The disclosure relates to access doors, and, in particular, to a door assembly for a motor vehicle with vehicle user gesture detection.
In general, doors are used to control passage between separate spaces. A typical door is a panel that swings on hinges, slides, or rotates inside a space. When open, doors admit ventilation and light. A door may be used to control the physical atmosphere within a space so that an interior may be more effectively heated or cooled. Doors also act as a barrier to noise, inclement weather, and physical intrusion into a specifically defined space.
A typical vehicle has at least one door for accessing an interior of the vehicle. Such a door usually has a latch mechanism for maintaining the door in a locked state until access into or egress from the vehicle is required. Conventionally, the latch mechanism is actuated by an outside door handle to gain access to the interior of the vehicle, and by an interior door handle to facilitate exit from same. Actuation of the latch mechanism may also be locked or disabled to thereby prevent unauthorized access into the vehicle.
A door assembly for a vehicle having a vehicle body defining an entryway into a vehicle interior has an electronic controller and a door panel for the entryway. The door panel has a vehicle exterior-facing surface and a vehicle interior-facing surface. The door assembly also includes a door locking system having a latch mechanism configured to selectively latch the door panel to and unlatch the door panel from the vehicle body. The door assembly additionally includes an electronic circuit embedded in the door panel, including an electronic chip configured to detect a gesture of a vehicle user proximate the door panel, and configured to generate a signal indicative of the detected gesture. Each of the latch mechanism and the electronic circuit is in operative communication with the electronic controller. The electronic controller is configured to receive the signal from the electronic circuit and command the latch mechanism to either latch or unlatch the door panel from the vehicle body as needed in response to the detected gesture.
Either one or both of the vehicle exterior-facing surface and the vehicle interior-facing surface may be structured from an electrically nonconductive material, such as fiberglass.
The electronic circuit may be embedded in a composite preform, and the composite preform may be arranged between the vehicle exterior-facing surface and the vehicle interior-facing surface.
Either one or both of the vehicle exterior-facing surface and the vehicle interior-facing surface may be structured from an electrically conductive material, such as carbon fiber.
The door panel may include a first electrically insulating panel and a second electrically insulating panel. In such an embodiment, the electronic circuit may be arranged between the first and second electrically insulating panels.
The first insulating panel may be arranged proximate the vehicle exterior-facing surface and the second insulating panel may be arranged proximate the vehicle interior-facing surface.
At least one of the first electrically insulating panel and the second electrically insulating panel may be a fiberglass veil.
The door panel may additionally include a scrim sheet arranged between the second electrically insulating panel and the vehicle interior-facing surface.
The electronic circuit may be in communication with the electronic controller via a wireless network. Alternatively, the electronic circuit may be in communication with the electronic controller via a Controller Area Network (CAN) bus.
The electronic chip may be configured to detect the gesture by recognizing a change in magnetic capacitance of air proximate the door panel.
The door panel may be characterized by an absence of an exterior door handle and an interior door handle.
A method of unlatching a door panel for an entryway in a vehicle is also disclosed.
The above features and advantages, and other features and advantages of the present disclosure, will be readily apparent from the following detailed description of the embodiment(s) and best mode(s) for carrying out the described disclosure when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings and appended claims.
