There are numerous applications in which the position of a movable member, relative to adjacent structure, is to be determined. The determination is desirably (or, in certain instances, necessarily) made by generating and measuring a position-dependent electrical signal.
One application for such a system that has received considerable attention in the art concerns the positioning of a movable sash in a fume hood. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,706,553 describes a controller system in which sash position is monitored by a transducer to provide a signal that is indicative of the area of a fume hood opening. U.S. Pat. No. 4,893,551 discloses an apparatus for sensing the extent to which a fume hood opening is uncovered by the sashes, utilizing detectors to sense radiation from an optical or magnetic emitter. And U.S. Pat. No. 6,994,619 provides a sash-sensing system for controlling the flow of air into a fume hood, utilizing an optical sensing device and a reflective tape. Apparatus of kind described is believed to be common, and commercially available.
Nevertheless, the need remains for a position-sensing system in which the physical extent of its operative components is readily varied and selected and, once selected, is readily embodied in physical form, which system is of incomplex and inexpensive construction, is facile to assemble and install, and affords a wide scope and high degree of flexibility in its applications.
The foregoing objects are achieved, in accordance with the present invention, usually by the provision of a system consisting basically of two assemblies (stacks or arrays), each being constructed from a multiplicity of units, or segments, which are normally of modular form and are readily assembled with one another to produce linear or curvilinear arrays of virtually any practical length or extent. The units of one of the assemblies (sensor means, or “switch array”) contains an electrical resistance element and associated switching means (referred to for convenience generally as a “switch”), which switch can be operated so as to vary the electrical resistance in a common circuit that is established through the array. The other assembly (actuator means) usually consists of a multiplicity of adjacent actuating units, which are attached to one another so that they also form an array. The switch will preferably be operated magnetically, and the actuating units will comprise magnets, forming a “magnet array.”
Depending upon the extent of effective overlap of the two assemblies, any number of the switches present will be operated, in sequence, by the actuating effect (magnetic flux) to which they are subjected. The resistance of the associated resistance element will thereby be either removed from (by short circuiting, to short it out), or impressed upon, the circuit carried by the switch array. By measuring the total resistance in the circuit, the position of a movable member, on which one of the two arrays is mounted, can readily be determined (provided of course that the resistance elements all have the same ohmic value, or that the necessary correlation can be made otherwise). The output of a current applied to the switch stack, as so modified by the resistance variation, can be utilized by suitable control means for adjusting the position of the movable member or for other purposes, as will be evident to those skilled in the art.
A highly desirable feature of the system of the invention resides in the utilization not only of a single form of housing for both the switch/resistor units and also the magnet units, but also in the use of a single form of housing component that can be paired for constructing each unit.
Alarm systems are of course well known in which a reed switch or the like, and an actuating magnet, are separately mounted on a window or door sash and an adjacent frame part for initiating an alarm, or performing another function, when a circuit including the switch is broken by opening the door or window; such systems may include a programmable logic controller. The system of the present invention, in contrast, comprises multiple switches that are stacked together as an array and that function to generate a signal that is proportionate to the length of overlap with the units of a cooperating magnet stack.
Assemblies comprising the present system are readily retrofit to existing members and structures without need for prior measurement or for additional manufacture to conform them to the members and structures; they may of course also be supplied as an OEM feature. Specific applications for the system include the control of a mechanical air supply system, adapted as to account, for example, for the effects of a partially opened fenestration (which may be accomplished by enabling a length or area calculation), as in a fume hood or a common doorway or window; the determination and control of the area of a “air curtain” to optimize mechanical fan energy; and the determination and control of the level of liquid in a tank, the position of a flag on a pole, etc. Curvilinear arrays can, for example, be used to determine the position of a rotary valve, and myriad other applications will be evident, from the present description, to those skilled in the art.
