The present disclosure is related to support apparatuses for supporting persons. More specifically, the present disclosure is related to a person support apparatus such as a hospital bed having a powered transport system to propel the support apparatus across a floor to transport a patient.
Person support apparatuses such as hospital beds, for example, typically include a plurality of wheels and are manually moved over a floor. A bed may weigh several hundred pounds and may carry additional loads including the person supported and medical equipment used in the care of the person supported on the bed.
Motorized carts which couple to a bed and propel the bed across a floor are known to be used. The carts may include controls for use by a caregiver in operating the cart to move the bed. A single cart may be used to move multiple beds by moving the cart from bed to bed.
In some beds, a motorized drive mechanism may be positioned on the frame of the bed and configured to propel the bed. The drive mechanism may have a wheel or a track which contacts the floor and is driven to propel the bed in a direction parallel to the longitudinal axis of the bed. In some instances, the drive mechanism maintains constant contact with the floor.
The present application discloses one or more of the features recited in the appended claims and/or the following features which, alone or in any combination, may comprise patentable subject matter.
According one aspect of the present disclosure a powered transport device for a person support apparatus includes a floor contacting driver, a prime mover, a power source and a controller. The prime mover is coupled to the driver and an output of the prime mover provides input to the driver. The power source provides power to the prime mover. The controller senses a performance characteristic of the powered transport device and varies the operation of the powered transport device based solely on the performance characteristic.
The controller may vary the speed of the prime mover based on an input from a user. In some embodiments the controller senses that the driver is slipping relative to the floor and adjusts the output of the prime mover to reduce the slippage of the driver. In some embodiments the controller senses that the load on the prime mover is increasing and adjusts the output of the prime mover to maintain a constant speed of the driver relative to the floor.
The controller may sense a variation in the operation of the transport system and adjusts an operating parameter of the transport system. In some embodiments, the controller senses an operating characteristic of the power source and varies the operation of the transport system to mitigate variations in the operating characteristic of the power source.
The controller may sense an input from a user and an operating characteristic of the transport system and vary the operation of the transport system based on both the user input and the operating characteristic.
In some embodiments, the floor contacting driver is movable between a first position wherein the driver is in contact with the floor and a second position wherein the driver is not in contact with the floor. The floor contacting driver may be movable between a first position wherein the floor contacting driver is configured to drive the person support apparatus in a direction parallel to the longitudinal axis of the person support apparatus and a second position wherein the floor contacting driver is configured to drive the person support apparatus in a direction parallel to a lateral axis the person support apparatus.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, a powered transport device for a person support apparatus includes a floor contacting driver, a prime mover coupled to the driver and with an output of the prime mover providing input to the driver, a power source providing power to the prime mover, and a controller. The controller provides a drive signal to the prime mover, the drive signal indicative of a desired speed of movement of the powered transport device. The controller also senses the actual speed of the driver of the powered transport device and varies the drive signal to respond to differences between the actual speed and the desired speed.
In some embodiments, the prime mover comprises a motor, an output coupled to the driver, and a chain coupled to the motor and the output to transfer motion from the motor to the output.
The transport device may further include a vertical deployment mechanism configured to move the driver to a position contacting the floor.
In some embodiments, the power source comprises a battery.
The controller may monitor the charge of a battery and the operating state of the powered transport device and vary the charging of the battery to mitigate the effects of changes in the operating state of the powered transport device. The controller may monitor the battery to determine the rate of discharge of the battery and determine the rate of voltage drop as a function of the battery discharge while the powered transport device operates.
In yet another aspect of the present disclosure, a method of operating a powered transport device for a person support apparatus includes monitoring a user input to determine a desired speed for the powered transport device. The method further includes providing a signal to a driver of the powered transport device, the signal being based on the user input. The method also includes monitoring the performance of the driver and comparing the performance of the driver to determine the actual speed of the driver. The method also includes comparing the actual speed to the desired speed and adjusting the signal to the driver to compensate for differences between the desired speed and the actual speed to mitigate changes in the operating environment of the powered transport device.
