VEHICLE DOOR OPENING ASSEMBLY
20220205288 · 2022-06-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
E05B81/76
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E05B85/08
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E05B85/107
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E05B85/16
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
A vehicle door handle to control the opening of a vehicle door includes a door latch mechanism to release the vehicle door when actuated and a handling element mobile with respect to a handle frame between a rest position and an actuation position in which it actuates the door latch mechanism. The vehicle door handle also includes at least one static magnetic element fixed in motion with the handle frame and at least one mobile magnetic element solidary in motion with the handling element, generating a haptic feedback by defining stable or unstable positions of the handling element in which the static and mobile magnetic element face and attract or repel each other.
Claims
1-13. (canceled)
14. A vehicle door handle to control the opening of a vehicle door, comprising: a door latch mechanism configured to release the vehicle door when actuated; a handling element that is mobile with respect to a handle frame between a rest position and an actuation position in which the handling element actuates the door latch mechanism; and at least one static magnetic element fixed in motion with the handle frame and at least one mobile magnetic element solidary in motion with the handling element, generating a haptic feedback by defining stable or unstable positions of the handling element in which the static magnetic element and mobile magnetic element face and attract or repel each other.
15. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, further comprising guiding means for the motion of the handling element comprising static guiding means attached to the handle frame, and mobile guiding means attached to the handling element, and wherein the static magnetic element is attached to the static guiding means and the mobile magnetic element is attached to the mobile guiding means.
16. The vehicle door handle according to claim 15, wherein the static and mobile guiding means comprise a guiding finger and a rail or sheath along which the guiding finger slides in translation during motion of the handling element.
17. The vehicle door handle according to claim 15, wherein the mobile guiding means comprise a rotor and the static guiding means comprise a stator, the rotor and stator moving with respect to each other in rotation during motion of the handling element.
18. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, wherein the static or mobile magnetic elements comprise magnets.
19. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, wherein the static and mobile magnetic elements comprise magnets of opposing polarity defining, when facing each other, unstable positions by repelling each other.
20. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, wherein the static and mobile magnetic elements comprise magnets of similar polarity defining, when facing each other, at least one stable position by attracting each other.
21. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, wherein at least one of respectively the static and mobile magnetic elements comprises magnets of alternating polarity, defining, when facing at least one magnet of respectively the mobile or static magnetic element at least one unstable position by repelling each other and at least one stable position by attracting each other.
22. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, wherein the static and mobile magnetic elements comprise at least one permanent magnet.
23. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, wherein the magnetic elements comprise at least one electromagnet.
24. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, wherein one of respectively the static or mobile magnetic elements comprises at least one magnet and the other comprises at least one metallic protuberance defining, when facing a stable position of the handling element.
25. The vehicle door handle according to claim 14, wherein either the static guiding element or the mobile guiding element comprise at least two magnetic elements defining at least two unstable intermediary positions with a stable position in between said unstable positions.
26. The vehicle door handle according to claim 25, wherein when the handling element reaches the stable position, an instruction is sent to an authentication unit to cause said authentication unit to interrogate the presence of a security token carried by the user and authenticate said security token.
Description
[0022] Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will appear at the reading of the following description, given in an illustrative and not limiting fashion, of the following figures, among which:
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030] In all figures, the same references apply to the same elements.
[0031] Though the figures refer to precise embodiments of the invention, other embodiments may be obtained by combining or altering slightly the represented embodiments. Said new embodiments are also within the scope of the invention.
[0032] For spatial orientation, a longitudinal horizontal axis x is defined along the normal forward motion of the considered vehicle with straight wheels (i.e. when not turning). A vertical top-down axis z is defined using gravity when considering the vehicle on flat terrain. The wheel axes (when straight) define a transverse axis, orthogonal to the previous two axes. Terms such as “inwards” “outwards” etc. are defined with respect to an outer surface of the vehicle, corresponding to the apparent bodywork when viewing the vehicle from outside its cabin.
[0033]
[0034] According to alternative embodiments, the handling element 3 can comprise a handle knob or push button.
[0035] The terms like “inwards”, “outwards” and equivalents are defined with respect to the vehicle interior and exterior.
