Automotive image sensor surface washing and drying system and method
11465595 · 2022-10-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60S1/56
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60S1/52
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B1/044
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G02B27/0006
PHYSICS
B05B1/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60S1/56
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B1/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60S1/52
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G02B27/00
PHYSICS
B08B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present disclosure relates to automated or remotely controlled methods and apparatuses for cleaning and drying soiled external 2-D or 3-D image sensor surfaces such as objective lenses on Light Detection and Ranging (“LIDAR”) sensors when mounted in a configuration that is exposed to dirty environments.
Claims
1. A sensor surface cleaning system for cleaning one or more sensor surfaces, comprising: an air dry nozzle assembly body that defines an interior lumen that includes an inlet in communication with a channel and an outlet orifice or throat; a first distally projecting member that includes a first intake port configured to draw in a first flow of entrained ambient air and a second distally projecting member that includes a second intake port configured to draw in a second flow of entrained ambient air; the first distally projecting member and second distally projecting member define opposing substantially planar floor surfaces configured to direct and aim air distally from the outlet orifice or throat; and the first and second intake ports are positioned downstream from the outlet orifice or throat; wherein said outlet orifice or throat includes an end exit with an open slot that is shaped to assist with accelerating inlet airflow from the open slot to be combined with the first and second flows of entrained ambient air from said first and second intake ports of said first and second distally projecting members; the system is configured to generate a fan-shaped stream of drying air from a first flow of supplied air which is used to accelerate at least one flow of entrained ambient air; wherein said fan-shaped stream of drying air is aimed at a sensor surface target area having a selected width and a selected height.
2. The sensor surface cleaning system of claim 1, further comprising a washing nozzle assembly configured to generate a fan-shaped spray of washing fluid from a first flow of supplied washing fluid wherein said fan-shaped spray of washing fluid is aimed at said sensor surface target area.
3. The sensor surface cleaning system of claim 2, wherein said fan-shaped stream of washing fluid has a selected spray width and height which are coextensive with said fan-shaped stream of drying air such that both said fan-shaped spray of washing fluid and said fan-shaped stream of drying air are aimed at said sensor surface target area and each cover a selected width and selected height of said target area.
4. The sensor surface cleaning system of claim 1, wherein said air dry nozzle assembly includes a body that is positioned within a housing member and attached to an aiming fixture wherein said housing member is rotatable and pivotable relative to said aiming fixture.
5. The sensor surface cleaning system of claim 1, wherein said air dry nozzle assembly is positioned on an exterior portion of a vehicle.
6. An air nozzle assembly comprising: an air dry nozzle assembly body that defines an interior lumen that includes an inlet in communication with a channel and an outlet orifice or throat; a first distally projecting member that includes a first intake port configured to draw in a first flow of entrained ambient air and a second distally projecting member that includes a second intake port configured to draw in a second flow of entrained ambient air; the first distally projecting member and second distally projecting member define opposing substantially planar floor surfaces configured to direct and aim air distally from the outlet orifice or throat; and the first and second intake ports are positioned downstream from the outlet orifice or throat; wherein said outlet orifice or throat includes an end exit with an open slot that is shaped to assist with accelerating inlet airflow from the open slot to be combined with the first and second flows of entrained ambient air from said first and second intake ports of said first and second distally projecting members; wherein said air dry nozzle assembly is configured to generate a fan-shaped stream of air from a supplied airflow to the inlet combined with the first and second flows of entrained ambient air to generate said fan-shaped stream of air.
7. The air nozzle assembly of claim 6, wherein said air dry nozzle assembly body includes a first nozzle member and a second nozzle member wherein the first nozzle member is abutted to the second nozzle member to define said interior lumen.
8. The air nozzle assembly of claim 7, wherein said first nozzle member is symmetrical with the second nozzle member.
9. The air nozzle assembly of claim 6, wherein said inlet, channel, and outlet orifice are aligned along a common central flow axis.
10. The air nozzle assembly of claim 6, end exit includes at least one of a spherical shape and a rectangular shape.
11. The air nozzle assembly of claim 6 wherein said first and second distally projecting members are generally symmetrical to one another.
12. The air nozzle assembly of claim 6, wherein a first platform surface is spaced from a second platform surface and extend generally perpendicularly relative to a common central flow axis.
13. The air nozzle assembly of claim 12, wherein the first platform surface and the second platform surface form a generally v-shaped configuration and are aligned with the open slot and wherein the first and second platform surfaces are radially spaced from the first and second intake ports.
14. The air nozzle assembly of claim 12, wherein the first intake port includes an opening that is generally symmetrically shaped to an opening of the second intake port wherein both openings are generally aligned relative to one another and aligned adjacent to the open slot.
