I. Field of the Invention
The present invention refers to an improved kind of oven for cooking food, comprising a boiler provided to generate steam.
II. Description of the Related Art
Largely known in the art there are ovens, which are adapted to steam food, i.e. cook food by steaming, and which—further to being capable of cooking food by any of a number of traditional methods, and being provided with appropriate cooking devices and arrangements, accordingly—are adapted to also enable food to undergo a particular cooking mode by letting a flow of steam into the cooking cavity to saturate the interior thereof.
The basic features and characteristics of such ovens are extensively described, for example, in the German patent application no. 20307161.1, filed by this same Applicant, to which reference should therefore be made for greater convenience and brevity.
Ovens of this kind are also disclosed in great detail also in other publications, such as European patent EP 1 116 920 A2 and German utility model DE-GM 295 00 595.5.
The solutions that have been disclosed up to this moment generally show that—substantially—each gas burner provided to ensure heating of a respective steam generating boiler, is a means that is exactly sized to just cope with the intended use thereof. In other words, the members and parts used to govern or adjust such operating parameters as gas inflow and throughflow, fan flow-rate, and the like, and—above all—the size of the burner body are in all cases optimized just in view of complying with the requirements associated with a given, particular application, which the burner itself is intended for, so that they cannot be generally used in connection with steam-generating boilers of cooking ovens having even slightly different characteristics and boiler ratings.
This practically forces manufacturers involved in the production of this kind of cooking ovens into designing and manufacturing a really wide variety of boilers and—above all—related gas burner bodies. Now, it can be most readily appreciated that this necessity for such splitting-up effect to be introduced in both design and production processes does of course not fail to bring about obviously and considerably higher costs deriving from a poorer than desired production standardization, i.e. a circumstance that is quite familiar to all those skilled in the art, so that it certainly does not need any further explanation.
It would therefore be desirable, and it is actually a main purpose of the present invention, to provide a gas burner of the so-called premix kind, which is adapted to ensure heat outputs that are adjustable within a really wide range by adjusting burner-related variables that are not associated to or do not depend on the sizing of the same burner; accordingly, a single type of premix gas burner according to the present invention will be capable of being used in a wide variety of different oven models having respective different boiler ratings, without introducing or putting any appreciable penalty on the actual performance capabilities of any of such various oven types and models.
According to the present invention, these aims, along with further ones that will become apparent from the following disclosure, are reached in a kind of premix gas burner used to heat up steam-generating boilers in food cooking oven, as particularly intended for food service and mass-catering applications that incorporates the features and characteristics as defined and recited in the appended claims.
Advantages and features of the present invention will anyway be more readily understood from the description that is given below by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The present invention is essentially based on following considerations: since the main object lies in providing a kind of gas burner, which is potentially adapted to ensure heat outputs that may differ from each other even to a quite considerable extent, and in which, such widely varying heat outputs shall be adjustable by correspondingly controlling variables other than the size of the burner, the solution that has been searched for and found in this connection is based on defining some features of the burner that are effective in enhancing the efficiency thereof, while preferably reducing the space requirements, i.e. increasing the compactness thereof.
However, this aim can only be reached if combustion of the gas directly at the outflow port of the gas injector is avoided, while providing an intermediate pre-mixing region between the flame region and the injector outflow port.
It has in fact been found that, by providing such pre-mixing region upstream to, i.e. before the flame region, the gas jet is allowed to optimally pre-mix with the primary air being blown jointly with the same gas jet.
As a direct consequence thereof, such improved pre-mixing of the gas with the primary air has the effect of ensuring an optimum combustion of the same gas, resulting in a significant overall increase in the efficiency of the burner, all other functional and design characteristics of the burner remaining of course unaltered.
An oven for cooking food by steam according to the prior art (
Furthermore, one or more gas injectors 5 are associated to said fan 3 and the related delivery conduit, so as to be able to inject respective flows of fuel gas into the flow of air being blown by said fan 3 into said burner 2. Anyway, this technique is largely known as such in the art, so that it shall not be dealt with and illustrated any longer.
According to the prior art, such a gas burner is generally made to only comprise a single, almost totally sealed body, into which there is let a flow of gas mixed with primary air; this mixed air/gas flow exits the almost totally sealed body of the burner by passing through a number of perforations, or ports, provided in the surface of the same burner body, to be then ignited and burned just at the aperture of each such port, on the outside thereof.
