Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6396037
-
Patent Number
6,396,037
-
Date Filed
Friday, November 3, 200025 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, May 28, 200223 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Fulbright & Jaworski L.L.P.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 219 746
- 219 747
- 219 748
- 219 750
- 219 695
- 219 696
- 219 756
- 333 21 A
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
The invention provides a dielectric heating device. The device includes a plurality of electrically conductive side walls which are electrically interconnected in use and arranged in series to define a heating cavity. At least one pair of adjacent side walls has its walls inclined to each other at a corner having an included angle selected from the group consisting of acute angles and obtuse angles. At least one electromagnetic power source capable of emitting electromagnetic radiation suitable for dielectric heating is arranged to feed waves of such radiation into the cavity with circular polarization of the waves, to cause the cavity to act as a multimode resonant heating cavity.
Description
THIS INVENTION relates to a dielectric heating device. More particularly, it relates to a dielectric heating device suitable for microwave heating, and to an electromagnetic power source.
According to the invention, there is provided a dielectric heating device, the device including:
a plurality of electrically conductive side walls which are electrically interconnected in use and arranged in series to define a heating cavity, at least one pair of adjacent side walls being inclined to each other at a corner having an included angle selected from the group consisting of acute angles and obtuse angles; and
at least one electromagnetic power source capable of emitting electromagnetic radiation suitable for dielectric heating, the power source being arranged to feed waves of such radiation into the cavity with circular polarization of the waves, to cause the cavity to act as a multimode resonant heating cavity.
The heating cavity may be a heating cavity as described in international patent application number PCT/NL97/00282 published under number WO 97/44988, the contents thereof being incorporated herein by reference.
The electromagnetic power source may be capable of emitting electromagnetic waves in the form of microwaves suitable for cooking foodstuffs; and the device may thus be in the form of a microwave oven. In a preferred embodiment of the invention the electromagnetic power source may include a microwave generator, eg a magnetron of a conventional microwave oven, or the like, and a waveguide having an inlet opening connected to the microwave generator, the waveguide also being connected to an inlet port into the heating cavity, and the waveguide being constructed to convert the linear polarization of the microwaves to a circular polarization thereof, and to guide the microwaves having the circular polarization through the inlet port into the cavity. In other words, the waveguide may thus be arranged to convert electromagnetic waves which have a linear polarization to a resultant electromagnetic wave feed whose waves have a circular polarization and which are fed via the inlet port into the cavity.
The waveguide may be hollow and circular-cylindrical in shape, having an end wall and a curved side wall, the waveguide containing, in its interior, at least one conversion formation for converting microwaves having a linear polarization to microwaves having a circular polarization, the inlet opening of the waveguide being through the curved side wall thereof and the waveguide having an open end for feeding microwaves into the inlet port of the cavity. The conversion formations may be in the form of two panels in the form of blades or plates which extend radially inwardly from opposed inner sides of the circular cylindrical waveguide. Accordingly, the waveguide may include a pair of the conversion formations in the form of diametrically opposed flattened elongated panels, each panel projecting radially inwardly from the inner wall of the cylinder of the waveguide and having a long dimension extending lengthwise along the cylinder, the panels being coplanar and the radially inner edges of the panels being opposed to, and diametrically spaced from, each other. The invention thus extends to an electromagnetic radiation feed arrangement for a dielectric heating device which includes a hollow circular cylindrical waveguide as herein described.
In other embodiments, the waveguide may be in the form of a hollow elongate rectangular waveguide including a microwave inlet which is typically located at a waveguide end wall or at a corner of the waveguide between its ends. An electromagnetic feed from the source inlet may have a linear polarization, the inlet opening of the waveguide being arranged so that the resultant polarization of the waves in the hollow rectangular waveguide is circular. For example, the waveguide may be a hollow box of elongate-rectangular shape, the inlet opening of the waveguide being through a corner of the waveguide between two side walls of the waveguide, at a position between the ends of the waveguide, one end of the waveguide being open for feeding microwaves into the inlet port of the cavity. Instead, the waveguide may be a hollow box of elongate-rectangular shape, the waveguide having an open end for feeding microwaves into the inlet port of the cavity, the opposite end of the waveguide having a wall with a rectangular opening therethrough, the peripheral edges of the rectangular opening being inclined at an angle to the peripheral edges of said wall at the opposite end of the waveguide, a box-like compartment having an open end registering with and communicating with said rectangular opening being mounted on said wall at the opposite end of the waveguide, and the inlet opening of the waveguide being through a wall of the box-like compartment parallel to the long dimension of the waveguide. The invention thus also extends to an electromagnetic radiation feed arrangement for a dielectric heating device which includes a hollow rectangular waveguide as herein described.
