EP2836273A2 - Chauffage électronique pour hommes et animaux - Google Patents
Chauffage électronique pour hommes et animauxInfo
- Publication number
- EP2836273A2 EP2836273A2 EP13748380.6A EP13748380A EP2836273A2 EP 2836273 A2 EP2836273 A2 EP 2836273A2 EP 13748380 A EP13748380 A EP 13748380A EP 2836273 A2 EP2836273 A2 EP 2836273A2
- Authority
- EP
- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- heater
- target
- power density
- heat
- sensor
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Withdrawn
Links
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Classifications
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61F—FILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
- A61F7/00—Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61N—ELECTROTHERAPY; MAGNETOTHERAPY; RADIATION THERAPY; ULTRASOUND THERAPY
- A61N5/00—Radiation therapy
- A61N5/06—Radiation therapy using light
- A61N5/0613—Apparatus adapted for a specific treatment
- A61N5/0625—Warming the body, e.g. hyperthermia treatment
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61F—FILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
- A61F7/00—Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
- A61F2007/0088—Radiating heat
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61F—FILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
- A61F7/00—Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
- A61F2007/0094—Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body using a remote control
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61F—FILTERS IMPLANTABLE INTO BLOOD VESSELS; PROSTHESES; DEVICES PROVIDING PATENCY TO, OR PREVENTING COLLAPSING OF, TUBULAR STRUCTURES OF THE BODY, e.g. STENTS; ORTHOPAEDIC, NURSING OR CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES; FOMENTATION; TREATMENT OR PROTECTION OF EYES OR EARS; BANDAGES, DRESSINGS OR ABSORBENT PADS; FIRST-AID KITS
- A61F7/00—Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body
- A61F2007/0095—Heating or cooling appliances for medical or therapeutic treatment of the human body with a temperature indicator
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61N—ELECTROTHERAPY; MAGNETOTHERAPY; RADIATION THERAPY; ULTRASOUND THERAPY
- A61N5/00—Radiation therapy
- A61N5/06—Radiation therapy using light
- A61N2005/0626—Monitoring, verifying, controlling systems and methods
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61N—ELECTROTHERAPY; MAGNETOTHERAPY; RADIATION THERAPY; ULTRASOUND THERAPY
- A61N5/00—Radiation therapy
- A61N5/06—Radiation therapy using light
- A61N2005/0658—Radiation therapy using light characterised by the wavelength of light used
- A61N2005/0659—Radiation therapy using light characterised by the wavelength of light used infrared
Definitions
- This invention relates to heating people, other living things, and their surroundings for comfort and homeostasis.
- This invention relates to radiative heating.
- Radiative heating currently uses two primary technologies: 1) combustion of natural gas (methane), propane, coal, or wood; 2) electrical resistance heating.
- the heat can only be pointed in a general direction, primarily because the photons are ejected from the heating material by spontaneous emission and because the heating material is necessarily too large to focus.
- the result of this imprecision is that much of the thermal energy these heaters put out usually does not hit a person or other target.
- the thermal output of a radiative heater subtends 4 ⁇ steradians, and a normal person with 1 square meter of frontal surface area stands 2 meters from the heater, he would receive about 2% of the thermal energy from the heater.
- a reflector can be used to point the heat generally in one direction, but a reflector is highly inaccurate and unlikely to improve the efficiency of a radiative heater beyond 4% at 2m.
- the rest of the thermal energy would go to the person's surroundings. While a person may derive some comfort from the warm surroundings, the comfort they derive is out-of-proportion to the energy expended. Outdoors or where there is wind or a strong draft, the inefficiency is worse. This inefficiency is both expensive and bad for the environment. [0007]
- the target usually must move to a specific distance from the heater to be comfortable. Closer to the heater the target will be too hot and further away the target will be too cold. It is difficult to be comfortable when moving around.
- the existing broadband heaters emit light as well as heat, which some people consider distracting.
- Microwave heating has been tested by the US military to heat people in order to stop them from approaching or to disperse crowds. These systems require large antennas, and their use of microwaves would tend to interfere with radio communications.
- laser sources have not been used to heat people or animals for comfort or homeostasis.
- the physical properties of laser sources make them useful when it is desirable to focus heat for material processing. They have been used on human and animal tissues under focus not as heaters for comfort and homeostasis but as scalpels and medical tools.
