ROTARY CAM ACTUATED LINEAR PERISTALTIC PUMP
A rotary cam actuated linear peristaltic pump includes a plurality of cams which actuate a plurality of pistons. The cams apply a force to the piston by way of a lifter for providing mechanical advantage so that a smaller motor may be used to rotate the cam. Each piston of a plurality of pistons is sequentially raised to the extended position to squeeze a tube so as to flow fluid through the tube.
Not Applicable
STATEMENT RE: FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH/DEVELOPMENTNot Applicable
BACKGROUNDThe embodiments discussed herein relate to a peristaltic pump.
Peristaltic pumps are typically used in medical applications for metering intravenous infusion of a medication into a patient. Peristaltic pumps may also be used for withdrawing fluid such as in wound drainage procedures. To this end, various linear and curvilinear peristaltic pumps have been introduced into the market place.
For example, the curvilinear peristaltic pump described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,164,921 (hereinafter '921 patent) was introduced into the marketplace. The entire contents of the '921 patent is expressly incorporated herein by reference. The first named inventor of the '921 patent is the inventor of the device described below in the detailed description section. As shown in FIG. 7 of the '921 patent, a flexible tubing is inserted between a plurality of fingers and a platen. The fingers are arranged in a curved pattern. Also, the bottom surface of the platen which work in conjunction with the fingers is also curved and matched to the curvature of the plurality of fingers. As the cam rotates, the lobes of the cam push the fingers into the tube disposed between the fingers and the bottom surface of the platen in a rolling manner to urge fluid through the tube.
Unfortunately, the peristaltic pump disclosed in the '921 patent has certain limitations. To operate the pump, the tube is installed between the platen and the fingers of the pump by opening the platen, fitting a locator pin and a shut off valve into recesses formed in a body of the pump and closing the platen. In doing so, it is difficult to fit the locator pin and the shut off valve into the recesses due to the curved configuration of the fingers and the curved bottom surface of the platen. Moreover, the tube is typically installed on the pump when the pump is hung on a stand next to a patient. However, the pump is top heavy causing the pump to be unstable and shift during installation of the tube.
Another limitation of the device disclosed in the '921 patent is that the flow rate through the pump is low fluid in the range of 600 mL. The flow rate of the pump is dependent on a variety of factors such as cycle speed of the fingers, the size of the tube, etc. To increase the fluid flow rate through the pump, these factors must be improved by increasing the cyclical speed of the fingers, increasing the size of the tube, etc. Unfortunately, to do so, the size of the motor must be enlarged to handle the increased load. The pump disclosed in the '921 patent is relatively heavy. Enlarging the motor would undesirably increase the weight of the pump and may cause further instability.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for an improved peristaltic pump.
BRIEF SUMMARYThe embodiments disclosed herein address the needs discussed above, discussed below and those that are known in the art.
A rotary cam actuated linear peristaltic pump is disclosed. The pump may have a plurality of pistons that are traversable between extended and retracted positions. The pistons are traversed toward the extended position in a sequential manner through a plurality of cams. Cam lobes of each of the cams are angularly offset with respect to the prior and subsequent cams. The cam lobes are operative to traverse the pistons toward the extended position. Since the cam lobes are offset, the pistons are traversed to the extended position in a wave format during rotation of the cams. A tube is disposed between the piston and a platen. As the pistons move to the extended position, the piston and the platen squeeze the tube so as to occlude the tube and prevent the flow of fluid through the occluded portion thereof. Initially, a first cam traverses a first piston to occlude the tube. The next cam traverses the next piston towards the extended position to also occlude the tube. However, during this period of time, the first piston prevents fluid flow through the tube. Since the second piston is applying pressure to the tube, the fluid flows to the path of least resistance, specifically, to the opposite side of the first piston. The third and subsequent pistons continue this movement until the fluid is pushed out of the pump.
The cams are mounted to a rotating cam shaft. The cam shaft is rotated with a motor. A motor and the cam shaft are in mechanical communication with each other by way of a worm drive and a worm gear. The worm drive and worm gear provide a gear reduction (i.e., mechanical advantage) so that a smaller motor is capable of running the pump. Moreover, the worm drive and worm gear prevent reverse rotation of the cam shaft during operation. This prevents fluid from back flowing through the tube. The cams also raise lifters which provide a mechanical advantage to reduce the load required to lift or traverse the pistons to the extended position. In particular, the pistons are preferably disposed about half way between a pivot point of the lifter and the cam. As such, the cam need only generate about one half the force to lift the piston to raise the piston since the lifter functions as a lever. Accordingly, a smaller motor can flow fluid through the tube at a greater rate (e.g., 1500 mL), as discussed below.
