Detecting the position and rotation of a pump rotor of a pumping apparatus (e.g. a rotary style peristaltic pump) allows the pumping apparatus to determine a rate of fluid delivery as well as some error conditions of the pumping apparatus. Typically, an electric motor drives the pump rotor such that pump rotor rotational speed and position can be estimated by monitoring a current and/or a voltage of the electric motor. However, some pumping applications, such as pumps which deliver medical fluids to a patient, require greater accuracy. One approach is to position magnets in a surface of the pump rotor and detect rotation of the pump rotor via a nearby Hall Effect sensor. This approach requires relatively expensive magnets and Hall Effect sensors and is necessarily adversely affected by other magnetic fields. Additionally, Hall Effect sensors produce partial sinusoid detection signals, the transitions times of which limit the amount of time that the detection signals spend at higher magnitudes, thus increasing the likelihood of detection signal inaccuracies. For example, if the detection signal is being digitally sampled and compared to a threshold, the sample may miss the peak of the sinusoid signal causing the system to miss detecting a magnet passing by the sensor. This effect would become more likely for relatively low sample rates and relatively high rotational speeds.
A medical pump embodying aspects of the invention provides a more cost-effective monitoring approach that is not adversely affected by magnetic fields. In an aspect of the invention, a portion of the pump rotor reflects electromagnetic radiation from an emitter. As the pump rotor rotates, a detector receives the reflected electromagnetic radiation. By monitoring the received electromagnetic radiation, the pump determines pump rotor position and rotation.
One aspect of the invention is directed to a medical pumping apparatus having a motor for driving a pump rotor and an electromagnetic radiation emitter-detector pair. The pump rotor includes a surface with a reflective portion for reflecting electromagnetic radiation and a non-reflective portion which does not reflect electromagnetic radiation. The emitter is positioned to emit electromagnetic radiation sequentially on the reflective portion and the non-reflective portion of the surface of the pump rotor as the pump rotor rotates. The detector receives electromagnetic radiation reflected by the reflective portion of the surface and provides a detection signal indicative of the received electromagnetic radiation for monitoring a position of the pump rotor.
Another aspect of the invention includes a pump rotor for a medical pumping apparatus comprising a motor, an emitter, and a detector. A motor shaft engages and supports the pump rotor relative to the medical pumping apparatus. A surface of the pump rotor includes a reflective portion for reflecting electromagnetic radiation and a non-reflective portion that does not reflect electromagnetic radiation. The emitter of the medical pumping apparatus emits electromagnetic radiation on the surface of the pump rotor, and is positioned to emit electromagnetic radiation sequentially on the reflective portion and the non-reflective portion of the surface of the pump rotor as the pump rotor rotates. The detector is positioned to receive electromagnetic radiation reflected by the pump rotor.
A method for detecting the rotation of a pump rotor in a medical pumping apparatus embodies yet another aspect of the invention. A surface having a reflective portion for reflecting electromagnetic radiation and a non-reflective portion that does not reflect electromagnetic radiation is provided on the pump rotor. Electromagnetic radiation is emitted on the surface of the pump rotor such that as the pump rotor rotates, the electromagnetic radiation sequentially interacts with the reflective portion and the non-reflective portion of the surface. A detector receives electromagnetic radiation reflected by the pump rotor and provides a detection signal in response thereto.
This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are further described below in the Detailed Description. This Summary is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter.
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the drawings.
Referring to
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A surface (generally designated 210) of the pump rotor 106 has a reflective portion 212 and a non-reflective portion 214. The reflective portion 212 reflects IR, and the non-reflective portion 214 absorbs, scatters, diffuses, or otherwise disperses IR such that it reflects no IR, or significantly less IR than the reflective portion 212. A shaft 216 of motor 204 passes through the housing 104 and is attached to (i.e., glued, friction fitted, fastened,, or otherwise engaged by) the pump rotor 106 at the surface 210. The shaft 216 supports the pump rotor 106 and defines its axis of rotation. When the pumping apparatus 100 supplies power to the motor 204, the motor 204 provides rotational force to the shaft 216, causing the pump rotor 106 to rotate. The emitter-detector pair 208 is mounted in the housing 104 and positioned such that as the pump rotor 106 rotates, the IR emitted by the emitter-detector pair 208 sequentially strikes the reflective portion 212 and then the non-reflective portion 214 and so forth. It is contemplated that the emitter-detector pair 208 may be mounted back from the front panel of the housing 104 and positioned to interact with the surface 210 of the pump rotor 106 through a hole, slot, or other opening in the front panel of the housing 104 without deviating from the scope of the invention.