The method may further include determining a parameter indicative of the age of a battery for powering the driver. The method may still further include determining the rate of discharge of the battery. The method may also include determining the rate of voltage drop as a function of the battery discharge during operation of the powered transport device.
Additional features, which alone or in combination with any other feature(s), including those listed above and those listed in the claims, may comprise patentable subject matter and will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon consideration of the following detailed description of illustrative embodiments exemplifying the best mode of carrying out the invention as presently perceived.
As shown in
Referring now to
An electrical system 28 of the person support apparatus 10 shown in
As shown in
Assuming controller 30 receives signals from user interface 34 indicating that a user desires powered transport of apparatus 10, controller 30 determines whether other conditions are met prior to activating the drive motor 42 to drive wheel 26. For example, controller 30 may first determine that battery power of power supply 36 meets or exceeds a threshold level and may determine whether the casters are not in brake mode before applying power to drive motor 42 to rotate wheel 26. A caster brake position sensor 45 provides a signal to controller regarding whether casters are braked or released. Contrary to the teachings of all known prior art patient support apparatuses that have powered transport devices and that have AC power plugs 37, controller 30 does not require that the power plug of power supply 36 of apparatus 10 be unplugged prior to applying power to drive motor 42 to rotate wheel 26 to propel apparatus 10 along the floor. This creates the possibility that apparatus 10 can be power driven with the power plug still plugged into an electrical outlet resulting in the power plug being ripped out of the electrical outlet as apparatus 10 is driven away. However, by allowing drive motor 42 to be driven even when the AC power plug 37 is plugged into an electrical outlet, powered transport device 24 can be used to make minor adjustments in the positioning of apparatus within its location. This is especially useful when obese or morbidly obese (also known as, bariatric) patients are supported on apparatus 10.
User interface 34 at the head end of apparatus 10 includes a pair of first switches 44, shown in
A user applies a force to push handles 50 by pushing on the hand grips 48 in the direction of arrow 170 or pulling on the handle in the direction of arrow 172. Load cell 52 is fixed to upper frame 14. Movement of the push handle 50 acts on load cell 52 causing deflection of load cell 52 which is sensed by a strain gage in load cell 52, as is well known in the art.
In the illustrative embodiment of
AC power 37 may charge batteries 250 which are used to power the electrical system 200 when the AC power is not connected.
A charge monitoring and management system 300 varies operation based on the state of the various parameters of the electrical system 200. A state diagram shown in
The system 300 operates differently in the charging state 308 than in the discharging state 312. The presence of AC power 37 to the electrical system 200 provides a source of power for the system 300 to charge the batteries 250 of the transport system 100. If there is no AC power 37 available, then the system 300 must monitor consumption of the charge of the batteries 250 and provide feedback to a user if the charge falls below an acceptable level. The system 300 includes a software based charge monitor which determines an expected discharge of the batteries to determine a battery life remaining and to determine various charging parameters. In addition, the system 300 is operable to continuously measure the voltage of the batteries and compare the changes in the voltage to the charge monitor to determine operating characteristics of the battery including the degradation of the life of the battery.
A control process 318 controls the charging of the batteries 250. Upon entry into the process 318 the system 300 evaluates the previous state and charge level at a decision step 320. If the state of system 300 was the charging state 308 and the charge count of the batteries 250 is greater than or equal to the maximum charge count level allowed by the system 300, the control process 318 branches to a second decision step 340 which will be discussed in further detail below. If the charge count of the batteries 250 is lower than the maximum charge count allowed, then the control process 318 advances to a decision step 330 to determine if the system is receiving AC power 37. If the system is not receiving AC power 37, then the control process 318 advances to decision step 352. If the system is receiving AC power 37, then the control process 318 advances to process step 332 where the state of the charging system is set to discharge. Then the control process 318 advances to decision step 334 where it is determined if a flag indicating a sample has been taken is set. If not, the system exits the control process 318. If the sample taken flag is set, the control process 318 advances to step 336 where the system the flag is cleared and the control system exits the process.
