This invention relates generally to electrostatic ionizers for purifying air in air-conditioning units and ducts, and particularly to cleaning the electrodes in such devices.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,843,169 discloses a bipolar ionizer circuit mounted in an air-conditioning duct or on the flaps of a wall-mounted air-conditioning unit that swing up and down to direct the air at varying angles. This allows the air emitted from the flaps of the air-conditioning unit to be ionized regardless of the direction of the flaps. During prolonged use, debris accumulates on the ionizing electrodes and must be removed.
Cleaning mechanisms for ionizing devices are also well-known. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,768,087 discloses a bipolar ionization device whose stationary ionizing electrodes are cleaned automatically. The electrode cleaning device is installed on a rotating part of the ventilator and is operated by centrifugal force.
US2010/0188793 discloses a bipolar ionization device with an automatic cleaning device operated by a drive implemented as a bi-directional solenoid.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,705,224 discloses a bipolar ion generator having a pair of deflectable ionizing electrodes rotatable by a variable speed electric motor. In a cleaning mode, the motor speed is increased so as to deflect the electrodes under centrifugal force thereby contacting a stationary cleaning unit and removing dust collected on the electrodes.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,969,707 discloses a device for bipolar ionization with automatic electrode cleaning facility, in which both the ionizing electrodes and the cleaning device are mounted on the rotating part of a ventilator. The cleaning device is operated by means of centrifugal force.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,957,571 discloses an ionizing electrode with a solenoid-operated cleaning mechanism.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,408,759 discloses a device for generating ions in a flowing air stream. Multiple filamentary ion-generating electrodes are rotatable relative to a support structure for wiping the surface of the filament and removing accumulated debris.
US20040079233 discloses an electrostatic air conditioner device having first and second electrode arrays. A manually-operated cleaning mechanism includes a length of flexible insulating material that frictionally cleans the electrodes in the first array as a user moves the second electrode array up or down within the conditioner housing.
US20040237787 discloses an air conditioner with a cleaning member having an opening, through which a wire-like electrode passes. The cleaning member is moved along the wire to frictionally clean the wire-like electrode when a collector electrode array is moved manually by a user.
It is an object of the invention to provide a simple cleaning device for cleaning the electrodes of an ionizing device mounted in association with an air-conditioning unit.
This object is realized in accordance with the present invention by an air conditioner device having a housing, one or more flaps, an ionizer and a cleaning pad.
Specifically, there is provided an air conditioner device that includes a housing or duct having an opening for exit of air, one or more rotatable flaps for adjusting the flow rate and angle of air exiting through the opening, an ionizer having an electrode configured to ionize the air exiting through the opening, and a cleaning pad adapted to frictionally remove debris from the electrode consequent to rotation of the flaps without requiring manual operation by a user.
The ionizer can be fixed inside the housing in such a position and orientation that its electrode is wiped by a cleaning pad mounted on the air conditioner flap. Alternatively, the ionizer can be mounted on the air conditioner flap and the cleaning pad can be fixed inside the housing in such a position and orientation so as to wipe against the ionizer electrode. In either case, rotation of the air conditioner flap induces relative movement between the ionizer electrode and the cleaning pad and the consequent abrasion cleans the electrode. This is particularly effective and advantageous in those types of air conditioner unit that have motorized flaps that are programmed to rotate up and down periodically, and when the flaps are closed completely the ionizer electrode is then wiped clean automatically without the need for user interaction.
While frictional cleaning of ionizer electrodes mounted in association with an air conditioner is known in the art, there appears to have been no suggestion to exploit the rotary motion of the air conditioner flap to achieve this in a-cyclic manner with no need for manual operation or intervention by the user.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, embodiments will now be described, by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the following description of some embodiments, identical components that appear in more than one figure or that share similar functionality will be referenced by identical reference symbols.
It will be understood that although in
It is also to be noted that the invention may be used with many different types of ionizing electrodes such as a stiff metal emitter (needle point), flexible wire, and brush type emitters consisting of a plurality of bristles (carbon fibers). Likewise, the cleaning pad may be a brush type pad having a plurality of bristles, a soft abrasive material (scotch) or an unwoven polymer/fabric strip. These are provided by way of example only, other options being apparent to those skilled in the art.
It should also be noted that features that are described with reference to one or more embodiments are described by way of example rather than by way of limitation to those embodiments. Thus, unless stated otherwise or unless particular combinations are clearly inadmissible, optional features that are described with reference to only some embodiments are assumed to be likewise applicable to all other embodiments also.
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