The invention relates to novel ornamental and utilitarian features of a backup power control system comprising a remote sensing unit in communication with a backup power control unit. The remote sensing unit is configured to detect the status of a power grid and transmit such status to the backup power control unit.
As is well known, an electric utility is a company in the electric power industry that engages in electricity generation and distribution for sale in a regulated market such as the residential market. An electric power system is a group of generation, transmission, distribution, communication, and other facilities that are physically connected and collectively referred to as the “utility power grid.” All electrical equipment, including the power grid, will fail given enough time even under normal use. Unfortunately, such failures often happen when people generally need power the most.
Permanently installed home backup generators is a prior art method used to address power grid failures. Such generators can run on diesel, natural gas and liquid propane (LP), and sit outside the home and look similar to a central air conditioning unit. The typical home backup generator delivers power directly to the home's electrical system, using the same electrical connection points as the power grid, backing up the entire home or just the most essential items. While such systems are available, few homes in the United States have such backup systems for at least two reasons: (1) the US power grid is very dependable substantially reducing the need for such a system (except recently in California); and (2) generator backups are expensive ($5,000 to $10,000 installed). Couple (1) and (2) together and most people do not see a need to invest the money in such a system. Yet, one day the power grid will fail, and at such time people will wish they had such a backup system.
While most homes do not have a $10,000 backup system many do have, or can purchase upon need, a portable 11,000-Watt generator for between $700-$1000 dollars or a 4,000-Watt generator for $300 to $600 that can run 10 hours on a full tank of fuel at 50% load. Such a cost is doable for most people in the US when the need arises. Further, typical power requirements for 120v electric equipment found in the home include (watts): microwaves 1300-start/1300-run, refrigerators 1500-start/200-run, TVs 200-start/200-run, coffee makers 600-start/600-run. Power requirements for 240 v electric equipment include electric ranges 2100-start/2100-run and water heaters 4500-start/4500-run. Thus, in an emergency, one can purchase a $300 generator and easily power a refrigerator, TV, coffee maker, several LED lights and microwave if one can connect a portable generator to the home electrical grid. Purchase an 11,000-watt generator, and one can even power a water heater and take hot showers.
The typical residential power system comprises a “home power gird” (wiring in a home) connected to the utility company power grid. Notably, for a home power grid, many power outlets are connected to the same electrical circuit. Each circuit is separated from the utility company power grid by a common breaker (i.e. the well-known breakers in your home breaker box). Thus, if the utility power fails, one can turn off the breaker for electrical circuit X to isolate electrical circuit X from the utility grid. If electrical circuit X has five outlets (for example) one can then connect an external power source (such as a power generator) to one of the free outlets of the electrical circuit X and “back feed” power into such free outlet and power the devices connected to the remaining four outlets. For example, suppose a kitchen has an electrical circuit that has five outlets. One outlet is connected to a refrigerator, one is connected to a microwave and one is connected to a coffee maker with two free outlets. One can back-feed power into one of the free outlets to supply power to the microwave, coffee maker and refrigerator.
Safety concerns arise, however, when back-feeding power into an electrical circuit as described above (e.g. supplying a power outlet with power instead of receiving power from such an outlet). As is well known, a power generator/source such as a portable generator provides power through female outputs. Further, the home outlet that is to be associated with the power generator output is a female connection. Thus, a male to male connection configuration (of some type) is required to transfer power from the external power source to a home power outlet. Such a configuration can result in one end of a male to male connection having exposed conductors with active power. Great care is taken in all countries by the electrical industries to ensure such never happens for obvious safety reasons.
The safety aspects of back-feeding power into a home power outlet are not limited to damaging humans via handling a ‘live’ plug but also damaging hardware such as wiring, breakers, and equipment connected to the wiring from overvoltage issues which would likely occur when the utility power grid power is restored and connected to a circuit being back-feed power as described above.
Therefore, there is a need to provide a means and method that allows a common person, who is not an electrician, without the help of an electrician, to safely connect the female power output of a temporary power source to the female outlet of a home power grid during a power outage until the utility company restores power to the home. The disclosed technology addresses such issues.
Some of the objects and advantages of the invention will now be set forth in the following description, while other objects and advantages of the invention may be obvious from the description or may be learned through practice of the invention.