If the system is not receiving AC power 37, the control process 318 advances from step 330 to decision step 352 to determine if the both the previous charge state and the current charge state are set to a normal charge rate. If so, the control process 318 advances to step 338 where the software discharge value is set to 10% of maximum charge. The control system then advances to decision step 334 discussed above.
If both the current and previous charge states are not both set to the normal charge rate, then control process 318 advances to decision step 354 to determine the state of the system. If the system has been in a trickle charge state with both the previous charge state and current charge state set the trickle charge, the control process 318 advances to step 356 where the software discharge value is set to zero. The control system then advances to decision step 334 discussed above.
If the system has not been in a trickle charge, the control process 318 advances from step 354 to decision step 358 where available charge currently available is compared to the available charge that was available in a previous sample. If the available charge is not greater than the previously available charge, then the control process 318 advances from step 358 to step 334 discussed above. If the current charge is greater than the previous charge, the control process 318 advances to decision step 360 where the difference in the current charge and previous charge is compared to the amount of discharge calculated by the software. If the increase in actual charge is greater than the software calculated charge, then the control process advances to step 362 where the difference between the current charge and the previous charge is subtracted from the software discharge calculated. The control process 318 then advances to decision step 334 as discussed above. If the change in charge from the previous sample is not less than the software calculated discharge, then the software discharge is set to zero at step 364 and the control process 318 advances to decision step 334.
If the control process 318 determines that the system is charging and the charge is greater than a maximum threshold at step 320, then at step 340 control process 318 evaluates if the prior state was the charging state. If not, then the process 318 advances to step 324 to begin a diagnostic analysis. At step 324, the charge monitoring register is set to a pre-set value. At step 326, the pre-set value is read to determine if the read value equals the written value. If it does, the control process 318 advances to decision step 330 discussed above. If the read value does not match the written value, then at step 328, a communication error flag is set by the system. The control process 318 then advances to step 330.
If it is determined at step 340 that the system is in the charging state, then the control process 318 advances to decision step 342 where the current sensed charge is compared to the previous sensed charge. If the current sensed charge is not greater than the previously sensed charge, then the control process 318 advances to step 350 where the difference in the current and previous charges is added to the charge monitor and the control process 318 advances to step 324 discussed above. If the current sensed charge value is greater than the previously sensed charge value, then the control process 318 advances to decision step 344 where the difference in sensed charge values is compared to the amount of discharge calculated by the charge monitor. If the sensed value is less than the discharge calculated by the charge monitor, then the difference is subtracted from the charge monitor value at step 346 and the control process advances to step 324.
If the difference in sensed charge values is not less than the amount of discharge calculated by the charge monitor at step 344, then the charge monitor discharge value is set to zero at step 348. The control process 318 then advances to step 324 as discussed above.
A separate control process 378 is invoked when the system is in the discharging state 312. Upon entry to the discharge state 312, the control process 378 determines if the previous state was the discharging state 312. If not the control process 378 advances to a decision step 384. If the previous state was the discharging state, the state timer is set to 0 at a process step 382 and the control process 378 advances to the decision step 384.
At step 384, the system evaluates the previous charge level to determine if there was any charge in the batteries. If there was a charge, the control process 378 advances to decision step 388. If there was no charge, the control process 378 sets the variable for the previously sensed charge to the current charge level at step 386 and advances to decision step 388.
At decision step 388, the current charge level is compared to the previous charge level. If the current charge level is not less than the previous charge level, the control process 378 advances to decision step 392. If the current charge level is less than the previous charge level, the charge monitor is set to zero discharge and the control process 378 sets the variable for the previously sensed charge to the current charge level. The control process 378 then advances to decision step 392.
