Many different applications use gas generation. A few of these applications include thrusters for satellites, air bags, cylinders, hydraulics and the like.
The present application teaches programmable microcells which provide programmable amounts of gas generation. A controller selects which of the programmable cells will fire at any given time.
The system enables precise control of the rate, timing and amount of gas that is generated. This can be used in combination with sensors to select one of a plurality of stored profiles.
These and other aspects will be described in detail with respect to the accompanying drawings wherein:
The present application shows and describes a number of different forms of programmable gas generators.
A digital propulsion chip 120 is formed from the plurality of units 130. Each unit includes an initiator 132 connected to its own initiation line 134. The initiator 132 is connected to activate a fuel element 136, which can be a solid fuel element, for example.
A cover layer 138 includes bursting spots 140, each of which being a spot where the strength of the diaphragm is intentionally degraded. The gas exhausts from the bursting spot when the propulsion chamber is ignited, and the diaphragm is pierced by the expanding gas.
In operation, the initiators can be individually initiated to produce gas output. Each initiator produces a known amount of gas output, which may be constant to within a specified resolution. The position of exhaust gas to the elements is also known.
The controller 199 controls how many initiators to execute, and may also controls them in a specified order. The controller may also include a non volatile memory 198, which keeps track of which initiators have been operated. The controller can be a processor or digital computing device.
An alternative embodiment is shown in
The programmability in this system can be achieved by selecting the number and order of activation, in order to select the timing rate and amount of gas that is generated. The controller can calculate the amount of gas to be produced, and can ignite the specified cells to produce the gas output.
One or more sensors may be integrated with or used in conjunction with one or more of the programmable gas generators. This can be used, for example, to select or modulate the timing rate, amount or profile of gas generation as a function of time. The controller 199 includes a microprocessor which may compute a timing rate amount or profile of gas generator adjacent as a function of time prior to, during or after the acceleration.
In one specific use, different scenarios can be modeled in advance. An ideal gas production profile for each scenario is obtained from the modeling, and is stored in the controller 199.
At any time, current information is compared against the scenarios in memory, and a best match scenario is selected. That best match is used to produce a gas production profile.
An embodiment shown in
Other sensors 722 may determine the speed of the vehicle at the time of the acceleration, the weight of the vehicle, seat position, thermal sensors which detect the presence or size of the passenger in the vehicle; rate or proximity sensors may also detect information such as proximity or rate of approach, etc. Data from each of these sensors can be included into the controller; and used to set the profile of the airbag deployment.
Although only a few embodiments have been disclosed in detail above, other modifications are possible.
The present application claims priority under 35 USC 120 from provisional application No. 60/156,629, filed Sep. 28, 1999; 60/159,931, filed Oct. 14, 1999; 60/170,130, filed Dec. 10, 1999; and 60/159,943; filed Oct. 14, 1999.
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| 3858392 | Evans et al. | Jan 1975 | A |
| 6532408 | Breed | Mar 2003 | B1 |
| 6823670 | Simburger et al. | Nov 2004 | B1 |
| 6851259 | Simburger et al. | Feb 2005 | B1 |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60170130 | Dec 1999 | US | |
| 60159931 | Oct 1999 | US | |
| 60159943 | Oct 1999 | US | |
| 60156629 | Sep 1999 | US |