In the public realm, various screens, buttons, and other surfaces may be deemed as high-touch surfaces, because several different individuals may contact them on a daily basis. Disinfection services may only be offered periodically and thus allow multiple users to come in contact with a surface between each cleaning. In such situations, contaminants, such as viruses, may be present on the surface and thus be transferred to from user to user as they come in contact with the surface. In some past examples, UV emitting devices have been used to periodically disinfect such surfaces and the surrounding air. However, such systems do not continuously and efficiently clean such surfaces.
Aspects of the present disclosure are directed toward systems and methods for disinfecting a high-touch surface. In some embodiments, a disinfection device includes an electromagnetic wave emitting device (EWE device), the EWE device being configured to emit electromagnetic radiation within the ultra-violet spectrum (UV radiation). A disinfection device may further include a light guide having a front surface and a rear surface. In some configurations, the EWE device may be positioned to emit UV radiation into the light guide, the light guide may be configured to reflect and diffuse a portion of the UV radiation received from the EWE device in a distributed manner across the front surface, and the light guide may be at least partially transmissive of visible light between the front surface and the rear surface. A disinfection device can be further configured such that a use device, positioned such that at least a portion of the disinfection device is between the use device and a user, is observable through the disinfection device via the front surface by the user and physically interactable through the disinfection device via the front surface by the user and the UV radiation received by the light guide and distributed across the front surface functions to disinfect the front surface.
In some embodiments, the disinfection device may comprise a plurality of EWE devices configured to emit UV radiation into the light guide. Additionally or alternatively, the UV radiation received at the front surface is sufficient to remove, denature, or deactivate pathogens located on the front surface.
In some embodiments, the disinfection device may further comprise a UV barrier positioned proximate a surface of the light guide. The UV barrio may be positioned proximate the rear surface of the light guide and be configured to block UV radiation from the EWE device being received by the use device and to be at least partially transmissive of visible light. In some examples, the light guide is configured to reflect and diffuse a portion of the UV radiation received form the EWE device in a distributed manner across the rear surface, and in further embodiments the US barrier is configured to reflect a portion of the UV radiation received at the rear surface of the light guide towards the front surface, whereby the UV radiation distributed across the rear surface is reflected towards the front surface in a distributed manner across the front surface.
In some embodiments, the disinfection device may further comprise an ultrasonic wave generator physically coupled with the light guide such that sonic waves generated by the ultrasonic wave generator are received by the front surface and the sonic waves received by the front surface functions to disinfect the device. In further embodiments, the ultrasonic wave generator may be physically coupled to the rear surface.
In some embodiments, a method of disinfecting a high-touch surface using a disinfection device may comprise emitting UV radiation into a light guide and the light guide having a front surface and a rear surface, and the light guide being at least partially transmissive of visible light between the front surface and the rear surface. A method may further comprise reflecting and diffusing a portion of the UV radiation within the light guide in a distributed manner across the front surface and disinfecting the front surface by the UV radiation reflected and diffused in a distributed manner across the front surface. Additionally, a method may comprise receiving interaction with a use device through the disinfection device via the front surface from a user. In some embodiments, the receiving interaction may include receiving physical contact on the front surface from the user, the physical contact providing the interaction with the use device, the interaction being through the disinfection device, the use device being observable by the user through the disinfection device via the front surface.
In some embodiments, the method may further comprise reflecting and diffusing a portion of the UV radiation within the light guide in a distributed manner across the rear surface and restricting the UV radiation received at the rear surface from being received by the use device by a UV barrier, the UV barrier being at least partially transmissive of visible light. Additionally, the method may further comprise absorbing at least a portion of the UV radiation received at the rear surface via the UV barrier and/or reflecting at least a portion of the UV radiation received at the rear surface towards the front surface via the UV barrier.
In some embodiments, the method may further comprise emitting ultrasonic waves into the light guide, receiving at least a portion of the ultrasonic waves on the front surface, and disinfecting the front surface by the ultrasonic waves received on the front surface. In some examples, emitting ultrasonic waves may further comprise emitting ultrasonic waves via an ultrasonic wave generator physically coupled to the light guide.
The following drawings are illustrative of particular embodiments of the invention and therefore do not limit the scope of the invention. The drawings are not necessarily to scale (unless so state) and are intended for use with the explanations in the following detailed description. Embodiments of the invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the appended drawings, wherein like numerals denote like elements.
The following detailed description is exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration of the invention in any way. Rather, the following description provides some practical illustrations for implanting various embodiments of the present invention. Those skilled in the art will recognize that many of the noted examples have a variety of suitable alternatives.
Embodiments described herein generally relate to systems and methods relating to a disinfection device configured to disinfect surfaces using electromagnetic wave emitting devices (EWE devices), such as light-emitting diodes (LEDs), UV radiation creating lamps, ultrasonic wave generators, a combination of such devices, or the like. In some embodiments, the devices may provide radiation or the like to a surface, such as a surface external to a use device. For example, the EWE devices may provide electromagnetic waves to a surface external to a use device.
