Normobaric Hypoxia Trainer
20220257445 · 2022-08-18
Inventors
- Rocco Portoghese (Winter Park, FL, US)
- Matthew Adams (Orlando, FL, US)
- Tyson Griffin (Oviedo, FL, US)
- Nelson Lerma (Orlando, FL, US)
- Chad Farwig (Oviedo, FL, US)
Cpc classification
A61M16/0045
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B2213/006
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B01D53/228
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61G10/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B22/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G09B9/085
PHYSICS
A62B11/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61G10/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61G10/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A normobaric hypoxia trainer including a training chamber, an intake fan for allowing ground level air to be introduced into the training chamber; an exhaust fan for removing air from the training chamber; a plurality of circulation fans for mixing interior air of the training chamber to create a uniform oxygen concentration within the training chamber; a nitrogen generation system, the nitrogen generating system including a plurality of polysulphone membrane cartridges for separating out nitrogen from air; a compressor for supplying compressed air to the nitrogen generation system; a pressure regulator for regulating the pressure of the compressed air; a heater for controlling temperature of the compressed air, the heated pressure regulated compressed air passing through the polysulphone membrane cartridges such that nitrogen can be separated out from the air; and, a flow controller for controlling flow rate of the separated nitrogen into the training chamber.
Claims
1. A normobaric hypoxia trainer comprising: a training chamber; an intake fan for allowing ground level air to be introduced into the training chamber; an exhaust fan for removing air from the training chamber; a plurality of circulation fans for mixing interior air of the training chamber to create a uniform oxygen concentration within the training chamber; a nitrogen generation system, the nitrogen generating system including a plurality of membrane cartridges for separating out nitrogen from air; a compressor for supplying compressed air to the nitrogen generation system; a pressure regulator for regulating the pressure of the compressed air; a heater for controlling temperature of the compressed air, the compressed air passing through the polysulphone membrane cartridges such that nitrogen can be separated out from the air; and, a flow controller for controlling the flow rate of the separated nitrogen into the training chamber.
Description
DRAWINGS
[0011] These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following description and appended claims, and accompanying drawings wherein:
[0012]
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DESCRIPTION
[0019] The preferred embodiments of the present invention are illustrated by way of example below and in
[0020] In the description of the present invention, the invention will be discussed in a military environment; however, this invention can be utilized for any type of application related to hypoxia training.
[0021] In one of the preferred embodiments, as shown in
[0022] The polysulfone membranes cartridges 430 act as molecular filters. In operation, when a pressure differential is created across a membrane cartridge 430, oxygen, water vapor, and other gases readily pass through the membrane material while nitrogen does not, separating the gases. The nitrogen is collected while the other gases are discarded. Although polysulphone is the discussed membrane, the membrane can be manufactured from any material that performs the functions outlined.
[0023] In the general case, the nitrogen purity of air output by the polysulfone membrane cartridges 430 can be controlled by changing the air pressure entering the membrane within the cartridge 430, air and membrane temperature, flow rate through the membrane cartridges 430, and the number of cartridges 430 in use. The percentage of oxygen passed through a polysulfone membrane cartridge 430 increases as the pressure across the membrane cartridge 430 increases. The oxygen permittivity of the membrane cartridge 430 increases as air and membrane cartridge 430 temperature increases. The membrane cartridge's 430 effectiveness increases as the flow rate through the cartridge 430 decreases and air spends a longer amount of time within the cartridge 430. Since the cartridges 430 in the array are plumbed in parallel, increasing the number of cartridges 430 in use while flow through the array of polysulfone membrane cartridges 430 as a whole is held constant, reduces the flow rate through each cartridge 430 and increases their effectiveness.
[0024] The pressure of the air fed to the plurality of cartridges 430 is held constant at the cartridges' 430 recommended operating pressure by the pressure regulator 410. The heater 420 is used to heat the air to the membrane cartridges 430 recommended operating temperature. A control system (or controller) 800 controls nitrogen purity by selecting the number of cartridges 430 in use and controlling the airflow rate through the cartridges. Individual cartridges can be added to or removed from the parallel array by remotely controlled pneumatic solenoid valves 440. The flow rate through the cartridge array is controlled by a flow controller 700 placed after the cartridges 430.
