The present invention relates to a refrigerator with a storage chamber, an evaporation chamber separate from the storage chamber and a fan for driving an air circulation between the evaporation chamber and the storage chamber. Refrigerators of this type are referred to as no-frost refrigerators.
A problem in the construction of these types of refrigerators is the danger of uneven cooling. Refrigerated items placed directly in front of an inlet opening of the cold air coming from the evaporation chamber into the storage chamber will be cooled very efficiently and can screen other refrigerated items from the stream of cold air so that the danger arises of the latter items being cooled insufficiently. If a temperature sensor in the storage chamber is also screened the result can be an incorrect regulation of the temperature; the cooled items directly in the path of the cold air are cooled down too far and may possibly be damaged.
In order to avoid such dangers efforts are generally made to achieve a good spatial distribution of cold air and to feed it at a lower flow speed into the storage chamber by providing a number of inlet openings spaced widely apart or one inlet opening with a large spread in at least one direction for the cold air. In order to distribute the highly concentrated airflow in the area of the fan evenly to the available opening cross-section a known approach is to provide a distribution passage with air guide ribs diverging from each other between the fan and the inlet opening (or the inlet openings) of the air into the storage chamber.
The air guide ribs are only effective however if they do not diverge too far; with guide ribs diverging greatly from one another and correspondingly sharply curved there is the danger of the flow detaching from the surface so that an even distribution of the air cannot be achieved. Also, even if it is possible with the aid of the guide ribs to achieve a satisfactory distribution of the cold air over the entire cross-section of the inlet opening, finding a suitable shape for the guide ribs is a tedious and expensive optimization task.
The object of the present invention is to specify a refrigerator with a storage chamber, an evaporation chamber and a fan for driving an air circulation from the evaporation chamber to the storage chamber, in which an even distribution of the cold air over the cross-section of an inlet opening is able to be achieved in a simple manner and with little optimization effort.
The object is achieved by a grid crossing an elongated inlet opening of the storage chamber. The effect of the grid is two-fold. On the one hand a slight drop in pressure occurs at the grid, which effects an even distribution of the air pressure in front of the grid and thereby an even distribution of the airflow over the entire surface of the grid. On the other hand many individual streams are formed directly downstream from the grid behind its openings which are separated from one another in each case by areas screened by the closed surfaces of the grid. The fact that the many streams each of small cross-section pull air with them from the shielded areas means that they slow down and there is a slow flow obtained over a significantly larger cross-sectional surface than corresponds to the open surface of the grid.
To intensify this carrying-along effect a number of grids can be arranged at the inlet opening in series in air flow terms. In such cases the openings of the grid are preferably offset relative to each other in relation to a surface normal of the grid.
In order on the one hand not to let the drop in pressure at a grid become too great, but on the other hand to have sufficient screened areas between the individual streams, the surface of the grid is preferably between 30 and 60% open.
Because of the use of the grid it is possible to greatly widen out the flow cross section over the short distance between the ventilator and the inlet opening. Thus the distributor passage, the downstream end of which is the inlet opening of the storage chamber, and the greatest cross-sectional dimension of which at its upstream end must be at most half as large as the largest dimension of the inlet opening, must not itself be longer than the largest dimension of the inlet opening itself. This means that even with a very compact form of the refrigerator housing a good distribution of the cold air is achievable.
The length of the distributor passage can even be reduced to two thirds or less of the largest dimension of the inlet opening. Even if the largest cross-sectional dimension at the upstream end of the distributor passage is only a third of the largest dimension of the inlet opening, an even distribution can still be realized.
The refrigerator is easy to assemble if the storage chamber and the distributor passage are delimited by a same inner container and are separated from one another by a partition wall installed in the inner container.
Further features and advantages of the invention emerge from the description given below of exemplary embodiments which refer to the enclosed figures. The figures show:
Below the wall 4 is located an evaporation chamber 5. It is divided by a housing 7 with a front side suction opening 6 from the lower storage chamber 3.
Behind an opening in the rear wall of the evaporation chamber 5 is located a fan 8 which sucks in air from the evaporation chamber 5. As can be seen in
Two grids 17, which are shown more precisely in the perspective view of
Openings not shown in the figure each make up around 60% of the surface of the grids 17. The air flows through these openings in parallel to the surface normal of the grid 17. The openings of the grids are offset from each other so that an air stream formed at an opening of the grid 17 lying upstream in each case hits close to the surface of the downstream grid 17 and is broken up by this.
In the diagram shown in
As can be seen in the section depicted in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 048 572.9 | Oct 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP08/62630 | 9/22/2008 | WO | 00 | 3/31/2010 |