The present teachings relate to the field of environmentally controlled spaces and, more particularly, to efficient thermal, particulate, and/or humidity control of enclosure spaces used, for example, in industrial processes that require reducing the effect of environmental conditions and/or contamination from one processing stage to a subsequent stage when processing stages are performed in adjacent spaces.
In many types of production processes, the processing and assembly of product occurs in separate enclosures, rooms, or spaces. Each room may have a different and distinct environment created to assist with an aspect of the manufacturing process itself or that is tailored for the specific processing stage performed in the particular room. As the product is created or processed, it may be transported from one room to an adjacent room using, for example, a conveyor belt that moves each product item separately or a forklift, hand truck, or cart that moves an entire production lot of product. Environmental conditions within each room may be controlled separately. For example, a first processing stage may occur within a first room at a relatively higher temperature and a second processing stage occurs within a second adjacent room at a relatively lower temperature. Other environmental conditions such as humidity, airborne particulates, etc., may also be controlled. When product is moved from the first room to the second room, environmental air typically moves from the first room to the second room along with the product. In many manufacturing processes this movement of air along with the product is undesirable and may create inefficiencies that increase costs and decrease production.
For example, in the food processing industry, product such as fruit and vegetables are heated and/or cooked during processing. The heating process may include immersion of the product in hot water, which increases the temperature and humidity of the air within the room. If the product is heated without immersion in water, the heated product may release moisture, thereby increasing the temperature and humidity of the air within the room. Once a food product has been heated and/or cooked, it is often transported to a different, cooler room to be flash frozen to avoid bacterial contamination and spoilage of the product.
At many food processing facilities, food cooking and/or packaging occurs in a food processing room and flash freezing and/or cold storage occurs in a flash freezer room (freezer) located immediately adjacent to the processing room. The product may be transported directly from the processing room to the freezer using a conveyor belt. The conveyor belt transports the product in bulk form or in boxes from the processing room, through a hole or opening, and into the freezer. During transport of the processed product, warm humid air from the processing facility is transported into the freezer along with the processed product.
Once in the freezer, the warm air from the processing room cools and water vapor may condense and freeze within the freezer thereby resulting in a rapid buildup of frost within the freezer space itself. To remove the frost buildup, a processing plant may schedule equipment shutdowns to allow maintenance personnel time to manually clear the frost buildup to prevent equipment failure, which decreases production and increases labor costs. Food processing plants can also use heat trace equipment to spot heat certain locations within freezer space to prevent frost buildup, which decreases cooling efficiency of the freezer and increases costs.
To maintain temperature separation between rooms, high velocity air may be directed across an opening. The high velocity air may be prevented from flowing into a cold space using air curtains. One drawback with this technology is that when an object such as a vehicle, production personnel, or the product itself passes through the air curtain, the high velocity air can be deflected off of the object and into the room, space, or enclosure (hereinafter, collectively, “room” or “enclosure space”) that the air is meant to protect.
Additionally, strip curtains are often used by themselves in an attempt to minimize airflow from the production room into the freezer. While strip curtains alone may provide a passive method to decrease unwanted air flow from a production room into a freezer, they provide only a modest improvement in efficiency.
Thus prior technologies used to maintain thermal separation between adjacent rooms are inefficient and/or provide only a minimum improvement. Heat and/or humidity introduced within the freezer can be negated by increasing cooling, which increases demand on the cooling systems, can result in an increase in equipment failure and an increase in required maintenance, a decrease in production, and thus increases costs.
A method and structure for providing improved thermal separation, moisture separation, and/or particulate separation between adjacent rooms such as a processing room and a freezer would be desirable.
The following presents a simplified summary in order to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of one or more embodiments of the present teachings. This summary is not an extensive overview, nor is it intended to identify key or critical elements of the present teachings nor to delineate the scope of the disclosure. Rather, its primary purpose is merely to present one or more concepts in simplified form as a prelude to the detailed description presented later.