It is to be appreciated that the waveguides may be used to feed circularly polarized waves into a heating cavity of any shape or size, e.g. a cavity with a square outline, pentagonal outline, or the like. Preferably, however, the heating cavity is pentagonal in plan view outline when viewed from above in horizontal section.
The invention extends also to an electromagnetic power source capable of emitting electromagnetic radiation suitable for dielectric heating, the power source including an electromagnetic radiation generator which generates electromagnetic waves having linear polarization, and a waveguide having an inlet opening connected to the generator, the waveguide being constructed to convert the linear polarization of the electromagnetic waves to circular polarization thereof and to guide the waves away from the generator.
The electromagnetic radiation generator may be a microwave generator, the power source optionally having a construction as described above with reference to the dielectric heating device of the present invention.
The invention is now described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings.
In the drawings,
FIG. 1
shows a three-dimensional view of a dielectric heating device in accordance with the invention;
FIG. 2
shows an axial view of an electromagnetic power source of the device of
FIG. 1
, along line II—II in
FIG. 3
;
FIG. 3
shows a longitudinal sectional view of the electromagnetic power source of
FIG. 2
along line III—III in
FIG. 2
;
FIG. 4
shows a three dimensional view of a hollow circular-cylindrical waveguide, in accordance with the invention, of the electromagnetic power source of
FIGS. 2 and 3
;
FIG. 5
shows a further embodiment of an electromagnetic power source with a hollow box-like elongate-rectangular waveguide in accordance with the invention; and
FIG. 6
shows a yet further embodiment of an electromagnetic power source with a hollow box-like elongate-rectangular waveguide in accordance with the invention.
Referring first to
FIG. 1
of the drawings, reference numeral
10
generally indicates a dielectric heating device in accordance with the invention. The device
10
includes an electromagnetic power source
12
(omitted from
FIG. 1
but see
FIGS. 2
to
3
), and heating cavity
14
defined by electrically conductive vertical cavity side walls
1
6
and top and bottom cavity walls
18
,
20
respectively. As described in more detail below, the electromagnetic power source is operable to feed electromagnetic waves which have a circular polarization into the heating cavity
14
.
The heating device
10
is a microwave oven which may be used in both domestic and industrial applications for heating or cooking foodstuffs. Accordingly, conventional control circuitry with its associated control panel
22
is provided for controlling operation of the device
10
. Likewise, the heating device
10
includes a housing (whose side walls and roof are omitted for ease of illustration) generally indicated by reference numeral
24
and an access door
26
which forms one of the vertical cavity walls
16
of the cavity
14
. The vertical cavity walls
16
which define the heating cavity
14
are arranged so that, in horizontal section, the cavity
14
has a pentagonal plan view outline. It is however to be appreciated that the vertical cavity walls
16
may define an outline of any shape e.g. rectangular, hexagonal, octagonal, or the like.
Referring now in particular to
FIGS. 2
to
4
of the drawings, the electromagnetic power source
12
is arranged to generate electromagnetic radiation in the form of microwaves by means of a conventional magnetron
28
via its antenna
30
. The magnetron
28
is a conventional magnetron of the type used in conventional microwave ovens. The electromagnetic power source
12
is connected to a hollow circularcylindrical waveguide
32
, in accordance with the invention, which couples the magnetron
28
to an inlet port
31
provided in the top wall
18
(see FIG.
1
).
The cylindrical waveguide
32
has an inlet opening
34
which acts as an antenna inlet, inwardly through which the antenna
30
of the magnetron
28
projects, thereby to induce electromagnetic radiation in the form of microwaves within the interior of the cylindrical waveguide
32
. The microwaves produced by the magnetron
28
are linearly polarized when fed into the cylindrical waveguide
32
.
The cylindrical waveguide
32
includes a pair of conversion formations
35
which are diametrically opposed panels in the form of coplanar plates or blades which project radially inwardly and extend lengthwise along the waveguide
32
. The conversion formations
35
are arranged to act to convert the linear polarization of the waves generated by the magnetron
28
to waves which have a circular polarization. The waves having the circular polarization are then guided into the heating cavity
14
via the inlet port
31
. The waveguide
32
has a curved side wall, an open end provided with a flange, via which open end the waves of circular polarization are guided into the port
31
, and a closed end provided with an end wall opposite the open end. The antenna inlet opening
34
is between the closed end and the formations
35
, the formations
35
in turn being between the inlet opening
34
and the open end having the flange.