In a totally different manner, the gas burner according to the present invention (
Said two bodies 6 and 7 are further arranged so as to be physically separated from each other, thereby forming a pre-mixing region 8 in the hollow gap so created and existing therebetween (
In addition, said second outer body 7 is in turn accommodated inside the initial portion of the outer flue conduit (
With particular reference to
A gas burner is in this way provided, in which the combustion air—as mixed with the gas being injected by the injectors 5—is let into the first inner body 6 to leave it through said first apertures 10 thereof. As mentioned above, in the following hollow gap existing between said two burner bodies there forms a premixing field that is effective in exalting air and gas mixing to quite remarkable an extent. The thus formed mixture is in turn ejected through the second apertures 11 provided in the surface of the second outer body 7, where it then burns.
Owing to the high efficiency, reached thanks to said full and thorough pre-mixing effect, it has been found that—normally—it is not necessary for all said second apertures 11 to be distributed all over the entire surface of the second outer body 7, since providing said apertures so as to solely cover a limited portion 12 of said surface proves fully adequate, actually.
More precisely, if the cylindrical side surface of the outer body 7 is developed, i.e. unfolded onto a plane, as this is shown in
It is further advantageous when said portion 12 is so arranged as to directly face said boiler 1 in the direction followed by the flue gases flowing towards it. To this purpose, said assembly comprised of said two bodies 6 and 7 is mounted with the axis X thereof lying orthogonally to the axis Y of the flow direction of the flue gases in said outer flue conduit 4 (
It is in this case particularly advantageous when said perforated portion 12 is in a way or another arranged so as to be entirely facing said outer conduit in the conveyance or flow direction Y of the flue gases and—to such purpose—an improved embodiment of the present invention is based on forming said second outer body 7 so that the section of said delimited portion 12 on a plane lying orthogonal to the axis X of said second outer body 7 develops by an angle that is not greater than 180° (
In an advantageous manner, said delimited portion 12 is so arranged and oriented on said second outer body 7 as to be fully, or at least prevailingly, facing the inner volume of said outer flue conduit 4, so that combustion of the air/gas mixture is able to directly occur right at the initial side of the flow-path along which the flue gases are conveyed towards said steam-generating boiler 1; this solution, in fact, proves effective in favouring an advantageously quick transfer of the hot flue gases into the steam-generating boiler 1, thereby improving the ultimate energy efficiency of the boiler to a still further extent.
Said two inner and outer burner bodies 6 and 7 can on the other hand be most easily provided with the use of readily available manufacturing techniques and materials. In this connection, it should be merely noticed that, as opposed to prior-art burners of this kind, in which the combustion surface of the burners is generally provided by a wire gauze or similar finely or thickly meshed metal kind of mantle, the two burner bodies 6 and 7 according to the present invention are preferably manufactured by a process involving a couple of distinct steps, in which:
From an industrial engineering point of view, such kind of manufacturing process may certainly be considered as a considerably simple, quick and—above all—low-cost one; however, it may have a kind of technologically conditioned impairing limitation in that calendering is a process that cannot be used, i.e. is not practicable when diameters are to be obtained, which are smaller than a given value.
It has in fact been found that—in view of overcoming such technologically determined limitation of the calendering process—the optimum diameter size to be selected for the above-cited first inner body 6 should be set at a value in excess of 40 mm (1.57 in).
It has on the other hand also been found that, notwithstanding such a technological restraint, pairs of inner-outer bodies having respective diameters can nevertheless be made, which, although being confined; i.e. delimited as far as the minimum size thereof is concerned—are still capable of ensuring sufficiently low heat output rates for the requirements arising from a combination thereof with even lowest-rated boilers to be adequately complied with, while, when appropriately supplied with suitable air/gas mixtures at adequate flow rates, and thanks to the remarkably high efficiency thereof, they are also capable of ensuring heat output rates coping with the requirements of boilers used in connection with ovens requiring high boiler ratings.
According to the present invention, therefore, a single type of burner is substantially provided, which combines a number of excellent properties ensuring a most desirable flexibility in the application and operation thereof, since
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PN07A0009 | Feb 2007 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1336565 | Ketler | Apr 1920 | A |
1349529 | Pattison | Aug 1920 | A |
1890642 | Edwards | Dec 1932 | A |
3605717 | Sauer | Sep 1971 | A |
3719180 | Pere | Mar 1973 | A |
4128388 | Freze | Dec 1978 | A |
4512327 | Stiegler | Apr 1985 | A |
20080190299 | Turrin et al. | Aug 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2460871 | Nov 2001 | CN |
295 00 595.5 | Apr 1995 | DE |
203 07 161.1 | Sep 2003 | DE |
1 116 920 | Jul 2001 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080190299 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |