Door Detection System And Method
20210047147 ยท 2021-02-18
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B66B13/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B66B13/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
In an embodiment, a door detection system may include a transmitter, a receiver, a reflector, and one or more processors. The transmitter positioned on an elevator car door transmits a signal towards a reflector on a hoistway door and the reflector reflects the signal towards the receiver when the hoistway door is properly positioned with respect to the elevator door. The one or more processors determine whether the hoistway door is properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door based on the reflected signal received by the receiver. If the hoistway door is not properly positioned, the elevator car is prevented from moving. If the hoistway door is properly positioned, the elevator car is free to move.
Claims
1. A door detection system comprising: an elevator car door that moves towards and away from an elevator door frame; a hoistway door that moves towards and away from the elevator door frame; a transmitter-receiver positioned on the elevator car door with a first face configured to transmit a first signal and a second face configured to transmit and receive a second signal; a first receiver positioned on the elevator door frame configured to receive the first transmitted signal; and a reflector positioned on the hoistway door substantially opposite the second transmitting and receiving face when the elevator car door and the hoistway door are closed; wherein the transmitter-receiver includes one or more processors configured to: detect the reflected signal from the reflector, determine whether the hoistway door is properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door based on the detected signal, and send instructions to the elevator detection system to keep the elevator car stationary when the hoistway door is not properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door.
2. The door detection system of claim 1, wherein the first signal is an infrared light beam.
3. The door detection system of claim 1, wherein the reflected signal transmitted from the reflector is more intense as compared to the reflected signal from the hoistway door.
4. The door detection system of claim 1, wherein the first face is also configured to receive a reflected first signal.
5. The door detection system of claim 1, wherein the one or more processors determine the intensity of the detected reflected signal from the reflector and compare the detected signal to a preset threshold intensity to determine whether the elevator car door is closed.
6. The door detection system of claim 1, wherein the first signal is transmitted in a direction parallel with the elevator car.
7. The door detection system of claim 1, wherein the second signal is transmitted in a direction perpendicular to the elevator car.
8. The door detection system of claim 1, wherein the first signal is transmitted in a direction parallel with the elevator car and the second signal is transmitted in a direction perpendicular to the elevator car.
9. The door detection system of claim 1, wherein the hoistway door is a swinging hoistway door that swings away from the elevator car door about a hinge.
10. A door detection system comprising: a first pair of contacts configured to indicate when an elevator car door of an elevator car is closed; a second pair of contacts configured to indicate when a hoistway door is closed; a transmitter positioned on the elevator car door configured to transmit a signal in a direction perpendicular to the elevator car door; a reflector positioned on the hoistway door substantially opposite the transmitter when the elevator car door and the hoistway door are closed; a receiver configured to receive the reflected signal from the reflector; and one or more processors configured to: detect the reflected signal using the receiver, determine whether the hoistway door is properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door based on the detected signal, and send instructions to keep the elevator car stationary when the hoistway door is not properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door.
11. The door detection system of claim 10, wherein the elevator car door includes a first protrusion and the hoistway door includes a second protrusion, and wherein the elevator door protrusion contacts the hoistway door protrusion to close the hoistway door.
12. The door detection system of claim 10, wherein the hoistway door is a swinging hoistway door that swings away from the elevator car door about a hinge.
13. A door detection system comprising: one or more first transmitters positioned on an elevator car door of an elevator car, the one or more first transmitters facing in a first direction parallel to the elevator car door and being configured to transmit a first signal; one or more first receivers positioned on an elevator car door frame of the elevator car substantially opposite the one or more first transmitters; one or more second transmitters positioned on the elevator car door, the one or more second transmitters facing in a second direction perpendicular to the first direction and being configured to transmit a second signal; one or more second receivers positioned on the elevator car door facing in the second direction; a reflector positioned on a hoistway door substantially opposite to the one or more second transmitters and the one or more second receivers, when the elevator car door and the hoistway door are closed; and one or more processors configured to: detect the first signal using the one or more first receivers, determine whether the elevator car door is closed based on the detected first signal, detect the second signal using the one or more second receivers, determine whether the hoistway door is properly positioned with respect to the elevator door based on the detected second signal, and send instructions to an elevator system to keep the elevator car stationary when either the elevator car door is not closed or the hoistway door is not properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door.
