SENSOR SYSTEM FOR MONITORING TIRE WEAR
20190193480 ยท 2019-06-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60C11/246
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60C11/243
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A tread wear indicator is affixed to a respective tire tread element. The indicator is constructed as a plurality of radially stacked sensor elements operatively configured and located to sequentially sacrificially abrade and change in electrical resistance responsive to a progressive tread wear of the respective tread element. The sensor elements are connected by circuitry that communicates a data signal from the sensor elements to a data processor indicative of a change in cumulative resistivity of the sensor elements. The data processor receives the data signal from the sensor elements and determines a radial wear level of the tread element based on the data signal. Multiple tread wear indicators may be mounted to respective tread lugs across the tread to derive a tread wear status based upon the tread wear profiles of the respective lugs.
Claims
1. A vehicle tire and tread wear sensor comprising: a tire having a tread; and a tread wear sensor mounted in the tread, said tread wear sensor comprising a thin layer having a first and second outer surface each having a capacitor formed of conductive ink, wherein the tread wear sensor is positioned in a groove or sipe of the tread, wherein the printed circuit is in electrical communication with a RFID tag.
2. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the thin layer is rubber.
3. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the capacitor is oriented in the radial direction of the tread.
4. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the circuit is printed using a stretchable ink.
5. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the RFID tag is printed on the thin layer of rubber, and is in electrical communication with the printed circuit.
6. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the RFID tag is a chip mounted on the thin layer.
7. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the RFID tag is a chip mounted on the tread in a groove.
8. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 3 wherein the RFID tag is a chip mounted on the tread in a pocket of a groove.
9. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the tread wear sensor is mounted in the tread in a sipe post cure of the tire.
10. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 further comprising a reader.
11. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 further comprising data processing means for determining a tread wear status of the tread based on the absence of an electrical signal from the electrical element.
12. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the RFID tag is passive.
13. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 1 wherein the RFID tag has a A/D convertor.
14. A vehicle tire and tread wear sensor comprising: a tire having a tread; a tread wear sensor comprising at least one electrical element affixed to a rubber layer, wherein the rubber layer is mounted in the tread, wherein the electrical element is made of a capacitor for emitting an electrical signal; and a passive circuit mounted in electrical communication with the electrical element and capable of sensing the electrical signal emitted from the electrical element.
15. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 wherein the electrical element is sacrificial.
16. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 wherein there is an array of capacitor sensors mounted in the tread.
17. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 wherein the passive voltage-measuring circuit is mounted in the tread in a groove.
18. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 wherein the sensor is mounted to the side of a tread element.
19. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 wherein the reader is a UHF-RFID reader.
20. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 wherein the reader is a passive UHF-RFID reader.
21. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 wherein the RFID tag is mounted in the tire.
22. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 wherein the tire is mounted upon a wheel, and the RFID reader is mounted on the wheel.
23. The vehicle tire and tread wear sensor of claim 14 further comprising data processing means for determining a tread wear status of the tread based on the electrical signal from the tread wear sensors.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] The invention will be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0024] Referring to
[0025]
[0026] With reference to
[0027] Other examples of capacitors are shown in
[0028]
[0029] The capacitance sensor is oriented in the radial direction so that as the tread wears, the capacitance level decreases. Preferably, each of the capacitance sensors are printed or painted with electrically conductive and flexible ink, and then inserted in a sipe or groove of the tire. Alternatively, the sensors could be mounted to an outer surface of the tread block or rib.
[0030] More preferably, multiple capacitance sensors electrically connected to single chip RFID tag 220 to provide rib based or location based wear indication and converter chip to provide A/D conversion. The RFID tag 220 is enhanced to receive multiple data inputs.
[0031]
[0032]
[0033] Furthermore, one or more of the capacitor based sensors 100 could also be used as aquaplaning detector. As the tire runs through the wet surface, the circuit will indicate near zero capacitance (shorted). This may provide extra safety information for vehicle operation.
[0034] As examples from the above described embodiments, the enhanced passive tag will integrate with at least one (may include multi-channels) A/D converter that provides power from RFID tag to sensor and converts measured signal (analog) into digital form and store it to RFID tag's memory that then transmitted to RFID reader upon requested as illustrated in
Reader Location and Power Options
[0035] Each reader 40 may be a small electronic receiver, electronic transceiver that could communicate with a passive RFID (RadioFrequency IDentification) tag/sensor to obtained required information; In another embodiment as shown in
[0036] An alternative embodiment is shown in
[0037] In an alternate embodiment, the reader is at a remote location such as a drive over reader device. Alternatively, the reader may be powered by a small battery or energy harvestor embedded in the patch, or be hardwired to the vehicle battery as shown in
[0038] The tread depth measurement would only need to be taken at low frequency and transmitted infrequently e.g., once a month due to the slow wear rate of tires, so power requirements would be low. The tread depth readings could be stored on a server for commercial tire management & data analysis. For consumer tires, the server could send emails to consumer warning of need to replace a worn-out tire. In addition, the non-skid of all four tires on a passenger car could be monitored as well as say both shoulders of each to give info on alignment maintenance. This convenience would be even more valuable on commercial fleet vehicles where the non-skid of all 18 wheels could be monitored automatically.
[0039] Variations in the present invention are possible in light of the description of it provided herein. While certain representative embodiments and details have been shown for the purpose of illustrating the subject invention, it will be apparent to those skilled in this art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the scope of the subject invention. It is, therefore, to be understood that changes can be made in the particular embodiments described which will be within the full intended scope of the invention as defined by the following appended claims.