[0036] In the first cutaway of
[0037] In the second cutaway of
[0038] In the third cutaway of
[0039] The rest and actuation positions (
[0040] In a flushing door latch, the handling element 3 can adopt a flush position in which it is flush with the bodywork of the vehicle. An electric motor brings the handling element 3 from its flush position into a ready position when specific conditions are met. The specific conditions can for example be the detection of a contact of the user through a capacitive detector on the handling element, the detection of a security token (key card, RFID transmitter, Bluetooth connected phone with a cryptographic key etc.) in a predetermined area close to the vehicle etc.
[0041] To move the handling element 3 from its flush to its ready position, the electric motor sets a mobile abutment in motion against the action of the return spring. The ready position then corresponds to the rest position of
[0042] In flushing position, the handling element 3 is less likely, when parked, to be interacted with by passers-by and air drag is reduced when driving. In the flushing position, the handling element 3 also appears integrated in the door panel 100 in a pleasant and discrete way.
[0043] The handling element 3 and the handle frame 5 comprise guiding elements, a mobile guiding element 31 and a static guiding element 51. The mobile guiding element 31 is attached to or integrally formed with the handling element 3, the static guiding element 51 is attached to or integrally formed with the handle frame 5.
[0044] In particular, in the embodiment of
[0045] The mobile guiding element 31 and the static guiding element 51 comprise respectively a mobile magnetic element 33 attached to the mobile guiding element 31 and a static magnetic element 53 attached to the static guiding element 53. Said magnetic elements 31, 51 are here in particular magnets, for example permanent magnets such as neodymium magnets.
[0046] The mobile and static magnets 33, 53 are attached to their respective guiding element 31, 51 so that in the rest and actuation positions of
[0047] In particular, the mobile and static magnets 33, 53 are oriented with opposing polarities (see arrows in
[0048]
[0049] The starting point at null displacement is a relatively small but positive resistive force, corresponding essentially to the opposing force or torque applied on the handling element 3 by the return spring, which the user as to overcome to set the handling element 3 in motion.
[0050] The resistive force F then increases with the displacement d along a first interval. During said interval, the static magnet 53 and the mobile magnet 33 come closer to each other with the increasing displacement d.
[0051] When the mobile and static magnets 33, 53 come face to face, the repelling force becomes orthogonal to the displacement. As a consequence, the perceived resistive force F suddenly decreases and becomes null when the mobile and static magnets 33, 53 face each other.
[0052] When the displacement d increases, the force becomes negative and increases in absolute value in a rapid fashion: the magnets 33, 53 repelling each other now aid in the direction of increasing displacement.
[0053] The rapid decrease and inversion in the perceived resistive force F is perceived by the user in form of a “clicking” or snapping in of mechanical nature even though no mechanical contact or overcoming of an elastic force takes place.
[0054] Tuning of the perceived haptic force F and thus of the haptic feedback can be done by selecting magnets with a more or less important magnetic moment and by modifying the relative distance between the magnetic elements 33, 53 when they are at their closest position to each other.
[0055] For tuning of the haptic force F, at least one of the magnetic elements 33, 53 can be an electromagnet with a tuneable current feed. Preferably the static magnetic element 53 can comprise an electromagnet to define stable or unstable positions of the handling element with a tuneable repelling or attracting strength. In particular, the electromagnet can be selectively fed electric current when the contact of a user with the handling element is detected using a capacitive detector, or when a remote authentication token such as a RFID tag or a Bluetooth phone containing a cryptographic key enters a predetermined perimeter around the vehicle.
[0056]
[0057] In said figures, the represented mobile guiding means 31 comprise a guiding finger, and the represented static guiding means 51 comprise a sheath for the guiding finger forming a rail guiding the sliding motion of the guiding finger.
[0058] The motion of the handling element 3 causes the guiding finger to slide out of the sheath that contains it in the rest position (
[0059] The static magnetic elements 53 comprise two static magnets 53a, 53b, and the mobile magnetic element 33 comprises a single magnet, with a polarisation opposite that of the static magnets 53a, 53b.