Referring to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers refer to like components,
As shown in
The door locking system 20 also includes an electronic circuit 24 embedded in the door panel 16 and having an electronic capacitive chip 26-1 configured to detect a gesture 18A of the vehicle user 18 proximate the door panel. Specifically, the gesture 18A is a predetermined deliberate physical movement or expression of an authorized vehicle user 18, as will be described in detail below. The capacitive chip 26-1 is configured to detect the gesture 18A by recognizing a change in magnetic capacitance of air proximate the door panel 16, i.e., where the gesture 18A of the vehicle user 18 is to be detected. The detected change in magnetic capacitance of air proximate the door panel 16 is reflected by a change in electrical capacitance of the electrical circuit 24. In other words, such an embodiment of the electronic circuit 24 is configured as a capacitive circuit. The electronic circuit 24 is also configured to generate a signal 28 in response to the detected gesture 18A. An energy storage device 29 (shown in
As shown in
Alternatively, as shown in
The door panel 16 may additionally include a scrim sheet 36 arranged between the second electrically insulating panel 34 and the vehicle interior-facing surface 16B. The scrim sheet 36 may be a thin plastic film employed as a protective layer to protect the second electrically insulating panel 34 from damage during shipping and handling of the door panel 16 to an assembly plant for installation onto the vehicle 10. In either the embodiment of
An alternative embodiment of the electronic circuit 24 embedded in the door panel 16 may include an infra-red sensor 26-2 (shown in
Each of the latch mechanism 22 and the electronic circuit 24 is in operative communication with an electronic controller 40. As shown in
The electronic controller 40 may receive from an external source, such as via an electronically coded communication, or be pre-programmed with, a preapproved gesture 42, configured to permit the electronic controller to either latch or unlatch the door panel 16. Accordingly, the preapproved gesture 42 of the vehicle operator 18 may serve as a form of passcode to enter or exit the vehicle 10. The electronic controller 40 is configured to receive the signal 28 from the electronic circuit 24. The electronic controller 40 is configured, i.e., structured and programmed, to recognize the detected gesture 18A based on the received signal 28 and correlate or compare the detected gesture 18A to the preapproved gesture 42. Additionally, the electronic controller 40 is configured to command the latch mechanism 22 to either latch or unlatch the door panel 16 from the vehicle body 12 in response to the detected gesture 18A matching the preapproved gesture 42.
Accordingly, the door locking system 20 also includes at least a portion of the electronic controller 40 that is responsible for regulating operation of the latch mechanisms 22. As shown in
The door locking system 20 may also include a door actuator 48 arranged between the door panel 16 and the vehicle body 12. The door actuator 48 is configured to push and move or shift the door panel 16, and thereby separate the door panel 16 away from the vehicle body 12 by a predefined distance. Such a distance may be configured to facilitate sufficient access for the vehicle user 18 to a hem portion 50 (shown in
Overall, the door locking system 20 permits the vehicle 10 to dispense with the need for a traditional door handle arranged on the vehicle exterior-facing surface 16A of the door panel 16. Additionally, the door actuator 48 may facilitate the separation of the door panel 16 from the vehicle body 12 when the latch mechanism 22 unlatches of the door panel from the vehicle body for egress of the vehicle user 18. Accordingly, the use of the door locking system 20 using the door actuator 48 may dispense with the need for the vehicle interior-facing surface 16B of the door panel 16 to be configured without a door release handle.
A method 100 of unlatching the door panel 16 is shown in
In frame 106, the method includes receiving, via the electronic controller 40, the signal 28 from the electronic circuit 24. After frame 106, the method proceeds to frame 108, where the method includes commanding, via the electronic controller 40, to one of latch and unlatch the door panel 16 from the vehicle body 12 via the latch mechanism 22 in response to the detected signal 28. After frame 108, the method will generally proceed to frame 110, where the method includes re-latching the door panel 16 to the vehicle body 12 via the latch mechanism 22 once the door panel is closed. Following frame 110, the method may return to frame 102 for detecting, via the electronic circuit 24, another gesture 18A of the vehicle user 18 proximate the door panel 16, either externally to the vehicle body 12, to facilitate ingress of the vehicle user 18 into the vehicle, or from the interior 14 to provide egress of the user therefrom.
The detailed description and the drawings or figures are supportive and descriptive of the disclosure, but the scope of the disclosure is defined solely by the claims. While some of the best modes and other embodiments for carrying out the claimed disclosure have been described in detail, various alternative designs and embodiments exist for practicing the disclosure defined in the appended claims. Furthermore, the embodiments shown in the drawings or the characteristics of various embodiments mentioned in the present description are not necessarily to be understood as embodiments independent of each other. Rather, it is possible that each of the characteristics described in one of the examples of an embodiment may be combined with one or a plurality of other desired characteristics from other embodiments, resulting in other embodiments not described in words or by reference to the drawings. Accordingly, such other embodiments fall within the framework of the scope of the appended claims.