This application relates to security systems and more particular to fire detection systems.
Systems are known to protect people and assets within secured areas. Such systems are typically based upon the use of one more sensors that detect threats within the secured area.
Threats to people and assets may originate from any of number of different sources. For example, a fire may kill or injure occupants who become trapped by a fire in a home. Similarly, carbon monoxide from a fire may kill people in their sleep.
In most cases, threat detectors are connected to a local control panel. In the event of a threat detected via one of the sensors, the control panel may sound a local audible alarm. The control panel may also send a signal to a central monitoring station.
Located on the control panel or nearby may be a display screen that displays the status of the fire and/or security system. In some cases, the display may include a map that shows fire detectors and a status of each detector.
The display may also show a separate window that includes a list of identifiers of activated fire detector and a time of activation. The map of fire detectors and time of activation may be very important for fire fighting personnel arriving to fight the fire. The maps provide an indication of activated fire alarms and the list provides a time of activation. By viewing the map, the fire-fighter is able to determine a location of the fire and path to the fire.
While fire and/or security systems work well, the displays are sometimes difficult to interpret. This is especially the case in the situation where a fire fighter is unfamiliar with the secured area and/or where the fire has enveloped large areas of a facility. Accordingly, a need exists for better methods of displaying fire information.
While disclosed embodiments can take many different forms, specific embodiments thereof are shown in the drawings and will be described herein in detail with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles thereof as well as the best mode of practicing same, and is not intended to limit the application or claims to the specific embodiment illustrated.
The fire detection devices may include single detector devices or multi-function devices. Multi-function devices may refer to a single device with more than one fire detector or it may refer to a single communication cable with more than one detector connected to the cable. Where the fire detectors are multi-function devices, the multi-function device may include a combination of two or more of an ionization detector, a photoelectric detector, an infrared detector, a laser detector, a heat detector and a carbon monoxide detectors.
The fire detection devices may also include multi-function acoustic sensors (MFASs). The fire detection devices may also include water sprinkler flow detection as described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,797,116 or PASS devices described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,639,147.
A control panel 18 may monitor each of the fire detectors for activation. Upon activation, the control panel may compose and send an alarm message to a central monitoring station 20.
The fire detectors may be wired or wirelessly connected to the control panel through a corresponding wired or wireless network. The fire detectors all have a separate unique system address and are all separately addressable by the control panel. In the case of a multi-function detector, a multiplexer within the multi-function detector allows each of the fire detectors of the multi-function detector to be separately accessed by the control panel.
Included within the control panel and each of the fire detectors is one or more processor apparatus (processors) 22, 24, each operating under control of one or more computer programs 26, 28 loaded from a non-transitory computer readable medium (memory) 30. As used herein, reference to a step performed by a computer program is also reference to the processor that executed that step.
Within the control panel, a monitoring processor monitors the status of each of the fire detectors. Monitoring in this case means detecting a normal state, an alarm state, a trouble state and a failure of the branch circuit that includes the fire detector. In this regard, a trouble state may mean an abnormal state detected within the fire detector by circuitry that monitors the operating parameters of a sensor of the fire detector. In contrast, failure of a branch circuit may mean a short or open circuit of a cable in the case of a wired branch circuit or failure of a radio frequency (RF) transceiver in the case of a wireless branch circuit.
Under the illustrated embodiment, the three state conditions of a conventional fire sensor (i.e., normal, alarm, trouble) is extended to a four state mode of operation. In this regard, the fourth state considers the possibility of failure of a corresponding branch circuit.
For example, in the case of a fire, very high heat can cause physical failure of a fire detector. In the case of a multi-function sensor one or more of the detectors could fail while leaving the others intact. However, the very high heat could also cause failure of a communications branch circuit.
In general, alarm failure may be caused by any of a number of different conditions. In the case of a multi-function detector, the failure of any one detector to enter an alarm state may indicate that communications are intact with loss of communications due to a particular failure mode of only a single detector. In this case, the fire alarm control panel (FACP) confirms communication loss by checking the cable for open or short-circuit conditions or verifying wireless device operation(s). When one or more devices on a cable are detected as intact (not failed), then the remaining devices which are in alarm may be used to determine a fire path.
