1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to an air cleaner, and more particularly to air cleaners where a negative ion generator and an ozone gas generator share a common inverter.
2. Description of the Related Art
Due to consistent pollution in modern cities, more and more illnesses related to poor air quality occur while in indoor settings. Thus, air cleaners are used to filter out harmful substances and provide clean indoor air.
Conventional air cleaners can generate negative ions and ozone gas. The negative ions can absorb air particles (e.g. pollen, dust, cigarette smoke) and then fall to the ground. An ozone molecule composed of three oxygen atoms is a strong oxidant and can oxidize various odorous gases to eliminate unpleasant odors, and the ozone gas converts to oxygen gas after the chemical reaction. Furthermore, a high concentration of the ozone gas can be used as a bactericide; however, the ozone gas is a strong stimulus to the respiratory tract of human beings and can cause difficulty of breathing, chest pains, coughing, or throat pains. Consequently, the air cleaner is required to generate the negative ions and deactivate the generation of the ozone gas when someone is inside the enclosed area encompassing the air cleaner.
Accordingly, both the negative ion generator 104 and the ozone gas generator 106 are required to be driven by the AC voltage. Because the ozone gas is harmful for human beings, the ozone gas must be generated when no one is inside the enclosed area of the air cleaner. The negative ions, however, are required to be continuously generated when the air cleaner is activated, so the negative ion generator 104 and the ozone gas generator 106 must be driven separately. Referring to
The use of the two inverters not only results in high production costs but also requires large circuit area, so that it is difficult to reduce the size of the air cleaner. Therefore, an unaddressed need exists in the art to address the aforementioned deficiencies and inadequacies.
Certain aspects commensurate in scope with the originally claimed invention are set forth below. It should be understood that these aspects are presented merely to provide the reader with a brief summary of certain forms the invention might take and that these aspects are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Indeed, the invention may encompass a variety of aspects that may not be set forth below.
The invention provides an air cleaner capable of providing an inverter shared by a negative ion generator and an ozone gas generator in a Burst Mode. The air cleaner comprises a control unit, an inverter, a negative ion generator, and an ozone gas generator. The control unit generates a control signal. The inverter coupled to the control unit generates a voltage according to the control signal. The negative ion generator coupled to the inverter receives the voltage to generate a negative ion. The ozone gas generator coupled to the inverter receives the voltage to generate an ozone gas. The negative ion generator and the ozone generator are both activated when the voltage is larger than a first voltage level, and the negative ion generator is activated and the ozone gas generator is deactivated when the voltage is less than the first voltage level and larger than a second voltage level.
The invention provides an air cleaner capable of providing an inverter shared by a negative ion generator and an ozone gas generator in a DC Mode. The air cleaner comprises a control unit, an inverter, a negative ion generator, an ozone gas generator, and a control circuit. The control unit generates a switch signal. The inverter coupled to the control unit receives a feedback signal with a predetermined voltage level to generate a voltage. The negative ion generator coupled to the inverter receives the voltage to generate a negative ion. The ozone gas generator coupled to the inverter receives the voltage to induce a current for generating an ozone gas. The control circuit coupled to the control unit, the inverter, and the ozone gas generator, receives the switch signal to generate the feedback signal. The feedback signal is increased to reduce the voltage when the negative ion generator is to be activated and the ozone gas generator is to be deactivated, thereby enabling the feedback signal to return to the predetermined voltage level.
The invention can be more fully understood by reading the subsequent detailed description and examples with references made to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The air cleaner 200 comprises a control unit 202, a negative ion generator 204, an ozone gas generator 206, and an inverter 208. The inverter 208 is coupled to the control unit 202, and can output an AC voltage 212 according to the control signal 210. The negative ion generator 204 is coupled to the inverter 208, and can receive the AC voltage 212 to generate negative ions. The ozone gas generator 206 is also coupled to the inverter 208, and can generate a current according to the AC voltage 212 to induce an arc to generate the ozone gas. It is noted that the current generated by the ozone gas generator 206 can be converted to a feedback signal 214 and then input into the inverter 208.
