Skin treatment apparatus and method for the same
10426692 ยท 2019-10-01
Assignee
Inventors
- Martin Jurna (Eindhoven, NL)
- Margaret Ruth Horton (Eindhoven, NL)
- Yan Liu (Eindhoven, NL)
- Jonathan Alambra Palero (Eindhoven, NL)
Cpc classification
A61H2201/503
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61H2201/5005
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A skin treatment apparatus (1) for treating a skin surface, comprising: a hand held base body (10); a rotor head (20), movably connected to the base body (10), and including at least one skin contacting element (22); a motor (30), operably connected to both the base body (10) and the rotor head (20) to rotatably drive the rotor head (20) relative to the base body (10) around a rotation axis (L); at least one motion sensor (40) to generate a movement signal reflecting a path of relative movement between the motion sensor and the skin surface; and a control unit (50), operably connected to the at least one motion sensor (40) and the motor (30) to control the motor (30) to rotatably drive the rotor head (20) in dependence of the movement signal of the at least one motion sensor (40).
Claims
1. A skin treatment apparatus for treating a skin surface, comprising: a hand-held base body; a rotor head, movably connected to the hand-held base body, and including at least one skin contacting element; a motor, operably connected to both the hand-held base body and the rotor head, and configured to rotatably drive the rotor head relative to the hand-held base body around a rotation axis; at least one motion sensor, configured to generate a movement signal reflecting a path of relative movement between the hand-held base body and the skin surface; and a control unit, operably connected to the at least one motion sensor and the motor, and configured to control the motor to rotatably drive the rotor head in dependence of the movement signal of the at least one motion sensor.
2. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the control unit is configured: to distinguish a plurality of predetermined paths of relative movement; to associate a different rotor head movement pattern with each of said distinguished predetermined paths of relative movement; to repeatedly analyze the movement signal to detect one of the distinguished predetermined path of relative movement; and once a distinguished predetermined path of relative movement is detected during said analysis of the movement signal, to rotatably drive the rotor head in accordance with a rotor head movement pattern associated with the detected distinguished predetermined path of relative movement.
3. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the control unit is configured to analyze timewise successive portions of the movement signal, each portion of the movement signal corresponding to a time interval of less than 1 second.
4. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the control unit is configured to distinguish the plurality of predetermined paths of relative movement including linear paths of relative movement.
5. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 4, wherein the control unit is further configured to distinguish between linear paths of relative movement extending in different directions with respect to a predetermined coordinate system fixed to the apparatus.
6. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the control unit is configured to distinguish the plurality of predetermined paths of relative movement including circular paths of relative movement.
7. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 6, wherein the control unit is further configured to distinguish between clockwise and counter-clockwise circular paths of relative movement.
8. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the different rotor head movement patterns include at least two of: a first rotor head movement pattern involving a clockwise rotation of the rotor head around a rotation axis of the rotor head; a second rotor head movement pattern involving a counter-clockwise rotation of the rotor head around the rotation axis of the rotor head; and a third rotor head movement pattern involving an alternate clockwise and counter-clockwise rotation of the rotor head around the rotation axis of the rotor head.
9. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the different rotor head movement patterns include: a first rotor head movement pattern including a rotation or an oscillation of the rotor head at a first frequency; and a second rotor head movement pattern including a rotation or an oscillation of the rotor head at a second frequency different than the first frequency.
10. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the at least one motion sensor is statically arranged relative to the hand-held base body.
11. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the motor is a stepper motor.
12. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the at least one motion sensor is a tracking device configured to generate a movement signal in accordance with movements of the hand-held base body across the skin surface detected.
13. The skin treatment apparatus according to claim 12, wherein the tracking device is an optical tracking device.
14. A method of treating a skin surface, comprising: providing a skin treatment apparatus including: a hand-held base body; a rotor head, movably connected to the hand-held base body such that it is rotatable relative to the hand-held base body around a rotation axis, and including at least one skin contacting element; moving the hand-held base body relative to the skin surface, and generating a movement signal that reflects a path of relative movement between the hand-held base body and the skin surface; and rotatably driving the rotor head in dependence of the movement signal, while the at least one skin contacting element touches the skin surface.