[0025] In the preferred embodiment, temperature, pressure, flow rate, oxygen and carbon dioxide sensors distributed throughout the nitrogen generation system 400 and training chamber 100 allow the control system 800 to monitor the process and training environment at all times, providing inputs to a controlling algorithm. In the preferred embodiment the algorithm is Altitude Control Algorithm. In addition, the operator is provided with an emergency stop button that can be used to cease training and rapidly return the training chamber 100 to the ground normal oxygen concentration.
[0026] The Altitude Control Algorithm (ACA) is responsible for reaching and/or maintaining the operator's intended simulated altitude. The ACA may run on a programmable logic controller. In operation, the algorithm constantly monitors system sensors and operator inputs to determine the current state of the environment inside the training chamber 100 and move it toward the operator's intended simulated altitude. Inputs to the ACA include the current oxygen concentration of the training chamber 100, the target oxygen concentration of the training environment as determined by the operator's current altitude setting, the current oxygen concentration in the nitrogen generation system 400 outflow and the current state of the emergency stop button. Outputs from the ACA are the membrane cartridges 430 to be used, the desired air flow rate, the speed of the chamber intake fan 200 and the speed of the chamber exhaust fan 300.
[0027] During operation, the ACA is always in one of four states as determined by operator input and the current and target training environment oxygen concentrations. The high-level ACA state determination flowchart is shown in
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[0031] The performance data array is populated during system calibration procedures. During calibration, the oxygen concentration of the nitrogen generation system output flow is measured and recorded for every combination of number of active polysulfone membrane cartridges 430 and air flow rate in increments of a few standard cubic feet per minute. Not all combinations will be possible; the maximum achievable flow rate decreases as the number of cartridges used increases due to the limitation of the maximum compressor output flow. Unachievable combinations are null entries in the performance data array.
[0032] The ACA algorithm checks the performance data array during runtime and predicts the instantaneous rate of change of the training environment oxygen concentration that would result, under the current training environment conditions, from each possible combination of output oxygen concentration and flow rate in the array. The algorithm selects the array entry that yields the desired rate of change. This is typically the fastest rate of change, but a lower rate may be chosen to create a particular ascent profile. The control system enables the number of membrane cartridges 430 and sets the air flow rate corresponding to the selected array entry 1540. Finally, the timer is reset 1545 and the decrease concentration loop restarted. In this way the ACA algorithm regularly optimizes the instantaneous rate of change of the training environment oxygen concentration.
[0033]
[0034] A PID controller has three constants that must be tuned: the proportional, integral, and derivative gains. Acceptable values for the PID gains are dependent on the properties of the control system, nitrogen generator and training environment, and, in the preferred embodiment, have been determined through experimentation. The PID controller is allowed to vary the nitrogen generator flow rate in an attempt to drive the current training environment oxygen concentration toward the target concentration 1614. The maximum flow rate available to the PID controller is the flow rate selected by the ACA algorithm from the pre-populated performance data array upon entering the maintain concentration state 1604, while the minimum available flow rate is defined as half that value.
[0035] After the PID controller has selected a flow rate, the adjustment flag state is checked 1616. If the flag is raised, the ACA restarts the maintain concentration loop 1600. If the adjustment flag is low, the algorithm examines the flow rate selected by the PID controller. If the flow rate is less than ninety percent 1618 and greater than ten percent 1620 of the flow rate range available to the PID controller, it is judged that the PID controller has enough control range available to be able to maintain the target oxygen concentration. The timer is turned off 1622 and the maintain control loop is restarted at block 1608. If the flow selected by the PID controller is greater than ninety percent of the maximum flow rate range available to the controller 1618 and the current training environment oxygen concentration is still less than or equal to the target concentration 1624, it indicates the current combination of max flow rate and number of membrane cartridges in use can likely not maintain the target concentration under the current training environment conditions. In that case, the current time is noted 1626. If the timer is currently turned off 1628, it is started 1630 and the maintain concentration loop restarts at block 1608. If the timer has been running for less than thirty seconds 1632 the loop is restarted at block 1608. If, however, the timer indicates the ACA has been in this condition for over thirty seconds an adjustment is called for. The current training environment oxygen concentration is compared to the target oxygen concentration 1634. If the current oxygen concentration is higher than the target concentration (the simulated altitude is higher than the target altitude), a polysulfone membrane cartridge solenoid valve 440 is turned off 1636, removing a polysulfone membrane cartridge 430 from the array in use. Removing a cartridge 430 from the array at a constant array flow rate has the effect of speeding the flow of air through each remaining cartridge, decreasing their effectiveness and raising the oxygen concentration in the output flow. The adjustment flag is then raised 1640, indicating the original membrane count has been changed, and the maintain concentration loop restarted at block 1608. In this way the PID controller is given a higher range of oxygen concentrations to work with to attempt to raise the training environment oxygen concentration to the target concentration (decrease altitude).