Broadly speaking, a principle object of the present invention is to provide a remote sensing unit configure to detect the status of a power grid associated back-feeding control system to a backup power control unit configured for electrically associating an output interface defined by a power generator with the same type output interface defined by an electrical circuit.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide a remote sensing unit comprising an interface configured for being electrically associated with a power grid that can detect the difference between a main power grid failure and the remote sensing unit being disconnected from a power grid.
Additional objects and advantages of the present invention are set forth in the detailed description herein or will be apparent to those skilled in the art upon reviewing the detailed description. It should be further appreciated that modifications and variations to the specifically illustrated, referenced, and discussed steps, or features hereof may be practiced in various uses and embodiments of this invention without departing from the spirit and scope thereof, by virtue of the present reference thereto. Such variations may include, but are not limited to, the substitution of equivalent steps, referenced or discussed, and the functional, operational, or positional reversal of various features, steps, parts, or the like. Still further, it is to be understood that different embodiments, as well as different presently preferred embodiments, of this invention may include various combinations or configurations of presently disclosed features or elements, or their equivalents (including combinations of features or parts or configurations thereof not expressly shown in the figures or stated in the detailed description).
Those of ordinary skill in the art will better appreciate the features and aspects of such embodiments, and others, upon review of the remainder of the specification.
A full and enabling description of the present subject matter, including the best mode thereof, directed to one of ordinary skill in the art, is set forth in the specification, which makes reference to the appended figures, in which:
Repeat use of reference characters throughout the present specification and appended drawings is intended to represent the same or analogous features or elements of the present technology.
Reference now will be made in detail to the embodiments of the invention, one or more examples of which are set forth below. Each example is provided by way of explanation of the invention, not limitation of the invention. In fact, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. For instance, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment can be used on another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment. Thus, it is intended that the present invention covers such modifications and variations as come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents. Other objects, features, and aspects of the present invention are disclosed in or may be determined from the following detailed description. Repeat use of reference characters is intended to represent same or analogous features, elements or steps. It is to be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that the present discussion is a description of exemplary embodiments only and is not intended as limiting the broader aspects of the present invention.
For the purposes of this document two or more items are “mechanically associated” by bringing them together or into relationship with each other in any number of ways including a direct or indirect physical “releasable connections” (snaps, screws, Velcro®, bolts, clamps, etc.—generally connections designed to be easily, perhaps frequently, released and reconnected), “hard-connections” (welds, rivets, macular bonds, generally connections that one does not anticipate disconnecting very often if at all—a connection that is “broken” to separate), and/or “moveable connections” (rotating, pivoting, oscillating, etc.).
Similarly, two or more items are “electrically associated” by bringing them together or into a relationship with each other in any number of ways, including (a) a direct/indirect or inductive communication connection, and (b) a direct/indirect or inductive power connection. Additionally, while the drawings may illustrate various electronic components of a system connected by a single line, it will be appreciated that such lines may represent one or more signal paths, power connections, electrical connections and/or cables as required by the embodiment of interest.
For the purposes of this document, unless otherwise stated, the phrase “at least one of A, B, and C” means there is at least one of A, or at least one of B, or at least one of C or any combination thereof (not one of A, and one of B, and one of C). As used herein, the terms “first,” “second,” and “third” may be used interchangeably to distinguish one component from another and are not intended to signify the location or importance of the individual components unless specifically stated otherwise. As used in the claims, the definite article “said” identifies required elements that define the scope of embodiments of the claimed invention, whereas the definite article “the” merely identifies environmental elements that provide context for embodiments of the claimed invention that are not intended to be a limitation of any claim.
This document includes headers that are used for place markers only. Such headers are not meant to affect the construction of this document, do not in any way relate to the meaning of this document nor should such headers be used for such purposes.
While the particulars of the present invention and associated technology may be adapted for use for any type of electrical system, the examples discussed herein are primarily in the context of connecting a portable generator output with a power outlet of a residential home.
