Many commercial buildings have air handling units, usually placed on the roof of the building. An air handling unit of the prior art is generally shown in
As can be seen, a typical air handling unit includes an enclosure E with one or more doors D to allow personnel to gain access to the machinery inside the enclosure.
The air handling unit enclosure typically encloses heating, ventilation and air conditioning equipment (HVAC). Because the HVAC equipment is used to maintain the building's temperature, it is important that the enclosure E and doors D of the air handling unit do not allow the passage of air into or out of the air handling unit.
Because of this requirement, the air handling unit must be able to withstand the high external air pressure associated with gale force winds. Furthermore, the air pressure inside the air handling unit is typically lower than ambient air pressure outside the unit (sometimes by as much as six inches), and such a difference in air pressure can cause a pressure differential between the inside and outside of the unit equivalent to up to a 300 mph wind blowing against the unit and its doors. The doors must not leak air, even under such a high pressure.
In addition, the doors of the unit must have thermal insulation to prevent heat exchange between the outside and the inside of the unit.
Typical air handling units of the prior art are capable of withstanding six inches of pressure differential, but this is their limit.
In today's environment, there is a need for high-efficiency cooling in buildings. Such high-efficiency cooling requires a more efficient air handling unit, because colder air within the air handling unit means that less volume of air conditioned air is needed to maintain the building's temperature.
There is a need for a high-efficiency air handling unit with higher structural strength and more efficient thermal properties.
A door and frame combination for an air handling unit, the combination comprising:
(a) a frame;
(b) a hinged door engaging the frame, the door further comprising a front wall, rear wall, and side walls enclosing a hollow core and insulating material filling the hollow core; and
(c) a gasket between the door and the frame, the gasket further comprising a flexible gasket wall with anti-roll extensions.
A principal object and advantage of the present invention is that it provides higher structural strength with less door thickness than in previous doors.
Another principal object and advantage of the present invention is that it includes a special gasket which does not roll over when the door closes, thus producing an airtight seal.
The door and frame combination of the present invention is generally shown in the Figures as reference numeral 10.
The door and frame combination 10 comprises a frame 12; a hinged door 14 engaging the frame 12; and a gasket 16 between the door 14 and the frame 12. Optionally, the door may have a window 18 therein.
As may be more particularly seen in
Preferably the insulating material 28 is expanding polyurethane foam. This foam may be obtained readily from several sources, such as Flexible Products Company, 1007 Industrial Park Drive, Marietta, Ga. 30062, whose product is a polymeric diphenylmethane diisocyanate with chlorodifluoromethane.
In the preferred embodiment, the side walls 24 are two inches in width, to produce a door 14 two inches thick.
As can best be seen in
Preferably, the gasket has a friction-reducing material 16D on the gasket wall 16A. The friction-reducing material may be SANTOPRENE® thermoplastic rubber from Advanced Elastomer Systems, L.P., 388 South Main St., Akron, Ohio 44311; a thermoplastic resin from Minnesota General Polymers, 3500 W. Highway 13, Burnsville, Minn. 55337 (a propylene-ethylene copolymer); and Pro-Fax polymer (propylene-ethylene copolymer) from Himont, Inc., Three Little Falls Center, 2801 Centerville Rd., Wilmington, Del. 19850.
To produce additional protection against leakage of air around the door, the door 14 and frame 12 may have thermal pockets 30 filled with an insulating material, such as high-density polyurethane.
As the door 14 is closed against the frame 12, the anti-roll extensions 16B on the gasket 16 prevent the gasket from being rolled over by the door. This property is assisted by the friction-reducing material 16D on the gasket wall 16A. The result is that the gasket 16 is flattened between the door 14 and the frame 12, producing an air-tight seal.
If R13 polyurethane insulation is used within the hollow core 26 of the door 14, the door need only be two inches thick, rather than four inches, as in previous doors in air handling units. The polyurethane insulation also gives the door 14 rigidity and structural strength. The polyurethane insulation is applied as an expanding foam while the door is under pressure during the manufacturing process. It has been found that approximately eight minutes is required to keep the door under pressure to prevent undue expansion of the foam, followed by twenty-four hours of curing.
The door and frame combination has been tested at up to 14 inches of static pressure without leaking, as compared to six inches of static pressure for previous doors.
The present invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential attributes thereof, and it is therefore desired that the present embodiment be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, reference being made to the appended claims rather than to the foregoing description to indicate the scope of the invention.
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