The present disclosure relates generally to sensors, and more particularly, to modular sensor assemblies.
Sensors are commonly used to sense various parameters in a wide variety of applications including, for example, medical applications, flight control applications, industrial process applications, combustion control applications, weather monitoring applications, as well as many other applications. In some applications, it may be desirable to replace the sensors periodically or at other times. Particularly in these applications, the cost of such sensors can be important.
The present disclosure relates generally to sensors, and more particularly, to modular sensor assemblies that include, for example, a removable and/or disposable sensing module including a transducer or sensor. In one illustrative embodiment, a modular sensor assembly includes a signal processing module and a sensing module. The signal processing module may be configured to be connected to an end-user device, and may be configured to produce a conditioned (e.g. linearized) sensor output signal from a raw or partially conditioned output signal received from the sensing module. In some instances, the signal processing module may include a signal conditioning block.
The sensing module may be configured to produce a raw or partially conditioned output signal, and may be housed separately from the signal processing module. The sensing module may be electrically coupled to the signal processing module via a wired (or wireless) connection. In some cases, the sensing module may be removably mechanically coupled to the signal processing module. For example, the sensing module may include a housing that forms a first part of a connector, and the signal processing module may include a housing that forms a second complementary part of the connector. In some instances, the first part of the connector may interface with the second complementary part of the connector to removably mechanically couple the housing of the sensing module to the housing of the signal processing module. In some cases, such a connector may also include two or more electrical interconnects which may form an electrical connection between the sensing module and the signal processing module when the first part of the connector is mechanically connected to the second complementary part of the connector.
In some instances, the sensing module may include at least one transducer or sensor for sensing a physical parameter, and in some cases, a local memory configured to retain a set of correction coefficients specific to the at least one transducer or sensor. When so provided, the signal conditioning block of the signal conditioning module may be configured to download some or all of the correction coefficients stored in the local memory of the sensing module, and utilize the downloaded correction coefficients to produce the conditioned output signal from the raw or partially conditioned output signal. After use, the sensing module may be disconnected mechanically, electrically, or both from the signal processing module for replacement and/or disposal.
The preceding summary is provided to facilitate an understanding of some of the features of the present disclosure and is not intended to be a full description. A full appreciation of the disclosure can be gained by taking the entire specification, claims, drawings, and abstract as a whole.
The disclosure may be more completely understood in consideration of the following description of various illustrative embodiments of the disclosure in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIGS. 5 and 6A-6B are schematic block diagrams of illustrative signal processing modules; and
While the disclosure is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the disclosure to the particular illustrative embodiments described herein. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the disclosure.
The following description should be read with reference to the drawings wherein like reference numerals indicate like elements throughout the several views. The description and drawings show several examples that are meant to be illustrative of the claimed disclosure.
For merely illustrative purposes, the present disclosure has been described with reference to some relative terms including, for example, left, right, top, bottom, front, back, upper, lower, up, and down, as well as others. It is to be understood that these terms are merely used for illustrative purposes and are not meant to be limiting in any manner.
Also, while not so limited, the modular sensor assembly, as described herein according to the various illustrative examples, may be particularly suitable for those applications where a sensor may be exposed to a “dirty” or “contaminated” environment, and those that require that the sensor be either sterilized or disposed of after use such as some medical applications. The modular sensor assembly, as described herein, may provide a modular assembly in which the sensing module may be packaged and provided separately from the signal processing module, which may facilitate disposal and/or replacement of the sensing module after exposure to a “dirty” or “contaminated” environment without requiring disposal and/or replacement of the entire assembly.
In the illustrative embodiment depicted in
In certain embodiments, the transducer or sensor 18 may be a flow sensor for measuring a fluid flow rate passing through a fluid channel including a fluid inlet and a fluid outlet. Depending upon the application, the fluid channel may be a main flow channel or a bypass flow channel. The flow sensor may be capable of sensing fluid flow at different fluid flow rates, which may include a high-volume fluid flow, a mid-volume fluid flow, or a low volume fluid flow. The flow sensor may be exposed to and/or disposed in fluid communication with a fluid channel to measure one or more properties of the fluid flow. For example, the flow sensor may measure the mass flow and/or velocity of the fluid flow using one or more thermal sensors (e.g., see
In some cases, the first sensor element 118 and the second sensor element 120 may be thermally sensitive resistors that have a relatively large positive or negative temperature coefficient, such that the resistance varies with temperature. In some cases, the first and second sensing elements 118 and 120 may be thermistors. In some instances, the first sensor element 118, the second sensor element 120, and any additional sensor elements may be arranged in a Wheatstone bridge configuration, but this is not required. The output of the Wheatstone bridge may provide a measure of the sensed property of the fluid, and may be considered to be a raw output signal. In some cases, the output of the Wheatstone bridge may pass through a pre-amplifier, and may still be considered a raw output signal. Often, such a raw output signal will not be linear across the entire sensed range of the sensed property, particularly over all operating conditions.
