This application represents the national stage entry of PCT International Application No. PCT/EP2018/055481 filed on Mar. 6, 2018 and claims priority to German Patent Application DE 10 2017 104 769.7 filed on Mar. 7, 2017. The contents of these applications are hereby incorporated by reference as if set forth in their entirety herein.
The present disclosure relates to a burner, in particular for a vehicle heater, with a orifice plate separating an internal combustion zone from an external zone.
Nowadays motor vehicles are often equipped with vehicle heaters, which serve in particular as additional heaters and/or auxiliary heaters. In most cases it is also possible to retrofit vehicle heaters in motor vehicles. Such heaters are also used in other environments, for example in boats, caravans and other mobile or stationary areas. Especially in motor vehicles, the same fuel is often burned in the vehicle heater that is also used for combustion in the drive engine of the motor vehicle, i.e., in particular diesel fuel or gasoline. This fuel, which is available in the vehicle, must be converted to the gaseous state for the purpose of combustion. For this purpose, mainly the principles of atomisation and/or evaporation are used.
In atomizing burners, for example, an atomizer nozzle can be provided for this purpose, by means of which the fuel is first converted into droplet form, only to then change over to the gaseous state due to the thermal energy present in the vehicle heater. The oxidant required for combustion is continuously supplied to the combustion region in the vehicle heater in the form of a combustion air stream. In many cases, a device for flame detection is also assigned to the burners of the vehicle heaters. This is a sensor of any kind which detects the presence of a flame in the burner and transmits a corresponding signal to a control unit of the vehicle heater.
The control and regulation parameters of the vehicle heater are set depending on this, for example in the sense of a modification of the burner's operation after successful ignition of the burner or in the case of an intentional or unintentional extinction of the flame, whereby in particular the fuel supply is then interrupted.
An example of a prior art jet burner is shown in
To ensure that the combustion air passes from the outer region 18′ to the inner combustion region 16′ in a defined manner through the openings 68 provided for this purpose in the funnel-shaped wall 58, the light opening 28″ is covered with a mica disc 70, so that no combustion air can reach the inner combustion region 16′ through the light opening 28″. The mica disc 70 is fastened with two rivets 72 to the side of the orifice plate 14′ facing away from the nozzle 60.
During the service life of the burner, residues such as soot or unburned fuel are produced during its operation. These can deposit on the mica disc over time, whereby flame detection by the photosensitive sensor is impaired. In extreme cases, the mica disc can even darken optically to such an extent that reliable flame detection can no longer take place at all. Therefore a regular maintenance of such a burner is necessary to check the light transmission of the mica disc and to clean it if necessary. Furthermore, it should also be noted that the sealing effect of the mica disc at the orifice plate can be partially lost due to temperature effects, so that after all false air can penetrate through the light opening after all.
It is the object of the present disclosure to eliminate disadvantages of the prior art burner. In particular, a maintenance-free burner is provided which ensures reliable flame detection, eliminates the occurrence of false air entering the inner combustion region and offers large tolerances during installation at the same time.
This object is solved with the features of the independent claim.
Advantageous embodiments of the disclosure are indicated in the dependent claims.
