The present invention relates generally to illuminated display indicators. More particularly, the present invention relates to a method and apparatus for operating a multiple lamp display indicator from a control station.
Existing annunciator lamp technology, including devices known in the art as dome lights, and further including those for medical applications, may use multiple wires from each served examination or patient room to light multiple lamps within a dome light at a location outside the door of the patient room. There may, in some applications, be one wire per lamp with a common return. This affords moderate complexity at each room, since there are likely to be four or more informational signals that can be sent from each room plus an emergency signal.
Each in-room controller in a typical prior-art system may feature a transmitting control station with a switch and a confirming light on the control station for each signal. There may further be a pull cord activating a switch for an emergency signal. Each switch closure may send power from a power supply to a corresponding lamp on the dome light assembly, then to a common return. It is understood that a similar system with two dedicated wires per switch closure could also be implemented, at further cost in wiring complexity.
Such an annunciator system may be highly reliable and electrically obvious, but may represent a significant cost in installation materials and labor as well as complexity.
Accordingly, what is needed in dome light systems is a technology that preserves reliability while decreasing installation complexity.
It is therefore a feature and advantage of some embodiments of the present invention to provide a dome light system capable of illuminating individual lamps under the control of and at a display remote from a control station, using minimal wiring to achieve full functionality.
It is also a feature and advantage of some embodiments of the present invention to provide a dome light system wherein a single two-wire signal line furnishes both power and digital commands from a control station to a dome light.
The above and other features and advantages are achieved through the use of a novel dome light system and method of operation as herein disclosed. In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, a dome light system is provided. The dome light system includes a controller with a transmitting device for power and data, at least one dome light located separately from the controller, having at least one illuminating device therein, and having a receiving device for power and data.
In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, a dome light comprises a display device with a multiplicity of identifiably distinct display elements, a receiving device that generates a multiplicity of display modes to control the display device in response to the detection by the receiving device of a multiplicity of distinct, digitally encoded display commands, and a transmitting device, wherein the transmitting device generates the display commands recognizable by the receiving device.
In accordance with yet another embodiment of the present invention, a dome light comprises displaying means for displaying a multiplicity of identifiably distinct status elements, receiving means for receiving commands directing display in one of a multiplicity of modes of each of the identifiably distinct status elements in response to the detection by the receiving device of a multiplicity of distinct, digitally encoded display commands, and transmitting means for transmitting commands, wherein the transmitting means generates display commands recognizable by the receiving means.
In accordance with still another embodiment of the present invention, visually indicating status at a distance from a controller comprises the steps of displaying a multiplicity of identifiably distinct status elements, receiving commands directing display in one of a multiplicity of modes by each of the identifiably distinct status elements in response to the receiving of a multiplicity of distinct display commands, and transmitting display commands.
There have thus been outlined, rather broadly, some of the features of the invention in order that the detailed description thereof that follows may be better understood, and in order that the present contribution to the art may be better appreciated. There are, of course, additional features of the invention that will be described below and which will form the subject matter of the claims appended hereto.
In this respect, before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and to the arrangements of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced and carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein, as well as the abstract, are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting.
As such, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the conception upon which this disclosure is based may readily be utilized as a basis for the designing of other structures, methods, and systems for carrying out the several purposes of the present invention. It is important, therefore, that the claims be regarded as including such equivalent constructions insofar as they do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Established annunciator technology for environments such as doctors' offices, clinics, and primary care facilities may have provisions for identifying the status of individual patient rooms, such as by the presence of file folders in a basket outside the door. More technologically elaborate solutions may include, for example, a single lamp outside a patient room controlled by a switch inside the room. All such basic solutions have limited utility and none provides emergency support. More elaborate lamp-based indicator systems, to include those with two or more lamps in a dome light assembly, can include complex control wiring, possibly requiring one or more wires per lamp. Such systems may lack the ability to support enhancements without altering or adding wiring.
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention may include at least one lamp in a dome light assembly that can be affixed outside a patient's room in a medical clinic, for example, which dome light assembly can be controlled from a control station inside the same room. The dome light assembly may receive both power and control signals on a single wire pair from the control station. It may be desirable for the single wire pair providing power and control to be implemented using multiplexed control signals, contained, for example, in a serial digital command string. This is particularly true for feature-rich dome light assemblies. Some such assemblies can include more than one lamp. In some, the individual display elements within the dome light can be provided with filters, different color light emitting diodes (LEDs), or equivalent features to permit emission in different colors. In some, the lamp can emit using heightened-alert features such as flashing. In some, the dome light assembly can include capability for emitting sound.
