Anesthetic metering device

An anesthetic metering device is provided with a temperature-stabilized anesthetic vapor source, from which anesthetic vapor 14 is metered into a carrier gas stream via a delivery line 8 with a metering valve 11 that can be controlled by a control unit 6. The arrangement is provided so that uncontrolled evaporation of anesthetic is prevented. To accomplish this task, the anesthetic vapor source is designed as a vaporizer chamber 2 filled with liquid anesthetic 3, and a gas delivery element 9 generating the metering pressure P.sub.I is present in front of the metering valve 11.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
The present invention pertains to an anesthetic metering device with a 
temperature-stabilized anesthetic vapor source, from which anesthetic 
vapor is metered into a carrier gas stream via a delivery line with a 
metering valve that can be driven by a control unit. 
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
An anesthetic metering device of the above-described class has become known 
from EP-A2-231,513. The prior-art anesthetic metering device consists of a 
reservoir, from which liquid anesthetic is pressed by a delivery pressure 
into a heated vaporizer chamber serving as an anesthetic vapor source. The 
pressurized anesthetic vapor is metered via a cyclically operating 
metering valve into a carrier gas stream, e.g., an oxygen-laughing gas 
mixture, and sent to an anesthetic apparatus. Corresponding to the 
pressure in the vaporizer chamber, the degree of opening of the metering 
valve, and the volume flow of the carrier gas per unit time, a 
corresponding anesthetic concentration becomes established in the carrier 
gas stream. 
One disadvantage of the prior-art anesthetic metering device is the fact 
that if the heating of the vaporizer chamber is insufficient, e.g., in the 
case of malfunction of the heater, liquid anesthetic may enter the carrier 
gas stream, leading to a considerable increase in concentration there. 
Malfunction of the metering valve would also cause an abrupt entry of the 
anesthetic vapor present in the vaporizer chamber into the carrier gas 
stream. Another disadvantage is the fact that the delivery pressure in the 
reservoir is difficult to set to a stable value in the case of low-boiling 
anesthetics, as a result of which the volume of liquid anesthetic flowing 
per unit time into the vaporizer chamber is subject to variations, because 
the vapor pressure acts in addition to the delivery pressure. 
An anesthetic metering device known from DE-C2,31,16,951 provides for 
delivery of liquid anesthetic with a pump from a reservoir into a heated 
vaporizer chamber, where it is completely mixed into the carrier gas 
stream flowing through the vaporizer chamber. 
One disadvantage of the prior-art device is the fact that an increased 
amount of liquid anesthetic enters the vaporizer chamber in the case of 
malfunction of the pump, and leads to an uncontrolled increase in the 
anesthetic concentration in the carrier gas stream there. 
SUMMARY AND OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION 
It is a primary object of the present invention to improve an anesthetic 
metering device so that an uncontrolled evaporation of liquid anesthetic 
in the anesthetic vapor source is prevented, and the accuracy of metering 
is improved. 
To attain this object, the anesthetic vapor source is designed as a 
vaporizer chamber filled with liquid anesthetic, and a gas delivery 
element generating the metering pressure P.sub.I is located in front of 
the metering valve. 
The advantage of the present invention essentially lies in the fact that 
the liquid anesthetic is no longer delivered into the vaporizer chamber, 
where it will evaporate more or less completely, but the anesthetic is 
metered solely from the anesthetic vapor volume present above the liquid 
anesthetic. To achieve this, liquid anesthetic is filled into the 
vaporizer chamber, and the anesthetic vapor being formed is pumped off by 
the gas delivery element, and adjusted to the metering pressure P.sub.I in 
front of the metering valve. If the metering valve is designed as a 
digital valve, the amount of anesthetic vapor in the carrier gas stream is 
adjusted by the opening, which is limited in time, and which may also take 
place as repeated pulse-like openings. If, in contrast, the metering valve 
is designed as an analog valve, a degree of opening which is obtained from 
the amount of anesthetic vapor to be metered is set on the analog valve. 
Thus, it is advantageous to design the gas delivery element as a pump with 
a downstream buffer volume and to arrange a pressure transducer in the 
buffer volume to detect an actual value signal of the metering pressure 
P.sub.I, with which a metering pressure regulated quantity signal for the 
pump is formed in a metering pressure regulator. The metering pressure 
regulator is also connected to the control unit and receives the metering 
pressure set value P.sub.S from there. In conjunction with the degree of 
opening and the opening time t of the metering valve, the metering 
pressure P.sub.I is a measure for the volume of anesthetic vapor metered 
per unit time into the carrier gas stream. To prevent anesthetic from 
condensing, it is advantageous to heat the pipe between the vaporizer 
chamber and the metering valve, the pump, and the buffer volume. 