At decision step 392 it is determined if the current charge is below a minimum threshold level. If it is, then the charge monitor is set to an initial value at step 394. If it is not, then the control process 378 advances to the appropriate state related to drive activity. Once the charge monitor is set to the initial value at step 394, the control process 378 advances to a decision step 396 to test the communication of charge information. At decision step 396, the initial value of the charge monitor is read and compared to the value written in step 394. If the value matches, control process 378 advances to the appropriate state of drive activity. If the value does not match, then at process step 398, a communication fault flag is set and the control process advances to the appropriate drive activity state.
If the drive motor is inactive, the control process 378 sets the drive to the drive inactive state 406 and exits. If the drive motor is active, then the control process 378 advances to the drive active state 400 and at a decision step 402 checks the to see if any inputs are being received from the various user inputs. If none are being received, then the control process 378 exits. If drive inputs are being received as determined by decision step 402, then various drive related variables are set at step 404 based on the inputs.
While the drive system is in the inactive state 406 as a sub-state of the charge monitor discharge state 312, the charge monitor operates a control process 420 to control the charging of the batteries. Upon entry into the control process 420, the state of drive requests is determined. If drive requests from user inputs are true, the control process 420 advances to step 444 and sets the drive active flag and advances to decision step 424. If no drive requests are being made, the control process 420 advances to decision step 424 directly.
At decision step 424, it is determined if the time that the charge monitor has been off exceeds a battery stability time period. If it has not, the control process 420 advances to a decision step 440 which will be discussed in further detail below. If the stability time period has been exceeded, then the control process 420 advances to decision step 426 where it is determined if a first battery charge sample has been taken. If it has not, then the control process 420 advances to a step 446 where variables for the battery voltage and the software discharge value for the charge monitor are used to set respective battery charge values. Also at step 446, a flag for having taken a first sample is set to true. The system then advances to a process step 428. If the first sample is determined to have already been taken at decision step 426, then the control process 420 would advance directly to step 428.
At step 428, the battery voltage is corrected to account for an offset constant. The corrected battery voltage and the previous value for the battery voltage are then averaged. Control process 420 then advances to process step 448 where the average is compared to an appropriate range. Each cycle through the control process 420, the range of the battery voltage is verified. The upper range is between 36.75 volts and 37.75 volts. The lower range is between 35.00 and 36.50 volts. If the voltage is in the right range, then the status of the verification is out of process step 448. Otherwise, the status is set to false.
Control process 420 then advances to decision step 430 where the battery voltage drop is evaluated against a threshold. If the battery voltage drop is too great, then the control process 420 advances to decision step 432. If the voltage drop is acceptable, then the control process advances to step 440. At decision step 432, if the status determined in step 448 is true, then various parameters of the charge monitor are set at process step 450 and the control process 420 advances to step 452. In step 452, the proper range is verified and the battery life calculation is updated based on the current information regarding the average voltage in the battery. This calculation is done based on the rate of change of voltage over time. As a battery degrades, variations in the rate of voltage change indicate the expected life of the patent. Increasing rates of discharge indicate shortened battery life.
The control process 420 advances from step 452 to decision step 434. Steps 434, 436, 454, 456, 458, and 460 cooperate to set the various variables determined regarding the battery life by reading the current battery voltage and setting the software discharge calculation values to be used as discussed above.
Referring now to
The powered wheel 514 is carried by an assembly 526 which is enclosed by a housing 528 which mounts to the plate 520 with a cover 530. The assembly 526 further includes a noise dampening member 524 which fits within the housing 528 and serves to suppress the noise of the operation of the powered transport device. In addition, a cover 522 engages the cover 530 and further serves to dampen the noise of the powered transport device.
