PERISTALTIC PUMP WITH LINEAR FLOW CONTROL
20170218945 · 2017-08-03
Inventors
Cpc classification
F04B49/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/1253
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B49/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B35/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A61M5/14228
HUMAN NECESSITIES
F04B49/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/082
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B49/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F04B49/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B49/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/09
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A peristaltic pump includes a conduit having a first end tor receiving a fluid from a reservoir and a second end for delivering the fluid. A plurality of fingers are disposed at respective locations along a segment of the conduit and are configured to alternately compress and release the conduit at the locations. A cyclical pump mechanism is coupled to move the fingers between respective compressed and released positions in a spatio-temporal pattern so as to drive a predetermined quantity of the fluid through the segment of the conduit in each pump cycle. A motor is coupled to drive the pump mechanism. A controller is coupled to activate and deactivate the motor in alternation during each pump cycle with a duty cycle that varies within the pump cycle.
Claims
1. A fluid pump comprising: An electrical motor to convert an electrical signal into a mechanical rotation of a shaft, such that an instantiations rotational velocity of said shaft corresponds to an instantaneous parameter of the electrical signal applied to said motor; a fluid pumping mechanism driven by said shaft such that a rotation of said shaft causes said pumping mechanism to force some volume of fluid flow through a functionally associated fluid conduit, wherein the pumping mechanism is characterized by non-uniform shaft rotation to fluid volume function across different angles of a full shaft rotation cycle (e.g. 360 deg), such that a given rotation angle (e.g. 0.33 deg) of said shaft starting at a first shaft angles results in a different fluid flow than the same given rotation angle starting at a second shaft angle; a sensor adapted to detect one or more parameters relating to an instantaneous position of said shaft within the full shaft rotation cycle; and a variable electrical signal source to receive an output of said sensor and in response to generate a non-uniform electrical signal with at least one electrical parameters being a function of a sensed instantaneous position of said shaft, wherein the sources generates a non-uniform electrical signal which compensates for the non-uniform shaft rotation to fluid volume function across different angles of a full shaft rotation cycle.
2. The pump according to claim 1, wherein said sensor is an angular encoder.
3. The pump according to claim 1, wherein said variable signal source includes a micro-controller.
4. The pump according to claim 3, wherein said variable signal source includes a shaft rotation angle to instantaneous electrical signal parameter converter.
5. The pump according to claim 4, wherein said variable signal source includes one or more of: (a) a digital to analog converter; (b) an electrical amplifier, and (c) a power sources.
6. The pump according to claim 1, wherein the instantaneous parameter of the electrical signal applied to said motor is a pulse rate.
7. The pump according to claim 1, wherein the instantaneous parameter of the electrical signal applied to said motor is a voltage.
8. The pump according to claim 1, wherein the fluid pumping mechanism includes three or more compressing elements placed in a linear arrangement relative to one another, and wherein each compressing element is configured to cyclically compress and release a separate cross-section of the fluid conduit at different angles along the full rotation cycle of said shaft.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012]
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[0020]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0021]
[0022] Tube segments 26 and 28 may be connected to a mechanical interface unit 32, which couples to pump 22 in a manner that is shown and explained below in greater detail. Unit 32 contains a conduit (not shown in
[0023]
[0024] Reference is now made to
[0025] A controller 48 activates and deactivates motor 40, typically (although not necessarily) by switching power on and off to the motor, in order to regulate the rate of fluid flow through conduit 50. Optionally, the gear ratio of transmission 42 may also be varied, either by the controller or by manual operation, in order to provide a selection of different speed ranges, according to the desired rate of flow. An encoder 46 may measure the angle of rotation of the motor, and thus provide feedback to controller 48 regarding the rotation of the motor. The encoder shown in the figure is of the type comprising a wheel with windows and a light source and sensor to translate the wheel position to an electrical signal. Alternatively, any other suitable rotation sensor may be used. For accurate flow control, transmission 42 may typically have a high gear ratio, in the range of 20-25:1, for example, and encoder 46 provides high angular resolution, with as many as 1000-1500 control points per revolution of camshaft 44. In the present example, there are 1308 encoder control points per camshaft rotation (based on 21.8 motor cycles to each shaft cycle and fifteen windows in the encoder wheel, wherein each windows provides four location information points). These features of the pump, together with the novel control methods described hereinbelow, enable pump 22 to achieve a dynamic range on the order of 10,000:1, with accurately-controlled continuous flow from less than 0.5 ml/h to several liters per hour.
[0026] Controller 48 typically comprises an off-shelf microcontroller, such as a Microchip PIC18F8720 device (produced by Microchip Technology Inc., Chandler, Ariz.), with suitable interfaces to motor 40 and encoder 46 (and possibly to other components of pump, such as safety interlocks). The microcontroller may be programmed in software or firmware to carry out the flow control functions that are described herein. Alternatively, some or all of the functions of controller may be implemented using dedicated or programmable hardware logic circuits.