In the example shown, when no fluid flow is present in the fluid channel 112 and the heater element 116 is heated to a temperature higher than the ambient temperature of the fluid in the fluid flow 114, a temperature distribution may be created and transmitted in a generally symmetrical distribution about the heater element 116 to upstream sensor element 118 and downstream sensor element 120. In this example, upstream sensor element 118 and downstream sensor element 120 may sense the same or similar temperature (e.g., within 25 percent, 10 percent, 5 percent, 1 percent, 0.001 percent, etc.). In some cases, this may produce the same or similar output voltage in the first sensor element 118 and the second sensor element 120. When a non-zero fluid flow 114 is present in the fluid channel 112 and the heater element 116 is heated to a temperature higher than the ambient temperature of the fluid in the fluid flow 114, the symmetrical temperature distribution may be disturbed and the amount of disturbance may be related to the flow rate of the fluid flow 114 in the fluid channel 112. The flow rate of the fluid flow 114 may cause the upstream sensor element 118 to sense a relatively cooler temperature than the downstream sensor element 120. In other words, the flow rate of the fluid flow 114 may cause a temperature differential between the upstream sensor element 118 and the downstream sensor element 120 that is related to the flow rate of the fluid flow 114 in the fluid channel 112. The temperature differential between the upstream sensor element 118 and the downstream sensor element 120 may result in an output voltage differential between the upstream sensor element 118 and the downstream sensor element 120.
In another illustrative embodiment, the mass flow and/or velocity of the fluid flow 114 may be determined by providing a transient elevated temperature condition in the heater element 116, which in turn causes a transient elevated temperature condition (e.g., heat pulse) in the fluid flow 114. When there is a non-zero flow rate in the fluid flow 114, the upstream sensor element 118 may receive a transient response later than the downstream sensor element 120. The flow rate of the fluid flow 114 can then be computed using the time lag between the upstream sensor element 118 and downstream sensor element 120, or between the time the heater is energized and when the corresponding elevated temperature condition (e.g., heat pulse) is sensed by one of the sensors, such as the downstream sensor 120.
Referring now back to
Each of the sensing modules 14A-14D may include an electrical interconnect 26 for electrically interfacing the sensing modules 14A-14D with a signal processing module 16 (
In certain embodiments, the electrical interconnect 26 may be configured to interface both electrically and mechanically with a corresponding electrical interconnect 56 (see e.g.,
In still other illustrative embodiments, the electrical interconnect 26 may be a wireless transmitter/receiver configured to wirelessly transmit and receive data to and from the signal processing module 16. A wireless electrical interconnect may facilitate remote location of the sensing module 14A-14D from the signal processing module 16, but this is not required.
In further illustrative embodiments, as shown in
In certain embodiments, the local memory device 30 may be configured with conditioning coefficients and/or other data specific to the transducer and/or sensor(s) 18 contained within the sensing module 14B-14D. This data, including the conditioning coefficients, may be transferred via the electrical interconnect (or a wireless communication link) to the signal processing module 16 (
The local memory device 30 may be configured to store up to the maximum number of coefficients needed to process the raw or partially conditioned output signal to produce a desired conditioned output signal. In some cases, a partially or fully conditioned output signal may have: a prescribed deviation (% FSS) of less than about 0.1% from an ideal conditioned output signal over the full scan span; a prescribed deviation (% FSS) of less than about 0.25% from an ideal conditioned output signal over the full scale span; a prescribed deviation (% FSS) of less than about 1% from an ideal conditioned output signal over the full scale span, a prescribed deviation (% FSS) of less than about 2% from an ideal conditioned output signal over the full scale span; or a prescribed deviation (% FSS) of less than about 5% from an ideal conditioned output signal over the full scale span. In other cases, the partially or fully conditioned output signal may have a prescribed deviation of less than about 2.5% of the reading or absolute measurement (% Reading).
