This application claims priority on International Application No. PCT/EP2004/053267, filed Dec. 3, 2004, which claims priority on Italian Application No. VA2003A000046 filed Dec. 4, 2003.
The present invention concerns a domestic oven of the type comprising heating means, a gas sensor connected to a central processing and control unit and a user interface connected to said central processing unit by means of which the user can set the type of food placed in the oven compartment. The present invention also concerns a cooking process that uses the aforesaid oven.
Such a type of known oven is described for example in U.S. Pat. No. 4,331,855 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,463,238. Said ovens with one or more gas sensors have been designed in order to make it simpler to use domestic ovens in which, traditionally, methods for setting the cooking time are based mainly on recipes and not on the actual process for cooking the food.
The aim of the present invention is, by monitoring the gases emitted by the food during cooking, to provide an oven that makes it possible to understand and therefore to communicate to the user the actual degree of cooking of the food (well cooked, lightly cooked, over-cooked, becoming burnt) and, if necessary, to interact with the control of said oven with the aim of automatically achieving a desired cooking level, at the same time preventing the food from burning.
This aim is achieved by means of an oven having the characteristics specified in the attached main claim.
According to another characteristic of the present invention, the gas sensor is positioned in an optimal configuration, i.e. placed in the intake duct of the oven. Positioning the sensor correctly is not in fact easy, since it is exposed to dirt from the oven and to the high cooking temperatures of foods. The position of the sensor also significantly influences the type of signal supplied by said sensor. The above-mentioned position has been found to be optimal. The invention involves the use of a gas sensor of MOS type (Metal Oxide Semiconductor), already used for automatic cooking in some microwave ovens. It should be understood that other types of sensors, for example MOSFET (Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field-Effect) could be used.
The signal from the gas sensor is subject to pre-filtering through a filter with characteristics (bandwidth, attenuation, phase, etc.) depending on the food type. As a consequence of this operation, the signal is analysed with the aim of demonstrating some characteristics that can be correlated with the cooking of the food.
Further advantages and characteristics of an oven according to the present invention will be obvious from the following detailed description, supplied purely as a non-limitative example, with reference to the attached drawings in which:
With reference to the drawings, the reference number 10 is used to indicate the sensor positioned inside a duct C of an oven F; the cooking vapours that leave via the duct C therefore pass through the sensor.
This solution makes it possible for the sensor not to be directly exposed to the cooking gases and therefore not to be soiled by any fat splashes; at the same time it will be subject to lower temperatures than if it were positioned inside the oven. This positioning ensures that the distance from the food is a fair compromise between the solution in which the sensor is placed immediately next to the food (inside the compartment) and that in which it is placed in a suitable chamber outside the compartment and connected by means of suitable tubing. The gas sensor used in the tests carried out by the applicant is sensor model ST-MW2 produced by FIS.
According to the invention, the oven F is provided with a user interface 12 (
The processing of the signal provides first of all for the signal to be filtered. Once the signal is obtained from the sensor 10, by sampling at homogeneous intervals equal, for example, to 1 second, pre-filtering has to be applied to it. Good results have been achieved by applying a moving-window filter with an amplitude equal to 30 samples. The amplitude of filtering depends on the food type being considered. This filtering algorithm can be replaced by other methods.
As concerns the chosen moving-window filter, its output at the “ith” moment depends on the samples acquired within the time interval preceding said ith moment and with dimensions equal to the amplitude of the filter, in the case cited, therefore, equal to 30 samples:
Ŷj
where
is the actual signal at the moment Tj.
By processing the signal Y we get the following signal F(t):
illustrated in
α and β can assume values other than 1 and can be obtained by experimentation in relation to the food type placed in the oven compartment.
The processed signal produced in this way reaches its minimum in a period of time when the food (pizza in the example described) is being cooked, and the gradient of this signal indicates the degree of cooking. A formula for evaluating the gradient can for example be:
where K is a constant other than zero.
If P(t) supplies negative values, the function F(t) has a negative gradient as a result and this coincides with the phases prior to the optimal cooking moment. If P(t) takes values close to zero we are close to optimal cooking, i.e. to the minimum of the function F(t). Assuming that P(t) has highly positive values, there is an indication of a very advanced or burnt state of cooking.
By way of example, taking the constant K to be equal to 1, the following experimental intervals are obtained for cooking the pizza:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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VA03A0046 | Dec 2003 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2004/053267 | 12/3/2004 | WO | 00 | 3/7/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/055670 | 6/16/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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1424874 | Jun 2004 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070241099 A1 | Oct 2007 | US |