The control process shown in
During steady-state operation of the powered transport device 24, the controller 202 calls an encoder speed process 600 every 500 ms. Referring now to
In the encoder final stage process 616, the controller 202 adjusts the output to the motor controller 204 to compensate for any rolling resistance that may be encountered by the powered transport device 24. For example, if patient support apparatus 10 is moved to an incline, drive motor 42 that drives the drive wheel 26 will be straying such that the speed of rotation of the drive wheel 26 will be reduced because of the additional load experienced by the drive motor 42. This is one example of a rolling resistance experienced by the powered transport device 24. If the rolling resistance becomes large enough, the drive wheel 26 may lose grip such that there is slipping between the drive wheel 26 and the surface on which the patient support apparatus 10 is being driven. The encoder final stage process 616 monitors an encoder of the drive motor 42 to monitor the rotation of the drive wheel 26 and modify the operation of the drive motor to compensate for increases or decreases in a rolling resistance. By comparing the rotation of drive will 26 to the power signal provided by the motor controller 204, the controller 202 modifies the operation of the drive motor 42 through the motor controller 204 to vary the output from the motor controller 204. Through this closed loop modification of the output from the motor controller 204, the powered transport device 24 maintains a near constant ground speed at a given deflection of the load cell 52. Utilizing the closed loop control, the controller 30 provides automatic adjustments such that a user does not have to modify the pressure placed on the hand grips 48 to maintain a desired speed of the patient support apparatus 10.
Upon entering the encoder final stage process 610 at step 617 the encoder final stage process 610 advances to a process step 618 where an array of encoder pulse counts is updated. The encoder pulse count array is an accumulation of encoder pulse counts over a period of time such as 100 ms. The encoder final stage process 610 to process step 620 where an index of pulse count samples is incremented. If the pulse count array is greater than a maximum allowed count in the array as determined at decision step 622, then the array is cleared at process step 624. If the pulse count array is determined to be acceptable at decision step 622, then the encoder final stage process 610 advances to process step 626 where the encoder timer counter array is updated. The value of this array is the total time period over which the encoder pulse count algorithm has been accumulated. At process step 628, the array index is incremented to monitor the amount of data placed in the array. At decision step 630, the array index is compared to a maximum. If the maximum is exceeded, the index of data is cleared at process step 632. If the maximum is not exceeded, a variable EncoderSpeed is determined at process step 634 with the value of EncoderSpeed being set as the sum of all encoder pulse counter array values. The process then advances to process step 636 where the value of EncoderSpeed is normalized. In one particular embodiment, the normalization includes setting the EncoderSpeed variable to an adjusted value by multiplying the sampled value of EncoderSpeed by a constant and dividing the product by the total time that the value of EncoderSpeed was gathered. For example, the EncoderSpeed may be normalized to a value of 125% of the actual sampled value. This approach may be used to account for limitations in the sampling of the encoder pulses. Of course, other values may be used as an adjustment value depending on the response of the particular system to which this approach is being applied.
Once the value of a normalized EncoderSpeed is determined, the final stage process advances to process step 638 where an integral error array is updated by accumulating the difference of a DesiredSpeed variable and the EncoderSpeed variable into the array. The DesiredSpeed value is the speed value that corresponds to the input signal received from the load cells 52. Once an element is added to the array, the array index is incremented at process step 640. The array index is evaluated at a process step 642 to determine if the index exceeds a maximum allowable number of elements in the array. If the index is excessive, the index is cleared at process step 644. In either case, the final stage process advances to process step 646 where the acceleration actually being experienced by the powered transport device 24 is accumulated. This is determined by comparing the current EncoderSpeed variable to the previous value of the EncoderSpeed variable and accumulating the difference between the values. At process step 648 the acceleration array index is incremented. At decision step 650, the size of the array is compared to a maximum value. If the size of the array exceeds the maximum value, the index is cleared at process step 652.
The encoder final stage process 610 then advances to process step 654 to determine what adjustment control state the controller 202 is experiencing. If the adjustment control state corresponds to an adjustment starting stage, then the adjustment starting stage process 656 is called by the encoder final stage process 610. Upon starting the starting stage process 656 at step 666, the value of a variable AdjSpeed is set to a fixed count. In the illustrative embodiment, the output value is 50 counts. The starting stage process 656 then advances to a decision step 670 where it is determined if the starting stage process 656 has been called 10 times. If not, then the starting stage process 656 advances to a process step 674. However, if the process 656 has been called 10 times, then the process advances from decision step 670 to process step 672 where a throttle correction process 658 is invoked at process step 672.
