This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. 10425081.6 filed Mar. 19, 2010, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by this reference.
Embodiments of the present invention relate to a method and to a device for sorting postal objects.
Devices for sorting plane rectangular postal objects (letters, postcards, documents in envelopes, magazines, etc.) are known, which comprise:
The sorting device is designed to perform operations of sending of the postal objects to the outlets, said operations being designed to enable, following upon execution of an initial step and a final step, formation in the outlets of groups of postal objects that are sequenced, i.e., ordered according to successive delivery points.
As is known, the sequenced postal objects can be conveniently delivered in succession by a postman, who proceeds along a postal path in which the delivery points are physically located.
It may be shown that for a sorting device provided with n physical separations (stacker, bin, container outlets etc.) n*n delivery points can be sequenced in two passes or steps (for example, said initial step and final step).
Known solutions envisage the interposition of an intermediate sequencing step between the initial one and the final one. In known solutions, this requires that at least all the mail regarding the additional addresses, which may be the majority, must be:
One or more embodiments of the present invention provide a method and device that enables an increase of the delivery points that can be sequenced by a factor hereinafter defined as “magnification”.
One or more embodiments of the present invention relate to a method for sorting postal objects. One or more embodiments of the present invention also relate to a device for sorting postal objects.
Embodiments of the invention will now be illustrated with particular reference to the attached figures in which:
a and 3b are a schematic illustration of operations performed by the device according to an embodiment of the present invention;
Designated as a whole by 1 in
The device 1 comprises a module for acquisition and singulation of postal objects 3 operating according to known technologies (and consequently not described in detail hereinafter), which receives at input parallelepipedal packs 4 of plane rectangular postal objects 7 set on top of one another (letters, postcards, documents in envelopes, etc.) (not represented in scale) and is designed to generate at output singulated postal objects, i.e., ones physically separated from each other.
The module 3 for acquisition and singulation of postal objects is provided with a first read device 8a ((of a known type) not illustrated for reasons of simplicity in
The acquisition and singulation module 3 is designed to address each singulated postal object 7 received at input along a path L from which the postal object can reach a respective outlet 12 (which can be selected by means of swapping devices of a known type arranged along the path L (not illustrated)), in which the postal objects accumulate typically, but not exclusively, within a stacker of a known type and are subsequently transferred by the operator into a container 13 for mail. The device 11 is provided with a large number of n outlets, for example, n=200 (two hundred) outlets 12. Typically, each outlet 12 is associated to a postal destination or to a set of postal destinations.
The outlets 12 are set alongside one another and are associated to respective outlet logic indicators E1, E2, . . . Ei, En.
The selection of the outlet 12 is made by the unit 9 by means of a sorting program that uses the information associated to the two-dimensional image Ipo of the postal object and/or to the unique identifier ID_TAG for selecting an outlet logic indicator E1, E2, . . . Ei, E20 and hence routing a postal object towards said outlet.
The device 1 further comprises a magnifier device M (represented schematically in
For example, the forming device 15 can be obtained according to what is described in the European patent No. EP-B-0804975 and comprises a plurality of formation units, each of which comprises a pair of facing belts, which extend in contact with one another along a substantially rectilinear path that extends between an inlet area (inlet 15a) in which the belts come into contact with one another and an outlet area (outlet 15b) in which the belts separate. The belts move in concordant directions and at constant pitch under the thrust of a motor device that is activated by a postal object 7 launched into the inlet area so that it enters between the two overlapping belts; the repetition of said operations of entry of the postal object between the two belts and of pre-set displacement forms a set of overlapping postal objects that extend along said path and have their respective front edges separated from one another by a pre-defined spacing.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the sorting operations take place as indicated hereinafter (
A first sorting step (block 100—initial step) is performed, according to which, directed into each outlet 12 are the postal objects belonging to a number K of subgroups having homogeneous delivery points, with K that is an integer equal to or greater than two. As will be clarified hereinafter, the number K represents a magnification factor that determines an increase in the number of delivery points that can be obtained.
Sorting of a first outlet with K=3 will be exemplified, where three subgroups of postal objects having homogeneous delivery points are formed.
