The invention is generally directed to an improved air sterilization device that works with ducts to contain intense heat that effectively destroys micro-organisms such as virus, mold, bacteria, pet dander allergens, and dust mite and other insect allergens, avoids mildew formation and cross contamination, providing healthier environments and preserve food items. It should be realized that the invention is applicable to gases other than air so that in general it relates to improvements in a gas sterilization system.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,877,990 there is shown an air sterilization device that consists of a refractory ceramic mass or block (of height 70 mm) of zirconium dioxide (ZrO2) and quartz (SiO2) and consisting of a relatively high number (e.g. fifty-six) of vertically extending high thermal gradient ducts or 2 mm diameter bores designed as a function of an air volume to be processed. Heating elements in the form of NiCr resistive wire filaments having a resistance of 100 ohm/meter are placed in the small diameter ducts, connected in series (4.5 meters), and energized with rectified current from a 110 volt home outlet to dissipate 24.4 Watts. Room air will circulate upwardly through the ducts by convection and will become sterilized by energy dissipated by the Joule heating effect wherein a high thermal gradient is produced in the interior of the ducts (220° C.) during the traverse through the ducts. Spread out over fifty-six ducts, each duct will dissipate 0.38 Watt. With a volume of 2.2×10−7 cubic meter, the 0.38 Watt of power will raise the temperature to at most 400° C. under a room condition of 24° C. and 80% relative humidity.
The previous U.S. Pat. No. 5,874,050 A of the applicant hereof discloses a straight tube full of ducts easily achieved by means of extrusion which proved its efficiency in the past years in several countries including the USA.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,332,140 B2 of the same applicant discloses another more flexible version of the technology thus achieving the same air sterization efficiency, allowing the gas to be sterilized either inside or outside the device where the technology is implemented.
The present application answers the need for an improved air sterilization system which can be utilized by itself or coupled with other devices but with the possibilty of much smaller external dimensions. The previous US Patents of the present applicant did not offer the possibility of external size reduction due to the use of straight ducts.
The invention is thus in one aspect directed to an improvement to the current air sterilization system from the same applicant, where the sterilizing ducts are no longer straight but with at least one curve in any direction in order to internally maintain or exceed the length of each straight duct yet with the same or increased air residence time within said ducts but reducing at the same time the external size of the mass within which the ducts reside e.g. ceramic block mounted within an assembly while maintaining the same or more air residence time beyond that necessary to destroy airborne microorganisms carried by the air convection continuous flow or in some cases also powered by a fan or equivalent. The concept of the new invention is aimed to reduce the external dimensions of the formed assembly of the ceramic ducts or even increase the size and number of ducts being assembled together, allowing at the same time different configurations for new air sterilizer devices that might be smaller or larger depending on the quantity of ducts formed. The new invention will sterilize the air by a high temperature such as 200° C. inside the heated ducts with minimum heat contribution to the room within which the assembly resides with the objective of drastically reducing its airborne micro-organisms and to avoid formation of organic smells, fungi, mold and destroy viruses, bacteria.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to provide an improved sterilization system for standalone, wall mounted, or inserted small and large devices.
Another object of the invention is to provide flexibility in the size and shape of the formed ducts that are shaped for heating air flowing through the ducts during the process of the air sterilization.
Yet another object is to provide a way to provide closely spaced ducts that do not have to be formed into a unitary mass such as ceramic. Ceramic blocks of this kind when made by extrusion for instance are subject to the ducts blending with each other when placed too closely. This is avoided according to another aspect of the present invention by assembling the block from plates with the ducts preformed in the surfaces of the plates. For instance, a non-straight, curved, or bent half-duct is pre-formed in the surface of one plate, and a mirror image of that half-duct may be formed in the surface of a matching plate for alignment when stacked into a two-plate section of the block. Of course, it is conceivable that plate with a half-duct formed therein may be matched with a completely flat plate to form a duct with only the shape of a half-duct for instance with a half-circle, half-oval, half-square, half-rectangle, or some other half-shape cross-section.
This way of design of a ceramic block as an assembly of plates also provides design flexibility because the size of the assembly may be chosen without undue design effort. By having a large number of plates on hand, the overall size of the block can be chosen with a great degree of convenience not possible in the prior art where selection of the size of a unitary block and ducting necessarily involves additional pre-production design steps as well as manufacturing of the block of the selected size and ducting.
