VALVE POSITION DETECTION
20220260179 · 2022-08-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16K31/042
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G01D5/34792
PHYSICS
F16K37/0041
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16K37/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A position detection assembly for detecting a spatial position of a moveable element. The assembly includes a colour sensor and one or more colour indicators provided on a surface of the moveable element. The colour sensor is spaced from the surface of the moveable element and arranged to emit light onto the surface and detect light reflected from the surface and to determine the position of the element based on the reflected light.
Claims
1. A position detection assembly for detecting a spatial position of a moveable element, the assembly comprising: a colour sensor; and one or more colour indicators provided on a surface of the moveable element; wherein the colour sensor is spaced from the surface of the moveable element and arranged to emit light onto the surface and detect light reflected from the surface and to determine the position of the element based on the reflected light.
2. The assembly of claim 1 comprising two or more colour indicators of different colours provided at different positions on the surface.
3. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the colour sensor emits light of different colours at different times and determines the position of the element based on the colour of the reflected light.
4. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the colour sensor emits white light and determines the position of the element based on the colour of the reflected light.
5. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the moveable element is a rotating element and the sensor determines the rotational position of the element based on the reflected colour.
6. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the moveable element is a valve closure element and the position is a position of the closure element relative to a valve housing.
7. A valve assembly comprising: a valve having a housing; a valve closure element; and a position detection assembly as claimed in claim 6.
8. The valve assembly of claim 7, comprising a ball closure element and a shaft attached to the ball element to cause rotation thereof, the one or more colour indicators mounted around an outer surface of the shaft.
9. The valve assembly of claim 7, wherein the valve is a motorised valve.
10. A method of detecting the position of a moveable element one which one or more colour indicators are provided, the method comprising: emitting light towards the moveable element; and determining the position of the element based on the wavelength of the reflected light.
11. The method of claim 10, further comprising: rotating the moveable element such that the one or more colour indicators rotate past the emitted light as the moveable element rotates.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009] Examples of a position detection assembly according to the disclosure will now be described by way of example only, with reference to the drawings.
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0020] Referring first to
[0021] An example of the valve closure is a ball closure having a passage defined therethrough. A shaft (not shown in
[0022]
[0023] The housing 1 needs to be big enough to contain the complex mechanical switches, thus making the overall valve assembly large and bulky. Furthermore, the assembly requires precisely machined cam shaft surfaces and precisely manufactured and assembled switches 4.
[0024] The present disclosure provides a valve position detection assembly comprising a colour sensor. This will be described further with reference to
[0025] According to the disclosure, the position detection assembly comprises one or more colours provided at one or more locations on an outer surface of the valve shaft and one or more colour sensors positioned spaced from the outer surface of the shaft.
[0026]
[0027]
[0028] The colour indicators can provided in any known manner on the shaft e.g. as paint or as a sticker, with a colour anodized coating if provided on an alloy component, a paint coating on a steel or composite shaft etc. The shaft itself can have a simple e.g. circular cross section and regular outer surface.
[0029] Various types of sensor are known, some of which will be described below. Such sensors are simpler and smaller than micro-mechanical switches, and so the housing 9 can be smaller than the conventional housing 1.
[0030] In one example, as shown in
[0031] The LED 12 emits light beams of different colours 14, independently, towards the rotating shaft 11. As the shaft 11 rotates, light is reflected back to the photoresistor 13 from the surface of the shaft 11. The sensor 6 is arranged to detect reflection 15 of the same colour as emitted from the LED. The sensor can, therefore, detect when a colour indicator 8 of a specific colour is at a position to receive and reflect the particular colour light emitted 13 by the LED 12. In this way, the sensor knows when certain colour indicators 8 are at certain rotational positions because of the colour of reflected light 15. For example, when a red indicator is reflecting light from the LED back to the sensor 6, the assembly will know that that red indicator is at a position resulting from the ball being in, say, a fully open position. When, say, a yellow indicator is at that position, this may be an indication that the ball is in the fully closed position.
[0032] In its simplest form, the assembly has only a single colour sensor as shown in
[0033] The colours may be different colours or different patterns or shades of colours, or may be indicators arranged to reflect colours at different intensities.
[0034] The function of such an assembly is described further with reference to
[0035] The sensor includes an RGB LED arrangement here shown as green LED 121, red LED 122 and blue LED 123. LED driver 124 controls the switching of the LEDs 121, 122, 123 so that light of different wavelengths is alternately and separately emitted towards the shaft 11 i.e. the arrangement switches between blue, red and green light. Light is reflected back from the shaft to an optical receiver 125. Optionally, the received light is measured by a density measurement and comparator block 126 to filter out any stray light and the received light signal is sent to a logic circuit 200 to determine, based on the colour of light emitted and the known positions of the colour indicators relative to each other around the shaft 11, at a given time, which colour indicator reflected the light and, therefore, the rotational position of that colour indicator and, therefore, the rotational position of the shaft. For example, if blue light is reflected when the blue light is emitted (AND gate 201), it is determined that at that time of emitting the blue light, the blue colour indicator was opposite the sensor and from that the rotational position of the shaft at that time can be determined (202). Similarly if red light is emitted and reflected (AND gate 203) the ‘red’ position of the shaft is determined (204) and if green light was emitted and reflected (AND gate 205), the ‘green’ position of the shaft is determined (206).
[0036] In the example described above, the sensor is simple and relatively accurate. It may be necessary to switch the colour of the emitted light several times to get an accurate reading but this has been found to be sufficiently accurate and responsive for most applications.
[0037] An alternative solution, which is slightly more complex and requires more accurate anchoring of the sensor, but provides greater accuracy, involves the emission of white light from the sensor. The different colour indicators 8a, 8b, will absorb different parts of the white light and reflect light of the same colour as the indicator. Again, from the information from the reflected light, the position of the shaft can be determined.
[0038] An example of such an arrangement is shown in
[0039]
[0040] The same concept could be used for determining the position of a directional valve an example of which is shown in
[0041] Again, the valve comprises a shaft 11′ driven by a motor 10′, the shaft driving a drive 112′ which rotates a ball shaft 113′ to open and close passages between different flow ports 1141, 1142, 1143.
[0042] The colour sensor assembly for detecting valve position is a simple, inexpensive, robust solution that requires less calibration or regulation on assembly, has fewer parts and smaller overall size, and has parts that are less susceptible to wear, thus maintaining accuracy.