The present disclosure describes a burner, in particular for a vehicle heater, having an orifice plate separating an inner combustion region from an outer region, wherein a photosensitive sensor is arranged in the outer region, wherein at least two separate air inlet openings being provided in the orifice plate, wherein one of the at least two air inlet openings is additionally formed as a light opening which also allows light to pass from the inner combustion region to the photosensitive sensor that is arranged in the outer region, wherein the at least two air inlet openings being shaped such that the same combustion air quantities flow into the internal combustion region per unit time, respectively, and wherein the orifice plate is transparent and/or the light opening has a shape different from the air inlet openings that are not formed as light opening such that an illumination area defined by the light opening is larger than a reference illumination area defined by one of the at least two air inlet openings that is not formed as light opening. Since the light opening, just like the other air inlet openings, serves to supply combustion air to the inner combustion region, the occurrence of false air flows due to leaks in the area of the orifice plate can be reliably prevented. Through the orifice plate, the combustion air partial mass flow supplied per time unit can be adjusted via the pressure loss and evened out or directed. In this respect, the orifice plate can also be regarded as a flow straightener. The uniform supply is ensured by the shapes of the air inlet openings and the light opening, i.e., by their respective edges surrounding the opening surfaces. The at least one air inlet opening and the light opening have the same pressure drop in the sense of a throttling effect for the combustion air flowing through them, which can, for example, be expressed approximately by an identical hydraulic diameter, provided that the respective outer shape of the at least one air inlet opening and the light opening does not deviate too far from a circular shape. This ensures that the same quantities of combustion air per time unit flow through the respective openings. In the context of this description, two combustion air quantities are regarded as essentially the same combustion air quantities or the same combustion air quantities, which differ from each other by a maximum of 20 percent, preferably by a maximum of 10 percent, more preferably by a maximum of 5 percent. In this context, the smaller of the two combustion air quantities can be regarded as defining 100 percent. Alternatively, within the scope of this description, two combustion air quantities can be regarded as essentially the same combustion air quantities or the same combustion air quantities, which differ from each other by a maximum of 15 percent, preferably by a maximum of 10 percent, more preferably by a maximum of 5 percent. In this context, the larger of the two combustion air quantities can be regarded as defining 100 percent. The “deviation” refers to the combustion air quantity through the light opening compared to the respective combustion air quantity through an air inlet opening. For example, the pressure drop at the light opening can be determined experimentally and adjusted to the pressure drop at the air inlet openings. Furthermore, the reliability of the flame detection by the photosensitive sensor can be improved against mispositioning of the orifice plate, which can occur especially during mounting. If the orifice plate is transparent, light can also pass beyond the edge of the light opening from the inner combustion region to the photosensitive sensor. If the illumination area defined by the light opening is larger than the reference illumination area defined by at least one of the two air inlet openings, the tolerance to misalignment of the orifice plate is also increased. The reference illumination area can be defined as the area which lies in the plane of the photosensitive sensor and is illuminated from the inner combustion region by a reference opening in the form of one of the at least two air inlet openings, which are not designed as a light opening, if the reference opening would be brought to the position intended for the light opening. If the photosensitive sensor is within the reference illumination area, reliable flame detection is possible because it is illuminated. If, however, the photosensitive sensor is outside the reference illumination area, for example due to incorrect positioning of the orifice plate during burner mounting, reliable flame detection is not possible. The illumination area defined by the light opening itself can be determined in the same way as the reference illumination area. The illumination area may be larger than the reference illumination area due to the different shape of the light opening from the other air inlet openings, or at least have a larger tolerance to misalignments of the orifice plate, in particular rotations. If the orifice plate is transparent, the illumination area is essentially unlimited. A distinction between light opening and air inlet opening is purely formal for a transparent orifice plate due to the unlimited illumination area. It is conceivable, for example, that the “light opening” is located so far away from the photosensitive sensor that it can only be reached by light rays from the inner combustion region that have passed through the transparent material of the transparent orifice plate. This case should also be explicitly regarded as the passage of light through the light opening from the inner combustion region to the photosensitive sensor arranged in the outer region. The light opening and the air inlet openings can, for example, be subsequently punched, cut, milled, drilled, lasered or inserted into the orifice plate in another manufacturing process known to the person skilled in the art. Depending on the material selected for the orifice plate, it is also possible to produce the orifice plate directly with the openings in a casting process, in particular an injection moulding process.
Alternatively, in the case of a transparent orifice plate, it is also possible for the orifice plate to include a light opening which, in the absence of an opening that can be passed by air, does not simultaneously serve as an air inlet opening. In this case, the light opening may be defined as the area of the transparent orifice plate through which the light passes through the transparent material of the orifice plate from the inner combustion region to the photosensitive sensor arranged in the outer region. In the case described above, where the light opening of a transparent orifice plate does not serve as an air inlet opening at the same time, it may also be provided that the orifice plate has at least one air inlet opening.
It may be useful to provide that the orifice plate consists of a metallic material or a heat-resistant plastic or a transparent mineral. A heat-resistant plastic material suitable for the application at hand may, for example, belong to the class of polyether sulfones. Polyether sulfones can show a high transparency paired with stiffness and temperature resistance. A suitable transparent mineral may, for example, be mica.