15. The air nozzle assembly of claim 14, wherein the first and second intake ports are distally aligned with and adjacent to the first and second platform surfaces, respectively.
16. The air nozzle assembly of claim 14, wherein the first and second intake ports have an elongated shape that is greater than the size of the open slot.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(18) Vehicle 2-D or 3-D Imaging System Nomenclature
(19) In order to provide an exemplary context and basic nomenclature, we refer initially to
(20) Referring now to
(21) Although shown at a rear portion 8a of vehicle 8, camera module 10 may be positioned at any suitable location on vehicle 8, such as within a rear panel or portion of the vehicle, a side panel or portion of the vehicle, a license plate mounting area of the vehicle, an exterior mirror assembly of the vehicle, an interior rearview mirror assembly of the vehicle or any other location where the camera may be positioned and oriented to provide the desired view of the scene occurring exteriorly or interiorly of the vehicle. The image captured by the camera may be displayed at a display screen or the like positioned within the cabin of the vehicle, such as at an interior rearview mirror assembly (such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,690,268), or elsewhere at or within the vehicle cabin, such as by using the principles disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,550,677; 5,670,935; 5,796,094; 6,097,023 and 6,201,642, and/or 6,717,610.
(22) Turning now to the system diagrams of
(23) Referring next to
(24) Integrated Sensor Surface Washing and Drying System
(25) Reference will now be made in detail to exemplary embodiments, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural and functional changes may be made. Moreover, features of the various embodiments may be combined or altered. As such, the following description is presented by way of illustration only and should not limit in any way the various alternatives and modifications that may be made to the illustrated embodiments.
(26) As used herein, the words “example” and “exemplary” mean an instance, or illustration. The words “example” or “exemplary” do not indicate a key or preferred aspect or embodiment. The word “or” is intended to be inclusive rather an exclusive, unless context suggests otherwise. As an example, the phrase “A employs B or C,” includes any inclusive permutation (e.g., A employs B; A employs C; or A employs both B and C). As another matter, the articles “a” and “an” are generally intended to mean “one or more” unless context suggest otherwise.
(27) Similar reference numerals are used throughout the figures. Therefore, in certain views, only selected elements are indicated even though the features of the system or assembly may be identical in all of the figures. In the same manner, while a particular aspect of the disclosure is illustrated in these figures, other aspects and arrangements are possible, as will be explained below.
(28) Turning next to
(29) As noted above, there are several challenges which must be overcome if, for example, a LIDAR system's external lens surface (
(30) As will become clear from the disclosure contained below, the air dry nozzle of the present invention overcomes the problems associated with prior art nozzles by efficiently generating and aiming a powerful narrow fan-shaped stream of drying air 520. The air dry nozzle's efficiency is due partly to the inclusion of entraining air intake ports (e.g., first and second air intake holes 542, 544) located at top and bottom of exit floors to entrain two ambient air flows 552, 554 combined with inlet airflow 518 as it passes through outlet orifice 546. The entrained ambient air flows 552, 554 combine with the processed inlet airflow 518 between the distally projecting members 534, 536 and results in the drying air fan 520. The advantage of this air entrainment is that the output fan 520 becomes thicker and the exit flow rate is much more than inlet flow rate. Therefore the coverage is greatly increased with the same inlet flow conditions (flow rate, dimensions, etc). As a result of the entrained flow rate, the cleaning ability of fan 520 is significantly enhanced over prior art blower nozzles.
(31) The structure and method of the present disclosure provides a new way to increase output coverage of a fan-shaped stream of drying air 520 without changing inlet conditions (flow rate, dimensions, etc).
(32) As shown in
(33) Preferably, the air dry nozzle assembly 512 includes the air dry nozzle insert member or body 532 or multiple insert members 560 (See
(34) When in use, inlet airflow 518 from the nozzle member's inlet 540 translates through the channel 558 and through an open slot 559 of the outlet orifice or throat 546. As the inlet airflow 518 exits the open slot 559, it converges with air entrained via entrainment ports 542, 544 distally from and adjacent to the open slot 559. In the embodiment illustrated by
(35) In both embodiments of
(36) Additionally, the top or first intake port 542 may have an opening that is shaped similar to the bottom or second intake port 544. The first and second intake ports 542, 544 may be generally symmetrically aligned relative to one another and may be aligned and centered relative to the open slot 559. Further, the intake ports 542, 544 may be aligned with and adjacent to the platform surfaces 570, 572. The intake ports 542, 544 may have an elongated shape that includes a width that is greater than the width of the open slot 559 wherein such widths are generally transverse to the central axis CL.