In one particular example, the FACP may detect failure of a branch circuit including at least some fire detectors that were not in an alarm state and some devices that were in an alarm state. Under the illustrated embodiment, only the devices that were in an alarm state before branch circuit failure are used to detect the path of a fire.
Alternatively, some buildings may have a dual cable arrangement with one of the two cables routed along the length of the building on each side and fire detectors along the length alternatively connected to the fire and second cables. In this case, the location of the cables and activated sensors before failure of one of the two cables may be used as additional information in determining fire spread.
As mentioned above, a conventional fire panel considers three states including a normal state where no fire is detected, an alarm state where a fire is detected and a trouble state. Conventional FACP annunciators typically latch the alarm or normal indicator in the event of a trouble signal thereby hiding any trouble or failure states.
In contrast, the system of
As mentioned above, the fire detectors used in the system of
In the case of multiple sensors, the readings of the different sensors may be used to indicate a fire signature. In this case, each of the fire detectors in a particular region may be simultaneously read and considered in combination to arrive at a fire signature. The fire signature may be used to determine the state of a fire in that region.
For example,
In general, a set of signatures, such as those shown in
It should also be noted that a unique icon that depicts each fire condition could also be depicted on the display in addition to or in the alternative to shading. For example,
Alternatively, the information of the fire progression file may also be used to depict a fire vector as shown in
In general, the segments shown in
Alternatively, the information of the fire progression file may also be used to depict a three dimensional visualization of a fire as shown in
The map of
In general,
In general, the system includes a plurality of fire detectors distributed throughout a secured geographic area, a monitoring panel that monitors each of the plurality of fire detectors, a status processor that periodically detects a status of each of the plurality of fire detectors and saves a status indicator of the fire detector indicating one of normal, alarm and fault into a memory along with a time value, an alarm processor of the monitoring panel that detects alarm signals from the plurality of fire detectors and presents respective indicators of the activated fire detectors on a geographic map of the secured area shown on a display and a fire progression processor that displays an indicator of a progression of a fire on the map of the display based upon the status indicators saved in memory and upon a correlation between a status indicator of alarm in a previous time period and a status indicator of fault in a more recent time period.
Alternatively, the system includes a plurality of fire detectors distributed throughout a secured geographic area, a monitoring processor that monitors each of the plurality of fire detectors for alarm messages from activated fire detectors and for trouble messages from malfunctioning fire detectors, a correlation processor that detects a trouble message immediately following an alarm message from one of the plurality of fire detectors and a fire progression processor that displays an indicator of progression of a fire on a map of the secured area presented on a display based upon the detected trouble message immediately following the alarm message from the one fire detector.
Alternatively, the system includes a fire detection system that protects a secured geographic area divided into a plurality of zones, a plurality of fire detectors distributed throughout the secured geographic area with at least one of the plurality of fire detectors disposed in each of the plurality of zones, a monitoring processor that monitors each of the plurality of fire detectors for alarm messages from activated fire detectors and for trouble messages from malfunctioning fire detectors, a correlation processor that detects a trouble message immediately following an alarm message from one of the plurality of fire detectors and a fire progression processor that displays an indicator of progression of a fire in at least some adjacent zones of the plurality of zones shown on a map of the secured area presented on a display based upon the detected trouble message immediately following the alarm message from the one fire detector.
From the foregoing, it will be observed that numerous variations and modifications may be effected without departing from the spirit and scope hereof. It is to be understood that no limitation with respect to the specific apparatus illustrated herein is intended or should be inferred. It is, of course, intended to cover by the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the scope of the claims. Further, logic flows depicted in the figures do not require the particular order shown, or sequential order, to achieve desirable results. Other steps may be provided, or steps may be eliminated, from the described flows, and other components may be add to, or removed from the described embodiments.