Cart for Medical Equipment with Built-In Power Supply
20220226180 · 2022-07-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61G12/001
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61G12/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
An equipment cart for medical equipment, such as medical disinfection equipment, includes a base with a support surface for securing the equipment and casters that allow the equipment cart to be moved. A mechanical locking mechanism for the equipment may be provided. The equipment cart has an upright support connected to the base, and a work surface supported by the upright support and spaced from the base. A power system, including an uninterruptible power supply, is provided onboard the equipment cart and supplies AC power to one or more electrical outlets on the equipment cart in the form of generally sinusoidal AC power.
Claims
1. An equipment cart, comprising: a base having a support surface, an equipment lock coupled to the support surface, and casters arranged to movably support the base; an upright support attached to the base; a work surface attached to the upright support, the work surface extending generally parallel to, and vertically spaced from, the support surface of the base; and an electrical system disposed within the equipment cart, the electrical system including a power input, an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) coupled to the power input, the UPS including one or more batteries, and a circuit that produces an at least generally sinusoidal alternating current (AC) power output, and being adapted to draw power from either or both of the power input and the one or more batteries; and one or more AC power outlets coupled to the UPS.
2. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the equipment lock comprises: a plate slideably mounted on the support surface, the plate having a first opening with a first portion and a second portion, the second portion of the plate having complementary engaging structure adapted to engage a portion of a piece of equipment; and a lock mounted in association with the support surface and the plate, the lock adapted to retain the plate in a fixed position.
3. The equipment cart of claim 2, wherein walls of the second portion of the plate are angled.
4. The equipment cart of claim 2, wherein the lock comprises a moveable bolt positioned and adapted to engage with a complementary slot in the plate.
5. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the UPS comprises a switch that switches the one or more AC power outlets between the power input and the one or more batteries.
6. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the UPS comprises a high-voltage side and a low-voltage side with a transformer interposed therebetween.
7. The equipment cart of claim 6, wherein the low-voltage side of the UPS comprises: a first oscillator generating a first non-sinusoidal waveform; a second oscillator generating a second non-sinusoidal waveform, the second non-sinusoidal waveform having characteristics different from the first non-sinusoidal waveform; and a comparator receiving the first non-sinusoidal waveform and the second non-sinusoidal waveform.
8. The equipment cart of claim 7, wherein the first non-sinusoidal waveform comprises a triangular or sawtooth waveform.
9. The equipment cart of claim 7, wherein the low-voltage side of the UPS comprises a half-wave rectifier connected to an output of the comparator.
10. The equipment cart of claim 9, wherein the low-voltage side of the UPS comprises a pair of flip-flops connected to an output of the half-wave rectifier, one of the pair of flip-flops set high and the other of the pair of flip-flops set low.
11. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the UPS is mounted to the base.
12. The equipment cart of claim 10, wherein the UPS is mounted to an underside of the support surface of the base.
13. The equipment cart of claim 1, further comprising a drawer mounted to an underside of the work surface.
14. The equipment cart of claim 12, wherein the drawer includes a lock.
15. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the work surface includes a step that divides the work surface into an upper work surface and a lower work surface.
16. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the work surface includes one or more built-in storage elements.
17. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the upright support comprises two or more portions arranged in telescoping fashion relative to one another.
18. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the base has a berm on a forward portion thereof.
19. The equipment cart of claim 1, wherein the equipment cart comprises a powered mobile disinfection workstation for medical equipment.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURES
[0012] The invention will be described with respect to the following drawing figures, in which like numerals represent like features throughout the description, and in which:
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0021]
[0022] The equipment cart 10 is intended to serve as a mobile disinfection workstation, with a base 14 that includes casters 16 for movement. In the illustrated embodiment, there are four casters 16, positioned in a rectangular layout supporting the base 14, although any number of casters 16 may be used, so long as that number of casters 16 provides for a stable, moveable base 14. The front casters 16 each have a standard frictional braking mechanism, the actuation levers 18 for which can be seen in
[0023] The base 14 includes a lower shelf 20, on which the disinfection equipment 12 rests. A single telescoping support post 22 rises from the base 14 to provide support for the other elements of the equipment cart. At its upper extent, a work surface 24 is cantilevered from the support post 22. A drawer 26 lies under the work surface 24.
[0024]
[0025] One particular advantage of the equipment cart 10 is that by mounting the disinfection equipment on a low shelf, like the lower shelf 20, the weight of the disinfection equipment 12 is less likely to tip the equipment cart 10. Low mounting also means that the equipment cart 10 can include a workspace, like the work surface 24, at the appropriate height for a user.
