Commercial building spaces such as offices, laboratories, light manufacturing facilities, health facilities, meeting and banquet hall facilities, educational facilities, common areas in hotels, apartments, retirement homes, retail stores, restaurants and the like are commonly constructed with suspended ceilings. These suspended ceiling installations are ubiquitous, owing to their many recognized benefits. Such ceilings ordinarily comprise a rectangular open grid suspended by wire from a superstructure and tile or panels carried by the grid and enclosing the open spaces between the grid elements. The most common form of grid elements has an inverted T-shaped cross-section. The T-shape often includes a hollow bulb at the top of the inverted stem of the T-shape. A popular variant of this standard T-shape includes a downwardly open C-shaped channel formed by the lower part of the inverted tee.
Advances in electronics has fed further advances and lead the world into the digital age. This digital movement creates an ever-increasing demand for low voltage direct current (DC) electrical power. This demand would seem to be at least as great in finished commercial space as any other occupied environment. A conventional suspended ceiling has potential to be an ideal structure for distributing low voltage electrical power in finished spaced. Many relatively low power devices are now supported on such ceilings and newer electronic devices and appliances are continuously being developed and adopted for mounting on ceilings.
The ceiling structure, of course, typically overlies the entire floor space of an occupiable area. This allows the ceiling to support electronic devices where they are needed in the occupied space. Buildings are becoming more intelligent in energy management of space conditioning, lighting, noise control, security, and other applications. The appliances that provide these features including sensors, actuators, transducers, speakers, cameras, recorders, in general, all utilize low voltage DC power.
As the use of electronics grows, the consumption of low voltage electrical power likewise grows. This seemingly ever accelerating appetite for DC power presents opportunities for more efficient transformation of relatively high voltage utility power typically found at 110/115 or 220/240 alternating current (AC) volts with which the typical enclosed space is provided. Individual power supplies located at the site of or integrated in an electronic device, the most frequent arrangements today, are often quite inefficient in transforming the relatively high voltage AC utility power to a lower DC voltage required by an electronic device. Typically, they can consume appreciable electric power in a standby mode when the associated electronic device is shut off. It is envisioned that a single DC power source serving the electronic needs of a building or a single floor of a building can be designed to be inherently more efficient since its cost is distributed over all of the devices it serves and because it can take advantage of load averaging strategies.
The invention provides accessories and components useful with and adapted to be carried on electrified suspended ceiling gird. In accordance with the invention, ceiling panels or tiles are arranged with conductive circuits that transmit electrical power from that carried on a supporting grid system. In some arrangements, the electrical circuit includes a connector that automatically makes electrical contact with the grid circuitry when the panel or tile is put in place on the grid. In accordance with other aspects of the invention, specialty border elements used in suspended ceiling islands distribute electrical power to the grid on which it is assembled and to electrical devices carried on the grid.
Referring now to
A ceiling panel 14 of suitable material, known in the industry, having physical stability, fire resistance and, preferably, acoustic properties, is illustrated at 14. In plan view, the panel 14 is rectangular, being square and having nominal dimension of 2′×2′ or metric equivalent, for example, or being somewhat elongated normally at 2′×4′ or metric equivalent, for example. The panel 14 has an electric or electronic device 16 mounted thereon. The device 16 can be a light fixture using light emitting diodes (LEDs), a speaker, a sensor for building control, security, or other function, a wireless support device, a camera, or other known device or apparatus having modest or limited electrical power consumption.
On its upper side, the ceiling panel 14 has two separate electrical conductors 17, 18. The conductors 17, 18 can have the same or like construction as that described for the strips 13. In the arrangement of
At the end of each of the conductors 17, 18, a flexible conductive leaf 19 is fixed to an edge of the panel 14. The leaf 19, which is in electrical continuity with an associated conductive strip 17 or 18, serves as a contact to establish an electrical circuit with the adjacent conductive strip 13 on the tee 11, or 12, supporting the respective edge of the panel 14. The leaf 19 is configured to automatically make contact with a conductive strip 13 when the panel 14 is in position on the grid 10. Additionally, the leaf 19 is configured to allow the panel 14 to have a limited degree of lateral freedom to accommodate normal dimensional variations in the grid 10 and panel 14 as well as permitting the panel to be lifted from below the ceiling to gain access to the plenum above the plane of the ceiling.
Referring now to
With reference to
With reference to
In
Referring to
In the various disclosed embodiments of the invention, the conductive strips 13, 17 and 18 have their outer or exposed surfaces un-insulated to facilitate electrical connections with the various connecting elements. Alternatively, the conductors can be fully insulated except on points at which an electrical connection is to be made where such insulation can be omitted or removed.
Referring to
Referring now to
While the invention has been shown and described with respect to particular embodiments thereof, this is for the purpose of illustration rather than limitation, and other variations and modifications of the specific embodiments herein shown and described will be apparent to those skilled in the art all within the intended spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the patent is not to be limited in scope and effect to the specific embodiments herein shown and described nor in any other way that is inconsistent with the extent to which the progress in the art has been advanced by the invention.
This application claims the priority of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/118,075, filed Nov. 26, 2008. The invention relates to suspended ceiling structures and, in particular, to electrification of such ceiling structures.
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