15. The method according to claim 14, further comprising: distinguishing a plurality of predetermined paths of relative movement; associating a different rotor head movement pattern with each of said distinguished predetermined paths of relative movement; repeatedly analyzing the movement signal to detect one of the distinguished predetermined path of relative movement; and once a distinguished predetermined path of relative movement is detected during said analysis of the movement signal, rotatably driving the rotor head in accordance with a rotor head movement pattern associated with the detected distinguished predetermined path of relative movement.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5)
(6) The skin treatment apparatus 1 may include a rigid, hollow hand-held base body 10, defining an elongate handle portion 12 and a substantially semi-spherical rotor head housing portion 14 connected to an end thereof.
(7) The rotor head housing portion 14 may accommodate a generally disc-shaped rotor head 20. The rotor head 20 may be movably mounted within the rotor head housing 14, such that it substantially covers an open side of the semi-spherical rotor head housing portion 14, and such that it is rotatable around a central rotation axis L. On an outward facing side, the rotor head 20 may be provided with at least one skin contacting element 22. In the depicted embodiment, the at least one skin contacting element 22 includes a plurality of bristle tufts 24 that are regularly spaced apart around the rotation axis L; in other embodiments, the skin contact element 22 may be different, and for instance include an abrasive microdermabrasion surface, or a generally smooth massaging surface. Although the depicted embodiment includes a rotor head 20 with only one independently rotatable part, it is understood that other embodiments may include a rotor head with multiple, optionally independently rotatably drivable parts. In an elaboration of the depicted embodiment, for instance, each of the bristle tufts 24 may be provided on a respective sub-rotor head. Each such sub-rotor head may be excentrically connected to the primary disc-shaped rotor head 20 shown in
(8) The skin treatment apparatus 1 may also include at least one motion sensor 40 configured to generate a movement signal reflecting a path of relative movement between the motion sensor and a skin surface. In a preferred embodiment the motion sensor 40 may be statically arranged relative to, e.g. be immediately connected to, the hand-held base body 10 (instead of to the rotor head 20), to as to ensure that the movement signal generated by the motion sensor 40 substantially exclusively reflects user hand-induced displacements of the base body, and thus substantially excludes displacement contributions to rotation motions of the rotor head 20.
(9) The motion sensor 40 may in itself be of a conventional design, and of any suitable type. In one embodiment the motion sensor 40 may be a tracking device, such that it is configured to generate its movement signal in accordance with movements across a skin surface detected via interaction therewith. The tracking device may be similar to tracking devices known from the field of computer input devices, e.g. computer mice, and for instance be a mechanical tracking device, such as a rollerball tracking device, or an optical tracking device. In a skin treatment apparatus 1 fitted with a roller ball tracking device, a small ball may roll over the skin surface, while displacement sensors register the mutually perpendicular x/y-displacements of the ball; in an apparatus 1 fitted with an optical tracking device, optical images of the skin surface, taken at high frame rates, may be compared to each other to determine the mutually perpendicular x/y-shifts between them. An optical tracking device may be preferable to a mechanical tracking device for its higher reliability and accuracy. Alternatively, or in addition, the motion sensor 40 may be configured to generate its movement signal in accordance with movements detected without interaction with the skin surface. In such an embodiment the motion sensor may, for instance, include an accelerometer that may determine mutually perpendicular displacements from accelerations measured during certain time intervals. In another such embodiment, the motion sensor 40 may include an optical, e.g. infrared, sensor that is not mechanically connected to the hand-base body 10 and disposed outside thereof. The motion sensor may be configured to track the motion of the hand-held base body 10 in three dimensional space, and to wirelessly transmit coordinates of a path of movement of the hand-held base body 10 to the control unit 50.
(10) In general, the motion sensor 40 may preferably provide displacement information at a frequency about at least 60 Hz, so as to ensure that both linear and circular movements are detectable within small portions of the movement signal having durations on the order of a second or smaller.