Generally, the threshold voltage enabling the ozone gas generator 206 to generate the ozone gas is higher than the threshold voltage enabling the negative ion generator 204 to generate the negative ions. Accordingly, when someone enters an enclosed area encompassing the air cleaner and the ozone gas generator 206 is required to be deactivated, the control unit 202 can output a higher than a predetermined duty cycle control signal 210 to the inverter 208, and then the inverter 208 can output the AC voltage 212 with an amplitude lower than the threshold voltage of the generation of the ozone gas and higher than the threshold of the generation of the negative ions. Therefore, the control unit 208 can individually deactivate the ozone gas generator 206 while still activating the negative ion generator 204. An advantage of the air cleaner 200 is that only one inverter is required to provide the AC voltage to the negative ion generator and the ozone gas generator.
The transformer 220 has a primary side coupled to the switch device 218 and a secondary side coupled to the negative ion generator 204 and the ozone gas generator 206. The transformer 220 can convert the PWM signal 219 to the AC voltage 212 with a high amplitude, and the amplitude of the AC voltage 212 can be increased with the increase of the duty cycle of the PWM signal 219.
The negative ion generator 204 is coupled to the transformer 220, and comprises a boost circuit capable of increasing the voltage 212 to an extremely high negative voltage to generate the negative ions. The ozone gas generator 206 is also coupled to the transformer 220, and comprises two electrodes used to generate a current 213 according to the AC voltage 212. The ozone generator 206 starts to generate the ozone gas when the current 213 is larger than a threshold value (i.e. the voltage 212 is larger than a voltage level). The current 213 can be converted to the feedback signal 214 by a resistor 222. The pulse width modulator 216 can output the driving signal according to the control signal 210 and the feedback signal 214.
In the embodiment of
The sum of the feedback signal 414 and the DC voltage 410 has a predetermined voltage level. The feedback signal 414 is unchanged when the DC voltage 410 is fixed. For example, when someone enters an enclosed area encompassing the air cleaner and the ozone gas generator 406 is required to be deactivated, the control unit 402 can output a switch signal 415 to the control circuit 424 to increase the feedback signal 414, thereby increasing the sum of the feedback signal 414 and the DC voltage 410. Meanwhile, the inverter 408 reduces the AC voltage 412 to reduce the feedback signal 414, thereby forcing the feedback signal 414 to return to its original voltage level. The amount of decrease of the AC voltage 412 can be controlled by the internal circuit of the control circuit 424, and therefore the AC voltage 412 generated by the inverter 408 can be controlled between the threshold voltage of the generation of the ozone gas and the threshold voltage of the generation of the negative ions. Consequently, the negative ion generator 404 can be activated while the ozone gas generator 406 is deactivated, and further share the same inverter 408 as the ozone gas generator 406.
The function of the negative ion generator 404 and the ozone gas generator 406 are respectively the same as the negative ion generator 204 and the ozone gas generator 206, thus they will not be described hereafter for brevity. The control circuit 424 comprises a switch 421 and a resistor 423. The switch 421 can be a transistor.
When no one is inside the enclosed area encompassing the air cleaner and the ozone gas generator 406 is required to be activated, the control unit 402 can output the switch signal 415 to turn on the switch 421, and the feedback signal 414 can be the resistance of a parallel connection of the resistors 422 and 423 multiplied by the current 413. On the contrary, when someone enters the enclosed area encompassing the air cleaner and the ozone gas generator 406 is required to be deactivated, the control unit 402 can output the switch signal 415 to turn off the switch 421, and the feedback signal 414 can be the resistance of the resistor 422 multiplied by the current 413.
During the process when the ozone gas 406 is deactivated, the feedback signal 414 is increased when the switch 421 is turned on, because the current 413 does not change immediately at the moment the switch 421 is turned on and the resistance of the resistor 422 is larger than the resistance of the parallel connection of the resistors 422 and 423. Therefore, the inverter 408 can reduce the AC voltage 412 to reduce the current 413, thereby forcing the feedback signal 414 to return to its original voltage level and reduce the current of the ozone gas generator 406 to deactivate the generation of the ozone gas. It is noted that the voltage supplied to the ozone gas generator and the negative ion generator can be reduced by controlling the resistance of the feedback resistors. Accordingly, the ozone gas generator and the negative ion generator can share the same inverter. In one embodiment, the control unit 402 can be an MCU outputting an ON/OFF signal 411 to the pulse width modulator 416 to activate or deactivate the negative ion generator 404 and the ozone gas generator 406 at the same time.
While the invention has been described by way of example and in terms of the preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments. To the contrary, it is intended to cover various modifications and similar arrangements (as would be apparent to those skilled in the art). Therefore, the scope of the appended claims should be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and similar arrangements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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96130126 | Aug 2007 | TW | national |