a LED screen display. The light skin has a very small thickness in the order of one millimetre, and can be mapped to non-flat structures for example in order to cover part of the structure of the apparatus 1, such as an external part of the lighting system 6, and/or part of the container 4, as illustrated by rectangles L, L1 and L2. Like in the case of three separate LEDs mentioned previously, the light beam LB generated by the light skin has a lighting property which is changed by circuit 7, for example by varying its color and/or intensity in a uniform way, depending on the current/voltage generated by sensor 5. Alternatively, the light beam LB generated by the light skin has a lighting property which is changed by circuit 7, for example by varying its color and/or intensity in a non-uniform way, depending on the current/voltage generated by sensor 5, such that a first area of the light skin has a first color/intensity and a second area of the light skin has a second color/intensity, with the possibility to create a color/intensity fade-in/fade-out effect in between those two areas. By using a light skin element for lamps L, L1 and L2 different light effects can be generated to reflect the brewing status of the solvent.
This method corresponds to steps carried out in an apparatus according to
Other variations to the disclosed embodiments can be understood and effected by those skilled in the art in practicing the claimed invention, from a study of the drawings, the disclosure, and the appended claims. In the claims, the word “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. A single unit may fulfill the functions of several items recited in the claims. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage. Any reference signs in the claims should not be construed as limiting the scope thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CN2010/080096 | Dec 2010 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB11/55644 | 12/13/2011 | WO | 00 | 6/12/2013 |