Electromagnetic Absorbing Material in Opening of Shielded Enclosure
20170215980 · 2017-08-03
Assignee
Inventors
- Brian C. DeBusk (Knoxville, TN, US)
- Joe L. Smith (Powell, TN, US)
- Mark E. McKnight (Knoxville, TN, US)
- Haben M. Jemal (Knoxville, TN, US)
- Mary E. Kaylor (Chattanooga, TN, US)
- Gerald T. Griffith (Knoxville, TN, US)
- Nicholas Poker (Knoxville, TN, US)
Cpc classification
B65F1/1426
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65F1/1431
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
H05K9/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A shielded enclosure receives REID-tagged packaging from consumed medical items. The enclosure includes a housing and a lid. An opening in the lid receives the packaging into an internal space. A chute surrounds the opening and extends downward into the internal space. The chute has front, left, right, and rear walls. A hood attached to the lid surrounds the opening. An aperture in the hood allows passage of the packaging into the lid opening. The hood includes rear, right, left, and top walls. RF absorbing material covers inside surfaces of the chute and hood, including a front panel on the chute front wall, a rear panel on the hood rear wall and the chute rear wall, a left side panel on the hood left side wall and the chute left side wall, a right side panel on the hood right side wall and the chute right side wall, and a top panel on the hood top.
Claims
1. A shielded enclosure for receiving discarded packaging from medical items consumed during performance of a medical procedure, wherein the packaging has RFID tags disposed therein or thereon, the shielded enclosure comprising: an internal space for receiving the packaging of the medical items; a housing that at least partially encloses the internal space, the housing comprising: an upper portion that is disposed over and covers the internal space, the upper portion having: an opening that allows passage of the discarded packaging into the internal space; a chute extending downward from the opening into the internal space, the chute surrounding the opening; and a hood that is disposed over and at least partially surrounds the opening, the hood having an aperture that allows passage of the discarded packaging into the opening, wherein the upper portion of the housing is configured in such a manner that radio frequency signals emanated from MD tags disposed outside the shielded enclosure are attenuated to levels that are substantially undetectable within the internal space, and radio frequency signals emanated from one or more RFID antennas disposed inside the shielded enclosure are attenuated to levels that are substantially undetectable outside the shielded enclosure.
2. The shielded enclosure of claim 1 further comprising: RF absorbing material at least partially covering inside surfaces of the chute; and RF absorbing material disposed above the opening and at least partially covering inside surfaces of the hood.
3. The shielded enclosure of claim 2 further comprising: the chute comprising: a chute front wall; a chute left side wall; a chute right side wall; and a chute rear wall; and the RF absorbing material surrounding the opening and at least partially covering inside surfaces of the chute comprising: an RF absorber front panel attached to the chute front wall; an RE absorber rear panel attached to the chute rear wall; an RE absorber left side panel attached to the chute left side wall; and an RE absorber right side panel attached to the chute right side wall.
4. The shielded enclosure of claim 2 further comprising: the hood comprising: a hood rear wall; a hood right side wall; a hood left side wall; and a hood top; and the RE absorbing material disposed over the opening and at least partially covering inside surfaces of the hood comprising: an RF absorber rear panel attached to the hood rear wall; an RE absorber left side panel attached to the hood left side wall; an RE absorber right side panel attached to the hood right side wall; and an RF absorber top panel attached to the hood top.
5. The shielded enclosure of claim 3 further comprising: the hood comprising: a hood rear wall; a hood right side wall; a hood left side wall; and a hood top; and the RE absorbing material disposed over the opening and at least partially covering inside surfaces of the hood comprising: the RF absorber rear panel attached to the hood rear wall and the chute rear wall; the RF absorber left side panel attached to the hood left side wall and the chute left side wall; the RF absorber right side panel attached to the hood right side wall and the chute right side wall; and an RF absorber top panel attached to the hood top.
6. The shielded enclosure of claim 1 further comprising a door in a sidewall of the housing, the door covering an opening that is large enough to accommodate a waste bin for receiving the discarded packaging.
7. The shielded enclosure of claim 2 wherein the RF absorbing material comprises an RF isolation coating.
8. A shielded enclosure for receiving discarded packaging from medical items consumed during performance of a medical procedure, wherein the packaging has RFID tags disposed therein or thereon, the shielded enclosure comprising: an internal space for receiving the packaging of the medical items; a housing that at least partially encloses the internal space; a lid attached to an upper portion of the housing, the lid disposed over and covering the internal space, the lid having an opening that allows passage of the discarded packaging into the internal space; a chute surrounding the opening in the lid and extending downward from the lid into the internal space, the chute comprising: a chute front wall; a chute left side wall; a chute right side wall; and a chute rear wall; and a hood attached to the lid and disposed above and at least partially surrounding the opening in the lid, the hood having an aperture that allows passage of the discarded packaging into the opening in the lid, the hood comprising: a hood rear wall; a hood right side wall; a hood left side wall; and a hood top; and RF absorbing material disposed above the opening in the lid and covering inside surfaces of the chute and the hood, the RF absorbing material comprising: an RE absorber front panel attached to the chute front wall; an RE absorber rear panel attached to the hood rear wall and the chute rear wall; an RF absorber left side panel attached to the hood left side wall and the chute left side wall; an RE absorber right side panel attached to the hood right side wall and the chute right side wall; and an RF absorber top panel attached to the hood top, wherein the lid is attached to the housing and the hood is attached to the lid in such a manner that radio frequency signals emanated from RFID tags disposed outside the shielded enclosure are attenuated to levels that are substantially undetectable within the internal space.