Still a further object of the invention is to provide an improved air sterilization system coupled to an optional activated carbon block or similar components to capture chemicals and VOCs not destroyed by heat and the optional addition of a fan to enhance the air flow through such a carbon block or similar component and the air sterilizing assembly.
Yet still a further object of the invention is to provide an improved air sterilization and filtering system in which the air sterilization assembly is coupled to a filter or electrostatic filter to capture airborne particles.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide a compact improved air sterilization system to be used or attached to automobiles, other types of vehicles, furniture, home appliances, hanging, wall or table lamps, wall mounted or standalone, in which the air in a restricted volume is to be purified with the viruses and bacteria killed, and mold avoided.
Still other objects and advantages of the invention will, in part, be evident and will, at least in part, be apparent from the specification.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, a sterilization system for the sterilization of air in one or more ducts is formed by stacking at least two plates, each plate having a half duct with at least one engraved curve, wherein the at least two plates stacked together form a stacked plate pair that together form at least one duct resulting in an air sterilization assembly with said at least one duct for each air sterilization assembly, each duct having at least one heating element residing therein that when supplied with an electric current heats air within the duct to over 100° C. before the air escapes by convection from inside the duct.
Further, the sterilization system according to the first aspect of the present invention is provided such that air flows into the duct by air convection when a plurality of air sterilization assemblies reside in an air sterilization apparatus that is placed in a base having a bottom inlet at a lower level under the duct and a top outlet at an upper level above the duct allowing the hot air to exit freely upwards generating a negative pressure at the bottom inlet forcing the contaminated air upwards into the duct and out through the top outlet in an endless and constant flow of air.
Further still, the sterilization system according to the first aspect of the present invention, the hot air exiting the duct is cooled down by means of a heat interchange system by contact with colder surfaces or by other cooling means.
In further accord with the first aspect of the present invention, the open channel has at least one curve engraved therein so that when assembled together with a similarly curved open channel in the facing plate the duct is formed in full.
In still further accord with the first aspect of the present invention, a fan is coupled to enhance air movement in the sterilization system in order to improve sterilized air production. The fan allows the sterilization system to operate horizontally, vertically, or inclined.
In still further accord with the first aspect of the present invention, the sterilization system is incorporated into a ventilation duct in a ventilation system for a space in an ediface, an ediface wall, or room of a building.
In still further accord with the first aspect of the present invention, the air sterilization assembly is contained within an insulated cover to inhibit radiation of heat outside the assembly so as to concentrate heat inside the at least one duct.
In still further accord with the first aspect of the present invention, at least one filter or particle remover is coupled to the air sterilization assembly.
In still further accord with the first aspect of the present invention, the sterilization system is monitored and operated by means of wireless communication.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, a plate comprising a ceramic or equivalent insulating material is for assembly adjacent a facing plate as an assembled pair of plates to form a mass or block for the sterilization of air in a duct formed in the assembled pair of plates, the plate having an open channel in a surface of the plate such that when the plate and the facing plate are assembled face-to-face the open channel forms the whole or at least a part of the duct, wherein a heating element residing in the duct that when energized heats air within the duct to over 100° C. before the heated air escapes by convection from inside the at least one duct.
In further accord with the second aspect of the present invention, the assembled pair of plates is attached to an interior of a container of an air sterilization apparatus with at least one air inlet and at least one air outlet.
In still further accord with the second aspect of the present invention, the open channel has at least one curve engraved therein so that when assembled together with a similarly curved open channel in the facing plate the duct is formed in full. The invention accordingly comprises the features of construction, combination of elements, arrangement of parts, combination of steps and procedures, all of which will be exemplified in the constructions and processes hereinafter set forth and the scope of the invention will be indicated in the claims.
For a fuller understanding of the invention, reference is made to the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Reference is first made to
The two plate assemblies shown in
In
Thus,
As shown in
As shown in the various figures described above, the invention allows for multiple plaques or plates to be assembled and used to provide multiple full ducts for receiving air at an inlet, heating and thereby purifying the air as it passes through the ducts, and providing purified air through an outlet as the air exits the ducts.