In an embodiment of the present teachings, a vestibule for reducing the flow of air between a first enclosure and a second enclosure can include at least a first compartment and a second compartment, a first partial barrier that separates the first enclosure from the first compartment, a second partial barrier that separates the first compartment from the second compartment, and a third partial barrier that separates the second compartment from the second enclosure. The vestibule can further include a blower configured to draw air from the first enclosure through a vestibule intake and to return the air to the first enclosure through a vestibule exhaust, and a first compartment exhaust port configured such that the blower draws air from the first compartment through the first compartment exhaust port and exhausts the air from the first compartment through the vestibule exhaust into the first enclosure.
In another embodiment of the present teachings, a method for maintaining thermal separation between a first enclosure and a second enclosure using a vestibule can include drawing air from the first enclosure through a vestibule intake using a blower, exhausting the air through a vacuum outlet and back into the first enclosure through a vestibule exhaust, and drawing air from a first compartment of the vestibule through a first compartment exhaust, through the vacuum outlet, and into the first enclosure through the vestibule exhaust, thereby forming a vacuum within the vestibule first compartment using the blower. The method can further include drawing air from a second compartment of the vestibule, through a first partial barrier that separates the first compartment from the second compartment, and into the first compartment using the blower, and drawing air from the second enclosure, through a second partial barrier that separates the second enclosure from the second compartment, and into the second compartment using the blower.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the present teachings and together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the disclosure. In the figures:
It should be noted that some details of the FIGS. have been simplified and are drawn to facilitate understanding of the present teachings rather than to maintain strict structural accuracy, detail, and scale.
Reference will now be made in detail to exemplary embodiments of the present teachings, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts. It is to be understood, however, that embodiments of the present teachings may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but rather as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed system, structure or manner.
For purposes of the present teachings, unless otherwise specified, the term “thermal separation” encompasses both complete and partial thermal separation between two enclosures, spaces, rooms, etc. While the present teachings are described below, generally, with reference to thermal separation, it will be understood that the present teachings may also be used to reduce the transfer of moisture from one room to another, as water vapor carries a significant component of thermal load in many cases. Further, particulate separation between rooms may be better maintained using an embodiment of the present teachings. In various embodiments of the present teachings, some mixing of air from a room with air from a second room may occur intentionally, for example within a vestibule first compartment as described below. Additionally, unless otherwise specified, the term “blower” encompasses blowers, fans, or any device that is capable of moving air from one location to another location.
A vestibule 10 in accordance with an embodiment of the present teachings is depicted in the perspective view of
The vestibule 10 may include an enclosed space including at least a first compartment or airlock 20 and a second compartment or airlock 22 provided between the first room 12 and the second room 14 that assists in maintaining thermal separation between the first room 12 and the second room 14 as described below. In an embodiment, a plurality of barriers may be employed to assist in thermally separating the first room 12 from the second room 14. The barriers 24A, 24B, 24C, as depicted in
In an embodiment, barrier 24A separates the first room 12 from the first compartment 20, barrier 24B separates the first compartment 20 from the second compartment 22, and barrier 24C separates the second compartment 22 from the second room 14. Thus the barriers 24A-24C separate the first room 12 from the second room 14. In an embodiment, an area underneath conveyor belt 18 can include seals 25 to further reduce airflow. The seals 25 can be positioned as desired, such as in proximate vertical alignment with the barriers 24A, 24B and/or 24C. As depicted in
In an embodiment, the vestibule 10 includes subassemblies as described below that maintain the environments within the first compartment 20 and the second compartment 22. In this embodiment, the environment of the first compartment 20 is actively maintained to emulate the environment of the first room 12, and the environment of the second compartment 22 is passively maintained to emulate the environment of the second room 14.
The vestibule 10 includes a vestibule intake 26 that takes air into the vestibule from the first room 12, a blower 28 such as a centrifugal fan housed within a blower box 30, and vestibule exhaust 32 that exhausts air from the vestibule into the first room 12. The vestibule 10 further includes ductwork with a blower box exhaust port 34 that exits out of, and exhausts air from, the blower box 30. The vestibule 10 further includes a first compartment exhaust port 36 in fluid communication with the blower box exhaust port 34 that opens into, and exhausts air from, the first compartment 20. The blower box exhaust port 34 and first compartment exhaust port 36 are in fluid communication with a vacuum outlet 37 that leads to the vestibule exhaust 32. The sizes and shapes of the vestibule intake 26, the blower 28, the blower box exhaust port 34, first compartment exhaust port 36, and vestibule exhaust 32 are matched or sized such that, during operation, the blower 28 creates a vacuum within the first compartment 20 as described below.
