U.S. patents available from 1976 to present.
U.S. patent applications available from 2005 to present.

Digital liquid level sensing apparatus

Patent 5406843 Issued on April 18, 1995. Estimated Expiration Date: Icon_subject October 27, 2013. Estimated Expiration Date is calculated based on simple USPTO term provisions. It does not account for terminal disclaimers, term adjustments, failure to pay maintenance fees, or other factors which might affect the term of a patent.

Patent References

2519668

2544012

2621517

2638000

2648058

2651940

2751531

2866337

2868015

3343415

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Inventors

Assignee

Application

No. 143834 filed on 10/27/1993

US Classes:

73/304C, Capacitative73/292, Thermometer702/52, Capacitive sensor702/55Liquid level or volume determination

Examiners

Primary: Gutierrez, Diego

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Foreign Patent References

  • 0103321 EP 03/13/1984
  • 0538182 EP 04/13/1993
  • 2662249 FR 11/13/1991
  • 58-123431 JP. 07/13/1983
  • 748138 RU. 07/13/1980
  • 2066961 GB. 07/13/1981
  • 2074325 GB 10/13/1981
  • 0381911 SU 08/13/1973

International Class

G01F 023/26

Abstract

A digital liquid level sensing apparatus for detecting variations in the dielectric of a substance being sensed. The apparatus includes a capacitive element array including a plurality of individual (i.e., segmented) input plates positioned along an axis of measurement of a fluid to be detected. The array also includes a common output plate having a length sufficient to span the entire accumulated length of the input plates. A controller sequentially applies DC excitation pulses to the input plates which cause a series of output currents to be coupled onto the output plate. The output currents are input to a current-to-voltage amplifier which generates a series of corresponding analog output voltages. The analog output voltages are then input to a peak voltage detector circuit to generate a series of peak voltage signals representative of the magnitudes of the analog output voltages. The controller converts each of the peak voltage signals into a corresponding digital value and stores each of the digital values in an on-board memory. The controller then sequentially compares each of the values against at least one predetermined reference value indicative of an output produced by an input plate disposed in air until a predetermined difference is detected between the reference value and any one of the stored digital values. This indicates a predetermined difference in the dielectric, thus indicating that a corresponding input plate is at least partially submerged in fluid.

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