It may be advantageous that the at least two air inlet openings with respect to their respective centers in the plane of the orifice plane jointly define a geometric pattern with a symmetry rotation axis of order two or more. This arrangement allows a particularly uniform supply of combustion air to the inner combustion region through the orifice plate.
Furthermore, it may be provided that the light opening consists of a plurality of individual openings separated from one another. By providing several individual openings separated from each other, which together form the light opening, the illumination area defined by the light opening can be particularly large in the plane of the photosensitive sensor. Forms for possible individual openings or the light opening as a whole are, for example, rosette forms, star forms, gridded forms, unstructured forms, forms from geometric elements such as circles, rectangles and triangles, and variations of absolutely symmetrical basic forms. In any case, however, the given pressure loss at the light opening must always be guaranteed with sufficient stability of the orifice plate.
It may be useful to provide that the individual openings, which together form the light opening, form a grid pattern. Providing a grid pattern in the area of the reference illumination area defined by the light opening ensures a substantially uniform brightness of the light emitted from the inner region through the light opening. This enables steady signal detection by the photosensitive sensor, irrespective of any incorrect positioning of the orifice plate, which is advantageous for flame detection. The outer edge of the grid pattern can resemble a circular ring segment, for example, so that the orifice plate has a particularly high tolerance with respect to twisting during mounting. Furthermore, the outer edge of the grid pattern can be regarded as the edge of the light opening. For example, the grid pattern can be regular.
Furthermore, it may be provided that the light opening comprises at least sections of slot-like regions. Also by providing sections of slot-like regions, the illumination area defined by the light opening can be enlarged compared to a reference illumination area. In particular, the provision of sections of slot-like regions makes it particularly easy to compensate for incorrect positioning of the orifice plate, particularly with regard to twisting of the orifice plate during mounting.
Furthermore, it may be provided that the orifice plate is at least partially thermally insulated with respect to other components of the burner. By a thermal insulation of the orifice plate against other components of the burner can reduce the temperature load on the orifice plate, so that more temperature-sensitive materials, which are usually cheaper or easier to process, can be used to manufacture the orifice plate. The thermal insulation of the orifice plate can, for example, be provided in the form of seals on the outer edge of the orifice plate against other components of the burner which limit the inner combustion region.
This disclosure is described in the following with reference to the accompanying drawings on the basis of preferred embodiments.
It shows:
In the following description of the drawings, identical reference numerals denote identical or similar components.
The ramifications of the light opening 28 recognizable in
If a suitable transparent material is chosen as the material for the orifice plate 14, the light opening 28 may preferably be designed such that its external shape is identical to the external shapes of the other air inlet openings 22, 24, 26. This has the advantage that the orifice plate 14 is particularly easy to manufacture. Due to the transparency of the orifice plate 14, the resulting illumination area is essentially unlimited, regardless of the shape of the light opening 28, since light can pass through the entire orifice plate 14.
The features of the disclosure as described above, in the drawings as well as in the claims can be essential for the realization either individually or in any combination.
10 burner
10′ burner
12 vehicle heater
14 orifice plate
14′ orifice plate
16 inner combustion region
16′ inner combustion region
18 outer region
18′ outer region
20 photosensitive sensor
22 air inlet opening
22′ center
24 air inlet opening
24′ center
26 air inlet opening
26′ center
28 light opening
28′ center
28″ light opening
38 symmetry rotation axis
40 reference opening
42 fuel supply
44 flame
46 deflecting device
48 first edge beam
50 second edge beam
52 plane
54 offset
56 insulating seal
58 wall
60 nozzle
62 nozzle opening
64 edge
66 opening
68 opening
70 mica disc
72 rivet
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2017 104 769.7 | Mar 2017 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/055481 | 3/6/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2018/162486 | 9/13/2018 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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PCT International Search Report, PCT/EP2018/055481, dated Jun. 14, 2018, 6 pages. |
PCT Written Opinion, PCT/EP2018/055481, dated Jun. 14, 2018, 6 pages [English Language Translation Only]. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20200011527 A1 | Jan 2020 | US |