1. Field of the Invention
This application relates generally to a dryer for minimizing moisture entrained within a refrigerant circulated through a refrigeration cycle and, more specifically to a dryer including a plurality of outputs arranged to provide a predetermined preference of the refrigerant to be discharged through each of the outputs and a refrigeration appliance including such a dryer.
2. Description of Related Art
Refrigeration appliances include a refrigeration system that uses a refrigerant to provide a cooling effect to a temperature-controlled environment within a compartment of the refrigeration appliance. During assembly the refrigeration system is sealed but moisture from the ambient assembly environment is absorbed by, and becomes entrained within the refrigerant. Since portions of the refrigeration system, including the refrigerant, experience temperatures below the freezing temperature of water the moisture entrained within the refrigerant could potentially freeze and obstruct the flow of refrigerant through the refrigeration system.
To minimize the amount of moisture entrained within the refrigerant, a dryer storing a desiccant is included within the refrigeration system. Refrigerant introduced into the dryer is exposed to a desiccant and at least a portion of the moisture from the refrigerant is absorbed by the desiccant. Much of the moisture is removed from the refrigerant the first couple of times the refrigerant passes through the dryer, but since the refrigeration system is sealed during assembly the dryer can not be removed once it has outlived its useful life. Thus, the dryer should not adversely affect operation of the refrigeration system during normal operation of the refrigeration appliance.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for a dryer to be included in a refrigeration appliance for minimizing a moisture content of a refrigerant used by a refrigeration system of the refrigeration appliance to provide a cooling effect and a refrigeration appliance including such a dryer. The dryer can discharge the refrigerant through a plurality of outlets with a predetermined preference of the refrigerant to discharge the refrigerant through each of the outlets.
According to one aspect, the subject application involves a dryer for minimizing moisture entrained within a refrigerant used to provide a cooling effect to a temperature-controlled environment. The dryer includes a housing defining a drying chamber and a desiccant disposed within the drying chamber for removing at least a portion of the moisture from the refrigerant introduced into the drying chamber. An inlet is formed in the housing, the inlet being adapted to cooperate with a feed line supplying the refrigerant in a substantially liquid state to be introduced into the drying chamber. A first outlet is formed in the housing adjacent a lower region of the drying chamber when the drying chamber is viewed in an operational orientation. At least a portion of the refrigerant introduced into the drying chamber and exposed to the desiccant is to be discharged from the drying chamber through the first outlet and delivered to a first heat exchanger with a relatively-high internal pressure. A second outlet is also formed in the housing at an elevation vertically above the first outlet when the dryer is viewed in the operational orientation for discharging at least a portion of the refrigerant introduced into the drying chamber to be delivered to a second heat exchanger with a relatively-low internal pressure. The elevation of the second outlet relative to the first outlet promotes the discharge of the refrigerant through the first outlet to be delivered to the heat exchanger with the relatively-high internal pressure instead of through the second outlet.
According to another aspect, the subject application involves a refrigeration appliance that includes an insulated compartment for storing food items in a temperature-controlled environment, a first evaporator, and a second evaporator in thermal communication with the insulated compartment to provide a cooling effect within the insulated compartment. An internal operating pressure of the first evaporator is greater than an internal operating pressure of the second evaporator. A compressor is provided for elevating a pressure of a refrigerant in a substantially-gaseous phase, and a condenser at least partially condenses the compressed refrigerant into a liquid phase. A dryer is provided for at least partially removing moisture entrained within the refrigerant. The dryer includes a drying chamber and a desiccant disposed within the drying chamber for removing at least a portion of the moisture from the refrigerant exposed to the desiccant. An inlet is formed in the drying chamber for introducing the refrigerant in a substantially-liquid phase into the drying chamber, and a first outlet is formed in the drying chamber and is in communication with a conduit for transporting the refrigerant from the dryer to be delivered to the first evaporator. A second outlet is also formed in the drying chamber and is in communication with another conduit for transporting the refrigerant from the dryer to be delivered to the second evaporator. An arrangement of the second outlet relative to the first outlet establishes a preference of the refrigerant to be discharged through the first outlet to be delivered to the first evaporator with the internal operating pressure that is greater than the internal operating pressure of the second evaporator. A valve provided to the refrigeration appliance is operable to selectively interrupt delivery of the refrigerant to the first evaporator.
The above summary presents a simplified summary in order to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the systems and/or methods discussed herein. This summary is not an extensive overview of the systems and/or methods discussed herein. It is not intended to identify key/critical elements or to delineate the scope of such systems and/or methods. Its sole purpose is to present some concepts in a simplified form as a prelude to the more detailed description that is presented later.
The invention may take physical form in certain parts and arrangement of parts, embodiments of which will be described in detail in this specification and illustrated in the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof and wherein:
Certain terminology is used herein for convenience only and is not to be taken as a limitation on the present invention. Relative language used herein is best understood with reference to the drawings, in which like numerals are used to identify like or similar items. Further, in the drawings, certain features may be shown in somewhat schematic form.