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser medicine has an overview of the medical uses of lasers. These devices are not used to keep people warm and comfortable. They are generally hand-held but sometimes stationary, and the power densities are designed to cut tissues, remove hair or tattoos, or cure arthritis, but not to make a healthy person comfortable.
- One example of this is the device from US Patent Application 20120089135, Laser Generator for Dep Tissue Laser Treatments Using Low Intensity Laser Therapy Causing Selective Destruction of Nociceptive Nerves.
- This device is not a heater designed for comfort but a medical device designed for nerve-therapy. It uses non-thermal wavelengths under 980nm at powers of lmW - 6mW. 980nm is not a thermal wavelength - the thermal wavelengths are longer than 1200nm. Moreover lmW-6mW is insufficient to heat a person.
- Another example of a laser medical device is 20110218598, Stand-alone scanning laser device, which attempts to grow hair at 635nm.
- None of these or any other device designed for therapy is a device that would keep a person or animal comfortable in a normal room or outdoors. In general, they are either at the wrong wavelengths, they output the wrong amount of power at the wrong power densities, and their optics do not allow them to be pointed with precision at a person across a few meters of space. As a source becomes less precise, it becomes less efficient and less cost-effective.
- One aspect of the present invention is the use of a thermal laser or RCLED to heat people or animals for comfort and homeostasis.
- Another aspect is the use of optics that shape the beam so that much of the power impinges on a target across a room, and the power density is within safety limits.
- Another aspect is the use of a camera or other sensor to determine the position of the target person or other target.
- Another aspect is the use of a mechanism such as a pan-and-tilt to allow the laser to point the heat at a target at many positions within a field of view, or to track a target if it moves.
- Another aspect is the use of an algorithm to select and track targets.
- Another aspect is to respond to feedback from targets, including control instructions.
- Another aspect is the use of ambient temperature and wind sensors that provide information to an algorithm that can decide how much heat will be comfortable to the target.
- Another aspect is the use of additional sensors to assure that the beam will not touch a person at any point in space where it is above safety limits.
- the system is a heater with a thermal laser diode source (or sources) and optics to shape the beam.
- the beam should be shaped so that a large proportion of the photons impinge on the target and the power density is suitable for safety and comfort for a living thing.
- the system is a heater as above with a sensor (an imager) to identify targets, and it may have an automated system to point at a target.
- the beam may be collimated or it may be allowed to expand to a desired size at a desired position.
- electronics may be used to keep the power density in the beam within a safety limit when it touches a person, even though the power density may exceed the limit in other places.
- a time-of- flight sensor, binocular camera, or other distance sensor may give the distance to the target as well as possibly the distance to something else that may be entering the beam.
- the heater can be controlled by the target. This can be done with a controller, like those used for televisions, or it can be done by gestures picked-up on the position- sensing camera or other sensors.
- the heat beam system can distinguish between a target human's exposed skin and their clothed skin, warming the two in different amounts, or perhaps only warming the exposed skin.
- the heat beam system has sensors for ambient temperature and wind to provide input to the algorithm that decides what the beam intensity should be at the target. It may also have a thermal camera to determine the temperature of a person or some object that they may come in contact with.
- the system can coordinate multiple beams heating one or multiple targets. For this, communication between heaters, such as by radio, is required.
- a mirror can be used to redirect a beam.
- the mirror may be similar to those described in U.S. provisional patent application Serial No. 60/828,581 entitled “Mirror for Power Beaming," filed October 6, 2006.
- a heater of this type has a number of advantages over existing heaters. First, it is far more efficient because a far larger proportion of the emitted photons strike the target. Also, it is more comfortable because it can more precisely determine the power density of the heat that strikes the target. Also it is safer because its case is cool rather than hot and no person can be exposed to heat above a safe limit.
- FIG. 1 shows the spectrum of the sun.
- FIG. 2 shows the black body curves for several temperatures
- FIG. 3 shows the regulated limits for Class 1M under IEC-60825-1.
- FIG. 4 is an illustration of a schematic of a system, in accordance with one embodiment.
- FIG. 5A shows outline drawings of the device, while FIG5B shows the same device with dashed-line views.