14-15. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0041] Referring to
[0042] Referring to
[0043] In some embodiments, the transmitter-receiver 110 can utilize near field communication (NFC), Bluetooth, radio-frequency identification (RFID), or any combination thereof to transmit to, and/or receive signals from, the reflector 111. In embodiments, the reflector 111 can be a passive RFID tag or a barcode. In embodiments, the reflector 111 can be an active RFID tag with a local power source (such as a battery) powering the RFID tag.
[0044] Referring to
[0045] In some embodiments, the transmitter part of the transmitter-receiver 110 may include a light curtain transmitter positioned along the edge of the elevator car door 104, pointed towards the elevator door frame 122, and configured to transmit a signal to the first receiver 120. In such embodiments, the first receiver 120 may be a light curtain receiver affixed to the elevator door frame 122, pointed towards the transmitter-receiver 110, and aligned with the light curtain transmitter.
[0046] When the transmitter-receiver 110 is properly aligned with the reflector 111 and the first receiver 120, the elevator door detection system 112 can detect and determine, using one or more computing devices, that the elevator car door 104 and hoistway door 108 are both properly closed. Similarly, if the transmitter-receiver 110 is not properly aligned with the first receiver 120 and the reflector 111, the elevator door detection system 112 can detect and determine, using the one or more computing devices, that either the elevator car door 104 or the hoistway door 108, or both, are not properly closed.
[0047] As further described herein, the transmitter-receiver 110, reflector 111 and first receiver 120 determine whether (1) the elevator car door 104 is closed and (2) whether the hoistway door 108 is properly positioned in a closed state when the elevator car door 104 is closed. If one or both of (1) and (2) are determined not to be true, then the elevator door detection system may prevent the elevator car 102 from moving until both (1) and (2) are determined to be true.
[0048] As shown in
[0049] Still referring to
[0050] The door detection system 112 may also include a transmitter-receiver 110 having a second transmitting face 130 and a second receiver 140 and one or more reflectors 111 positioned on the hoistway door 108 opposite the second transmitting face 130. The second transmitting face 130 of the transmitter-receiver 110 may be configured to transmit a signal in a direction perpendicular to the elevator car door 104. In some embodiments, the second receiver 140 is adjacent to or on the second transmitting face 130. When the elevator car door 104 and the hoistway door 108 are both closed, such that the reflector 111 is opposite the second transmitting face 130, the second transmitting face 130 may be configured to transmit a signal towards the reflector 111, positioned on hoistway door 108. The reflector 111 may be configured to reflect a signal transmitted from the second transmitting face 130, and the second receiver 140 may be configured to receive the reflected signal when the reflector 111 is opposite the second transmitting face 130. The signal may be any type of signal that may be reflected by a physical object, for example, infrared light.
[0051] Still referring to
[0052] Referring to
[0053] When the elevator car door 104 and the hoistway door 108 are not in sync while stationary or moving, as shown in
[0054] Referring to
[0055] As shown in
[0056] Referring to
[0057] Memory 164 stores information accessible by the one or more processors 162, including data 166 and instructions 168 that may be executed by the one or more processors 210. The memory 164 may be of any type capable of storing information accessible by the processor, including a computer-readable medium such as a hard-drive, memory card, ROM, RAM, DVD or other optical disks, as well as other write-capable and read-only memories. The system and method may include different combinations of the foregoing, whereby different portions of the instructions and data are stored on different types of media.
[0058] Data 166 may be retrieved, stored or modified by the one or more processors 162 in accordance with the instructions 168. For instance, although the system and method is not limited by any particular data structure, the data 166 may be stored in computer registers, in a relational database as a table having a plurality of different fields and records, XML documents or flat files. The data 166 may also be formatted in any computer-readable format such as, but not limited to, binary values or Unicode. By further way of example only, image data may be stored as bitmaps comprised of grids of pixels that are stored in accordance with formats that are compressed or uncompressed, lossless (e.g., BMP) or lossy (e.g., JPEG), and bitmap or vector-based (e.g., SVG), as well as computer instructions for drawing graphics. The data 166 may comprise any information sufficient to identify the relevant information, such as numbers, descriptive text, proprietary codes, references to data stored in other areas of the same memory or different memories (including other network locations) or information that is used by a function to calculate the relevant data.