It is also to be noted that the phrase “at least one of”, if used herein, followed by a plurality of members herein means one of the members, or a combination of more than one of the members. For example, the phrase “at least one of a first widget and a second widget” means in the present application: the first widget, the second widget, or the first widget and the second widget. Likewise, “at least one of a first widget, a second widget and a third widget” means in the present application: the first widget, the second widget, the third widget, the first widget and the second widget, the first widget and the third widget, the second widget and the third widget, or the first widget and the second widget and the third widget.
A freezer door 12 is coupled to a wire basket disposed within an insulated freezer compartment 24 and is arranged vertically beneath the fresh food compartment 20. A handle 15 is provided to an externally-exposed side of the freezer door 12 to be grasped by a user and pulled outwardly to at least partially extract the freezer basket from within the freezer compartment 24, thereby making the contents of the freezer basket accessible. The freezer basket can be slidably mounted within the freezer compartment 24 by ball-bearing drawer slides such as those manufactured by Accuride International Inc., based in Santa Fe Springs, Calif. Pulling the handle 15 will move the freezer door 12 outwardly away from the freezer compartment 24 and cause the freezer basket to travel along a track defined by the slide rails to at least partially expose the contents of the freezer basket to a user standing in front of the refrigeration appliance 10.
As shown in
As shown in
Although the refrigeration appliance 10 has been described above is including both a fresh food compartment 20 and a freezer compartment 24, the refrigeration appliance 10 described herein is not so limited. Instead, alternate environments can include only a fresh food compartment 20, or only a freezer compartment 24, for example. Further, the illustrative examples discussed herein include an icemaker 26 that utilizes freezing fingers to which the ice pieces are to freeze. However, alternate embodiments can include any icemaker 26 capable of freezing water into individual ice pieces, such as by freezing water in a tray through convection. The refrigeration appliance 10 discussed herein can be configured in any desired manner, including a plurality of evaporators to which refrigerant is supplied to provide their respective cooling effects. For the sake of brevity the illustrative example including the chamber evaporator 46 in series with the ice making evaporator 50 and a separately supplied system evaporator 32 will continue to be discussed in detail below.
In addition to the evaporators 32, 46, 50 discussed above, the refrigeration circuit 56 shown in
Downstream of the eliminator tube 62, or downstream of the condenser 60 in the absence of the eliminator tube 28, a dryer 64 is installed to minimize the moisture entrained within the refrigerant circulating through the refrigeration circuit 56. The dryer 64 includes a hygroscopic desiccant that absorbs water from the liquid refrigerant. The desiccant can be any suitable material for minimizing the moisture content of the refrigerant such as a 100% molecular sieve desiccant beads, for example. The water content of the refrigerant is minimized the first few times the refrigerant is circulated through the refrigeration circuit 56, and accordingly the dryer 64, the dryer 64 remains in the refrigeration circuit 56 to avoid exposing the refrigerant to the ambient environment from where it can retain additional moisture.
A system capillary tube 66 is in fluid communication with the dryer 64 to transport refrigerant discharged through an outlet 68 to be delivered to the system evaporator 32. Likewise, an ice maker capillary tube 70 is also in fluid communication with the dryer 64 to transport refrigerant discharged through an outlet 72. The ice maker capillary tube 70 transports refrigerant to be delivered to at least an ice making evaporator 50 provided to the ice maker 20 for freezing water into the ice pieces, and optionally to a chamber evaporator 46 provided to the ice maker 20 for controlling a storage temperature to which ice pieces are exposed when stored in the ice bin 35.
An optional metering valve 74 can be disposed between the ice maker evaporator and the outlet 72 of the dryer 64. The metering valve 74 is configured to control the flow of refrigerant entering the ice making evaporator 50 and the optional chamber evaporator 46. The metering valve 74 allows the flow of refrigerant to the portion of the refrigeration circuit 56 including the ice making evaporator 50 (this portion being referred to hereinafter as the “Ice Maker Path”) to be regulated independently of the flow of refrigerant to the portion of the refrigeration circuit 56 including the system evaporator 32 (this portion being referred to hereinafter as the “System Path”) for controlling the temperature within at least one of the freezer compartment 24 and the fresh food compartment 20. Thus, the flow of refrigerant to the ice making evaporator 50, and optionally to the chamber evaporator 46 can be discontinued to terminate cooling of the freezing fingers and optionally the cooling effect provided by the chamber evaporator 46 even though the compressor 58 is operational and refrigerant is being delivered to the system evaporator 32. The delivery of refrigerant to the system evaporator 32 can be controlled by controlling operation of the compressor 58. Refrigerant is delivered to the system evaporator 32 when the compressor 58 is operational and is not delivered to the system evaporator 32 when the compressor 58 is off.