- FIG. 1 INFORMATIONAL - shows the solar spectrum. What is light and what is heat? Both are photons. The only difference is wavelength. Light is the part that the human eye can see. Heat is the longer wavelength infrared photons that the cornea cannot focus and that the rods and cones are not sensitive to. Human vision occurs at the peak of the sun's emission. [0035] The sun is approximately a 5,500 °K emitter. At the earth's surface it outputs about IkW/sq. m. Much of its output is in the visible and not the hermal infrared, and in this sense it is a less than ideal heater. Because the human body evolved to be sensitive to light but insensitive to heat, safe levels of heat are orders of magnitude higher than safe levels of light.
- FIG. 2 Black body curves for several temperatures - INFORMATIONAL
- heaters move to lower temperatures, they do not have as sharp a wavelength peak, and the peak moves toward longer wavelengths.
- Combustion heaters and resistance heaters approximate a black-body curve.
- a natural gas radiant heater will approximate the 1000 °C black body curve. This is a very broadband source.
- Semiconductor devices such as lasers are band-gap emitters. Their emission is over fewer wavelengths. A thermal laser will have more than 95% of its power within lOnm.
- a narrow band source like an LED or laser, is useful because refractive optics, including plastic refractive optics, can be used. Theyu cannot, in general, be used with broadband emitters like heating elements. To understand this difference, consider the milky white optic on the front of a motion detector that operates at approximately 10,000 nm in contrast to the clear optic on the front of a flashlight that operates at less than 1,000 nm. Also, a narrow band heat source will emit no visible light, but a black body source will.
- a thermal laser will also have much higher brightness than the usual sources for heaters. This is a property of bandgap emitters and especially lasers as opposed to combustion or resistance heating. Basically, you get more photons per steradian from a bandgap emitter by stimulated emission than from a black body source. In fact, the power density at the front facet of a laser exceeds that of a combuster or a resistance device because of the basic physical limits of the materials that burn gas and the stoichiometry as well as the basic limits of the resistive materials. Because the front facet can be so small for a given power density, it is much more efficient to image.
- FIG. Regulated limits under IEC60825-1 - INFORMATIONAL.
- This curve shows the regulated limit for exposure to lasers at Class 1M under IEC 60825-1. It shows the transition from visible light to heat. In the visible and near infrared, the exposure limits are approximately 0.01 mW/sq. mm. At 1400nm where the limits are 1.04 mW/sq. mm. This is approximately the same as the power density outdoors at midday in sunlight.
- FIG. System Schematic
- the Thermal Laser(s) 1 A may be of many types, and a good solution is an array of InGaAs on InP laser diodes operating at 1400 - 1600nm. These operate at an eye-safe point in the spectrum, and they feel warm to the skin. They have no ultraviolet light, as sunlight does, and therefore are unlikely to cause skin cancer or sunburn. Their power outputs and efficiencies vary. Examples are a 5W emitter from Seminex at 1480nm that is 20% efficient and a 1.5W emitter from nLight that is 32% efficient. These can be procured at a reasonable cost. These are available from companies such as Oclaro, JDSU, Seminex, and others. Other laser systems, such as C02 lasers, might also be used. Resonant cavity LEDs might also be used, as they function on a principle similar to lasers, but no vendor appears to make them at thermal wavelengths.
- the power output of these is decided by the size of the spot and the maximum desirable output. Two levels of maximum output may be desirable: In compliance with safety limit throughout the beam; above the safety limit at points within the beam, but below the safety limit at any point where a person may come into contact with the beam.
- An example of the first case is a system designed to output a maximum desirable power of lmW/sq. mm, which makes this a Class lMdevice. If we desire to heat a spot 300mm x 300mm - larger than a person's head - we will require a peak power of 90 W. The power can be reduced by reducing or modulating the input current. Modulation is usually better because it allows the thermal laser to operate at the most efficient point on its power curve.
- An example of the second case is a system that must provide lmW/sq. mm at a distance of 40 meters. Because of limits on how well the beam can be captured by a lens, experience teaches that the beam falls-off at approximately 1 % per meter. If every point in the beam was within the Class 1M limit, the maximum power on a target at 40m would be approximately 0.6mW/sq. mm. For comfort outdoors in the wind, a higher level of heat is more desireable. In this case, it would be possible to have 1.7mW/sq.mm eneter free space from the system, and to use electronics to turn down the beam if something began to enter it at a point where the power density exceeded the safety limit. A 300mm x 300mm spot would require 153W.