[0059] Instructions 168 may be any set of instructions to be executed directly (such as machine code) or indirectly (such as scripts) by the one or more processors 162. For example, the instructions 166 may cause the one or more processors 162 to transmit a signal via the one or more first transmitters 110 and/or the one or more second transmitters 130, to detect and process a signal received at the one or more first receivers 120 and/or the one or more second receivers 140, or to perform another step. The instructions 168 may be stored as computer code on the computer-readable medium. In that regard, the terms instructions and programs may be used interchangeably herein. The instructions 166 may be stored in object code format for direct processing by the one or more processors 162, or in any other computer language including scripts or collections of independent source code modules that are interpreted on demand or compiled in advance. Functions, methods and routines of the instructions 166 are explained in more detail below.
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[0061] As shown in
[0062] The hoistway door 108 may be configured to swing away from the elevator car 102 about a hinge 170. When the hoistway door 108 is in a swung-open position, the reflector 111 does not face the elevator car 102 and does not align with the second transmitting face 130 and second receiver 140. The reflector 111 may remain unaligned with the second transmitting face 130 and second receiver 140 until both the elevator car door 104 and the hoistway door 108 are in a closed position. For example, when the elevator car door 104 is open and the hoistway door 108 is closed, as shown in
[0063] In another embodiment, the elevator door system 100, 200, 300 may have two sliding car doors and two sliding hoistway doors rather than one. The two sliding car doors meet in the middle when in a closed position. Likewise, the two sliding hoistway doors meet in the middle when in the closed position. In this embodiment, first and second car doors may each have transmitter-receivers 110 and first and second hoistway doors may each have reflectors 111. First receivers 120 may be adjacent to or on the first transmitting face 124 of the transmitter-receivers 110, rather than affixed on the door frame. When the car doors and hoistway doors are closed, the second transmitting faces 130 and second receivers 140 are facing and aligned with the reflectors 111. Also when the car doors are closed, and the first receiver of a first car door is facing and aligned with the first transmitting face 124 of a second car door, and vice versa.
[0064] In some embodiments, first receiver 120 is on the first car door while the transmitter-receiver 110 is on the second car door. Each of the two car doors may include the second transmitting face 130 and the second receiver 140, and each of the hoistway doors may include the reflector 111. When the car doors and hoistway doors are closed, the first receiver 120 of the first car door is facing and aligned with the transmitter-receiver 110 of the second car door, and the second transmitting face 130 and second receiver 140 of each car door are facing and aligned with the reflector 111 on the corresponding hoistway door.
[0065] In yet another embodiment, the transmitter-receiver 110 may include a single transmitter configured to transmit a signal in at least a first direction via the first transmitting face 124 towards the first receiver 120 and a second direction via the second transmitting face 130 away from the elevator car 102 perpendicular to the first direction. In some implementations, the single transmitter may be a three-dimensional transmitter which transmits a light beam having a predetermined angular spread over three dimensions and the first receiver 120 may be a wide field of view receiver, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,167,991 to Full et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 5,886,307 to Full et al., both of which are incorporated by reference herein.
[0066] Furthermore, the first receiver 120 may alternatively be positioned adjacent to or on the first transmitting face 124 of the transmitter-receivers 110, similar to how the second receiver 140 may be positioned adjacent to or on the second transmitting face 130. Additionally, one or more second reflectors may be positioned on the elevator door frame 122 facing the first transmitting face 124 of the transmitter-receiver 110 in a manner such that a signal transmitted from the first transmitting face 124 may be reflected off the one or more second reflectors towards the first receiver 120. The first receiver 120 may therefore be configured to receive signals reflected by the second reflector which are transmitted by the transmitter-receiver 110.
[0067] In a further embodiment, the transmitter part of transmitter-receiver 110 that is configured to transmit through the first transmitting face 124 may be positioned in the elevator door frame 122 and the first receiver 120 may be positioned on the car door 104 or may be a receiver part of the transmitter-receiver 110.
[0068] Referring to
[0069] At block 602, the one or more processors 162 may transmit a first signal in a first direction using a first transmitter. The first transmitter may be the transmitter-receiver 110 positioned along and near the edge of the elevator car door 104. The first direction may be parallel to the car door 104 and towards a first receiver 120 positioned on the elevator door frame 122. Transmission of the first signal may be continuous or may be modulated at a particular frequency. The first transmitter may be an LED transmitting an infrared light signal.
[0070] At block 604, the one or more processors 162 may detect the first signal using the first receiver 120. The one or more processors 162 may detect the first signal based on a frequency of the signal, a frequency of the modulation, or other characteristics of the first signal.