Referring now to
A common residential circuit is protected by a 15-amp or 20-amp breaker at the breaker box 16, and thus, such a circuit can supply 15/20 amps of current (15/20 means 15-amps or 20-amps) before the breaker trips thereby isolating that circuit from the mains power 12 and stopping current flow between the mains power system and the home circuit. It should be appreciated, as described above, that one 15/20-amp circuit is generally configured to supply power to a plurality of power outputs 22, which may feed power to a plurality of electric devices (such as lamps, TVs, Microwaves, etc.). For example, one 20-amp circuit feeding power to four power outputs can easily supply power to a microwave, a refrigerator, at TV, and a coffee maker.
Referring now more particularly to
For this example, a power cable 42 is connecting the BPCU 36 to a Backup Power Lighting Adapter (BPLA) 44 connected to a light fixture output 30 and is supplying power to the associated lighting system 34. For one alternative embodiment, the BPLA 44 may be replaced by a Remote Sensing Unit (RSU) 46 that could be electrically associated with the BPCU 36 via an RSU cable 48. Such configurations will be defined in detail later.
Attention is now directed more particularly to the BPCU 36 as depicted in
The BPCU 36 further defines optional BPCU status indicators 52 that indicate system statuses including the main power grid 12, the connection to an RSU 46, home circuit breaker status (aka: “Load Detector”), backup generator power 38 status, output power status (i.e. is power being back-fed into the home outlets 22), and the current load on the system. For this embodiment, such status indicators are LEDs. One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that any number of status indicators may be provided without departing from the scope and spirit of the inventions.
A BPCU power switch 54 may be provided, for enabling/disabling the BPCU 36, and the BPCU 36 may be protected by a BPCU breaker 56. A BPCU power cable 40 is shown plugged into a BPCU input 58 configured for receiving a cable connected to a power generator output 42. For one embodiment, the BPCU power cable 40 defines a genderless connection (i.e. neither male nor female). As best seen in
Attention is now directed to the Remote Sensing Unit (RSU) 46 depicted in
Referring now to
It should be appreciated that the RSU 46 and the BPCU 36 should be associated with different electrical circuits 22, 26. For example, suppose the BPCU 36 is connected to a first electrical circuit 20 output 22 and the breaker 16 for the first electrical circuit 20 is tripped (turned off) thereby isolating the BPCU from the main power grid. The RSU 46 should be connected to a second electrical circuit 24 output 26 and the breaker for the second electrical circuit 24 should remained closed (turned on) thereby coupling the RSU 46 to the main power grid 12 (so that it can “see” the power grid 12 transformer).
The embodiments for a BPCU 36 and RSU 46 depicted in
For one alternative embodiment, a Backup Power Light Adapter (BPLA) 44 accessory, similar to the RSU in
Attention is now directed more particularly to
As depicted in
The BPCU 36 further comprises a control unit input 58 comprising a CUI-hot-conductor and a CUI-reference-conductor (CUI—Control Unit Input) configured for being connected to a power generator 38 output 42. The power generator 38 output 42 defines a PGO-hot-conductor and a PGO-reference-conductor. Such means the CUI-hot-conductor is configured for being connected to the PGO-hot-conductor and the CUI-reference-conductor is configured for being connected to the PG-reference-conductor. Such a connection may be established by standard power cables or special power cables with “safe connectors” (genderless connection) as described above.
The BPCU 36 further comprises a switch 80 connected to the CUO-hot-conductor 72 and the CUI-hot-conductor 76. The switch 80 is configured to selectively connect or isolate the CUO-hot-conductor and the CUI-hot-conductor in response to a command signal 82. For the embodiment depicted in
The BPCU 36 comprises a first sensor configured to sense a first electrical parameter of the control unit output 60 and generate a first parameter signal reflective of the first electrical parameter. The BPCU 36 further comprises a processor 84 electrically associated with the switch 80 and the first sensor. The processor 84 is configured to generate the command signal 82 based on predefined switching criteria related to sensor data related to one or more electrical parameters associated with the CUO-output 60. Processor 84 performs control tasks as well as communications for embodiment comprising communication circuitry 86. The processor 64 may be further configured to use the communication circuitry 86 to communicate with remote devices such as an RSU 46 and/or a Smartphone or similar device.
Fundamentally, the processor 84 generates a command signal 82 that causes/directs the switch 80 to connect or remove a power generator 38 power path to a selected electrical circuit 20 under certain conditions defined by sensor data (and/or data received from an RSU 46. Thus, as noted above, the BPCU 36 further comprises at least one sensor associated with the processor 84 and the control unit output 60 configured to sense electrical parameters for the control unit output 60 and generate a control unit output parameter signal reflective of a measured electrical parameter. The processor 84 generates the command signal 82 based at least in part on the control unit output electrical parameter signal(s).