- the lasers In either case 1 or case 2, the lasers must launch more than 90W or 153W respectively. Laser divergences are usually specified at full width half max (FWHM). Laser powers are specified including power that is beyond the FWHM. As a result, if the optics are designed for the FWHM, only 2/3 rds of the power will couple into the optics.
- FWHM full width half max
- Packaging IB can be done in several ways. They can be coupled into a fiber bundle or combiner or a waveguide array.
- a common problem with high power laser diodes is that the fast axis is approximately 30 degrees FWHM, and the slow axis is approximately 5 degrees.
- the beam is very ellipsoidal.
- the source is single-mode in the fast axis and very multimoded in the slow axis.
- microlenses to circularize the beams like those made by Blue Sky Research can be included within the package, but these add expense and sometimes require a diverging lens to follow.
- their beams can be coupled in free space, using a coupler such as those sold by Ingeneric. Some feedback in the system can be provided for safety, such as from monitor photodiodes.
- Thermal Management 4 It is critical that the Thermal Management 4 be effective.
- One choice is to a microchannel cooler attached to a radiator and fan.
- the microchannel cooler sits immediately under the laser diode array, individual laser diode, or either' s submount.
- the radiator and fan require a pump.
- a cheaper, simpler solution might be heat pipes with a fan, but the performance of this solution will vary across ambient temperature.
- Thermoelectric coolers (TECs) may also be used.
- Optics 2 to to shape the heat are important.
- a good choice is a Fresnel lens because it is relatively thin, light, and cheap. These can be made in glass or plastic. Glass will efficiently pass most wavelengths longer then 1400nm, but it is more expensive than plastic. It is also generally easier to clean. If plastic is used, it is necessary to look at the transmission curves carefully, as many plastics are highly absorptive from 1400nm to approximately 1480nm.
- Exceptions include fluoridated plastics, such as PTFE (Teflon). CoUimation is convenient because it assures that whether a person receives the same amount of heat at many different distances from the heater. As a result, unlike current heaters, a person is guaranteed to be appropriately warm at any distance from the heater. When collimating, it is necessary to be aware of the power density at the beam waists, which is the place where power density may be highest. It may not be desirable to have a focus for the beam in free space, as it is difficult to make a point of high power density safe.
- PTFE Teflon
- Lenses such as piano convex spirical lenses can be used to expand the beam and shorten the enclosure.
- Fixed lenses are simple and effective. For some cases, especially long distance cases, an arrangement of moveable lenses may be desirable.
- Reflectors can be used in addition to and sometimes instead of lenses.
- off-axis parabollics can be used for collimation.
- the Pointing Mechanism 3 must have sufficient resolution to hit the target at the desired range. Two axes of stepper motors with geardown are shown.
- the pointing mechanism should have sufficient speed to scan over some part of a target or between targets. For example, it may be desirable to heat a person's face 75% of the time and their shirt 25% of the time, or it may be desirable to timeshare one heater among two people.
- the Position sensor (5D) can be of many types. To the extent that the beam is collimated, it is not necessary to know the depth of the target, but only the pan-and-tilt coordinates required to hit it. A standard CMOS camera such as those made by Aptina or Omnivision is a good choice. Many standard optics can be used. Algorithms for detecting targets in the images may vary. For example, many H.2634 encoders have head tracking. The TI Davinci line of media processors implements this in hardware. It may be desirable to use a thermal camera or thermal diode to detect the heat from people's bodies.
- the sensor's field-of-view is less than the field through which the heater can be rotated, it will be necessary to move the sensor through the heater's field to avoid losing coverage.
- cost can be saved by putting the position sensor outside any one heater and communicating its output to multiple heaters.
- Processing and Memory 5C can be many arrangements of CPUs and memory.
- the software that will run on the CPU should be able to 1) detect targets, 2) aim the laser(s) at targets, and 3) control the electricity to the laser and thus the power from it and onto the target. It may also 4) take user input from the target.
- Motor Drivers and Feedback 5F are the drivers for the Pan and Tilt mechanism and the limit and home sensors. These are off-the-shelf electronics.
- Laser Control and Sensing 5G is photodiodes and temperature sensors that tell the CPU and Algorithm what the actual output of the lasers is. Because lasers' outputs change with temperature and time, it is useful to measure them in service.
- the photodiodes can be inside the laser packages, but often they are not. They generally require a transimpedence amplifier for readout. If the lasers go above a safe current level, it is best that they cut-off automatically, such as on a timer. As long as they are within specification, the CPU can periodically reset the timer.