9. A shielded enclosure for receiving packaging removed from one or more items, the packaging having one or more RFID tags disposed therein or thereon, the shielded enclosure comprising: an internal space for receiving the packaging; and a housing that at least partially encloses the internal space, the housing comprising: an upper portion that is disposed over and covers the internal space, the upper portion having: an opening that allows passage of the packaging into the internal space; a chute extending downward from the opening into the internal space, the chute surrounding the opening; a hood that is disposed over and at least partially surrounds the opening, the hood having an aperture that allows passage of the packaging into the opening; RF absorbing material at least partially covering inside surfaces of the chute and at least partially covering inside surfaces of the hood, wherein the RF absorbing material is configured in such a manner that radio frequency signals emanated from RFID tags disposed outside the shielded enclosure are attenuated to levels that are substantially undetectable within the internal space, and radio frequency signals emanated from one or more RFID antennas disposed inside the shielded enclosure are attenuated to levels that are substantially undetectable outside the shielded enclosure.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] Other embodiments of the invention will become apparent by reference to the detailed description in conjunction with the figures, wherein elements are not to scale so as to more clearly show the details, wherein like reference numbers indicate like elements throughout the several views, and wherein:
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0017]
[0018] The top of the housing portion 12 is covered by an aluminum lid 14. An opening 20 is provided in the lid 14 that is large enough to receive the packaging from which medical items have been removed, In the preferred embodiment, the opening 20 is a 6.75×13.75 inch rectangle. An aluminum hood 18 is provided over the opening 20 to help prevent RF signals from escaping the enclosure 10. As shown in
[0019] In some embodiments, the lid 14 and the hood 18 are integrally formed as part of the housing portion 12, In some embodiments, the lid 14 and hood 18 are removable and may be detached from the housing portion 12.
[0020] In a preferred embodiment, a hinged door 16 large enough to receive the waste bin is provided in a front sidewall of the housing 12. The door 16 is preferably 29.5×39.25 inch, and includes a handle/latch for securing the door in a closed position. The enclosure 10 is considered to be substantially shielded when the door 16 is closed.
[0021] As the term is used herein, “shielded” means that the enclosure 10 is designed to prevent an RFID antenna disposed inside the enclosure 10 from receiving RFID signals from RFID tags located outside the enclosure 10 at a signal-to-noise ratio high enough to trigger detection of those outside RFID tags. For purposes of this disclosure, “shielded” does not mean that absolutely all RF energy is blocked from entering the enclosure, as this would require unnecessary levels of shielding.
[0022] As shown in
[0023]
[0029] In an alternative embodiment, the RF absorbing panels 42-50 are formed from an RF isolation coating, such as an ME-500 coating product manufactured by MWT Materials Inc. of Passaic, N.J. In this embodiment, the RF absorbing panels 42-50 are integrally formed as a continuous coating on the inside surfaces of the hood 18, the opening 20, and the chute 24.
[0030] The inventors have determined that placement of the RF absorbing panels 42-50 on the interior surfaces of the hood 18, opening 20 and chute 24 effectively prevents RF signals in the operating frequency range used for RFID tags from entering or exiting the enclosure 10 at detectable levels, thereby eliminating stray readings of RFID tags that are outside the enclosure 10.
[0031] As illustrated in the cross-section view of
[0032] Thus, preferred embodiments of the invention (1) attenuate RFID signals that originate from RFID antennas inside the enclosure so as to reduce interference with RFID systems in the vicinity outside the enclosure, and (2) attenuate RFID signals that originate from RFID antennas outside the enclosure so as to reduce interference with the reading of RFID tags inside the enclosure.
[0033] Those skilled in the art will appreciate that embodiments described herein have application beyond the medical field. The shielded enclosure may be used in any application wherein the enclosure cannot be completely electromagnetically sealed due to the necessity of an access opening, but wherein it is important to prevent stray RFID signals from passing through the opening. Thus, the invention is not limited only to the medical field or to use only with medical items consumed during a medical procedure. Embodiments of the shielded enclosure described herein may be used with any type of RFID-tagged item.
[0034] The foregoing description of preferred embodiments for this invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Obvious modifications or variations are possible in light of the above teachings. The embodiments are chosen and described in an effort to provide the best illustrations of the principles of the invention and its practical application, and to thereby enable one of ordinary skill in the art to utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. All such modifications and variations are within the scope of the invention as determined by the appended claims when interpreted in accordance with the breadth to which they are fairly, legally, and equitably entitled.