It will be appreciated that when trying to back-feed power into a home electrical circuit (for example) the breaker 16 for such electric circuit should be open/tripped, thereby isolating your home electrical circuit from the power grid. Otherwise, when one tries to back-feed power into the electrical outlet the power grid will suck up the power and try to distribute the power to your neighbors. Thus, initially, it should be appreciated that, before back feeding power into an electrical circuit 20, the breaker 16 for an electrical circuit 20 is turned off and the BPCU 36 output is then connected to an output 22 associated with the electrical circuit 20. The BPCU 36 input is then connected to the output 42 associated with the backup power source 38 and the backup power source is started. When the backup power source 38 starts supplying power to the BPCU 36, it powers up its internal electronics but does not pass backup power to the output 22 until predefined tests are passed. Alternatively, an internal power source such as a battery may be used and the BPCU 36 may be powered on when there is not backup power 38.
For one such test, the BPCU 36 may comprise a first sensor defining an AC Detector 88 configured to detect a potential difference between the CUO-hot-conductor and the CUO-reference-conductor or similar reference point. Once the BPCU 36 is powered on, the BPCU checks the AC Detector 88 sensor to determine if the control unit output 60 has a voltage. If there is zero volts (or some value reflective of zero volts) such would be a “pass” for the voltage parameter test. If the AC Detector 88 detects a voltage materially different from zero volts, something is wrong and such would be a “fail.”
The absence of a voltage at the control unit output 60 may be the result of the BPCU 36 not being associated with an output 22 (which is not a proper configuration). Thus, a second check should be performed to verify the BPCU 36 is connected to an output 22. Further, even if the BPCU 36 is connected to an output 22 as required, a user may forget to turn off the associated breaker 16. An impedance test for the BPCU 36 output 60 can be used to detect that (1) the BPCU 36 is connected to an output 22 and (2) the status of the breaker associated with the output 22.
For one configuration, the BPCU 36 may further comprise a second sensor defining an impedance detector 92 configured to measure/detect an impedance value for the control unit output 60. Thus, the processor 84 may be connected to a sensor configured to measure an impedance reflective of the impedance along the CUO-hot-conductor and some reference point associated with the control unit output 60. For this test, the processor 88 generates a signal to turn on Q1 that closes Relay 2, thereby connecting the R3, R4, R5 resistor network associated with a DC voltage to the control unit output 60 to measure an associated impedance. For such a configuration, one example of a control unit output parameter signal reflective of an electrical parameter may be a resistance value. Ideally, the second test would be performed after the first test (voltage test) for configurations having the voltage testing capability. The processor 84 may be configured to look for a resistance (impedance) value between a lower limit and upper limit where such limits represent different conditions. For example, if the measured impedance is below the lower limit such may indicate that the BPCU 36 is indeed connected to an electrical circuit output, but the associated breaker 16 is closed (i.e. the power grid 12 transformer is in the circuit). Such would be considered a fail. If the measured impedance is above an upper limit, such may be an indication of an open circuit, implying that the BPCU 36 is not connected to an electrical circuit. Such would be considered a fail. If, however, the measured impedance is between the lower limit and the upper limit, such may be an indication that the BPCU 36 is connected to an electrical circuit 20 and the associated breaker 16 is tripped/off isolating the selected electrical circuit 20 from the main power grid. Such would be considered a pass.
Ideally, both upper and lower impedance limits are tested to pass the impedance test although only one, or none, may be required. If the impedance test yields an impedance below the lower limit, the processor may issue a “Breaker Failure” error indicating the breaker 16 is closed. If the impedance test gives a value above the upper limit, the processor 84 may issue a “Connection Failure” failure indicating the BPCU 36 is not connected to an output 22.
For a “fail” condition, the processor 84 generates a command signal 82 that instructs/causes switch 80 to isolate CUI-Hot-Conductor 76 from CUO-Hot-Conductor 72. For the embodiment in
As noted previously, the BPCU 36 may comprise communication circuitry 86 configured to receive a main power grid status signal generated by a remote sensing unit (RSU) 46 connected to a second electrical circuit female output associated with the main power grid. For such embodiment, the processor 84 may be further configured to generate the command signal 82 based at least in part on the main power grid status signal. Such will be described in detail below.