- Ambient Sensors 5H are: 1) a temperature sensor like a thermistor or other similar sensor that senses ambient temperature, 2) a wind sensor like a pressure sensor or pitot tube that senses air motion.
- the Position sensor 5D can also be used to determine how much light is hitting the subjects, and therefore how much warmth they may be receiving from the light source.
- User Control 51 is useful for improved comfort. Because different targets may prefer different amounts of heat, it is useful to have controls that indicate "more heat desired” and “less heat desired.” This is advantageous because a system with multiple heaters can provide different amounts of heat to different targets at the same time, regardless of their distances.
- a target requesting heat may control the heater by gestures that can be picked-up by the position-sensing camera. IRDA or radio remote controllers may also be used.
- the Power Supply 5A should supply the Laser(s) 1, the electronics (5B-5H), the Pointing Mechanism 3, and the Thermal Management 4.
- the lasers are high-current, low- voltage devices, and so if multiple lasers will be ganged, it will be more cost-efficient and energy-efficient to put multiple lasers in series rather than in parallel.
- Algorithm 5E is shown as part of the electronics, but it is likely to be primarily software.
- the major functions of the control algorithms are: 1) Detecting targets; 2) Pointing the laser at the targets; 3) Controlling the laser, including maintaining safety margins on power density; 4) Responding to user requests for higher or lower heat; 5) Maintaining comfort by outputting the heat in accordance with the characteristics of the target, the target's prior preferences, the ambient temperature, and the amount of air flow.
- Laser emissions are regulated, and it is necessary to assure that the laser power density does not exceed the regulated limits. It is particularly useful for Algorithm 5E to turn off the heater when no target is within its target area.
- a very good heater can be made for a non- moving target with a thermal laser and appropriate optics.
- a heater with more of the items in this schematic is useful.
- additional items are useful.
- FIG. 2A shows outline drawings of the device, while FIG2B shows the same device with dashed-line views.
- the output from Laser(s) 1A must be mounted centered behind the collimator.
- the main consideration of optics in the packaging is how the beam as it exits the package will interact with the Optics 2 to create a generally uniform and collimated beam. The choices are driven primarily by the fact that the lateral ("slow") axis of high powered lasers is multimode and has a divergence around 8 degrees FWHM, while the vertical ("fast") axis is single mode and has a divergence of 35 degrees FWHM.
- How the lasers are packaged can substantially affect performance. For example, beam circularizing cylindrical lenses, various kinds of reflectors, and various kinds of beam combiners can be packaged with (or external to) the lasers.
- the Laser(s) 1A must be packaged to stop moisture from getting to the lasers. Many mounting schemes can be used, depending on the thermal requirements and the design of the optics.
- Optics 2 shows a Fresnel on the front of an enclosure. This is a simple approach because the Fresnel serves as both an optic and a front cover. More complex optics could be used as well. Reflecting optics could be used to expand and collimate, but they would still require a glass cover. Microlenses can be used to circularize the beam. A concave lens can be used to reduce the length of the system. In this design, there is one beam. If the lasers are not combined into a single beam, it may be useful to have several separate collimated beams rather than one large collimated beam.
- Pointing Mechanism 3 is a two-axis pan-and-tilt driven by two stepper motors with inline gear trains.
- the drive electronics are in Electronics 5F. Other arrangements can be used.
- the main concern is with the specification of resolution. Assume that the resolution specification is 20mm at a range of 20m. This corresponds to a 0.001 radian tolerance. Assume the stepper motor tolerance is 10 degrees per step. That gear train would need 100 to 1 ratio.
- Thermal Management 4 shown as fan on radiator is shown.
- a fan on heat pipes would work for some cases.
- Lasers perform at 25 °C and generally performance decreases as they get hotter by perhaps 1.5%/°C. Because most people who use a heater are in a colder environment than 25 °C and those who want a lot of heat are usually in a colder (or windier) environment, it should not in general be necessary to provide refrigeration or thermoelectric cooling.
- Thermoelectric cooling can be useful because it has no moving parts and is quiet.