More specifically, certain objects of the invention are provided by the provision of a position-sensing system comprised of: a switch array comprising an assembly of a multiplicity of separate switch units arranged seriatim, each of the switch units including an electrical circuit section, an electrical resistance element, and a switch that is operable for movement between two positions to effectively connect the resistance element to the electrical circuit section in one of the positions and to effectively disconnect the resistance element from the circuit section in the other of the positions, the circuit section having a plurality of terminals for operative electrical connection to a circuit section of a proximate one of the switch units so as to form common circuitry therewith; an actuator (magnet) array, of similar form to the switch array, comprising an assembly of a multiplicity of separate magnet units arranged seriatim, each of the magnet units including a magnet element that is effective for operating the switch of each of the switch units of the switch array when positioned proximate thereto; and means for electrically interconnecting free terminals of one of the switch units of the switch array for establishing electrical continuity therebetween.
In certain preferred embodiments the switch units of the switch array are substantially identical to one another, and the magnet units of the magnet array are also substantially identical to one another. Each of the switch units and each of the magnet units may comprise a housing defining at least one chamber therewithin, with the chambers of the switch units containing the resistance elements and the switches, and the chambers of the magnet units containing the magnet elements. All of the housings, comprising both the switch units and also the magnet units, will most desirably be substantially identical, and each of the housings will advantageously comprise a pair of substantially identical components fabricated from an electrically insulating material and joined to one another face-to-face in an end-to-end inverted relative orientation.
The housing of each switch unit will have opposite ends, one of which will usually comprise at least one projecting element and the other of which defines at least one socket, the at least one projecting element and the at least one socket being dimensioned and configured for mated interfitting to enable assembly of adjacent switch units with the at least one projecting element of one switch unit received within the at least one socket of the adjacent switch unit. In such embodiments, two terminals of the electrical circuit section are effectively present on the at least one projecting element of the switch unit housing, and two terminals of the electrical circuit section are effectively present within the socket of the switch unit housing so that, with the at least one projecting element of the one unit and the at least one socket of the adjacent unit matingly interfit, each of the terminals on the at least one projecting element of the one switch unit electrically connects to a corresponding one of the terminals within the at least one socket of the adjacent switch unit.
Generally, one end of each such switch unit will comprise two substantially parallel projecting elements, providing the at least one projecting element, with each of the parallel projecting elements having one of the terminals of the electrical circuit section effectively present thereon; the other end of the switch unit will, in such embodiments, define two substantially parallel sockets, each having one of the terminals effectively present therewithin and the parallel sockets being dimensioned and configured to matingly interfit with the parallel projecting elements of the adjacent switch unit, with the corresponding terminals thereof electrically interconnected. Normally, the projecting elements and the sockets of the housings will be formed for retentive interengagement when interfit with one another.
In other embodiments, at least one of the opposite ends of a plurality of the housings will comprise at least one projecting element, and the system will additionally include a plurality of coupling members. Each of the coupling members will have opposite ends in each of which is defined at least one socket, the at least one projecting element of the plurality of housings and the at least one socket of the plurality of coupling members being dimensioned and configured for mated interfitting to enable assembly of two of the switch units or two of the magnet units with one of the coupling members interposed therebetween with the projecting elements of the two switch units or the two magnet units received within the socket in each of the opposite ends of the coupling member. The coupling members may have electrical conductor means therein for establishing operative electrical connection between the circuit sections of two of the switch units assembled with the interposed of the coupling member. When the housings are magnet unit housings, the coupling members will usually be devoid of operative electrical interconnection means. Alternatively, the housings can define sockets in both of their opposite ends, with the coupling members comprising the interfitting projecting elements.
The means for electrically connecting the free terminals of one switch unit of the switch array will normally be a shunt unit comprising a housing containing an electrical conductor having terminals for electrical connection to the free terminals of the one switch unit. Such a shunt unit housing will be assembled with an endmost switch unit of the switch array, and the conductor terminals of the shunt unit will be electrically connected to free terminals of the endmost switch unit to establish electrical continuity therebetween.