According to another advantageous embodiment, the pump and the buffer 
volume are designed as a modular unit as a piston or bellows type pump. An 
intake valve, which, being a directional valve, permits gas to flow only 
from the vaporizer chamber to the metering valve, is provided on the 
suction side. The movable pump part of the bellows pump or piston pump is 
driven by a pump drive, and an ejection force is applied to it during the 
ejection phase, so that the metering pressure P.sub.I is present in front 
of the metering valve. If the ejection takes place with constant ejection 
force, a constant metering pressure P.sub.I will become established. 
However, it is also possible not only to meter the anesthetic vapor on the 
basis of the metering pressure P.sub.I and the opening time t of the 
metering valve, but also to meter the volume of anesthetic vapor delivered 
by the movable pump part directly into the carrier gas stream. To do so, 
the metering valve is controlled by the control unit so that it is in the 
closed position during the suction phase and in the open position during 
the ejection phase. The pump stroke is measured with a displacement 
transducer. A delivery pressure P.sub.F now becomes established in the 
piston pump. The volume of anesthetic vapor delivered per unit time is 
proportional to the product of the delivery pressure P.sub.F, the pump 
stroke, and the number of pump strokes per unit time. In addition, 
correction factors for the anesthetic vapor volume delivered can be 
calculated with the delivery pressure P.sub.F corresponding to the gas 
laws known from classical thermodynamics. To do so, it is useful to relate 
the delivery pressure P.sub.F either to the beginning of the ejection 
phase or to the end of the suction phase. 
In an advantageous embodiment, an anesthetic gas sensor, which measures the 
carrier gas stream actual value C.sub.I and sends it to an anesthetic gas 
regulator, is provided in the carrier gas stream downstream of the 
junction of the delivery tube with the anesthetic gas line. The anesthetic 
gas regulator is connected to the control unit and is able both to receive 
control signals from this and to send control signals to the control unit. 
It is advantageous not to actuate the metering valve via the control unit, 
but to actuate the metering valve via the anesthetic gas regulator and to 
set the concentration of the anesthetic vapor in the carrier gas stream 
with the measured concentration actual value C.sub.I. In this case, the 
control signal present in the control unit for the metering valve is 
simply a plausibility check value for the anesthetic gas regulator. This 
plausibility comparison may be performed, e.g., in the control unit. If 
the plausibility comparison reveals an unacceptable deviation, the control 
unit blocks the anesthetic gas controller and switches the metering valve 
over to the closed position. 
It is advantageous to insert an emergency shutoff valve, which switches 
over to the closed position when a concentration limit value C.sub.G in 
the carrier gas stream is reached, as a safety device in the delivery 
line, behind the metering valve in the direction of flow. The emergency 
shutoff valve makes shutting off possible when the metering valve is 
jammed in the open position. 
The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are 
pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part 
of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its 
operating advantages and specific objects attained by its uses, reference 
is made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which 
preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
The first anesthetic metering device 1 shown in FIG. 1 comprises a 
vaporizer chamber 2, which is filled with liquid anesthetic 3 and is 
temperature-stabilized at a temperature T by means of a heat exchanger 7. 
The heat exchanger 7 has a heating coil 4 and a temperature sensor 5. The 
vaporizer chamber 2 is modularly inserted into the heat exchanger 7 and 
can be removed from it, e.g., to fill in anesthetic 3. 
The heating coil 4 is supplied by a control unit 6, and, at the same time, 
the actual value of the temperature T in the vaporizer chamber 2, measured 
with the temperature sensor 5, is measured in the control unit 6 and 
compared with a temperature set value stored in the control unit 6. In the 
case of a deviation between the temperature T and the temperature set 
value, the heating capacity is accordingly adjusted by the control unit 6. 
Since this temperature T is approximately in the range of the ambient 
temperature, the heat exchanger 7 alone is also sufficient, in most cases, 
for temperature stabilization to directly feed the ambient heat into the 
vaporizer chamber 2. Should the temperature T drop substantially as a 
consequence of the removal of a rather large amount of anesthetic vapor 
14, compensating heating may correspondingly be performed with the heating 
coil 4. 
A delivery line 8 leads from the vaporizer chamber 2 via a pump 9, a buffer 
volume 10, and a metering valve 11 to an anesthetic gas line 12, through 
which a carrier gas stream 13 flows. The anesthetic vapor 14 located above 
the anesthetic 3 is pumped by the pump 9 out of the vaporizer chamber 2, 
and adjusted in the buffer volume 10 to the metering pressure P.sub.I. The 
metering pressure P.sub.I is measured by a pressure transducer 15, and the 
measured signal is sent to a metering pressure regulator 16, in which it 
is compared with a metering pressure set value P.sub.s sent by the control 
unit 6. Corresponding to the deviation between P.sub.I and P.sub.s, the 
pump 9 is brought via line 17 to constant metering pressure P.sub.I. To 
meter anesthetic vapor 14 into the carrier gas stream 13, the metering 
valve 11 is switched by the control unit 6 to the open position at defined 
time intervals. The concentration of the anesthetic vapor 14 in the 
carrier gas stream 13 can be determined from the volume flow V.sub.I of 
the carrier gas stream 13 per unit time, which is measured with the volume 
measuring sensor (volume rate of flow sensor) 18, from the metering 
pressure P.sub.I, the degree of opening and the opening time t of the 
metering valve 11. Corresponding preset concentration values can be sent 
to the control unit 6 via the signal line 19. The control unit 6 contains 
a microprocessor and a permanent memory, with which the calculations 
necessary for metering can be performed. 