- Electronics 5 consists of the items as shown. All of the components are commercially available. The electronics will need to be mounted out-of-the-way near the front of the enclosure to provide a good field-of-view to the sensors. Because these heaters may be used outside, an enclosure that will assure dryness may be valuable. [0070]
- the system as shown above has many parts. It is possible to make an excellent heater for some circumstances with a subset of these parts. For example, a stand-alone heater would not need Communications 5B, but a heater for use in a public space with multiple targets and multiple heaters might benefit from Communications 5B. Similarly, a person sitting in a car will not move much, and he might be heated from the ceiling or the seat-back in front of him with a fixed heater comprising only Lasers 1A, Packaging IB and Thermal Management 4, and Optics 2.
- a heater with a thermal laser as the heating element can be far more efficient than existing heaters because a far higher proportion of the photons hit the target, especially when the target is not near the heater. It can also be more comfortable because the targeting is so fine that it is possible to heat different parts of the body differently. Targeting also improves comfort because the targeting sensors can provide data on who the target is and what conditions they may prefer.
- existing heaters send photons into space promiscuously, while the heater of this invention sends photons in a precisely controlled direction, usually at a known target.
Landscapes
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Biomedical Technology (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
- Public Health (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
- Nuclear Medicine, Radiotherapy & Molecular Imaging (AREA)
- Radiology & Medical Imaging (AREA)
- Pathology (AREA)
- Heart & Thoracic Surgery (AREA)
- Vascular Medicine (AREA)
- Radiation-Therapy Devices (AREA)
- Investigating Or Analyzing Materials Using Thermal Means (AREA)
- Thermotherapy And Cooling Therapy Devices (AREA)
- Control Of Resistance Heating (AREA)
Abstract
La présente invention concerne un élément chauffant pour le confort humain et l'homéostasie, réalisé par l'utilisation d'un laser thermique. La chaleur provenant du laser thermique est orientée avec précision au moyen d'optiques, telles que des lentilles et des réflecteurs. L'appareil peut être orienté avec un système panoramique à inclinaison automatisé, et peut être ciblé par une caméra ou un capteur analogue. Il peut augmenter ou diminuer ses niveaux de puissance, ou s'éteindre, en réponse aux données provenant du capteur. Grâce à la précision avec laquelle la source peut être ciblée, la proportion des photons frappant la cible est supérieure à celle obtenue avec les éléments chauffants actuels. Cet élément chauffant peut également maintenir la densité de puissance des photons arrivant sur la cible ou de tout autre élément, dans les limites de la sécurité.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US201261621749P | 2012-04-09 | 2012-04-09 | |
PCT/US2013/035537 WO2013154950A2 (fr) | 2012-04-09 | 2013-04-07 | Chauffage électronique pour hommes et animaux |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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EP2836273A2 true EP2836273A2 (fr) | 2015-02-18 |
Family
ID=48985801
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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EP13748380.6A Withdrawn EP2836273A2 (fr) | 2012-04-09 | 2013-04-07 | Chauffage électronique pour hommes et animaux |
Country Status (2)
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EP (1) | EP2836273A2 (fr) |
WO (1) | WO2013154950A2 (fr) |
Family Cites Families (6)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US7922751B2 (en) | 2004-02-04 | 2011-04-12 | Erchonia Corporation | Stand-alone scanning laser device |
US7328708B2 (en) * | 2003-12-23 | 2008-02-12 | United Laboratories & Manufacturing, Llc | LED multiplex source and method of use of for sterilization, bioactivation and therapy |
SE0402682D0 (sv) * | 2004-11-04 | 2004-11-04 | Haakan Lagergren Ab | Laser Apparatus for Heat Treatment |
US20080046044A1 (en) * | 2006-06-15 | 2008-02-21 | Jahnigen Timothy P | Method and Apparatus to Provide Infrared Heating for an Animal |
US20100049180A1 (en) * | 2007-10-19 | 2010-02-25 | Lockheed Martin Corporation | System and method for conditioning animal tissue using laser light |
US9044594B2 (en) | 2010-02-21 | 2015-06-02 | C Laser, Inc. | Laser generator for deep tissue laser treatments using low intensity laser therapy causing selective destruction of nociceptive nerves |
-
2013
- 2013-04-07 EP EP13748380.6A patent/EP2836273A2/fr not_active Withdrawn
- 2013-04-07 WO PCT/US2013/035537 patent/WO2013154950A2/fr active Application Filing
Non-Patent Citations (1)
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
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WO2013154950A9 (fr) | 2014-02-27 |
WO2013154950A3 (fr) | 2014-01-09 |
WO2013154950A2 (fr) | 2013-10-17 |
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