In most instances, the resistance elements of all of the switch units will have the same ohmic value. The switch of the each switch unit may desirably be a reed switch, and the magnet element of the each magnet unit will desirably be a permanent magnet. An electric circuit board, contained within the chamber of the housing of each of the switch units, will advantageously provide the electrical circuit section, the electrical resistance element, and the switch thereof. The resistance element of each of the switch units may be normally effectively connected in the circuit section thereof, with the switch in the one position, and the switch will be effective, in the other position thereof, to short circuit the resistance element.
The switch array and the magnet array will, in many cases, be of rectilinear form. Alternatively, they may be of curvilinear form. In the latter case, the arrays may comprise circular sections and have the same effective radius, or the effective radius of one of the arrays may be smaller than that of the other, so as to enable the arrays to be concentrically disposed relative to one another. Each of the switch units and each of the magnet units will usually have means thereon for affixing it to a support member.
Other objects of the invention are attained by the provision of a position-sensing assembly including first and second members disposed for relative movement adjacent to one another; a position-sensing system, as herein described; and means for mounting the switch array on the first member and for mounting the magnet array on the second member. The arrays are so positioned that, upon relative adjacent movement of the members, the arrays move past one another along a path having at least a section within which the magnet elements of a variable plurality of the magnet units effectively overlap the switches of a variable plurality of the switch units, so as to magnetically effect operation of the switches between the two positions thereof. Such an assembly will normally additionally include means for measuring the electrical resistance of the common circuitry formed through the switch array and for thereby enabling the determination of a position-dependent factor based upon the relative positions of the first and second members.
The first and second members of the assembly may be supported for relative movement in parallel planes, in which case a first member will generally comprise stationary structure disposed substantially in or on a first plane and a second member will be movable in an adjacent plane; the second member will typically comprise at least one panel. The first and second members may alternatively be supported for relative rotational movement.
Still other objects of the invention are attained by the provision of a module constructed for end-to-end, mutually adjacent assembly with like modules, arranged seriatim, for forming an array adapted for use in a position-sensing system. Such a module will comprise a housing that defines at least one chamber therewithin, dimensioned and configured for containing at least one of a switch and resistance element combination and a magnet element, and having other features herein described. Internal structure of each of the housing components will desirably define a compound recess for forming, in cooperation with a another such housing component so joined, a chamber configured to separately and selectively receive and seat a magnet element and an electric circuit board. More specifically, the internal structure will desirably define a first, generally rectangular recess portion for receiving and seating a circuit board, and a second, generally rectangular recess portion, narrower than the first recess portion and disposed in a traversing, centralized position relative thereto, for receiving and seating a magnet element.
a and 7b are, respectively, a plan view and a side elevational view of the electric circuit board employed in the unit shown in
a and 17b are, respectively, illustrations of cooperating assemblies of the invention, mounted separately upon each member of a set of relatively movable, adjacent members,
a and 18b are illustrations of a position sensor system embodying the invention installed on a sliding door arrangement,
a and 20b are front and side elevational views showing the system of the invention installed for determining the height position of an overhead garage door,
b is a plan view of a modular unit and a coupling component constructed for assembly therewith;
a and 23b are, respectively, plan views of an angled modular unit, and one of the pairs of housing components from which the unit is constructed, constituting one alternative to the form of the unit shown, for example, in
a and 24b are, respectively, plan views of an arcuate modular unit, and one of the pairs of housing components from which it is constructed, constituting another alternative to the form of the unit shown, for example, in
a is a plan view of a circular array of housing components of units of the form shown in
As seen in
The component depicted in
It will be appreciated that complete male connecting projections are formed when the base and cover components 10, 10′ are assembled in face-to-face relationship, as indicated in
It can also be seen that each component 10, 10′ is formed with a pair of posts 26, disposed on the diagonal in cater-corner relationship to one another, and with a pair of holes 28 at the intervening cater-corner positions. A catch element 30 is formed along one side of each housing component, and a corresponding notch 32 is formed into the opposite side. These several elements enable ready assembly of the two components 10, 10′, to provide a complete housing, by inserting the posts 26 of one component into the corresponding, confronting holes 28 of the other, for frictional engagement, and by causing the catch element 30 on one component to mechanically engage the corresponding notch 32 in the other.