FIG. 2 shows a second anesthetic metering device 20. Identical components 
are designated by the same reference numerals as in FIG. 1. Compared with 
the first anesthetic metering device 1 shown in FIG. 1, the pump 9 and the 
buffer volume 10 were replaced with a piston pump 21 with an intake valve 
22 and a pump part 23 performing stroke movements for sucking in and 
ejecting the anesthetic vapor 14. The pump part 23 performing stroke 
movements is operated by a pump drive 24, which in turn is actuated by the 
metering pressure regulator 16. 
Furthermore, an emergency shutoff valve 25, which blocks the delivery line 
8 when a concentration limit value C.sub.G of the anesthetic vapor 14 is 
reached in the carrier gas stream 13 in the anesthetic gas line 12, is 
provided between the metering valve 11 and the anesthetic gas line 12. To 
achieve this, a concentration actual value C.sub.I is measured with an 
anesthetic gas sensor 26 and is compared in an anesthetic gas regulator 27 
with the concentration limit value C.sub.G sent by the control unit 6. If 
the concentration actual value C.sub.I is equal to or higher than the 
concentration limit value C.sub.G, the anesthetic gas regulator 27 
switches the emergency shutoff valve 25 to the closed position. 
The anesthetic vapor 14 is metered into the carrier gas stream 13 so that 
anesthetic vapor 14 is first drawn in by means of the pump part 23 
performing stroke movements and the pump drive 24 via the intake valve 22, 
designed as a directional valve, and compressed to the metering pressure 
P.sub.I (as measured by pressure transducer 15) within the piston pump 21 
during the ejection phase. The metering pressure P.sub.I is compared with 
the metering pressure set value P.sub.s in the metering pressure regulator 
16, and a regulated quantity signal for the pump drive 24 is generated 
from the difference between P.sub.s and P.sub.I. 
The concentration ratio of the anesthetic vapor 14 to the carrier gas 
stream 13 is obtained from the volume flow V.sub.I of the carrier gas 
stream, the metering pressure P.sub.I, the degree of opening and the 
opening time t of the metering valve 11. 
According to an alternative mode of operation of the second anesthetic 
metering device 20, metering is performed not solely on the basis of the 
metering pressure P.sub.I and the opening time t, but on the basis of the 
volume delivered by the movable pump part 23. To do so, the metering valve 
11 is controlled by the control unit 6 so that it is in the closed 
position during the suction phase and in the open position during the 
ejection phase. The pump stroke is measured by a displacement transducer 
28 and sent to the control unit. The pump drive 24 delivers the anesthetic 
vapor 14 from the vaporizer chamber 2 and feeds it into the anesthetic gas 
line 12 according to predefined time intervals. The delivery pressure 
P.sub.F in the piston pump is measured with the pressure transducer 15 and 
sent to the control unit 6, in which correction factors for the anesthetic 
vapor volume delivered are calculated corresponding to the gas laws known 
from classical gas dynamics. To calculate the correction factors, it is 
advantageous to relate the delivery pressure P.sub.F to a fixed point in 
time, e.g., to the beginning of the ejection phase or the end of the 
suction phase. 
Mixed forms of dosage may also be realized with the second anesthetic 
metering device 20, e.g., by emptying the anesthetic vapor 14 present in 
the piston pump 21 stepwise. The anesthetic vapor volume metered per 
individual step is obtained from the partial stroke of the movable pump 
part 23, from the partial displacement measured with the displacement 
transducer 28, and the metering delivery pressure P.sub.w at the end of 
the respective partial ejection phase. 
FIG. 3 shows a third anesthetic metering device 30, in which the anesthetic 
vapor 14 is metered directly from the reservoir 2. Identical components 
are designated by the same reference numerals as in FIG. 1 and FIG. 2. 
Compared with the first anesthetic metering device 1 shown in FIG. 1, the 
metering pressure P.sub.I is generated by heating the vaporizer chamber 2 
by means of the heater 4 rather than by the pump 9. The pressure of the 
anesthetic vapor 14 is adjusted so that it is a few 100 mbar higher than 
the ambient pressure. The metering pressure P.sub.I is measured with the 
pressure transducer 15 within the vaporizer chamber 2 and is processed by 
the metering pressure regulator 16. To prevent the anesthetic vapor 14 
from condensing, a heating coil 31, whose terminals 32a, 32b are connected 
to the control unit 6, is provided in the delivery line section 8. 
While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described 
in detail to illustrate the application of the principles of the 
invention, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied 
otherwise without departing from such principles.