[0027]
[0028] Each finger 34 may comprise a respective magnet. 54, which interacts with a ferromagnetic frame 56 that may be fixed to the pump chassis. The strength and mechanical configuration of magnets 54 may be chosen so that the magnetic attraction between the magnets and frame 56 is just slightly stronger than the oppositely-directed elastic forces engendered by the squeezing of conduit 50 by finger 34 when compressing the conduit. (The conduit typically comprises an elastic material such as silicone.) The magnetic and elastic forces are thus balanced, so that the power demands on motor 40 in driving camshaft 44 are minimized. Examples of magnetic balancing are described in the above-mentioned U.S. Patent Application Publication 2009/0240201 and PCT International Publication WO 2008/059496.
[0029] When pump 22 is operating at low flow rates, below a certain minimum level, controller 40 may activate and deactivate motor 40 in alternation, as explained in detail hereinbelow. The magnetically-balanced design of fingers 34 that is shown in
[0030]
[0031]
[0032] For high flow rates (above about 399 ml/h, for example), with pump 22 operating at multiple cycles/sec (for example, above 108 cycles/min), the non-uniform output of pump 22 over each pump cycle averages out into a substantially continuous flow. It is therefore possible to operate motor 40 continuously at the appropriate speed to give the desired flow rate. On the other hand, at very slow speeds, the pump may make less than one cycle per minute (and as few as 1.8 cycles/hour for a flow rate of 0.1 ml/h), and the non-linear variation in fluid output over time will therefore be significant and may be clinically undesirable, particularly in delivery of drugs that require a constant infusion rate.
[0033] In embodiments of the present invention, in order to accurately control the fluid output at low and medium flow rates, the non-linear shape of plot 60 may be linearized by controlling the duty cycle of motor 40. The term “duty cycle,” as used in the context of the present patent application and in the claims, is used in the conventional sense to mean the fraction of time in which the motor is in its active state, i.e., the fraction of time during which the motor is in motion. For this purpose, each pump cycle is divided into a fixed number of intervals 62, such as 196 intervals, each giving the same fluid output volume (roughly 0.3 μl per interval in the present example, in which the entire pump cycle gives an output of 63 μl). Because of the non-uniformity of the fluid output as a function of motor rotation, however, the durations of intervals 62, in terms of motor steps, vary widely, as can be seen in the figure. The interval durations, thus, may be chosen so that the integral of plot 60 is equal over all intervals. The last interval in the cycle, referred to herein as a “rewind” interval 64, returns the pump quickly to the beginning of the next cycle.
[0034] When pump 22 is set to operate at a low or medium flow rate, controller 48 may activate and deactivate motor 40 at fixed periods, each period corresponding to one of intervals 62. The controller varies the duty cycle in each period (i.e., the amount of time during the period in which the motor is on), however, in proportion to the length of the corresponding interval. In other words, in each period, the motor may run for the exact amount of time needed to complete the steps in the corresponding interval, so that the fluid output of the pump during all periods in the cycle is effectively constant. (In the context of the present patent application and in the claims, the term “constant” is to be interpreted in the clinical sense, i.e., when the variations in the flow are clinically insignificant, the flow is considered to be constant.) The minimum length of the periods is limited by the length of rewind interval 64: The periods should be long enough to permit the motor to cycle through all of the steps in the rewind interval (654 steps in the present example) within a single period. Above this limit, either the period or the average duty cycle, or both, may be adjusted linearly in order to give the desired output flow rate.
[0035]
[0036]
[0037] In
[0038] As another alternative, controller 48 may change the number of intervals per pump cycle. For example, each pump cycle may be divided into 98 intervals, instead of 196, meaning that each period in the waveform driving motor 40 may include twice the number of motor steps as a corresponding period in the preceding scheme. Changing the number of intervals per pump cycle is conceptually equivalent to changing the “gear” of the transmission, and provides additional flexibility in setting the range of fluid output rates from pump 22.
[0039]
[0040] The results shown in
[0041] Although the embodiments described above relate, for the sake of clarity, specifically to the design of pump 22, the principles of the present invention may similarly be applied in controlling the operation of other peristaltic pumps, for both medical and non-medical applications. It will thus be appreciated that the embodiments described above are cited by way of example, and that the present invention is not limited to what has been particularly shown and described hereinabove. Rather, the scope of the present invention includes both combinations and subcombinations of the various features described hereinabove, as well as variations and modifications thereof which would occur to persons skilled in the art upon reading the foregoing description and which are not disclosed in the prior art.