As depicted in
As best seen in
The housing components of the male end cap are formed with projecting male connector elements 16 which, in assembly, provide parallel projections for receipt in the receptacles that provide the female connecting elements of an adjacent module unit. In this instance, the housing component 56 contains a shunt wire 62 disposed in the recess 60 of the body portion 58, adapted to electrically engage suitable terminals (e.g., sockets 42) disposed within the channels of the adjacent switch/resistor unit; this feature is also depicted in the circuit diagram of
As will be noted from
A specific application for a system embodying the invention is depicted in
A similar arrangement can of course be utilized for determining the position of a double-hung window. Typically, the stacks of such a system would consist of 22 switch segments, each again having a one-inch effective length, and including suitable end caps.
Another representative application for systems embodying the invention is shown in
a and 20b illustrate an application in which a system of the invention is employed for determining garage door height position. In this instance the switch stack 70 would typically be adhesively mounted upon a stationary frame member 90, with a number of relatively short magnet stacks 72′ being adhesively mounted upon the several panels 92 constituting the overhead door (the adhesive element 73 is visible only in
a and 21b depict components of systems embodying the invention in which the active units (e.g., switch and magnet units) of the arrays are not attached directly to one another but include instead an interposed connector 98, comprised of assembled housing components 99. As shown in these figures, the unit 100 and its housing component 102 are formed with female connecting structures 104 on both ends, and the connector 98 is formed with male elements 106 on both of its opposite ends; a number of active units would be joined by interposed connectors to form a complete array, as indicated in
Rather than having the male elements on the connectors and the female structures on the active units, it is obvious not only that those features can be reversed but also that other combinations, and different forms of connecting elements, can be employed. It is also obvious that when the active units are magnet units the connectors employed would normally be fully insulating and devoid of any electrically conductive means. As suggested in
The circuit board depicted in
Except for the angular shape, the unit of
a and 24b depict a unit, generally designated by the numeral 114, and a housing component 116 that are similar to those of
Alternatively, an array of such units may be of sectorial (e.g., semicircular) form, as shown in
An application for curvilinear arrays of switch and magnet units is schematically illustrated in
Finally,
As indicated above, many variations may be made in the system of the invention, as described herein, without departure from its underlying concepts. For example, while permanent magnets will usually be preferred for use in a magnet actuator stack, it is possible that electromagnets may be employed instead. Indeed, the actuation system may for example employ optical rather than magnetic, principles (or effects in other regions of the electromagnetic radiation spectrum), assuming of course that the sensor is responsive to the actuating energy. Also, while the provision of a single form of housing, assembled from a pair of identical components, offers obvious manufacturing and installation advantages, that need not necessarily be the case.
As is also indicated above, while the embodiments of the invention most fully described employ an array of actuating units, the invention may more broadly be implemented by using a continuous form of actuating means, such as a strip of magnetic tape applied to a substrate, or an elongate form of a radiation-emitting component. Such a continuous element might only need to be cut to proper length, and applied utilizing its adhesive backing.
Finally, while all sensor units will usually employ resistance elements having the same value, the resistances may vary. For example, the resistance may increase proportionately to the length of the array (e.g., doubling every inch), or the increases could be in a logarithmic relationship (e.g., 1, 10, 100, 1000 . . . ).
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/921,617, filed Apr. 2, 2007, and of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/009,521, filed Dec. 28, 2007. The entire specifications of both of the foregoing provisional applications are incorporated hereinto by reference thereto.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2008/004203 | 3/31/2008 | WO | 00 | 12/14/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61009521 | Dec 2007 | US | |
60921617 | Apr 2007 | US |