Referring to
FIG. 5
of the drawings, reference numeral
50
generally indicates a hollow box-like rectangular waveguide, in accordance with the invention, for guiding microwaves from a magnetron
28
to the inlet port
31
leading into the heating cavity
14
(see FIG.
1
). Unlike the waveguide
32
, the waveguide
50
is rectangular in cross-sectional outline and its inlet opening
34
is provided at a corner between two side walls of the waveguide
50
, between its ends. The antenna
30
of the magnetron
28
projects into the inlet opening
34
and generates linearly polarized waves which, due to the angle of entry of the microwaves into the interior of the waveguide
50
, which angle is established by routine experimentation, and the dimensions of the waveguide
50
, produce circularly polarized waves which travel and are guided along the waveguide
50
into the heating cavity
14
, the waveguide
50
being closed by a wall at one end and open at the other end for feeding the circularly polarized waves into the port
31
.
Referring in particular to
FIG. 6
of the drawings, reference numeral
60
generally indicates a further embodiment of a hollow box-like elongate-rectangular waveguide, also in accordance with the invention.
The wave guide
60
comprises a hollow elongate-rectangular feeder or guide portion
62
having an end wall
64
on which is mounted an open-ended box-like compartment
65
. The end wall
64
has a rectangular opening
66
therethrough which corresponds in shape and dimensions to the open end of the compartment
65
, the open end of the compartment
65
registering with the opening
66
. The guide portion
62
is open at its end remote from the compartment
65
for feeding microwaves, guided from the compartment
65
along the guide portion
62
to the open end of the guide portion
62
, into the port
31
of the cavity
14
. The peripheral edges of the opening
66
are inclined at an angle to the peripheral edges of the end wall
64
, and the corners of the opening
66
are located respectively on the peripheral edges of the wall
64
. In use electromagnetic waves can flow freely between the interiors of the guide portion
62
and compartment
65
. An inlet opening into the waveguide
60
is provided by an antenna inlet
34
for receiving the antenna
30
of a magnetron
28
(see FIGS.
2
and
3
). The inlet
34
is through a wall
67
of the compartment
65
, which wall
67
is parallel to the long dimension of the guide portion
62
. In use, the waveguide
60
converts linearly polarized microwaves fed by the antenna into the compartment
65
into circularly polarized waves which travel from the compartment
65
along the guide portion
62
into the port
31
of the cavity
14
. The inclination of the edges of the opening
66
to the peripheral edges of the wall
64
is selected by routine experimentation to achieve this conversion of linear to circular polarization.
The invention, as illustrated, acts to provide an improved dielectric heating device
10
in which electromagnetic waves which are circularly polarized are fed into the heating cavity
14
. The circularly polarized electromagnetic waves encourage the heating cavity
14
to act as a multi-mode resonant heating cavity, thereby enhancing uniformity of the heating process within the cavity
14
. Further, the waveguides
32
,
50
,
60
provide relatively simple conversions means for converting electromagnetic waves which have a linear polarization to waves which have a circular polarization. As construction of the waveguides
32
,
50
,
60
is relatively simple, manufacturing costs of the heating device
10
need not be materially increased by use thereof.
Claims
- 1. A dielectric heating device, the device including:a plurality of electrically conductive side walls which are electrically interconnected in use and arranged in series to define a heating cavity, at least one pair of adjacent side walls being inclined to each other to define an included angle selected from the group consisting of acute angles and obtuse angles; and at least one electromagnetic power source capable of emitting electromagnetic radiation suitable for dielectric heating, the electromagnetic power source being arranged to feed electromagnetic waves of such radiation into the cavity to cause the cavity to act as a multimode resonant heating cavity, the electromagnetic power source including a microwave generator which generates microwaves having linear polarization, and a waveguide to guide the microwaves away from the microwave generator into the heating cavity, the waveguide being hollow and circular-cylindrical in shape with a curved side wall and having an inlet opening connected to the microwave generator and the wave guide containing a pair of diametrically opposed conversion formations projecting radially inwardly from the curved side wall to convert the linear polarization of the microwaves to circular polarization thereof.
- 2. A device as claimed in claim 1, in which the inlet opening of the waveguide is through the curved side wall of the waveguide.
- 3. A device as claimed in claim 1, in which the waveguide has a closed end and an open end opposite the closed end for feeding the electromagnetic waves into the heating cavity.
- 4. A device as claimed in claim 1, in which each conversion formation is in the form of a flattened elongate panel having a long dimension extending lengthwise along the circular-cylindrical waveguide, the panels being coplanar and radially inner edges of the panels being opposed to and diametrically spaced from each other.