The throttle correction process 658 advances from entry step 768 to a decision step 770 where it is determined if the value of a variable timer variable PreviousThrottle 10 ms is less than or equal to 40 counts. If it is not, then the process 658 advances to process step 780 where the value of the PreviousThrottle 10 ms timer is set to zero. The value of a variable PrevAdjSpeed is then set to equal the current AdjSpeed at a process step 782 and the process returns to the calling step at an end of function step 784. However, if the value of the PreviousThrottle 10 ms Timer is less than or equal to 40 counts, the process 658 then advances to process step 772 where the time elapsed since the last operation of the process 658. The process then advances to process step 774 where a new value for AdjSpeed is calculated by using the PrevAdjSpeed variable and the elapsed time to determine an adjusted speed. The PreviousThrottle 10 ms Timer is then set to zero at process step 776. Finally, the PrevAdjSpeed variable is set to equal the current newly calculated AdjSpeed at process step 778. The process 658 then returns to the calling step at the end of function step 784. The throttle correction process 658 provides an adjustment at least every 400 milliseconds so that variations in the movement of the user applying pressure to the user inputs as compared to the movement of the person support apparatus 10.
Once the control has been passed back to the adjustment starting stage process 656, the process 656 advances to process step 674 where the AdjSpeed is increased by 10 counts once every 10 calls, or about every 400 ms. The process 656 then advances to a decision step 676 where it is determined if the EncoderSpeed variable or the combination of the EncoderSpeed and the value of any acceleration, notated as the variable “AccelValue” exceeds a threshold. If it is determined that the values do not exceed the threshold, then the process 656 ends at step 686.
However, if the values of EncoderSpeed or EncoderSpeed and AccelValue (calculated at process step 646 of the encoder final stage process 610) exceed the threshold value, then the process 656 advances to process step 678 where the throttle correction process 658 discussed above is called. Once the throttle correction process 658 returns at process step 678, the AdjSpeed is reduced by some value depending on the amount of acceleration identified by the system. Then the process 656 advances to process step 682 where the state is changed to the out of range low state and the process advances to process step 684 where the value of a variable ThrottleChange 10 ms Timer is set to a predefined value, illustratively identified as SecondOrderCorrectionTime. The adjustment starting stage process then ends at step 686 and returns to the encoder final stage process at step 662 where the variables that have been set are all returned.
If the adjustment control state is determined to be the out of range low state 658 at process step 654 of the encoder final stage process 610, then the out of range low process 658 is invoked and entered at step 688, shown in
Upon entry to the adjust throttle in low times process at step 748, the proceeds to initialize two constants used in a proportional-integral-derivative (PID) controller calculation at step 750. Then at step 752, the difference in EncoderSpeed is subtracted from the DesiredSpeed to get a value notated as DeltaSpeed. The proportional term of the PID is calculated at step 754 using the DeltaSpeed. In the illustrative embodiment, the proportional term is calculated as:
prop_term=(Kp—n*DeltaSpeed*100)/Kp—d
where Kp_n is a constant of 1 and Kp_d is set as a constant of 12.
The derivative term is calculated using the value of AccelValue at step 756 following the equation:
der_term=(Kd—n*CurrentAccel*100)/Kd—d
where Kd_n is defined as a constant of 1 and Kd_d is a constant 7.
The integral term is calculated as a function of a term IntegralError. IntegralError is the accumulated error of DesiredSpeed minus EncoderSpeed over a sample period. The integral term is calculated as:
integral_term=(Ki—n*IntegralError*100)/Ki—d
where Ki_n is 1 and Ki_d is 7.