In operation, when the non-reflective portion 214 of the pump rotor 106 is rotated through the IR emitted by the emitter-detector pair 208, the emitter-detector pair 208 receives relatively little, or no, reflected IR. Instead, the IR is scattered, absorbed, diffused, dispersed, or the like as described above. When the reflective portion 212 of the surface 210 of the pump rotor 106 rotates through the IR emitted by the emitter of emitter-detector pair 208, the detector of emitter-detector pair 208 receives a significant amount of IR (e.g., substantially equal to the amount of IR it is emitting). In one embodiment, the IR emitter-detector pair 208 generates a detection signal proportional to the amount of IR it receives. An output circuit 218, which may be part of the controller of pumping apparatus 100, receives the detection signal and compares it to a threshold. In turn, the output circuit 218 generates an output signal indicating whether the detector 208 is receiving a predetermined amount of IR reflected by the pump rotor 106 (i.e., whether the detection signal is in excess of the threshold). The threshold is a constant that is determined as a function of the construction and configuration of the pumping apparatus 100. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the threshold is advantageously set at a level such that IR interference or noise does not cause the detection signal to exceed the threshold while still consistently indicating when the reflective portion 212 of the surface 210 of the pump rotor 106 is passing through the IR emitted by the IR emitter-detector pair 208. Thus, by monitoring the output signal for changes, a controller of the pumping apparatus 100 can determine whether the pump rotor 106 is rotating, the speed of the rotation, and the number of revolutions of the pump rotor 106 in a given period of time. Additionally, depending on the number and position of reflective 212 and non-reflective 214 portions of the surface 210 of the pump rotor 106, the output signal can be used to approximate an angular position of the pump rotor 106. The rotational speed, number of revolutions, and angular position of the pump rotor 106 may be used in any number of ways including, for example, determining a volume and rate of fluid pumped by the pumping apparatus 100.
In the pump rotor 106 of
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The pump rotor 106 may be formed by various methods. In one embodiment, the pump rotor 106 may be injection molded using a mold that has smooth portions which correspond to the reflective portions 212, and a rough portion corresponding to the non-reflective portion 214. Alternatively, the pump rotor 106 may be machined from a block of material (e.g., plastic or aluminum) such that the pump rotor 106 has smooth portions corresponding to the reflective portions 212, and a rough (e.g., marred, hatched, scratched, or otherwise has scattering or absorptive properties relative to the electromagnetic radiation) portion corresponding to the non-reflective portion 214.
Alternatively, the pump rotor 106 may be formed (e.g., molded or machined) such that the entire surface 210 of the pump rotor 106 is reflective with respect to IR. The non-reflective portion 214 would then be added by machining (e.g., scratching or marring) the surface 210 of the pump rotor 106 to generate the non-reflective portion 214 that bounds the reflective portions 212. It is also contemplated that the pump rotor 106 may be composed of multiple pieces of material that are fastened, glued, or otherwise attached to one another to form the complete pump rotor 106.
It is contemplated that the reflective and non-reflective portions in the illustrated embodiments of the invention may be interchanged without deviating from the scope of the invention. It is also contemplated that the output circuit 218 may generate an output signal indicating that the non-reflective portion 214 of the pump rotor is passing through the IR emitted by the emitter 208 as opposed to indicating that the reflective portion 212 of the pump rotor 106 is passing through the IR emitted by the emitter 208, and that the output circuit 208 may be integral with the IR emitter-detector pair 208 or the controller of the medical pumping apparatus 100. Additionally, there may be any number of reflective and non-reflective portions of the pump rotor, and the reflective and non-reflective portions need not be located on the end of the pump rotor (e.g., they may spaced about the circumference of the pump rotor and the IR emitter-detector pair 208 positioned appropriately to detect the reflective and non-reflective portions). It is also contemplated that the reflective and non-reflective portions may not be evenly spaced from each other as in the illustrated embodiments of the invention, and that the emitter and detector pair 208 may operate at a frequency or wavelength other than IR. It is also contemplated that the surface of the pump rotor 106 or 400 having a reflective and non-reflective portion may be other than flat without deviating from the scope of the invention.
Embodiments of the present invention may include pumps other than rotary peristaltic pumps. For example, the present invention is applicable to syringe pumps employing screw or worm drive pumping mechanisms. In this example, one end of the worm gear is formed with a surface having reflective and non-reflective portions, and an emitter detector pair is mounted in a housing of the pump so as to interact with the reflective and non-reflective portions of the surface as the gear rotates.
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It is to be understood that the reflective and non-reflective portions shown in
The order of execution or performance of the operations in embodiments of the invention illustrated and described herein is not essential, unless otherwise specified. That is, the operations may be performed in any order, unless otherwise specified, and embodiments of the invention may include additional or fewer operations than those disclosed herein. For example, it is contemplated that executing or performing a particular operation before, contemporaneously with, or after another operation is within the scope of aspects of the invention.
When introducing elements of aspects of the invention or the embodiments thereof, the articles “a,” “an,” “the,” and “said” are intended to mean that there are one or more of the elements. The terms “comprising,” “including” and “having” are intended to be inclusive and mean that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements.
Having described aspects of the invention in detail, it will be apparent that modifications and variations are possible without departing from the scope of aspects of the invention as defined in the appended claims. As various changes could be made in the above constructions, products, and methods without departing from the scope of aspects of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description and shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.