Light guide 120 may additionally be transmissive or partially transmissive of one or more wavelengths or wavelength bands. For example, light guide 120 may be transmissive or partially transmissive of wavelengths emitted by one or more EWE devices (e.g. emitted radiation 115) and/or light within the visible light spectrum. Furthermore, light guide 120 may be configured to reflect and diffuse a portion of the emitted radiation 115 received from the one or more EWE devices 110 in a distributed manner across the front surface 121, the rear surface 122 and/or edge surface 123. Additionally or alternatively, a portion of the radiation emitted from an EWE device may be directly received by front surface 121 and/or rear surface 122, such as by propagating through light guide 120 with no reflections and/or diffusions.
In some embodiments, EWE devices 110 may be configured to emit radiation 115 of wavelengths to remove, denature, kill, deactivate, and/or suppress replication of various pathogens (e.g. pathogens 112) located on or near front surface 121. For example, when disinfection device 100 is configured to remove various viruses and germs (e.g. COVID-19, Influenza, etc.), the EWE devices 110 may be configured to emit pulsed or non-pulsed radiation within the ultraviolet (UV) spectrum, such as electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths between 100 nm and 450 nm. Additionally or alternatively, the EWE devices may be configured to emit other types of radiation, such as radiation outside the UV spectrum (e.g. radiation within the visible light spectrum, infrared spectrum, microwave spectrum, etc.). For example, various pathogens (e.g. bacteria, fungi, parasites or the like) may be more vulnerable to different types of radiation and/or different amounts of radiation. In some embodiments, the EWE devices may emit different types of radiation based on the desired type of disinfection or adjust the radiation emitted based on external factors as discussed herein (e.g. during specific exposure times, on a cycle, based on the amount of emitted radiation in a given timeframe, etc.).
In some aspects of the invention, light guide 120 may be optically coupled to the EWE devices 110 and may be formed form a sheet of glass, plastic, acrylic, or the like. Light guide 120 may be manufactured out of various substrates to provide a bending, reflecting, diffusing, and/or refracting effect on the radiation emitted (e.g. emitted radiation 115) by the EWE devices 110. In some embodiments, light guide 120 may be configured to influence the direction of emitted radiation 115. For example, light guide 120 may direct all or a portion of emitted radiation 115 toward the front surface 121. For instance, light guide 120 may be embedded with diffuser particles that reflect UV light rays as noted elsewhere in this application and suppress total internal reflection (e.g., particularly so if the UV light guide is at least partially transmissive of UV radiation) so as to permit the UV light rays to exit out a top or bottom surface of the UV light rays and contribute to the destruction, reduction, etc. of pathogens on the top surface of the light guide 120. In some embodiments, front surface 121 may comprise a separate substrate, such as a transparent protective layer. Furthermore, light guide 120 may comprise various geometric shapes, such as to fit various use devices 140. For example, light guide 120 can be curved, shaped, bent, rounded, or the like.
Disinfection device 100 may additionally include a UV barrier 130. UV barrier 130 may comprise a separate substrate and/or a coating optically coupled to light guide 120. UV barrier 130 may be located at or near the rear surface 122. Additionally or alternatively, UV barrier 30 may be located on or near the edge surfaces 123, the front surface 121, or the like. UV barrier 130 may comprise various substrates to provide a partial reflectance or total reflectance of radiation emitted by EWE devices 110 in order to protect the use device 140 from the influence of emitted radiation 115. Additionally or alternatively, UV barrier may comprise various substrates to provide a partial absorbance or total absorbance of radiation emitted by EWE devices 110 in order to protect the use device 140 from the influence of emitted radiation 115.
As shown in
In some embodiments, there may be a desired amount of energy and/or power to be provided to front surface 121, including a sufficient amount of energy and/or power to remove, denature, kill, deactivate, and/or suppress replication of various pathogens to reduce the risk of transmission to a human. Accordingly, EWE devices 110 may emit radiation 115 for a predetermined duration and/or a predetermined intensity to achieve the desired goal. Additionally or alternatively, EWE devices 110 may pulsate emitted radiation 115 on a duty cycle to achieve the desired amount of energy and/or power. In some embodiments, the duration, intensity, duty cycle, or the like of emitted radiation 115 can be adjusted based on the desired amount of energy and/or power to be provided to front surface 121. Furthermore, the amount of energy and/or power provided to front surface 121 may be dependent on the type of radiation emitted and/or external factors discussed herein (e.g. during specific exposure times, on cycle, based on the amount of emitted radiation in a given timeframe, etc.).
As shown in
The configuration of disinfection device 100 may depend on the application of the disinfection device and/or the use device.
In some embodiments, a disinfection device may comprise additional devices, such as an ultrasonic wave generator.
