Fluid level sensor with combined capacitance and conductance
09789697 · 2017-10-17
Assignee
Inventors
- David L. Knierim (Wilsonville, OR)
- Steven Ross Slotto (Camas, WA, US)
- Blake Terry Weimer (Woodburn, OR, US)
Cpc classification
Y02P70/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B41J2/17566
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2002/17579
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01F23/24
PHYSICS
International classification
B41J2/175
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01F23/26
PHYSICS
Abstract
A fluid sensor has a first electrode, a second electrode, a housing containing the first and second electrodes, such that the electrodes extend from the housing, exposed metal between the first and second electrodes, and a drive signal electrically connected to the second electrode, such that when fluid is present in the reservoir, either the first electrode senses the presence of the fluid, or the drive signal senses presence of the fluid. A fluid sensor has a first electrode, a second electrode, a housing containing the first and second electrodes, a drive signal electrically connected to the second electrode, and sensing circuitry to measure a current from the second electrode to indicate a fluid level.
Claims
1. A fluid sensor, comprising: a first electrode; a second electrode; a housing containing the first and second electrodes; drive sense circuitry to generate a drive signal, the drive signal electrically connected to the second electrode; and sensing circuitry to measure a current from the second electrode to generate a signal to indicate a fluid level, and to receive a drive sense signal, such that when the current from the second electrode would indicate a low level as result of conductive ink, the drive sense signal will cause the signal to indicate a high level.
2. The fluid sensor of claim 1, wherein the sensing circuitry also receives a voltage from the first electrode to indicate the fluid level.
3. The fluid sensor of claim 2 where the second electrode is above the first electrode relative to the level of fluid in a reservoir.
4. The fluid sensor of claim 2, including an exposed grounded surface at the base of the electrodes.
5. The fluid sensor of claim 2, wherein the drive signal further comprises an alternating current voltage.
6. The fluid sensor of claim 2, wherein the sensing circuitry includes a synchronous rectifier.
7. The fluid sensor of claim 1, wherein the sensing circuit also receives a current from the first electrode to indicate the fluid level.
8. A fluid sensor, comprising: a first electrode; a second electrode; a housing containing the first and second electrodes, such that the electrodes extend from the housing, the housing to be inserted into a fluid; an exposed piece of metal between the first and second electrodes, the exposed metal piece being grounded and positioned to be exposed to the fluid; and a drive signal electrically connected to the second electrode, such that when fluid is present in the reservoir, either the first electrode senses the presence of the fluid, or the drive signal senses presence of the fluid.
9. The fluid sensor of claim 8, further comprising drive circuitry to generate and monitor the drive signal.
10. The fluid sensor of claim 8, further comprising circuitry to convert a voltage received from the first electrode to an ink level signal.
11. The fluid sensor of claim 8, wherein the exposed metal between the first and second electrodes is coupled to electrical ground.
12. The fluid sensor of claim 8, wherein the second electrode is above the first electrode relative to the level of fluid in a reservoir.
13. The fluid sensor of claim 8, wherein fluid presence is indicated when either the voltage of the first electrode is high or when the current of the drive signal is high.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
(7)
(8) The fluid reservoir housing 10 includes a reservoir 16 that holds a level of ink or other fluid 12. A fluid level sensor 14 has its own housing, discussed in more detail later, from which extend two electrodes. The electrodes extend into the fluid. The resulting voltages and currents detected from the electrodes allow the system to determine the presence or absence of fluid, and depending upon the nature of the sensing system, the amount of ink available.
(9) The fluid level sensor embodiment of
(10) The drive sense circuitry 20 receives a select (SEL) and an enable (EN) signal shown in
(11) The issues with using Vout alone, as in a typical capacitive or conductive fluid level sense system, arises when the fluid has high conductivity. When lower conductivity liquids are present in the reservoir, the drive signal couples capacitively or conductively to the sense electrode resulting in an ink full signal. For high conductivity inks in current embodiments, currently available ink sensors may cause false empty or full readings. In the embodiments here, when high conductivity ink reaches the upper electrode, it short circuits the upper electrode to ground, especially in the case of metal reservoirs. This high load current on the upper electrode is also sensed and causes a full reading. In some embodiments, high conductivity inks are those that conduct more than 500 microsiemens per centimeter, and those that conduct less are considered low conductivity inks. The thresholds for high and low conductivity may be left up to the system designer.
(12) In the empty condition, a film of fluid may remain coating the level sense probe assembly. In the case of high conductivity fluid, this film can form a conductive path between the electrodes, causing a false full reading. To avoid this issue, exposed grounded metal 40 is interposed between the two electrodes. Conductivity of any remaining ink film is shunted to ground, preventing any false full reading.
(13)
(14)
(15) The drive section receives a select signal SEL. In this embodiment, the SEL signal consists of a square wave. There is also an enable signal, EN, that also consists of a square wave having a frequency twice that of the SEL signal. EN causes analog multiplexer 203 to sample Vout only during the second half of each SEL signal state, after DRIVE and Vout have settled. The SEL and EN signals control analog multiplexer 203. Every time SEL changes state (from high to low or low to high), EN goes false for the first half of that SEL state, causing the analog multiplexer 203 to be open-circuit. During the second half of the SEL low state, analog multiplexer 203 connects R202, which is the capacitively-coupled version of Vout, to ground. During the second half of the SEL high state, analog multiplexer 203 connects R202 to R208, charging or discharging C210, resulting in the Ink_Level signal to a level determined by the amplitude of Vout. The DRIVE signal is an amplified and inverted version of the SEL signal, unless the fluid in the reservoir is a high conductivity ink in the full state. The circuit block amplifies the SEL signal to generate the DRIVE signal, which is electrically coupled to Electrode 1 from
(16) As discussed above, the DRIVE signal is provided to the probe circuit, which returns the Vout signal. In the embodiment of
(17) Output 1Y0 connects 1Z to ground during the second half of the low state of SEL, which is the high state of DRIVE and the low state of Vout. Output 1Y1 connects to 1Z during the second half of the high state of Vout, sampling its amplitude into capacitor C210 to form the Ink_Level signal. If no ink is coupling the two electrodes, the amplitude of Vout is low, resulting in a low voltage on C210 and the Ink_Level signal. If ink is bridging the two electrodes, and not so highly conductive so as to short the DRIVE signal, then the amplitude on Vout will be higher, resulting in a high voltage on C210 and the Ink_Level signal.
(18) If the ink is highly conductive ink, DRIVE draws enough current to turn on transistor Q222. The collector of Q222, through diode D211 and resistor R209, pulls signal Ink_Level high, indicating a full condition, even when the amplitude of the Vout signal is low. Otherwise, the high conductivity inks cause a short and the signal never reaches the lower electrode, resulting in a false empty reading.
(19)
(20) The electrodes are inserted into the ink, and the signals are routed in and out of the chassis of the ink reservoir or the fluid dispensing system. In some embodiments, the electrodes were roughly 13 mm long and 2.2 mm wide with a 3 mm gap between them. The drive and sensing electrode pads extend from 2 mm outside the grounded housing to 0.1 mm from the ends of the electrodes. This particular geometry is designed to prevent ink bridging between the electrodes, except for any remaining ink film that by necessity must pass over grounded housing metal on its way from one electrode to the other. The drive signal is a 9V peak-to-peak alternating current voltage.
(21) It will be appreciated that variants of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.