Attention is now directed more particularly to
The RSU 46 may further comprises a processor 84 electrically associated with communication circuitry 86 comprising wireless and or wired technology. As noted previously, the BPCU 36 and RSU 46 depicted in
The RSU 46 further comprises an RSU interface sensor 92 electrically associated with said processor 84 and said RSU interface 60 and configured to detect/measure an electrical parameter associated with the interface 60. If the RSU 46 is properly connected to an electrical circuit as described above, such electrical parameter may also be reflective of an electrical parameter of the first electrical circuit. When connected to an electrical circuit 22, the interface status signal, which is reflective of an electrical parameter associated with the interface 60 should also be reflective of the status of the main power grid 12. The processor 84 is configured to generate and transmit a power grid status signal reflective of at least one of a properly connected RSU 46 and or a main power grid failure. For one embodiment, the RSU 46 remains dormant until there is not voltage (or a voltage below a predefined limit) measured at the interface 60 indicating is a power grid 12 failure. Thus, when there is a voltage at interface 60, the power grid status signal may be the absence of a signal.
There are two basic power grid conditions: (1) a power grid failure and (2) a power grid good condition. For a power grid failure condition, there will be no voltage (or a low voltage) at the RSU 46 interface. For a power grid good condition, there will be a voltage at the RSU 46 interface.
For a power grid failure condition, for the embodiment depicted in
For power grid failure condition, test 1 (voltage test), transistor Q1 will turn OFF (as it is powered by the interface voltage and there is not interface voltage). When Q1 turns off such allows a voltage at the base of Q2 which turns ON via the RSU power source 94. The RSU power source 94 may be a battery as depicted in
For power grid failure condition, test 2 (impedance test—optional test), the processor 84 is powered up and can perform test 2 (impedance test). Under such conditions current will flow to the interface 60 and through the selected output 26 electrically associated with an electrical circuit 24 which will result in an interface 60 terminal voltage proportional to the load associated with the RSU interface 60. The impedance value reflective of the load can then be measured by the processor 84 ADC input via the sense resistors R8 and R7. The processor 84 may then add the impedance information to the generated power grid status signal which may now be reflective of both (1) a properly connected RSU 46 and/or (2) a main power grid failure. For the simplest configuration, such a status signal may be a simple OK signal with a more complex status signal comprising, for example, the interface 60 load resistance measurement.
For the condition where there is a power grid has not failed the interface 60 voltage will be above a predefined level (probably 120 volts or 220 volts). Thus, here, the RSU interface 60 is associated with an output 26 electrically associated with an electrical circuit 24 that is supplying power (i.e. no main power grid 12 failure). The voltage at the interface 60 input is rectified by diode D1 and capacitor C1 to provide the DC current required to turn “ON” transistor Q1. With Q1 ON the junction of R3 and R5 (i.e. base of Q2) is pulled low turning OFF Q2. With Q2 OFF the relay RL1 is not engaged and transistor Q3 is turned OFF. When Q3 is turned off, the processor 84 and communication circuitry 86 are turned OFF (i.e. dormant). Thus, for this configuration and interface 60 condition, the RSU status signal can be considered generating no signal. Restated, the processor 84 generates an interface status signal by generating no signal at all. Such a configuration is designed to minimize power consumption from a depletable RSU power source 94 such as a battery.
For one alternative embodiment, the RSU power source 94 may comprise a battery configured to power the RSU 46 for extended periods of time. For such embodiment, the processor 84 may be configured to generate and transmit a power grid status signal reflective of the connection status of the RSU 46 and the status of the main power grid 12 even when the main power grid 12 has not fail and is providing a voltage at the interface 60.