[0036] Similarly, if the flow rate selected by the PID controller in block 1614 is in the bottom ten percent of the flow range available to the controller 1620 and the current training environment oxygen concentration is still greater than the target concentration 1642 (the simulated altitude is lower than the target altitude), it indicates the current combination of max flow rate and number of membrane cartridges may not be able to maintain the target oxygen concentration. If the ACA has been in this state for over thirty seconds 1632, then an additional polysulfone membrane cartridge 430 is added to the array by activating its solenoid valve 440. Adding a polysulfone cartridge to the array while maintaining a constant array flow rate has the effect of slowing the speed of air through each cartridge, increasing their effectiveness and lowering the output oxygen concentration. The adjustment flag is raised 1640 and the maintain concentration loop is restarted at block 1608. In this way, the PID controller is given a lower range of oxygen concentrations to work with to attempt to lower the training environment oxygen concentration to the target concentration (increase altitude).
[0037] The preferred embodiment of the ACA maintain concentration state does not allow for a second membrane cartridge array adjustment to be made. If the PID controller still cannot hold the target concentration after a single adjustment the training environment oxygen concentration will eventually move out of the target concentration dead band and the ACA will leave the maintain concentration state to return to the start condition and begin a correction.
[0038] In one of the embodiments, the cartridge array may be made to be larger to produce higher air flows. The system and method described here is realized with seven polysulfone membrane cartridges 430 supplied by a 50HP compressor (not shown) but could be expanded to control any reasonable number of cartridges 430 and more powerful compressors to achieve higher air flows and/or finer control of oxygen concentration. Such alternate systems could be used to condition the air of a larger volume, reduce the time required to achieve a simulated altitude or achieve and/or hold a simulated altitude more precisely than the realized invention.
[0039] The current invention controls the nitrogen purity of the air output from the polysulfone membrane cartridge array by varying the number of cartridges 430 in use and the air flow through them. The pressure and temperature of the air passed through the polysulfone cartridges 430 are held constant. Finer control of the nitrogen purity could be achieved by placing either or both the air pressure and temperature under Altitude Control Algorithm control as well. Finer control of the nitrogen content would allow a desired simulated altitude or flight profile to be held more accurately.
[0040] Personnel within the normobaric hypoxia trainer 10 use a recovery air system that provides them a supply of normal breathable air. Trainees breathe recovery air through flight masks during non-training idle periods or after self-diagnosing hypoxia, while instructors within the chamber breathe from the recovery air system throughout training. Humans utilize only a small portion of the oxygen in their lungs with each breath. Most of the oxygen provided to the trainees through the recovery air system is released into the training enclosure as they exhale. This exhaled oxygen works to lower the effective altitude of the training enclosure. The ACA currently reacts to this effect only after it has measurably altered the oxygen concentration of the training enclosure. However, for training purposes the operators of the NHT are provided with a method of noting when trainees don and remove their recovery masks. The ACA therefore could be made to account for how many persons are exhaling oxygen into the training enclosure at any moment and, using average values of respiration rate, efficiency and lung volume known to the medical community, counteract the oxygen injection before the effect becomes apparent in the simulated altitude. Furthermore, the detection of recovery air use by the trainees could be made automatic rather than relying upon operator input. Another improvement could be made by measuring the actual air flow through the recovery air system, rather than relying upon estimated or average values, to even more accurately gauge and counteract the effect of the recovery air system's oxygen injection before the simulated altitude is perturbed.
[0041] When introducing elements of the present invention or the preferred embodiment(s) thereof, the articles “a,” “an,” “the,” and “said” are intended to mean there are one or more of the elements. The terms “comprising,” “including,” and “having” are intended to be inclusive and mean that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements.
[0042] Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, other embodiments are possible. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the preferred embodiment(s) contained herein.