Enhanced vehicle sensor cleaning
US-2021109345-A1 · Apr 15, 2021 · US
US12296792B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-12296792-B2 |
| Application number | US-202217931972-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Sep 14, 2022 |
| Priority date | Sep 14, 2022 |
| Publication date | May 13, 2025 |
| Grant date | May 13, 2025 |
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A sensor-cleaning system includes a sensor of a vehicle, an electrode, and a computer communicatively coupled to the electrode. The sensor includes a lens. The electrode is positioned to draw dust from the lens when the electrode is energized. The computer is programmed to energize the electrode in response to the vehicle moving and deenergize the electrode in response to the vehicle being stationary.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A sensor-cleaning system comprising: a sensor of a vehicle, the sensor including a lens; an electrode positioned to draw dust from the lens when the electrode is energized; and a computer communicatively coupled to the electrode; wherein the computer is programmed to: energize the electrode in response to the vehicle moving; and deenergize the electrode in response to the vehicle being both on and stationary. 2. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the computer is communicatively coupled to the sensor; and the computer is further programmed to deenergize the electrode upon determining that a person is present within a field of view of the sensor, wherein determining that the person is present is based on data from the sensor. 3. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the computer is further programmed to determine a dirtiness metric for the sensor. 4. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 3 , wherein the programming to energize the electrode in response to the vehicle moving includes programming to energize the electrode in response to the vehicle moving and the dirtiness metric being above a threshold; and the computer is further programmed to deenergize the electrode in response to the dirtiness metric being below the threshold. 5. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 4 , wherein the threshold is a low threshold; the programming to deenergize the electrode in response to the vehicle being stationary includes programming to deenergize the electrode in response to the vehicle being stationary and the dirtiness metric being below a high threshold; the computer is further programmed to energize the electrode in response to the vehicle being stationary and the dirtiness metric being above the high threshold; and the high threshold is higher than the low threshold. 6. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 5 , wherein the programming to deenergize the electrode in response to the vehicle being stationary includes programming to deenergize the electrode in response to the vehicle being stationary and a person being present within the field of view of the sensor for any value of the dirtiness metric, wherein determining that the person is present is based on data from the sensor. 7. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 3 , wherein the computer is communicatively coupled to the sensor, and determining the dirtiness metric is based on data from the sensor. 8. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 3 , wherein determining the dirtiness metric is based on an air quality index for a current location of the vehicle. 9. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the sensor defines an axis extending through a middle of a field of view of the sensor; and the electrode is offset from the lens along the axis. 10. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the electrode is stationary. 11. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the electrode is movable between an extended position and a retracted position. 12. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 11 , wherein the computer is further programmed to instruct the electrode to move to the extended position in response to energizing the electrode. 13. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 11 , wherein the computer is further programmed to instruct the electrode to move to the retracted position in response to deenergizing the electrode. 14. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 11 , wherein the sensor defines an axis extending through a middle of a field of view of the sensor; and the electrode is movable between the extended position and the retracted position along the axis. 15. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 11 , further comprising a rail fixed relative to the sensor, wherein the electrode is movable between the extended position and the retracted position along the rail. 16. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the sensor defines an axis extending through a middle of a field of view of the sensor; and the electrode extends completely around the axis. 17. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the lens includes a coating that is conductive. 18. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 17 , wherein the sensor is a camera; and the coating is transparent. 19. The sensor-cleaning system of claim 1 , wherein the programming to deenergize the electrode in response to the vehicle being stationary includes programming to deenergize the electrode in response to the vehicle being stationary while the vehicle is on. 20. A method comprising: energizing, by a computer programmed to do so, an electrode in response to a vehicle moving, the vehicle including the electrode, the computer communicatively coupled to the electrode, and a sensor including a lens, the electrode being positioned to draw dust from the lens when the electrode is energized; and deenergizing, by the computer programmed to do so, the electrode in response to the vehicle being both on and stationary.
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the spreading means being moved between a rest position and a working position (B60S1/526 takes precedence) · CPC title
according to vehicle movement characteristics, e.g. speed, or climatic conditions, e.g. wind · CPC title
Accessories or details of general applicability for machines or apparatus for cleaning · CPC title
Cleaning by suction, with or without auxiliary action · CPC title
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