The embodiments above present a custom RSU interface sensor 92 design. It should be appreciated that any suitable RSU interface sensor 92 technology may be used without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
As best seen in
Referring now to
As depicted in the various figures the BPCU 36 and the RSU 46 comprise a processor 84. While the same reference number is used such processors need not be the same processor type. Processor 84 may be a microprocessor that supports standard operating systems and application software although other processing devices may be used such as ASICs (application specific integrated circuit) or ASSPs (application specific standard product) or PICs. The processing device may comprise onboard ROM, RAM, EPROM type memories for storing data and/or program code such as firmware. Processing device 82 may also comprise on-chip communication technology/circuitry (such as the ones manufacture by Microchip®) configured to transmit/receive a data signal to/from a remote electronic device. It should be appreciated that embodiments with communication circuitry 86 comprising a transceiver and/or only a transmitter fall within the scope of the invention. For one embodiment, the communication circuitry 86 consumes relatively low power and is configured to communicate with an external device that is expected to be within range of a low power transmitter signal. For example, for one embodiment the communication circuitry 86 may be configured to communicate with home communication system (e.g. WiFi, Security, etc.). Because such a system is expected to be within close communication range of the communication circuitry 86, the associated transmitter(s) can be relatively low powered thereby saving energy. That said, embodiments with more powerful transmitters may be used, including well-known technologies for wireless communications such as GPRS, GSM, GPRS, 5G, 4G, 3G, and EDGE enabled networks as well as WAP networks. Consequently, for some embodiments, the communication circuitry may define common cell phone communication technology.
Some embodiments may include both a low power transmitter and a high-power transmitter. For low power transceivers (a low power transmitter relative to the above described “high power” communication circuitry), such transceiver may operate in any number of unlicensed bands, although frequencies requiring a license may be used. Suitable technologies include Bluetooth and Zigbee (IEEE 802.15). Zigbee is a low data rate solution for multi-month to multi-year battery life applications. Zigbee operates on an unlicensed, international frequency band. Such technologies are known and understood by those skilled in the art, and a detailed explanation thereof is not necessary for purposes of describing the method and system according to the present invention. By way of example, the low power transmitter may provide communications with devices such as cell phones and may further be operable to transmit on one or more FM bands to provide communication through an FM radio.
One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that a BPCU 36 and an RSU 46 comprising such communication technology can be remotely monitored (e.g. temperature, power being supplied, voltage level, current being supplied, power generator fuel level, etc.) and controlled (e.g. turned on/off change switching element status, etc.).
As noted above, exemplary embodiments of a switch 80 include relays. A relay is an electrically operated switch. Many relays use an electromagnet to mechanically operate a switch, but other operating principles are also used, such as solid-state relays. The type of command signal used to control the switch 80 will depend on the switching technology used.
Generally speaking, the various electronic hardware comprises standard components known in the art although such hardware configuration and control routines are novel. One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the inherent flexibility of computer-based systems allows for a great variety of possible configurations, combinations, and divisions of tasks and functionality between and among components. For instance, methods discussed herein may be implemented using a single processor or multiple processors working in combination.
The various components discussed herein are not limited to any particular hardware architecture or configuration. Embodiments of the methods and systems set forth herein may be implemented by one or more general-purpose or customized computing devices adapted in any suitable manner to provide the desired functionality. The device(s) may be adapted to provide additional functionality complementary or unrelated to the present subject matter, as well. For instance, one or more computing devices may be adapted to provide desired functionality by accessing logic or software instructions rendered in a computer-readable form. When software is used, any suitable programming, scripting, or another type of language or combinations of languages may be used to implement the teachings contained herein. However, software need not be used exclusively, or at all. For example, some embodiments of the systems and methods set forth herein may also be implemented by hard-wired logic or other circuitry, including, but not limited to application-specific circuits. Of course, combinations of computer-executed software and hard-wired logic or other circuitry may be suitable, as well.
While the foregoing written description of the invention enables one of ordinary skill to make and use what is considered presently to be the best mode thereof, those of ordinary skill will understand and appreciate the existence of variations, combinations, and equivalents of the specific embodiment, method, and examples herein. The invention should therefore not be limited by the above described embodiment, method, and examples, but by all embodiments and methods within the scope and spirit of the invention as claimed.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/182,145, filed on 6 Nov. 2018, which claims priority to U.S. provisional application 62/648,977, filed on 28 Mar. 2018, and provisional application 62/673,224, filed on 7 Nov. 2017, which are incorporated by this reference for all that they disclose for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62648977 | Mar 2018 | US | |
62673224 | May 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16182145 | Nov 2018 | US |
Child | 16699510 | US |