In certain embodiments, the local memory device 30 may be configured to store up to 13 (or more) conditioning coefficients. The conditioning coefficients stored within the local memory device 30 may be calibrated such that they are specific to that particular sensing module 14A-14D. Because the conditioning coefficients are specific to the sensing module, it may be feasible to realize very high accuracy without the need to calibrate the sensing module 14A-14-D to a specific signal processing module 16 and/or end user device 12.
In other illustrative embodiments, as shown in
In yet another illustrative embodiment, as shown in
In some instances, the signal conditioner 40 may reference some conditioning coefficients from memory 30, and may perform some pre-conditioning of the raw output signal. This pre-conditioning can help compensate the raw output signal for certain other parameters, such as temperature effects, supply voltage variations, and the like. The raw output signals from the illustrative sensing module shown in
While the illustrative embodiments depicted in
FIGS. 5 and 6A-6B are schematic block diagrams of an illustrative signal processing module 16 in accordance with various illustrative embodiments. The signal processing module 16 may be configured to output a conditioned (e.g., linearized) signal to an end-user device 12 (e.g., personal computer, patient monitoring device, hand-held device, and the like) for further analysis. The signal processing module 16 may include a housing 50 and may be coupled to any one of the exemplary sensing modules 14A-14D via a first electrical interconnect 56a. A second electrical interconnect 56b may be used to electrically couple the signal processing module 16 to the end user device 12 (
The first electrical interconnect 56a may be configured to interact with the electrical interconnect 26 provided on a sensor processing module 14A-14D. In some embodiments, the electrical interconnect 56a may be configured to interface both electrically and mechanically with a corresponding electrical interconnect 26 (see e.g.,
In still other illustrative embodiments, the first electrical interconnect 56a may include a wireless transmitter/receiver configured to wirelessly transmit and receive data to and from a sensing module 14A-14D. Additionally, a wireless electrical interconnect may facilitate remote location of the sensing module 14A-14D from the signal processing module 16.
The signal processing module 16 may be electrically coupled to an end-user device 12 (
As illustrated in
In certain embodiments, as illustrated in
In certain embodiments, the memory 64 may contain a set of generic conditioning coefficients that may be usable with a range of end-user devices and/or sensing modules. When so provided, the signal conditioning circuit 74 may then use the conditioning coefficients downloaded from the sensing module 14 as well as the generic conditioning coefficients from memory 64 to process the raw or partially conditioned output signal received from the sensing module into a conditioned (e.g. substantially linearized) output signal.
The signal conditioning block 60 may also include a signal amplifier 78 (
The signal conditioning block 60 may also include other circuitry to facilitate processing of the output signal received from the signal processing module 14A-14D. Exemplary circuitry for facilitating signal processing and conditioning includes, but is not limited to, signal filters, signal converters (e.g. A/D Converters), range matching circuitry, isolation circuitry or any other circuitry that is configured to condition the output signal such that it is suitable for processing by the signal processing module 16 and/or end-user device 12. The signal processing module 16 may also optionally include a wireless transmitter/receiver 82 (
While the illustrative embodiments depicted in FIGS. 5 and 6A-6B show exemplary configurations for a signal processing module 16, it must be recognized that the signal processing module 16, as described herein according to the various illustrative embodiments, may include a different number and combination of various components and circuitry, as described herein, for processing a raw or partially conditioned output signal received from any one of exemplary sensing modules 14A-14D, depending on the desired application.
Once the output signal has been processed by the signal processing module 16, the data may be stored in the memory 64 and/or transferred to an end-user device 12 (e.g., personal computer, patient monitoring device, hand-held device, and the like) for display to the end-user and/or further analysis.
Having thus described various illustrative embodiments of the present disclosure, those of skill in the art will readily appreciate that yet other embodiments may be made and used within the scope of the claims hereto attached. Changes may be made in details, particularly in matters of shape, size, and arrangement of parts without exceeding the scope of the disclosure. The disclosure's scope is, of course, defined in the language in which the appended claims are expressed.
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