- 5. A device as claimed in claim 1, in which the microwave generator is a magnetron having an antenna which projects through the inlet opening of the waveguide, into the hollow interior of the waveguide.
- 6. A device as claimed in claim 1, which is in the form of a microwave oven.
- 7. An electromagnetic power source capable of emitting electromagnetic radiation suitable for dielectric heating, the electromagnetic power source including a microwave generator which generates microwaves having linear polarization, and a waveguide to guide the microwaves away from the microwave generator, the waveguide being hollow and circular-cylindrical in shape with a curved side wall and having an inlet opening connected to the microwave generator and the wave guide containing a pair of diametrically opposed conversion formations projecting radially inwardly from the curved side wall to convert the linear polarization of the microwaves to circular polarization thereof.
- 8. An electromagnetic power source as claimed in claim 7, in which the inlet opening of the waveguide is through the curved side wall of the waveguide.
- 9. An electromagnetic power source as claimed in claim 7, in which the waveguide has a closed end and an open end opposite the closed end.
- 10. An electromagnetic power source as claimed in claim 7, in which each conversion formation is in the form of a flattened elongate panel having a long dimension extending lengthwise along the circular-cylindrical waveguide, the panels being coplanar and radially inner edges of the panels being opposed to and diametrically spaced from each other.
- 11. An electromagnetic power source as claimed in claim 7, in which the microwave generator is a magnetron having an antenna which projects through the inlet opening of the waveguide, into the hollow interior of the waveguide.
- 12. A dielectric heating device, the device including:a plurality of electrically conductive side walls which are electrically interconnected in use and arranged in series to define a heating cavity, at least one pair of adjacent side walls being inclined to each other to define an included angle selected from the group consisting of acute angles and obtuse angles; and at least one electromagnetic power source capable of emitting electromagnetic radiation suitable for dielectric heating, the electromagnetic power source being arranged to feed electromagnetic waves of such radiation into the cavity to cause the cavity to act as a multimode resonant heating cavity, the electromagnetic power source including a microwave generator which generates microwaves having linear polarization, and a waveguide to guide the microwaves away from the microwave generator into the heating cavity, the waveguide being a hollow box of rectangular transverse section and having an inlet opening connected to the microwave generator, the inlet opening being arranged, and the waveguide being dimensioned, to convert the linear polarization of the microwaves to circular polarization thereof.
- 13. A device as claimed in claim 12, in which the inlet opening is through a corner of the waveguide between two side walls of the waveguide, at a position between opposite ends of the waveguide, one end of the waveguide being open for feeding the microwaves into the heating cavity.
- 14. A device as claimed in claim 12, in which the waveguide has an open end for feeding the microwaves into the heating cavity, an opposite end of the waveguide having an end wall with an opening therethrough and to which a box-like compartment inclined at an angle to peripheral edges of the end wall and in communication with the opening in the end wall is mounted, with the inlet opening being in a wall of the box-like compartment which is parallel to an axial dimension of the waveguide.
- 15. A device as claimed in claim 12, in which the microwave generator is a magnetron having an antenna which projects through the inlet opening of the waveguide.
- 16. An electromagnetic power source capable of emitting electromagnetic radiation suitable for dielectric heating, the electromagnetic power source including a microwave generator which generates microwaves having linear polarization, and a waveguide to guide the microwaves away from the microwave generator, the waveguide being a hollow box of rectangular transverse section and having an inlet opening connected to the microwave generator, the inlet opening being arranged, and the waveguide being dimensioned, to convert the linear polarization of the microwaves to circular polarization thereof.
- 17. An electromagnetic power source as claimed in claim 16, in which the inlet opening is through a corner of the waveguide between two side walls of the waveguide, at a position between opposite ends of the waveguide, one end of the waveguide being open.
- 18. An electromagnetic power source as claimed in claim 16, in which the waveguide has an open end and an opposite end of the waveguide has an end wall with an opening therethrough and to which a box-like compartment inclined at an angle to peripheral edges of the end wall and in communication with the opening in the end wall is mounted, with the inlet opening being in a wall of the box-like compartment which is parallel to an axial dimension of the waveguide.
- 19. An electromagnetic power source as claimed in claim 16, in which the microwave generator is a magnetron having an antenna which projects through the inlet opening of the waveguide.
Priority Claims (1)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
| 99/6911 |
Nov 1999 |
SA |
|
US Referenced Citations (6)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
| 2 318 039 |
Jun 1998 |
GB |
| 63-317068 |
Dec 1988 |
JP |
| WO 9744988 |
Nov 1997 |
WO |