(37) Without the air entrainment, the drying air fan would be a thin sheet. With the air entrainment through the air intake ports (542, 544 as shown in
(38) The insert member (e.g., 532) of the air dry nozzle assembly 512 could be molded in one piece as shown in
(39) Referring again to
(40) As noted above, a key problem to be addressed by the system (e.g., 500) and method of the present disclosure is the paucity of space and the economics of on-vehicle storage of compressed air. Most passenger vehicles do not have compressed air systems and adding a compressed air system (preferably a compressor and an accumulator) is expensive, takes up precious space and adds complexity, but the system of the present disclosure helps minimize the expense and the space requirements, because the air nozzle of the present disclosure (e.g., 512) requires much less than 30 LPM, and the drying air fan 520 is accelerated toward the surface 530 and not rapidly diffused. So, less air is needed. Additionally, the mass and velocity of the air stream in a fan-shaped stream 520 are large enough to overcome the mass of fluid droplets, so the droplets are dried or pushed off the surface 530 and air is distributed to clean a large enough section of sensor surface, without requiring multiple air nozzles. It should be noted that nozzle assembly 512 is not a fluidic generating an oscillating pattern of drying air flow in this prototype embodiment, as the propensity of a fluidic to have an audible oscillation was deemed objectionable.
(41) Requiring large amounts of air might be manageable with single sensors, but new high performance vehicles are starting to have more than one sensor that needs cleaning and drying. In extreme cases, one could expect to need to dry; singly, in zones, or all at once, as many as 30 to 40 sensors, and using the drying systems of the prior art, the amount of air needed is unmanageable. The system of the present disclosure (e.g., 500) can be used very effectively drying multi sensor arrays in zones to allow the system to handle smaller chunks limiting the amount of air needed at any instance, transitioning from one zone to the next. This allows the system of the present disclosure to work effectively (even with LIDAR systems) with 12 to 40V on-board compressors using the zone approach, at the required pressure and flow rates. Preferably the system includes an accumulator and compressor sized such that enough compressed air can be stored to supply the sensor blow off needs, whatever the configuration. In extreme applications such as vehicles with many sensor arrays, multiple automotive compressors could be required to make-up air needed to generate drying air.
(42) The system (e.g., 500) and method of the present disclosure reduces the system level packaging size by entraining additional air at the sensor, thereby reducing the supply requirement from the system and therefore the sizing of every component in that system (e.g., supply tube size, compressor size and accumulator size). In one embodiment, nozzle assembly 512 of the present disclosure can be made by injection molding from any suitable material including, but not limited to, any suitable plastic or polymer material. Alternatively, nozzle assembly 512 could be printed using additive manufacturing such as with a 3D printer from any suitable material including, but not limited to, any suitable plastic or polymer material. Aiming fixture 510 and insert-receiving socket or chamber 550 can be formed from any suitable material such as any metal, metal alloy, plastic or polymer and can be made from molding, casting, injection molding, or 3D printing.
(43) Field of View Considerations
(44) It should be understood that many existing cameras have Field of View Angles from 120 to 170 degrees (e.g., as indicated by radial lines). A major constraint to system functionality is to have nothing intrude into the displayed field of view of the camera, (e.g., 10, 10B) so that the control system or user is not interfered with or distracted by the appearance of the sensor surface washing and drying system 500 or any part thereof. Thus the washing and drying nozzle members (e.g., 512, 514) should be laterally positioned from and yet aimed back at the sensor's FOV. In the illustrated embodiments of the present disclosure, the nozzles (e.g., 512, 514) are oriented and aimed from a fixed location to be away from (e.g., below) the FOV of the sensor. In the embodiment of
(45) Having described preferred embodiments of a new and improved assembly, system and method, it is believed that other modifications, variations and changes will be suggested to those skilled in the art in view of the teachings set forth herein. It is therefore to be understood that all such variations, modifications and changes are believed to fall within the scope of the present invention.
(46) Although the present embodiments have been illustrated in the accompanying drawings and described in the foregoing detailed description, it is to be understood that the external lens washing and drying methods and assemblies are not to be limited to just the embodiments disclosed, but that the systems and assemblies described herein are capable of numerous rearrangements, modifications and substitutions. The exemplary embodiment has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Obviously, modifications and alterations will occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. Accordingly, the present specification is intended to embrace all such alterations, modifications and variations that fall within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. Furthermore, to the extent that the term “includes” is used in either the detailed description or the claims, such term is intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising” as “comprising” is interpreted when employed as a transitional word in a claims.