SYSTEM AND USE METHOD FOR VALVE CONTROLLED BY SOUND
20190301634 ยท 2019-10-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16K37/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/46
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K37/0041
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B22/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
F16K31/46
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The invention is a system comprising an electrically controlled valve and subsystems that convert sound to electrical signals such that they can be compared to stored control signatures, and when a match occurs, convey a commensurate control signal to the valve. The valve also contains sensors for its state as well as pressure. That data is converted to sound signals and conveyed to remote sound-to-electric transducers. The invention permits remote control of underwater systems without wires that could include control, valve-state, valve pressure, depth, and location.
Claims
1. What is claimed is a system for control of compressed gas and liquid flow using sound comprising: an electrical power source; an electrically controlled valve operative to open or close upon receiving an electrical control signal; said electrically controlled valve comprising one or more sensors operative to convey sensor data as electrical sensor-data signals; a sound-to-electric signal transducer operative to convert electrical signals into analogous electrical signals; an electric-to-sound signal transducer operative to convert electrical signals into analogous sound signals; a remote electric-to-sound signal transducer operative to convert said electrical signals into said analogous sound signals; a remote sound-to-electric signal transducer operative to convert said sound signals into said analogous electrical signals; a microcontrolled processing unit operative to receive encoded control signals originating from said remote electric-to-sound transducer, to decode said encoded control signals, and generate control response signals for conveyance to said electrically controlled valve; and said microcontrolled processing unit operative to receive said sensor signals from said electrically controlled valve, to process and convey said sensor signals to said electric-to-sound transducer for conveyance to said remote sound-to-electric transducer.
2. A claim as in claim 1 further comprising: an electronic counter operative to count down from a predetermined and preset time value, and after time-out, to convey a timer valve control signal to said electrically controlled valve.
3. A claim as in claim 1 further comprising: said electrically controlled valve, said electric power source, said microcontrolled processing unit, said electric-to-sound transducer, and said sound-to-electric transducer contained within one enclosure.
4. A claim as in claim 3 further comprising: said electrically controlled valve is integrated such that its input port is part of a standard fitting for attachment to a compressed-gas or compressed-liquid cylinder; and said electrically controlled valve is integrated such that its output port is accessible for attachment through a said standard fitting.
5. A claim as in claim 3 further comprising: said electronic counter is contained within said one enclosure.
6. A claim is in claim 4 further comprising; said electronic counter is contained within said one enclosure.
7. A method of use claim comprising: turning on said system; programming said electronic counter with said predetermined time value; sending a sound, underwater, from said remote electric-to-sound transducer, that is said encoded control signal; receiving said encoded control signal by said sound-to-electric transducer; decoding said encoded control signal by said microcontrolled processing unit; determining which said response control signal to convey to said electrically controlled valve; conveying said response signal to said electrically controlled valve.
8. A method claim as in claim 7 further comprising: sensing the valve state; conveying valve-state data to said microcontrolled processing unit; processing said valve-state data and conveying said sensor-data signal to said electric-to-sound transducer; conveying said sensor-data signal, as an analogous sound signal, by said electric-to-sound transducer to said remote sound-to-electric transducer.
9. A method claim as in claim 8 further comprising: sensing said valve's pressure; conveying valve pressure data to said microcontrolled processing unit; processing said valve pressure data and conveying pressure-data signal to said electric-to-sound transducer; and conveying said pressure-data signal, as an analogous sound signal, by said electric-to-sound transducer to said remote sound-to-electric transducer.
10. A method claim as in claim 8 further comprising: sensing said valve's depth; conveying valve depth data to said microcontrolled processing unit; processing said valve depth data and conveying said depth-data signal to said electric-to-sound transducer; and conveying said depth-data signal, as an analogous sound signal, by said electric-to-sound transducer to said remote sound-to-electric transducer.
11. A method as in claim 8 further comprising: sensing said valve's location; conveying valve location data to said microcontrolled processing unit; processing said valve location data and conveying said location-data signal to said electric-to-sound transducer; and conveying said location-data signal, as an analogous sound signal, by said electric-to-sound transducer to said remote sound-to-electric transducer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTIONS OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0014] Underwater systems that rely on control of gas or fluid passing through a valve typically rely on electrical control signals to control the valve state (e.g. open or closed). As such, an electrical wire conducting path extends from the underwater system to a surface vessel or platform allowing someone on the vessel or platform to control the valve state by sending the appropriate electrical signal to it via the conducting path. That, in turn, requires that the conducting wire remain tethered and intact. If it comes loose or is severed, electrical control of the underwater system is lost. It may take a submersible vehicle or diver to reestablish connection and control.
[0015] If, instead, the electrical control signal were not sent from the surface but, rather, by a subsystem co-located with the underwater system, and the control of that electrical signal was in response to a sound pattern conveyed through the water to that underwater system, there would be no need for a conducting wire path extending from the underwater system to the surface.
[0016] To avoid inadvertent valve action caused by extraneous sounds, the controlling sound pattern could be a complex one comprising frequencies, amplitudes and timings unlikely to occur naturally. Furthermore, band-pass filtering could be used to confine signal reception to a relatively narrow band of frequencies to further reduce the possibilities of unintended action in response to naturally occurring sounds.
[0017] It is important that any wireless control offers two-way communications between the remote controlling operator and the valve system. As such, the invention herein disclosed and claimed provides two-way communications that supports closed loop control of the valve as well as information about its state, pressure, depth and location.
[0018]
[0019] Sensors in the valve (not shown) could detect valve state (open or closed), pressure within the valve, and other physical parameters, such as depth and location, and convey those sensors' data signals back along path 108, to the I/O (105), and to the MCU (107). The MCU can encode those sensor data signals, convey them via I/O (105), to an electric-to-sound transducer (113). The sound generated by that electric-to-sound transducer can be detected by the remote sound-to-electric transducer in the vessel's 103 system.
[0020] Where the valve is meant to be used with a compressed-gas or compressed-liquid cyclinder, it can be integrated as shown in
[0021] As shown in
[0022] The use method of
[0023] As a safety backup method, the invention system may also comprise an electronic counter which is preset with a predetermined time value based on, say, worst case inaction time. As such, as illustrated in
[0024] The drawings and descriptions are meant to be exemplary and should not be read as limiting invention function or scope. Although the various subsystems are shown as essentially separate entities, they could be partially or fully integrated. The sensors incorporated in the valve subsystem are not limited to valve state, pressure, depth and location. Other parameters and appropriate sensors could be integrated and comprise the invention system.
[0025] The system enclosure may have a port to allow charging of rechargeable batteries that comprise the electric power source. The capacity of the electric power source can be modularly chosen to provide extended time between recharging. The integration of the valve into the enclosure's cylinder interface fitting reduces the number of tubes and fittings and therefore may extend the mean-time-between-failure (MTBF) of the invention system.
[0026] The invention system comprises a two-way communications system using water as its medium. The MCU could be programmed to enable the invention to participate as a node in a sound-in-water-medium network. As such, the node could be queried for sensor data; or the node could query other nodes for sensor data.