Previous air purifiers of the applicant always kept a minimum height of the vertical ducts to allow enough fluid residence time for the microorganism to be incinerated.
The present invention permits the height of the applicant's prior art purifiers to be reduced by providing a duct design with at least one curve as in
The present invention also allows for longer or shorter, thinner or thicker air purifiers, depending on the size of each plate and how many plates are assembled.
In
As shown in
In
A plate such as shown in
The assembled pair of plates may be attached to an interior of a container of an air sterilization apparatus with at least one air inlet and at least one air outlet.
The open channel may have at least one portion with a curve therein so that when assembled together with a similarly curved open channel in the facing plate the duct is formed in full with at least a portion of the duct with a curve therein.
The open channel may be straight so that when assembled together with a similarly straight open channel in the facing plate the duct is formed in full as a straight duct.
The plate may have more than one open channel therein with a first channel having at least one portion with a curve therein so that when assembled together with a similarly curved open channel in the facing plate a first duct is formed in full with at least a portion of the duct with a curve therein and wherein a second channel is straight so that when assembled together with a similarly straight open channel in the facing plate a second duct is formed in full as a straight duct.
The plate may be flat as in
The new air sterilizing plaque/plate assembly 110 formed for example of just two plaques/plates 100, can be as thin as 5 mm allowing for its incorporation to a new range of air purifiers as shown for example in
The new assembly allows for instance for a lengthy thin system with just two plaques or a short and thick assembly with multiple plaques/plates, both with same air sterilizing capacity.
Also the new assembly with straight, curved and even shorter formed ducts allows for different set ups, for instance shorter ducts when gas flows in by convection, longer ducts when there is a forced gas flow. As in the previous patents of the applicant, the flow of gas is guaranteed by convection when the sterilizing ducts of the plaque or plate assemblies are positioned in a substantially vertical position and the ducts are heated by a resistive wire to reach a selected high temperature such as at least 100° C., creating a chimney type of effect for convection of contaminated air or other gas.
The air or other gas is sterilized when exposed to heat during the required residence time inside the ducts and then cooled by release or by an optional heat exchanger.
Thus, a mass or block of material such as ceramic is formed by at least two plaques or plates with at least one half duct and preferably two matching half ducts to form full ducts of small diameter when attached together. These ducts are preferably heated by at least one electrically resistant wire that passes through each duct jointly or separately controlled. The resistant wire is connected to a power supply. When power runs through the wire, the resistance of the wire generates heat, which is radiated into the air surrounding the wire inside the duct. The assembly of power supply and resistant wire is designed to provide heat inside said ducts in excess of 100° Celsius. The heat inside the ducts, when the resistant wire is plugged into an exterior power source generates an air up stream by means of heating the air there contained when the ducts in the ceramic or other nonconductive material are in its preferably vertical position. When said heated air exits the ducts a negative pressure is created at the bottom of the ducts dragging exterior air into the ceramic ducts and therefore creating a continuous air circulation through the ducts. Airborne micro-organisms are exterminated by heat when passing inside the heated ducts. The continuous airflow generated by the air convection as above described assures 99.99% air sterilization in a quiet and efficient way and with low power consumption. The tubes are preferably made of a good quality ceramic or equivalent insulated material that can stand heat well above 200° C. and allow the ducts to be as close as possible to allow heat interchange between them. The ceramic core or block is inserted into an exterior casing equipped with easy air access at the bottom. An optional heat exchanger can be used at some distance over the air exhausting top of the ceramic ducts and a casing to be made of a material resistant to impact and heat, with at least one air outlet that will preferably boost air speed out. The casing is preferably constructed to incorporate the ceramic core and can be structured to be attached internally or externally to a device where air will circulate with or without a fan attached. It should also be realized that variations in the manner of heating the ducts are contemplated. For instance, the same duct may be heated at different times or at the same time to achieve different levels of heat. In such cases different heating elements may be connected to corresponding straight and nonstraight ducts. It should also be realized that the sterilization system may be configured to work in different directions, depending on how it is placed or oriented in service.
It will also be understood that the following claims are intended to cover all of the generic and specific features of the invention herein described and that all statements of the scope of the invention which, as a matter of language, might be said to fall therebetween.