Turning now to the figures, where like elements are denoted by like reference numerals,
Power to the control station 14 may originate in utility wiring 22, from which it may be fed from a central transformer 24 by low-voltage alternating-current wiring 26 serving preferably a multiplicity of control stations 14, 28 and 30 through power distribution wiring 32. Shielding 34 on all power distribution wiring 32 may likewise be desirable.
In the case of an unshielded system, a pair of loose wires, placed, for example, in a nonconductive conduit, can be used as signal conductors, and, in effect, comprise a transmission line. Such an arrangement can both radiate and capture stray electromagnetic interference (EMI) and radio-frequency interference (RFI) signals, and has the potential to cause signal and operational errors in highly sensitive electronic devices, such as medical instruments. The same pair of loose wires, placed within a metallic or otherwise conductive conduit, may exhibit lower interference, provided the conduit exhibits good electrical continuity to ground, since the conduit will tend to short out interference and thereby provide some shielding effect. This applies for most styles of conduit, such as flexible and rigid conduit.
Holding the pair of (untwisted) wires at uniform spacing, commonly characteristic of cables such as zip cord and Romex®, tends to increase impedance uniformity, reducing the tendency of the pair to radiate and to absorb signals. Twisting the wires together, as in commercial twisted pair cable, provides continuous change and periodic reversal in field orientation, which can tend to largely cancel both radiated emissions and induced interference. The most thorough protection against interference places a twisted pair within at least one layer of overall braided, stranded, or foil shield, which, if properly grounded, can provide a barrier to interference along with distributed interference cancellation, meanwhile providing good assurance of impedance uniformity.
The control station 40, shown in greater detail in
An internal face of the control station 40 also is shown in
A control station 40 may be powered, for example, from bussed, intrinsically safe power, such as the 24-volt transformer-isolated alternating-current power supplied from a central power supply 24 and distributed by low-voltage wiring 26 as shown in
Input signals to a microprocessor 102 configured as a receiver (jumper 104 set high by a jumper between pins 1 and 2 thereof) may arrive on an input line 116, which line can be pulled low by a weak resistor 118 and permitted to swing high during positive-going signals by a coupling capacitor 120. Output signals from a microprocessor 102 configured as a transmitter (jumper 104 set low by a jumper between pins 2 and 3 thereof) can be configured to drive bipolar transistors 122 and 124 to force output line 126 high during each logic-1 interval, which intervals are determined by the internal processing of the transmitter microprocessor 102 and output from pin 4, named RA2, thereof. Output line 126 is pulled low by load current in the receiver microprocessor circuit driven by the transmitter-configured circuit, including quiescent current in the regulator IC of the dome light assembly and current drawn by any lamps illuminated in the control station 40 panel and the dome light assembly 80.
The signal timing indicated in the exemplary embodiment, shown in
Once the start bit 132 has established timing, successive samples can be taken at the center of each successive bit time. In the exemplary waveform, which transmits the least significant bit (LSB) 142 first, only Bit 3148 is active. This could correspond to a doctor call lamp being steadily lit, for example. Similarly, setting Bit 4150 could correspond to an emergency, Bit 5152 to activation of the sound generator, Bit 6154 to flash all active lights, and Bit 7156 to flash sequentially instead of simultaneously any lights enabled to flash by Bit 6154.
Other message formats are possible, such as the use of a longer command word, which could include assignment of more than the previously mentioned two bits, thereby permitting more state options for each lamp to be available. Another option could transmit, for example, a single message per lamp, comprising a lamp number and a command code. Another option could leave the transmitter with the burden of keeping track of display functions, and require the transmitter to send a new command word for each state change in the dome light. Thus, to emulate the above operation, a flashing doctor call would require a new command to be sent each half-second—first on, then, after a half-second wait, off—instead of sending a flashing-doctor-call command once.
Other electronic line drivers and receivers and their associated microprocessor ICs may be usable in place of the devices shown in
Fiber optic communication may also be feasible, although the properties commonly viewed as making fiber desirable may be of limited benefit in the exemplary system. For example, fibers can be used to transmit the commands described above, and have the particular advantage of being effectively free of risk of causing interference in other medical apparatus in a room. Such approaches require separate power connections. Using another approach, light from high-brightness signal sources such as laser diodes, sent through low-loss fibers used as light pipes, can directly illuminate diffusers, so that neither electrical power nor active parts are required at the dome light unit.
Applications of the present invention can include support of multiple-station ward areas with multiple entrance doors. For such configurations, central timekeeping—that is, a single master clock to which all stations would be resynchronized periodically—may be preferable. Such synchronization, with microprocessor IC 102 transmitters programmed to start their respective transmissions only at specific intervals, may require bit transmit times to be uniform after a button is pressed at any station. Using the open-collector configuration of the output transistor 124 in
The many features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the detailed specification, and, thus, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all such features and advantages of the invention which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and variations will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation illustrated and described, and accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, that fall within the scope of the invention.