The throttle adjust value is then calculated at process step 760 according to the equation:
throttle_adjust=prop_term+integral_term−der_term
The value of throttle_adjust is then corrected according to the equation:
throttle_adjust=(K_constant*throttle_adjust)/L_constant
where K_constant is 20 and L_constant is 10.
Once the throttle_adjust value is determined at step 762, it is returned to the out of range low process 658 at step 764 and the process 700 ends at step 766. The AdjSpeed value is then calculated at process step 702 according to the equation:
AdjSpeed=[(throttle_adjust*10+((PreviousThrottle 10 ms Timer*(Adj Speed−throttle_adjust))/10]
The process 658 then progresses process step 724 where the ThrottleChange 10 ms Timer value is set to zero.
If the EncoderSpeed variable is not greater than the DesiredSpeed variable at decision step 690 of process 658, then the process 658 progresses to process step 692 where the adjustment control state is set to the out of range high state and the ThrottleChange 10 ms Timer value is set to is set to the FirstOrderCorrection value at step 694 and the process ends at step 706.
When the controller 202 is in the out of range high state 660, the out of range high state process 660 begins at step 708 and progresses to decision step 710 where the proper state is confirmed by comparing the EncoderSpeed to the DesiredSpeed. If the EncoderSpeed is less than the DesiredSpeed then the process 660 advances to decision step 712 to compare the ThrottleChange 10 ms Timer value to the FirstOrderCorrection time value. If the ThrottleChange 10 ms Timer value is greater than or equal to the FirstOrderCorrection time value, then the process 660 progresses ends at step 726. If the ThrottleChange 10 ms Timer value is less than the FirstOrderCorrection time value, then process 660 progresses to process step 718 and calls the throttle correction process 658. One the process returns to the process 660, the process advances to process step 720 where a temporary value is computed by invoking an adjust throttle in high times process 720.
The adjust throttle in high times 720 process begins at step 728 and initializes the K_constant and L_constant values at step 730. DeltaSpeed is calculated at step 732 as the difference of the DesiredSpeed subtracted from the EncoderSpeed. The proportional term of a PID is caclulated at step 734 and the derivative term is calculated at step 736. The integral term is calculated at step 738 and the preliminary throttle_adjust value is calculated at step 740 by subtracting the integral term from the proportional term and adding the derivative term. The throttle_adjust value is adjusted at step 742 following the equation:
throttle_adjust=(K_constant*throttle_adjust)/L_constant
where K_constant is 5 and L_constant is 30.
The value of throttle_adjust is then returned to process 660 at step 744 and the process 720 is ended at step 746.
The AdjSpeed value is then calculated at step 722 following the equation:
AdjSpeed=[(throttle_adjust*10+((PreviousThrottle 10 ms Timer*(AdjSpeed−throttle_adjust))/10]
The ThrottleChange 10 ms Timer is then set to zero at step 724.
If the EncoderSpeed is found not to be less than the DesiredSpeed at decision step 710, then the process 660 advances to step 714 where the adjustment control state is set to the out of range low state. The process then proceeds to process step 716 where the ThrottleChange 10 ms Timer is set to the FirstOrderCorrection time value.
When the encoder final state 617 is complete and has made all of the necessary process calls, the ultimate result is for the value of the AdjSpeed to be returned to the encoder speed process 600 so that the Adj Speed value may be used to update the SpeedCount that is provided to the motor controller 204 to operate the drive motor 42. With this approach, the variations in the EncoderSpeed and DesiredSpeed are resolved such that the powered transport device 24 is capable of maintaining the ground speed of the person support apparatus substantially constant regardless of any changes in rolling resistance as the person support apparatus 10 moves over various surfaces.
Although certain illustrative embodiments have been described in detail above, variations and modifications exist within the scope and spirit of this disclosure as described and as defined in the following claims.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/241,388, filed Oct. Sep. 10, 2009, which is expressly incorporated by reference herein. This application is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/865,763 filed Oct. 2, 2007 and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/040,446 filed Feb. 29, 2008, both of which are incorporated by reference herein.
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Entry |
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