In operation, the blower 28 draws air from the first room 12 through the vestibule intake 26 and into the blower box 30. Further, the blower 28 directs air out of the blower box 30 through the blower box exhaust port 34 and back into the first room 12 through the vestibule exhaust 32. Because the first compartment exhaust port 36 that opens into the first compartment 20 is in fluid communication with the blower box exhaust port 34, a vacuum is created within the first compartment exhaust port 36 and within the first compartment 20 resulting from Bernoulli and/or Venturi effects. A controlled volume of air is also drawn from the second room 14 through the third barrier 24C and the second barrier 24B, and into the first compartment 20, which is then exhausted back into the first room 12 through vestibule exhaust 32. This maintains a balanced pressure differential between the first room 12 and the second room 14 that maintains thermal separation between the two rooms.
During operation, the vacuum within the first compartment 20 may draw air through the first barrier 24A and, in turn, from the first compartment 20 to the second compartment 22 and into the second room 14, which would reduce efficiency. To reduce or prevent this, perforations 40 may be formed in the sides and/or or top of the vestibule 10 at the first compartment 20, thus reducing the overall vacuum forces on the first barrier 24A and the flow of air mass between the first room 12 and the second room 14.
Further, if vacuum forces within the first compartment 20 are excessively strong, excessive air from the second room 14 can be drawn into the vestibule 10, thus reducing efficiency. It is desirable that some air is drawn by the vacuum in the first compartment 20 from the second room 14 and into the second compartment 22, with minimal air from the second compartment 22 moving through the second barrier 24B and into the first compartment 20. Conversely, if the vacuum forces within the first compartment 20 are too weak, the air flow through the first compartment 20 will not be sufficient which can result in increased air flow from the first room 12 through the vestibule 10 to the second room 14.
In an embodiment, the apparatus of the present disclosure can include a means for varying the vacuum force within the vestibule 10. In an embodiment, the blower 28 can include a variable speed blower controlled by a blower controller 42. The blower controller 42 is electrically coupled with the blower 28, and is configured to drive the blower 28 at any number of selected speeds. The vacuum forces within the first compartment 20 are proportional to blower 28 speed. In another embodiment, the speed of the blower 28 can be controlled manually by an operator. In either embodiment, the blower speed is controlled so that a sufficient amount of air is moved through the first compartment 20 and that a sufficient but not excessive amount of air is drawn from the second room 14 through the second barrier 24B and into the first compartment 20.
In an embodiment, two or more temperature sensors in communication with the blower controller 42 may be employed to automatically adjust the speed of the blower 28. A first temperature sensor 44 may be placed within the first room 12 and a second temperature sensor 46 may be placed within the vacuum outlet 37 that leads to the vestibule exhaust 32. The blower controller 42 receives first temperature information relative to the first room from the first temperature sensor 44 and receives second temperature information relative to the vacuum outlet 37 from the second temperature sensor 46, for example through a wired or wireless connection. Based on a temperature differential between the first temperature and the second temperature, the blower controller 42 adjusts the speed of the blower 28. A temperature differential that is too large would indicate that the vacuum within the first compartment 20 is too great, and that excessive air is being drawn into the first compartment 20 from the second room 14. A temperature difference that is too small would indicate that the vacuum within the first compartment 20 is too small, and that insufficient air is being drawn into the second compartment 22 from the second room 14 by the vacuum in the first compartment 20. The blower controller 42 would be programmed to maintain a constant desired temperature differential between the first temperature sensor 44 and the second temperature sensor 46.