(11) In the embodiment depicted in
(12) The skin treatment apparatus may further include a control unit 50 that is operably connected to the at least one motion sensor 40 and the motor 30, and configured to control the motor 30 to rotatably drive the rotor head around its rotation axis L in dependence of the movement signal from the motion sensor 40 in a manner to be discussed below.
(13) The electrical components of the skin treatment apparatus 1, such as the electromotor 30 and the control unit 50, may be provided with electrical power from a battery 60, which may be accommodated in the elongate handle portion 12 of the hand-held base body 10.
(14) The apparatus 1 may be controlled, e.g. switched on and off, via one or more user controls 16 provided on the handle portion 12 hand-held base body 10.
(15) Now that the construction of the skin treatment apparatus 1 according to the present invention has been elucidated, attention is invited to its operation.
(16) During use, a user may hold the hand-held base body 10 of the apparatus 1 such that the skin contacting element 22 mounted on the rotor head 20 touches his skin, and then move the apparatus 1 relative thereto. In response to the relative movement, the motion sensor 40 may generate a movement signal that reflects the path of relative movement between the apparatus 1 and the skin surface. The control unit 50 may periodically analyze a respective portion of the movement signal of a certain duration, so as to each time determine whether one of a predetermined plurality of distinguished paths of relative movement is being executed. When a distinguished path of relative movement is detected, it may rotatably drive the rotor head 20 in accordance with a respective associated rotor head movement pattern.
(17) The relative motion between the skin treatment apparatus 1 and the generally three-dimensional skin surface being treated may be analyzed and described both theoretically and within the internals of the control unit 50 in terms of any suitable set of coordinates and with reference to any suitable coordinate system.
(18) In order not to complicate the exposition, however, and without loss of generality, the operation of the skin treatment apparatus 1 according to the present invention is expounded here in relation to a generally flat, i.e. two-dimensional, skin surface. This approach is sensible because even though the overall skin surface being treated may in actuality be three-dimensionally curved, the control unit 50 of the apparatus 1 may typically be configured to repeatedly determine the relative direction of motion in relation to only a relatively small portion thereof, which respective portion may each time be approximated by a two-dimensional patch.
(19) Where the paths of relative movement to be distinguished and detected by the control unit 50 include linear and/or circular paths, the relative movements between the apparatus and a generally flat (patch of) skin surface may further be conveniently describable with reference to a two-dimensional polar coordinate system in which each point is determined by a distance measured from a fixed point called the pole, and an angle measured from a fixed direction called the polar axis. The distance from the pole is called the radial coordinate or radius R, and the angle from the fixed direction is called the angular coordinate or polar angle . When using a polar coordinate system to describe the relative movements between the apparatus 1 and the skin surface, a movement signal from the motion sensor 40 may be construed to define a path of relative movement, every point of which is determined by a pair of coordinates (R, ). In the leftmost diagrams of
(20) Paths of relative movement may generally be distinguished based on differences in, inter alia, their shapes and/or differences in their orientations/directions and/or differences in the speed with which they are executed.
(21) In one embodiment, for instance, the control unit 50 may be configured to distinguish substantially linear paths of relative movement. Within a polar coordinate system with a suitably selected pole position (i.e. a pole position on said path), such a linear path of relative movement may be describable as a path along which the angular coordinate .theta. is substantially constant while the radial coordinate R varies. Here, is substantially constant may be construed to mean variable by less than a certain relatively small threshold angle, e.g. a threshold angle 10.degree. In an elaboration of this embodiment, the control unit 50 may further be configured to distinguish between linear paths of relative movement in different directions or angular coordinate ranges. Such predetermined angular coordinate ranges may, for instance, include eight identical 45.degree.-ranges or sectors (cf. the embodiments of
(22) In another embodiment, the control unit 50 may be configured to distinguish substantially circular paths of relative movement. Within a polar coordinate system with a suitably selected pole position (i.e. a pole position at the center of curvature), such a circular path of relative movement may be describable as a path along which the angular coordinate varies while the radial coordinate R is substantially constant. Here, is substantially constant may be construed to mean variable by less than a certain relatively small threshold deviation, e.g. a relative deviation of 10% of the maximum radius value of a point along the path of relative movement, or a certain absolute deviation, e.g. 1 mm. In an elaboration of this embodiment, the control unit 50 may further distinguish between clockwise and counter-clockwise circular paths of relative movement for which the angular coordinate along the path, respectively, consistently decreases and increases, or vice versa.