In some embodiments, ultrasonic wave generator 325 may be configured to emit ultrasonic waves to remove (and potentially also to denature, kill, deactivate, and/or suppress replication of) various pathogens (e.g. pathogens 112) located on or near front surface 121. For example, when disinfection device 300 is configured to remove various viruses and germs, the ultrasonic generators 325 may be configured to emit pulsed or non-pulsed sonic waves, such as sonic waves with wavelengths and frequencies typically associated with ultrasonic waves (e.g., wavelengths less than or equal to about 1.9 cm, frequencies greater than or equal to about 20 kHz).
Disinfection devices (e.g. disinfection device 100) can be used in a variety of environments, such as on buttons, switches, displays, fingerprint scanners, windows, doors, or other high touch surfaces. In general,
In some embodiments discussed herein, a user may interact with a use device (e.g. use device 140, 440A, or 440B). However, continuously disinfecting front surface 121 and/or disinfecting front surface 121 while a user is present may potentially provide discomfort to a user, be against regulations, or the like. In such embodiments, disinfection device 100 may comprise a cycle control mechanism, such that front surface 121 is disinfected after a predetermined amount of time, after a predetermined amount of energy has been provided, at or more predetermined cycles, at one or more predetermined cycles, after a predetermined amount of interactions with a user, and dependent on the efficacy of the particular UV wavelength chosen on the particular pathogens of concern, or the like. Additionally or alternatively, out of an abundance of caution, and to help ease any concerns of the user, it may be beneficial to halt the disinfection process, decrease the intensity of the disinfection processor, or the like while a user is either interacting with the use device (e.g. use device 140, 440A, 440B, or the like) or a sensor, such as a proximity sensor, has detected a user.
Once a user is registered (e.g. Yes in Step 520), the disinfection device may adjust the radiation and/or sonic waves emitted (Step 530B), as similarly described with respect to Step 530A. In some embodiments, the amount of radiation and/or the wavelengths/intensity of sonic waves may be reduced or stopped while a user is registered. In such embodiments, the reduction or stoppage may provide a user with a safer or more comfortable experience while using the use device.
A user may be registered in a variety of ways. In embodiments, wherein a user can interact with the use device, a user may be registered based on whether or not an input is received by the use device, an external controller in connection with the use device/disinfection device, or the like. For example, when a button is pressed, a selection is made on a display (e.g. touch sensitive display), or the like. Additionally or alternatively, a user may be registered by an external sensor, such as a proximity sensor, light sensor, motion sensor, etc.
As similarly described check may be performed, such as by an external controller or processor, to determine if no user is present (e.g. Step 540). In some embodiments, if a user is still registered (e.g. No in Step 540), the disinfection device may continue to emit radiation and/or sonic waves (e.g. Step 530B). In some embodiments, the radiation and/or sonic waves emitted may be adjusted again in Step 530B, similar to adjustments described herein. For example, if a user is using a use device for an extended period of time, it may be beneficial to further reduce and/or stop the radiation and/or sonic waves emitted. Such examples may result in a lower cost of operation by not using EWE devices and/or ultrasonic wave generators unnecessarily.
Once a user finishes interacting with the use device, or a user is no longer registered (e.g. the user left the proximity, an external sensor no longer detects the presence of the user, etc.) a user may no longer be registered (e.g. Yes in Step 540). In some embodiments, once a user is no longer registered, the disinfection device (e.g. disinfection device 100) may circle back to outputting radiation to the top surface (e.g. front surface 121). Similar methodologies as discussed with respect to step 520 may be used when determining if a user is no longer registered (step 540). In embodiments wherein a user can interact with the use device, a user may no longer be registered once the user has stopped interacting with the device. For example, once a button is released, a selection has been made, and/or no input has been received for a predetermined amount of time, or the like. Additionally or alternatively, an external sensor or external control unit may be used to determine whether or not a user is present.
In some examples, it may be beneficial to provide a delay (e.g. step 550) between the system no longer registering a user (e.g. step 540) and the disinfection device outputting electromagnetic radiation (step 510). Such a delay may allow a user time to re-register prior to the disinfection device adjusting the emitting radiation upon the top surface to be similar to the radiation emitted prior to a user being registered. Additionally or alternatively, the delay may provide a user time to fully stop interacting with the use device prior to radiation being emitted again.
Disinfection devices as discussed herein (e.g. disinfection device 100) or the like can be used in a variety of situations. For example, a disinfection device may be used in areas with high public contact, such as public transportation stops, governmental buildings, elevators, crosswalks, airports, or the like. Disinfection devices may be used during or after events which increased the risk of disease, such as a concert, sporting event, or the like. Furthermore, disinfection devices may also be used during particular events, such as times when there is a greater risk of transmissible diseases (during or after pandemics, epidemics, bio-terrorist attacks, etc.). For example, disinfection devices (e.g. disinfection device 100) may be used to disinfect surfaces after bio-terrorist attacks, such as the surfaces of military and public transportation vehicles, or the like.
Various embodiments have been described. Such examples are non-limiting, and do not define or limit the scope of the invention in any way.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application 63/023,373, filed May 12, 2020, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2020/036261 | 6/5/2020 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
63023373 | May 2020 | US |