A plurality of cams are stacked upon a common rotating shaft driven by the motor. Each of the cams may have a plurality of lobes which raise the lifters and traverse the pistons to the extended position. The corresponding lobes of adjacent cams are angularly displaced so that one set of corresponding lobes of the plurality of cams provide one pump cycle. If there are four lobes on each of the cams then there are four pump cycles.
More particularly, a peristaltic pump for flowing fluid through a lumen of a tube wherein the tube may define a diameter is disclosed. The pump may comprise a plurality of pistons, a plurality of lifters, a platen, a rotateable cam shaft, and a plurality of cams. The plurality of pistons may be linearly arranged adjacent to each other in a straight configuration. Each of the plurality of pistons may define opposed first and second ends. Each of the plurality of pistons may be traversed between extended and retracted positions.
Each of the lifters is pivotable about a pivot axis.
The platen may be disposed adjacent to the first ends of the plurality of pistons. The platen may be generally parallel to the plurality of pistons. A gap between a first end of a piston and the platen may be about equal to or more than a diameter of the tube when the piston is traversed to the retracted position. The gap may be smaller than the diameter of the tube when the piston is traversed to the extended position.
The rotatable cam shaft may be generally parallel to the plurality of pistons.
The plurality of cams may be mounted to the rotatable cam shaft. Each of the cams may have a cam lobe. The cam lobes of the plurality of cams may be disposed adjacent to the second end portions of the lifters with the second ends of the pistons positioned in between the second end portions of the lifters and the pivot axis of the lifters. As the cam shaft rotates, the lobes raise the lifters which provide a mechanical advantage to traverse the pistons to the extended position. The cams are angularly displaced with respect to the adjacent cam. The pistons are sequentially traversed to the extended position to flow fluid through the tube.
The platen may be traversed between an open position for inserting or removing the tube between the plurality of pistons and the platen and a closed position for flowing fluid through the lumen of the tube when the tube is disposed between the platen and the plurality of pistons.
The pump may further comprise a worm gear attached to the cam shaft; a worm drive engaged to the worm gear; and a motor attached to the worm drive for rotating the worm drive.
The plurality of pistons may linearly occlude the tube as each one of the plurality of pistons is sequentially traversed to the extended position due to the progressive angular displacement of the cams.
Each of the cams may have four lobes spaced 90 degrees apart from each other. The total angular displacement of the plurality of cams may be about 90 degrees.
The cam lobes of the cams may have a curved peak surface defined by an arc having a center about a rotating axis of the cam shaft and the cams. The curved peak surfaces of cam lobes of adjacent cams may be offset and overlap one another to urge fluid through the tube in one direction.
The pistons may reciprocate between extended and retracted positions about a common axis. The common axis of the reciprocating pistons, a flat surface of the platen and a rotating axis of the cam shaft may be parallel with each other.
Moreover, a method of operating a peristaltic pump for flowing fluid through a lumen of a tube is disclosed. The method may comprise the steps of disposing the tube between a platen and a plurality of pistons wherein the tube is straight and parallel to the platen and the plurality of pistons; sequentially traversing the plurality of pistons to an extended position; occluding the tube linearly down the tube when the pistons are sequentially traversed to the extended position; and pushing the piston back to a retracted position due to resiliency of the tube.
The disposing step may further include the step of traversing the platen from an open position to a closed position.
The method may further comprise the step of aligning the tube to be parallel to the platen and a cam shaft. The method may also further comprise the step of rotating a cam shaft on which a plurality of cam are mounted. Each of the cams may have a cam lobe angularly offset from cam lobes of adjacent cams. The method may further comprise the step of actuating a plurality of lifters to sequentially traverse the plurality of pistons to the extended position.