(23) Each distinguished path of relative movement may be coupled to one of a plurality of rotor head movement patterns. A single rotor head movement pattern may typically entail one of the following basic rotary movements: clockwise rotation of the rotor head 20 around its rotation axis L, counter-clockwise rotation of the rotor head 20 around its rotation axis L, and alternate clockwise and counter-clockwise rotation (i.e. oscillatory motion) of the rotor head 20 around its rotation axis L. Other parameters that may supplementarily define a rotor head movement pattern may include a frequency of rotation (i.e. the number of revolutions/rotations per unit of time), a frequency of oscillation, and an angle of oscillation. Frequencies of rotation and oscillation may preferably be in the range of 0.1-100 Hz.
(24) Since both the paths of relative movement distinguished by the control unit 50 and the associated rotor head movements patterns may differ for different embodiments, the number of possible configurations is virtually endless. By way of example, the exemplary operational configurations are illustrated below with reference to Table 1 and
(25) In the operational configuration of Table 1 and
(26) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 First exemplary operational configuration, defined by a set of distinguished paths of relative movement and associated rotor head movement patterns. Distinguished path Rotor head of relative movement movement pattern Angular R Basic Supplemental range(s) movement parameters (0, 90, Variation Oscillation Oscillation angle 180, 270) 22.5 (0-180) Frequency (0.1-100 Hz) (45, 225) 22.5 Variation CW Frequency rotation (0.1-100 Hz) (135, 315) 22.5 Variation CCW rotation Frequency (0.1-100 Hz)
(27) In the alternative configuration of Table 2 and
(28) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Second exemplary operational configuration, defined by a set of distinguished paths of relative movement and associated rotor head movement patterns. Distinguished path Rotor head of relative movement pattern movement Basic Supplemental R movement parameters Approximately Variation Oscillation Oscillation angle constant, (0-180) e.g. || < 10 Frequency (0.1-100 Hz) Consistent Approximately CW Frequency increase, constant rotation (0.1-100 Hz) e.g. || > 10 Consistent Approximately CCW Frequency decrease, constant rotation (0.1-100 Hz) e.g. || > 10
(29) Although illustrative embodiments of the present invention have been described above, in part with reference to the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to these embodiments. Variations to the disclosed embodiments can be understood and effected by those skilled in the art in practicing the claimed invention, from a study of the drawings, the disclosure, and the appended claims. In one such variation, for instance, the control unit may be operably connected to a pressure or contact sensor for detecting a pressure with which the skin contacting element is pressed against the skin, and be configured to control the motor to rotatably drive the rotor head in dependence of a pressure signal generated by the pressure sensor. Practically, this may enable the frequency of rotation or oscillation of the rotor head to be made dependent on the contact pressure, for example such that the frequency of rotation or oscillation is increased as the contact pressure increases, while rotation or oscillation of the rotor head ceases in case no skin contact is detected.
(30) Reference throughout this specification to one embodiment or an embodiment means that a particular feature, structure or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the present invention. Thus, the appearances of the phrases in one embodiment or in an embodiment in various places throughout this specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment. Furthermore, it is noted that particular features, structures, or characteristics of one or more embodiments may be combined in any suitable manner to form new, not explicitly described embodiments.
LIST OF ELEMENTS
(31) 1 skin treatment apparatus 10 hand-held base body 12 handle portion 14 rotor head housing portion 16 user control, e.g. on/off switch 20 rotor head 22 skin contacting element 24 bristle tuft 30 motor 40 motion sensor 50 control unit 60 battery angular coordinate L rotation axis of rotor head R radial coordinate