The vestibule 10 can be scaled for any desired size. For example, the vestibule 10 can be sized for transporting a smaller product 19 from the first room 12, through the first barrier 24A to the first compartment 20 within the vestibule 10, through the second barrier 24B to the second compartment 22, and through the third barrier 24C to the second room 14 using, for example, a conveyor belt 18. The vestibule 10 may also be scaled to a larger size so that production personnel can move the product 19 through the vestibule 10 from the first room 12 to the second room 14 using, for example, a forklift, hand truck, cart, or other transport. The system according to various embodiments of the present teachings is well suited for any size or type of opening where reducing airflow between two rooms or spaces is beneficial.
It will be understood that the FIGS. are schematic views and that a vestibule 10 in accordance with the present teachings can include other elements that are not depicted for simplicity and that other depicted elements can be removed or modified.
In another embodiment, a vestibule can include a single compartment. This embodiment can include the various elements as depicted in
In operation, the vestibule 50 functions similar to the embodiments described above. Air is drawn by the blowers 52, 54 from a first room 72 through a vestibule intake 74, and is transported through the hollow duct platform 66 and out of an end of the duct platform 66 which forms a vestibule exhaust 76, then back into the first room 72. Through Bernoulli and/or Venturi effects, air is drawn from the first compartment 56 through the perforations 70 in the bottom surface 68 of the duct platform 66 by the blowers 52, 54. The hollow duct platform provides a vacuum outlet 78 in fluid communication with the perforations 70 and blower box exhaust ports 80. A vestibule 50 including three separate compartments 56, 58, 60, may have improved thermal efficiency over a vestibule 10 that has two compartments 20, 22, but uses additional materials and physical space. The vestibule 50 maintains thermal separation between the relatively warmer first room 72 and a relatively cooler second room 82. The vestibule may include a blower controller 42 and temperature sensors (not individually depicted) that output temperature information to the blower controller 42 in accordance with embodiments of the present teachings discussed above. In an embodiment, instead of three compartments the vestibule 50 includes only the two compartments 56 and 58.
In this embodiment, a blower 108 draws air from the first room 92 through a vestibule intake 110 into a blower box 112, out of the blower box 112 through a blower box exhaust port 114, and through a vacuum outlet 116. The blower box exhaust port 114 and the vacuum outlet 116 are in fluid communication with at least one first compartment exhaust port 118 and at least one second compartment exhaust port 120. As air is forced through the vacuum outlet 116 by the blower 108, air is drawn from the first compartment 96 through the first compartment exhaust port 118 and from the second compartment 98 through the second compartment exhaust port 120 through Venturi and/or Bernoulli forces, and into the first room 92 through vestibule exhaust 122. As depicted in
In this embodiment, the first room 92 can be separated from the second room by an insulated wall 124. Further, cold air is drawn from second room 94, through the fourth partial barrier 106, and into the third compartment 100. As this occurs, some cold air is drawn through a gap 126 between the insulated wall 124 and the conveyer belt 102, and across product 104 being transported through the third compartment 100. This pre-cools the product 104 within the third compartment 100 before it enters the second room 94, and may thereby further increase thermal efficiency.
A thermal simulation of an apparatus including a three compartment vestibule such as that depicted in
While the present teachings have been described in connection with the above-referenced embodiments, this description is not intended to limit the scope of the present teachings to the particular form set forth herein. On the contrary, the present teachings are intended to cover such alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the present teachings as defined by the appended claims. It will be appreciated that structural components and/or processing stages can be added or existing structural components and/or processing stages can be removed or modified. Further, one or more of the acts depicted herein may be carried out in one or more separate acts and/or phases. Furthermore, to the extent that the terms “including,” “includes,” “having,” “has,” “with,” or variants thereof are used in either the detailed description and the claims, such terms are intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising.” The term “at least one of” is used to mean one or more of the listed items can be selected. Additionally, in the discussion and claims herein, the term “on” used with respect to two materials, one “on” the other, means at least some contact between the materials, while “over” means the materials are in proximity, but possibly with one or more additional intervening materials such that contact is possible but not required. Neither “on” nor “over” implies any directionality as used herein. Other embodiments of the present teachings will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the disclosure herein.
This disclosure claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/625,249, filed Apr. 17, 2012, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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