[0026] As shown in the view of
[0027] The orientation of the disinfection equipment 12 on the cart, and the manner in which it opens and is used, may affect the arrangement of the equipment cart 10 and its base 14 and lower shelf 20. In this embodiment, the disinfection equipment 12 has the form of a cabinet with a hinged door 13 that swings open outwardly. Thus, the height of the berm 32 at the front of the base 14 is sufficient to help retain the disinfection equipment 12, but not so high as to obstruct the movement of the door 32.
[0028] With the disinfection equipment 12 exploded away, other details of the equipment cart 10 can be seen in the view of
[0029]
[0030] Thus, fully equipped, the equipment cart 10 may serve as a workstation that has all necessary equipment to remove gross soil and contamination from a piece of medical equipment before it is placed in the disinfecting equipment. A laptop and printer may be installed on the work surface 24 and the shelf-holder 44 in order to keep disinfection or other related compliance records.
[0031] This particular configuration of the equipment cart 10 is not the only possible configuration.
[0032] Both equipment carts 10, 50 include locks and security measures. Chemical disinfection may involve chemicals that are toxic, corrosive, strong oxidizers, or are otherwise hazardous. For example, chemicals like 35% hydrogen peroxide are common. Because of this, it is helpful if the equipment cart 10, 50 has some locks. For example, the drawer 26 may be locked, either with a key lock mechanism, or with a proximity locking mechanism, like a radio-frequency identification (RFID) locking mechanism. An RFID locking mechanism uses a low-power radio-frequency transmitter to interrogate a nearby RF element, which may be either powered or unpowered. If the nearby element transmits the correct identifier, the locking mechanism unlocks.
[0033] In addition to securing peripherals and chemicals within the drawer 26, locking mechanisms may be present elsewhere as well.
[0034] The plate 28 and its openings 30 take advantage of an existing cant to the feet 46 of the disinfection equipment 12. As those of skill in the art will realize, many kinds of cooperating engaging features may be used to lock a structure such as the plate 28 to a piece of disinfection equipment.
[0035] The equipment carts 10, 50 have their own onboard electrical systems. As can be seen in
[0036]
[0037] The main circuit 100 provides AC power to the electrical outlets 54 with a pure AC sine wave, even when it is not connected to internal power. To do this, it includes both high-voltage portions and low-voltage portions. (While the definition of “high voltage” varies according to the authority one consults, for purposes of this description, the term will refer to voltages over 50V.) Much of the high-voltage portion 102 of the circuit 100 is shown in
[0038] The main circuit 100 illustrated in
[0039] In the main circuit 100 of
[0040] The switch S1 is connected to a relay U8.1 that connects either to the AC power, indicated as U2 in
[0041] Power from the AC power U2 in
[0042] As those of skill in the art will realize, a full diagram of the battery charge portion 106 is included in
[0043] As was noted briefly above, when the circuit 100 is not drawing power from AC mains, it draws from the battery V1 and modulates that power into a pure AC sine wave within the low-voltage signal generation portion 104 of the circuit 100. The low-voltage pure AC sine wave is then stepped up from low voltage to high voltage by the transformer T2.
[0044] Much of the low-voltage signal generation portion 104 is shown in
[0045] More specifically, the two waveforms of different characteristics are triangular or sawtooth-type waveforms in this embodiment. The first of the two sawtooth-type waveforms is generated by an NE555P timer IC U3. The connection of the 555 timer IC U3 with the resistors R13, R14 and capacitor C12 places the 555 timer IC in an astable configuration, allowing it to act as an oscillator. The voltage across the capacitor C12 is a triangular or sawtooth waveform in this configuration, and that waveform is sent to the noninverting input of an LM741CN op amp U.
[0046] A broader, “slower” triangular waveform is generated by a CD4047 multivibrator IC U1 in astable free-running operating mode. This output is connected to the inverting input of the LM741CN op amp U.
[0047] As was described briefly above, the output from the op amp U is first sent to two diodes D5, D8 in a half-wave rectifier configuration. The output of those diodes is sent to two IRF3205 flip-flops M1, M2, shown in
[0048] Unless otherwise noted, all electronic components in the circuit 100 are manufactured by, or can be obtained from, Texas Instruments, Inc. (Dallas, Tex., United States). As those of skill in the art will understand, the topology and components shown in
[0049] While the invention has been described with respect to certain embodiments, the description is intended to be exemplary, rather than limiting. Modifications and changes may be made within the scope of the invention, which is defined by the appended claims.