In this case, the first subgroup is formed by the postal objects associated to the following delivery points: 1,3n+1,3*2n+1,3*3n+1, . . . 3*(j−1)*n+1
The second subgroup is formed by the postal objects associated to the following delivery points: 2,3n+2,3*2n+2,3*3n+2, . . . 3*(j−1)*n+2
The third subgroup is formed by the postal objects associated to the following delivery points: 3,3n+3,3*2n+3,3*3n+3, . . . 3*(j−1)*n+3.
where n is the maximum number of the outlets of the sorting device for the first sorting step (initial step), and j is an indicator of the maximum number of the outlets used in a second step (final step).
Represented schematically in
In other words, according to the first sorting step, postal objects belonging to K subgroups are accumulated in an i-th outlet; the delivery points of each subgroup can be for example defined as:
(L),nK+(L),2nK+(L),3nK+(L), . . . (j−1)*nK+(L).
where:
At the end of the first sorting step (block 100) described above, a step of re-processing of the postal objects is executed (block 110), whereby the postal objects are taken from the outlets 12 and fed to the inlet of the magnifier module M, where the device for forming groups 10 forms K*n ordered lots of overlapping postal objects, each lot being formed by a respective homogeneous re-ordered subgroup, i.e., formed by ordered postal objects (i.e., arranged overlapping one another) according to successive delivery points:
Withdrawal of the postal objects from the outlets of the sorter device 11 and their re-introduction into the magnifier M for forming lots is carried out according to a pre-set order, i.e., starting from the outlet of lower order (first outlet containing the first lot) and then passing to the outlet of subsequent order (second outlet containing the second lot), and so forth up to the outlet of highest order (n-th outlet).
A sequence-verification step is in any case performed, designed to check whether withdrawal and loading into the magnifier M of the groups of postal objects respects the order pre-set by the outlets (i.e., first lot, second lot, third lot, etc.); in the case where said order is not respected, the operations of treatment of the postal objects are interrupted by blocking the acquisition and singulation module 3.
The mail loaded in incorrect chronological order is buffered temporarily, and an indication of wrong sequence is issued. Following upon said indication of wrong sequence, the operator is supplied with an indication of the mail that is to be loaded correctly. The mail kept in the buffer is introduced when the correct resumption of the operations of re-introduction enables restoration of the pre-set sequence.
There is then performed a second step (block 120—final step) of sorting of the lots that have been fed at output by the magnifier M and then re-introduced into the acquisition and singulation module 3; said second sorting step envisages sending of the postal objects having corresponding positions within each lot to one and the same outlet 12; said objects are accumulated in the outlet according to successive delivery points.
For example, sent into the first outlet 12 are all the objects that have the first position within the various lots, i.e.:
Sent into the second outlet 12 are all the objects that have the second position within the various lots, i.e.:
Sent into the third outlet 12 are all the objects that have the third position within the various lots, i.e.:
Sent into the j-th outlet are all the objects that have the j-th position within the various lots, i.e.:
The postal objects can now be extracted from the various outlets in so far as they are sequenced, i.e., arranged according to successive delivery points.
By concatenating the contents of the objects present in the first outlet with those present in the second outlet and so forth it may be noted how all the objects are globally sequenced in so far as they have the respective delivery positions:
Purposely provided virtual points can be introduced into the delivery sequences, without thereby departing from the scope of the method, in order to sort separators or indicators within the ordered stacks or also in order to annul the traffic in given combinations of group, subgroup, and outlet for other types of optimizations.
It may be shown how the aforesaid operations enable provision of the sequencing of n*j*K delivery points. The factor K (i.e., the magnification factor) concurs with the increased capacity of delivery points that can be sequenced as compared to a sequencing performed using traditional methods, where the number of points that can be sequenced in two passes would be n*j. Hence, for K=2 in effect the delivery points that can be sequenced is doubled; for K=3 it is tripled, so forth.
The proposed device co-operates by means of a parallel and sequential process performed by the magnifier M in pipeline mode with the sorter 11 in such a way that the processing time does not substantially change.
The pipeline mode envisages that each lot pre-sorted in the initial step, is forwarded to the sorter for the final step as soon as the next lot enters the intermediate process. This drastically reduces the need for storing within the magnifier M strictly to an amount just exceeding the individual lot at output for receiving also the first letters of the new lot at input.
Finally, the magnifier M requires a reduced addressing capacity, and hence the number of divisions/stations can be considerably reduced as compared to the number of outlets usually necessary for a traditional sorting system. Represented schematically in
As may be seen in
In the course of the sorting step 100 (
In the course of the re-processing step 100 and of the second sorting step 120 (
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