These and other features and advantages of the various embodiments disclosed herein will be better understood with respect to the following description and drawings, in which like numbers refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
Referring now to the drawings, a peristaltic pump 10 is shown. The peristaltic pump 10 is operative to receive a tube 12 that can flow fluid therethrough. As shown in
More particularly, the pump 10 may be hung vertically during use as shown in
Before use, the tube 12 is not installed on the peristaltic pump 10 as shown in
To install the tube 12 into the peristaltic pump 10, a handle 36 of latch 38 is moved upward in the direction of arrow 40. This releases the latch 38 and allows the platen 28 to be rotated upward in the direction of arrow 42 as shown in
With the positioning pin 44 and the pinch valve 50 mounted to the tube 12, the positioning pin 44 is initially inserted into a positioning pin recess 56 and the pinch valve 50 into a pinch valve recess 58 as shown in
Referring now to
Referring now more particularly, to
The latch 38 is an over center latch. In particular, catch 126 receives pin 102 mounted to the frame 32 of the pump 10. The catch 126 has a pawl 128 which has an inner surface 130. A distance 132 between a pivot axis 134 of the handle 36 and a distal end of the inner surface 130 of the pawl 128 is shorter than a distance 136 between the pivot axis 134 and the proximal end of the inner surface 130 of the pawl 128. (see
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring back to
The cam lobes 24a-d of the cams 18a-h each have curved peak surfaces 74a. Referring now to
The flow rate of fluid through the pump is based on a number of different factors. For example, the flow rate is dependent on the number of lobes on each of the cams 18a-h. The flow rate is also dependent upon the rotational speed of the cams 18a-h. The flow rate may also be dependent upon the inner diameter of the tube 12. Larger inner diameters would tend to flow more fluid through the pump than tubes with smaller inner diameters. The reason is that more fluid is displaced with larger tubes as the pistons occlude the tube. However, the motor will have to work harder to drive the cams, lifters and pistons to occlude larger tubes due to the increased sized of the tube itself and its resiliency. Fortunately, the lifters 26 provide mechanical advantage so that a small motor can still drive the cams, lifters and pistons to flow fluid through larger tubes. In particular, the pump 12 discussed herein may be sized to flow fluid at a rate of 1500 mL or at least twice as fast as the pump described in the '921 patent.
Referring now back to
Referring back to
The piston 14 is traversesable between a retracted position shown by solid line and an extended position shown by dash lines. In the extended position, the first end 70 is pushed toward the flat surface 60 of the platen 28. In this position, the distance between the first end 70 and the flat surface 60 is less than two times the thickness of a wall of the tube 12. The piston 14 occludes the tube 12 when the piston 14 is traversed to the extended position. When the lifter 26 is lowered, the piston 14 is now free to float within the through hole 100 which receives the piston 14. The resiliency of the tube 12 pushes the piston 14 away and allows the lumen of the tube 12 to open up and allow fluid to flow through the tube 12 once again. This process is repeated during operation of the pump 10.
Referring now to
The process of fabricating the plurality of cams 18a-h may be accomplished with any known technique or any technique developed in the future. By way of example, as shown in
After the stack of cams 18 are formed, the cams 18 are disposed within the frame 32 as shown in
Referring now to
As discussed herein, the stack of cams are described as having 8 cams 18a-h. However, it is also contemplated that the pump 10 may have more or less than eight cams. Additionally, each of the cams 18a-h was described as having four cam lobes 24a-d. However, it is also contemplated that each of the cams 18a-h may have one or more cam lobes 24. The cams 18a-h may be formed as individual eight individual cams and stackable upon each other. The holes 104 of the cams 18a-h are not symmetrical and allow angular displacement of the cams 18a-h by aligning the holes 104 of adjacent cams 18a-h and pinning the holes to each other. As such, the holes 104 of the cams 18a-h allow the cams to be self indexing. Although the cams 18a-h may be formed individually and stacked upon each other, it is also contemplated that the stack of cams 18a-h may be formed as a unitary unit either through blow molding, machining, etc. and any method known in the art or developed in the future.
Moreover, as discussed herein, the pistons 14a-h were described as being generally parallel to the tube and the flat surface 60 of the platen 28. The pistons 14a-h are constantly being traversed up and down as different timing. However, each of the pistons 14a-h reciprocates between extended and retracted positions which traverse about a common axis. This common axis is parallel to the tube 12 and the flat surface 60 of the platen 28. The cams 18a-h are also parallel to the pistons 14a-h, tube 12 and the flat surface 60 of the platen 28. In particular, the cams 18a-h all have identical caming surfaces. However, these surfaces are angularly offset from each other. Nonetheless, the cams 18a-h share a common rotating axis 76. It is this common rotating axis 76 that is parallel to the pistons 14a-h, tube 12 and the flat surface 60 of the platen 28.
The above description is given by way of example, and not limitation. Given the above disclosure, one skilled in the art could devise variations that are within the scope and spirit of the invention disclosed herein, including various ways of opening the pinch valve 50 upon closure of the latch 38. Further, the various features of the embodiments disclosed herein can be used alone, or in varying combinations with each other and are not intended to be limited to the specific combination described herein. Thus, the scope of the claims is not to be limited by the illustrated embodiments.