[0071] At block 606, the one or more processors 162 may determine whether the elevator car door 104 is closed based on the detected first signal. In one example, the detected first signal has an intensity. When the elevator car door 104 is closed, the intensity of the detected first signal may be at or above the first threshold intensity. When the elevator car door 104 is not closed, the intensity of the detected first signal may be below the first threshold intensity. The one or more processors 162 may therefore determine the intensity of the detected first signal, compare the determined intensity with the first threshold intensity, and determine whether the elevator car door 104 is closed.
[0072] At block 608, the one or more processors 162 may transmit a second signal in a second direction using a second transmitter. The second transmitter may be one of the one or more second transmitters 130 positioned on the elevator car door 104 facing away from the elevator car 102. The second direction may be perpendicular to the first direction. Like with the first signal, the second signal may be continuously transmitted or may be modulated at a particular frequency. The second transmitter may also be an LED transmitting an infrared light signal.
[0073] At block 610, the one or more processors 162 may determine whether the second signal is detected using the second receiver 140. In addition, the second receiver may be placed in the same or similar location as the second transmitting face 130 and also may be facing the same or similar direction as the second transmitting face 130. The second receiver 140 may therefore receive the second signal after the second signal is reflected by a physical object, such as the hoistway door 108, reflector 111, or reflective material on a surface of the hoistway door 108.
[0074] At block 612, the one or more processors 162 may determine whether the hoistway door 108 is properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door 104 based on the detected second signal. In one example, the detected second signal may have an intensity. When the hoistway door 108 is properly positioned with the elevator car door 104, the reflector 111, positioned on the hoistway door 108 facing the elevator car 102, may be positioned directly opposite the second transmitting face 130. When the doors 104, 108 are properly positioned with respect to each other, the second signal transmitted from the second transmitting face 130 may be reflected by the reflector 111 and received at the second receiver 140 at or above the second threshold intensity. When the doors are not properly positioned with respect to each other, the second signal detected at the second receiver 140 may be below the second threshold intensity. The one or more processors 162 may determine the intensity of the detected second signal, compare the intensity of the detected second signal with the second threshold intensity, and determine whether the hoistway door 108 is properly positioned with respect to with the elevator car door 104. In some circumstances, the second signal may not be detected at the second receiver 140, in which case the one or more processors 162 may determine that the hoistway door 108 is not properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door 104.
[0075] At block 614, the one or more processors 162 may send instructions to the elevator detection system 112 to keep the elevator car stationary when either the elevator car door 104 is not closed or the hoistway door 108 is not properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door 104. If both the elevator car door 104 is closed and the hoistway door 108 is properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door 104, then both the elevator car door 104 and the hoistway door 108 are in a closed position, and the elevator car 102 may proceed to its next destination. If, however, one of these conditions is not true, then one or both of the doors are not closed, and the elevator car 102 should be held at its current location until at least both doors are closed. The instructions may be for the elevator car 102 to remain stationary until both the elevator car door 104 becomes closed and the hoistway door 108 becomes properly positioned with respect to the elevator car door 104. In addition, the instructions may also include other conditions in which the elevator car 102 may be moved, such as user input is received that indicates that both doors are closed or an override of the instructions to remain stationary. In some implementations, the instructions may also include emitting a sound until both doors are closed or user input is received.
[0076] In some embodiments, the door detection system 112 may only comprise the transmitter-receiver 110. The one or more processors 162 may be then configured to determine whether the hoistway door 108 is properly positioned with respect to the elevator door as described above and send instructions to keep the elevator car stationary when the hoistway door 108 is not properly positioned with respect to the elevator door.
[0077] In some embodiments, the transmitter-receiver 110 share electrical circuitry and be a transceiver.
[0078] The features described above may provide for an elevator system that more reliably ensures that both the elevator car door 104 and the hoistway door 108 are closed before moving the elevator car 102. Elevator rides using the elevator system may therefore be safer and smoother.
[0079] Unless otherwise stated, the foregoing embodiments are not mutually exclusive, but may be implemented in various combinations to achieve unique advantages. As these and other variations and combinations of the features discussed above can be utilized without departing from the subject matter defined by the claims, the foregoing description of the embodiments should be taken by way of illustration rather than by way of limitation of the subject matter defined by the claims. In addition, the provision of the examples described herein, as well as clauses phrased as such as, including and the like, should not be interpreted as limiting the subject matter of the claims to the specific examples; rather, the examples are intended to illustrate only one of many possible embodiments. Further, the same reference numbers in different drawings can identify the same or similar elements.