[0060] When in rest position, as depicted in
[0061] When the user pulls on the handling element 3, the mobile magnetic element 33 gets closer to the first static magnet 53a (on the right in
[0062] Once the repelling force of the first static magnet 53a is overcome and the motion continues, the mobile magnetic element 33 reaches the stable position S depicted in
[0063] When the handling element 3 reaches said intermediary stable position S, a control unit of the latch 100 and of an authentication unit may cause said authentication unit to interrogate the presence and authentication value of a security token carried by the user to unlock the door if authentication is positive. The control unit and the locking mechanism 103 may, in case of negative authentication, prevent further outward motion of the handling element 3.
[0064] To continue the motion of the handling element 3, the user has to overcome the repelling force of the second static magnet 53b: the mobile magnetic element 33 gets closer to the second static magnet 53b (on the left in
[0065] Beyond the second unstable position U2, as depicted in
[0066] The resistive force F or torque as perceived by the user is represented in the graph of
[0067]
[0068] At first, the resistive force F is positive but relatively weak. When the displacement d increases, the mobile magnetic element 33 comes closer to the first static magnet 53a and the resistive force increases consequently until it reaches a maximum when the mobile magnetic element 33 and the first static magnet 53a come close to each other and decreases abruptly when they come face to face, thus defining the first unstable position U1.
[0069] When the displacement d further increases, the resistive force F becomes negative (it assists the motion of the handle lever 3) and quickly increases in absolute value, until it reaches a maximum. After said maximum, it decreases again in absolute value since the repelling force of the second static magnet 53b starts to counteract the repelling force of the first static magnet 53a.
[0070] When both repelling forces of the first and second static magnets 53a, 53b cancel each other out, the resistive force F is null. This defines the stable position S.
[0071] When the displacement d further increases, the resistive force F increases due to the increasing repelling force of the second static magnet 53b until the mobile magnetic element 33 and the second static magnet 53b come close to each other and decreases abruptly when they come face to face, thus defining the second unstable position U2.
[0072] Beyond said second unstable position U2, the resistive force increases again abruptly until a maximum and then decreases until the actuation position is reached, where an abutment prevents further outward motion.
[0073]
[0074] In the embodiment of
[0075] The protuberances 53a, 53b have a more important cross section and reach out in direction of the mobile magnetic element 33, which is here a magnet, in particular a permanent magnet.
[0076] The protuberances 53a, 53b face the mobile magnetic element 33 when the handling element 3 reaches predetermined stable positions. In said stable positions, the mobile magnetic element 33 is attracted to the protuberance 53a or 53b it faces in particular with a strength overcoming the force of the return spring to stabilize the considered position.
[0077] Other embodiments may comprise more than two protuberances 53a, 53b, or may combine protuberances 53a, 53b with static magnets. Also, the mobile magnetic element 33 may comprise a metallic element and the static magnetic element 53 may comprise magnets.
[0078] According to another embodiment, the protuberances 53a, 53b may be replaced at least partially with magnets having a polarization in the same direction as the mobile magnetic element 33.
[0079]
[0080] In the embodiment of
[0081] Two extremal magnets 53a, 53b are polarized in opposite direction with respect to the mobile magnetic element 33. An intermediary magnet 53c, situated between the extremal magnets 53a, 53b of the static magnetic element 53 is polarized in the same direction as the mobile magnetic element 33.
[0082] The extremal magnets 53a, 53b act in similar fashion to the embodiment of
[0083] The handling element 3 can also be an interior manual lock button of the vehicle door latch. The manual lock button is in general vertically protruding from a vehicle door body interior. Pulling the manual lock button causes unlocking of the door while pushing it down causes the door to lock. The corresponding “up” and “down” positions are stable positions S, while an intermediary position, in which the locking and unlocking of the vehicle door latch 1 takes place, is an unstable position U.
[0084] In
[0085] Abutments (not represented) define the stable positions, in which the mobile 33 and static magnetic elements 53 are furthest apart.
[0086] Other embodiments of manual lock button assemblies can be obtained based on the embodiments of
[0087]
[0088] The static and mobile magnetic elements 51, 31 generate a resistive torque instead of a resistive force F by defining stable and instable rotational positions due to their mutual attraction or repulsion forces.