Claims
1. A peristaltic pump for flowing fluid through a lumen of a tube, the tube defining a diameter, the pump comprising:
- a plurality of pistons linearly arranged adjacent to each other in a straight configuration, each of the plurality of pistons defining opposed first and second ends, each of the plurality of pistons traversable between extended and retracted positions;
- a plurality of lifters, each lifter being pivotable about a pivot axis;
- a platen disposed adjacent to the first ends of the plurality of pistons, the platen generally parallel to the plurality of pistons wherein a gap between the first end of one of the plurality of pistons and the platen is about equal to or more than a diameter of the tube when the piston is traversed to the retracted position and the gap is smaller than the diameter of the tube when the piston is traversed to the extended position;
- a rotatable cam shaft generally parallel to the plurality of pistons;
- a plurality of cams mounted to the rotatable cam shaft, each of the cams having a cam lobe, the cam lobes of the plurality of cams disposable adjacent to second end portions of the lifters with the second ends of the pistons positioned in between the second end portions of the lifters and the pivot axis of the lifters so that as the cam shaft rotates, the lobes raise the lifters which provide a mechanical advantage to traverse the pistons to the extended position, the plurality of cams are angularly displaced with respect to the adjacent cam, the plurality of pistons being sequentially traversed to the extended position to flow fluid through the tube.
2. The pump of claim 1 wherein the platen is traverseable between an open position for inserting or removing the tube between the plurality of pistons and the platen and a closed position for flowing fluid through the lumen of the tube when the tube is disposed between the platen and the plurality of pistons.
3. The pump of claim 1 further comprising:
- a worm gear attached to the cam shaft;
- a worm drive engaged to the worm gear;
- a motor attached to the worm drive for rotating the worm drive.
4. The pump of claim 1 wherein the plurality of pistons linearly occludes the tube as each one of the plurality of pistons is sequentially traversed to the extended position due to the progressive angular displacement of the cams.
5. The pump of claim 1 wherein each of the cams has four lobes spaced 90 degrees apart from each other, and a total angular displacement of the plurality of cam is about 90 degrees.
6. The pump of claim 1 wherein the cam lobes of the cams have a curved peak surface defined by an arc having a center about a rotating axis of the cam shaft and the cams, the curved peak surface of cam lobes of adjacent cams offset and overlapping one another to urge fluid through the tube in one direction.
7. The pump of claim 1 wherein the pistons reciprocate between extended and retracted positions about a common axis, and the common axis of the reciprocating pistons, a flat surface of the platen and a rotating axis of the cam shaft are parallel with each other.
8. A peristaltic pump for flowing fluid through a lumen of a tube, the tube defining a diameter, the pump comprising:
- a plurality of pistons linearly arranged adjacent to each other in a straight configuration, each of the plurality of pistons defining opposed first and second ends, each of the plurality of pistons traversable between extended and retracted positions;
- a platen disposed adjacent to the first ends of the plurality of pistons, the platen generally parallel to the plurality of pistons wherein a gap between the first end of one of the plurality of pistons and the platen is about equal to or more than a diameter of the tube when the piston is traversed to the retracted position and the gap is smaller than the diameter of the tube when the piston is traversed to the extended position;
- a rotatable cam shaft disposed adjacent to the second ends of the plurality of pistons, the rotatable cam shaft generally parallel to the plurality of pistons;
- a plurality of cams mounted to the rotatable cam shaft, each of the cams having a cam lobe, the cam lobes of the plurality of cams disposable adjacent to the second ends of the plurality of pistons so that as the cam shaft rotates to traverse the piston to the extended position, the plurality of cams are angularly displaced with respect to the adjacent cam and the plurality of pistons are traversed to the extended position sequentially to flow fluid through the tube.
9. The pump of claim 8 wherein the platen defines a flat surface and the tube is squeezed between the plurality of pistons and the flat surface in a wave format to flow fluid through the tube, the flat surface being generally parallel to the plurality of pistons.
10. A method of operating a peristaltic pump for flowing fluid through a lumen of a tube, the method comprising the steps of:
- disposing the tube between a platen and a plurality of pistons wherein the tube is straight and parallel to the platen and the plurality of pistons;
- sequentially traversing the plurality of pistons to an extended position;
- occluding the tube linearly down the tube when the pistons are sequentially traversed to the extended position;
- pushing the piston back to a retracted position due to resiliency of the tube.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein the disposing step further includes the step of traversing the platen from an open position to a closed position.
12. The method of claim 10 further comprising the step of aligning the tube to be parallel to the platen and a cam shaft.
13. The method of claim 10 further comprising the step of rotating a cam shaft on which a plurality of cam are mounted, each of the cams having a cam lobe angularly offset from cam lobes of adjacent cams.
14. The method of claim 10 further comprising the step of actuating a plurality of lifters to sequentially traverse the plurality of pistons to the extended position.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 11, 2011
Publication Date: Oct 11, 2012
Inventor: Ahmad Momeni (Tustin, CA)
Application Number: 13/083,738
International Classification: F04B 43/12 (20060101);