Due at least in part to the different operating temperatures of the system evaporator 32, ice making evaporator 50, and chamber evaporator 46, the pressure drop experienced by the refrigerant across the Ice Maker Path, or at least the pressure of the refrigerant returning from the Ice Maker Path can be different than the corresponding pressures from the System Path. For example, the pressure of the refrigerant returning from the Ice Maker Path may be greater than the pressure of the refrigerant returning from the System Path at a point 92 where the refrigerant returning from each path is combined. To minimize the effect of the higher-pressure refrigerant returning from the Ice Maker Path on the performance of the system evaporator 32 (i.e., by increasing the output pressure from the system evaporator 32 and thereby reducing the pressure drop across the system evaporator 32), an evaporator pressure regulator can optionally be disposed between the Ice Maker Path and the point 92 where the refrigerants returning from each path are combined. The optional evaporator pressure regulator can adjust the pressure of the refrigerant returning from the Ice Maker Path to approximately match the pressure of the refrigerant returning from the System Path.
With reference to
To minimize the effect of the different operating conditions within the evaporators 32, 46, 50 on the preference of the refrigerant being discharged from the dryer 64, the plurality of outlets 68, 72 from the dryer 64 can optionally be located at different positions relative to each other to ensure refrigerant is supplied to both the System Path and the Ice Maker Path in the presence of different operating conditions. For example, an embodiment of the dryer 64 in communication with the system capillary tube 66 and the ice maker capillary tube 70 (the portion of the refrigeration circuit 56 within a circle 96 in
The system outlet 68 is adapted to communicate with the system capillary tube 66 for outputting refrigerant to the System Path. Similarly, the ice maker outlet 72 is adapted to communicate with the ice maker capillary tube 70 for outputting refrigerant to the Ice Maker Path. Such a configuration of the system outlet 68 and the ice maker outlet 72 relative to the housing 100 of the dryer 64 is referred to herein as an “F-joint” because the housing 100, the system outlet 68 and the ice maker outlet 72 collectively form a structure having the general appearance of an upside down “F”.
The F-joint configuration of the dryer 64 and the outlets 68, 72 in communication with their respective capillary tubes 66, 70 promotes a substantially balanced preference of the refrigerant exiting the dryer 64 to be delivered to each of the System Path and the Ice Maker Path. For example, refrigerant can be discharged from the dryer 64 through the ice maker outlet 72 in a direction that is generally parallel with, and assisted by a force of gravity to promote the discharge of refrigerant leaving the dryer 64 through the ice maker outlet 72. However, according to alternate embodiments the dryer 64 can include any suitable shape and arrangement. It is sufficient if the system outlet 68 and the ice maker outlet 72 are provided at different locations on the dryer 64 to achieve a substantially balanced preference of the refrigerant to be discharged from both the system outlet 68 and the ice maker outlet 72.
A liquid level of the refrigerant within the dryer 64 falls to a level between the system and ice maker outlets 68, 72 when the dryer 64 is viewed in the operational orientation as a result of the refrigerant being discharged from the dryer 64 at a faster rate than the refrigerant is introduced thereto. For example, during ice making, the refrigerant is discharged through both the system outlet 68 and the ice maker outlet 72, and the liquid level of the refrigerant in the dryer 64 falls to a level that is between the two outlets 68, 72. When this occurs, the delivery of refrigerant to the system evaporator 32 can be temporarily disrupted while the metering valve 74 is open and ice is being made by the ice maker 26. When ice making (or at least the freezing of the ice pieces) is complete, the metering valve 74 can be closed, allowing the liquid level of the refrigerant to once again rise at least as high as the system outlet 68 while the compressor 58 is operational. The liquid level of refrigerant will typically exceed the height of the system outlet 68 under such conditions such that liquid refrigerant can once again be discharged through the system outlet 68, but not the ice maker outlet 72. The elevation of the system outlet 68 is vertically above a lowermost liquid level the refrigerant reaches within the drying chamber 109 while the refrigerant is being discharged. Similarly, the elevation of the system outlet 68 is vertically below an uppermost liquid level reached by the refrigerant within the drying chamber 109 while the refrigerant is not being discharged from the ice maker outlet 72 and/or system outlet 68.
The steps taken to control operation of the refrigeration circuit 56 discussed herein can optionally be executed by a controller 80 operatively connected to portions of the refrigeration circuit 56 to receive and/or transmit electronic control signals to those portions. For example, temperature sensors can optionally be wired to transmit signals indicative of sensed temperatures to the controller 80. According to alternate embodiment, any type of sensors such as position sensors, timers, etc. . . . can transmit feedback to the controller 80 for controlling operation of the refrigeration appliance 10. A microprocessor 82 provided to the controller 80 executing computer-executable instructions stored in a computer-readable memory 84 embedded in the microprocessor 82 can initiate transmission of an appropriate control signal from the controller 80 to cause an adjustment of the metering valve 74, compressor 58, or any other portion of the refrigeration circuit 56 to carry out the appropriate control operation.
In operation, the compressor 58 compresses the substantially-gaseous refrigerant to a high pressure, high-temperature refrigerant gas. As this refrigerant travels through the condenser 96 it cools and condenses into a high-pressure liquid refrigerant. The liquid refrigerant can then optionally flow through the eliminator tube 62 and into the dryer 64, which minimizes moisture entrained within the refrigerant. If ice is to be made by the ice maker 26, the metering valve 74 is opened by the controller 80, allowing refrigerant to be discharged through the ice maker outlet 72 of the dryer 64 in addition to the system outlet 68. If the liquid level within the dryer 64 falls below the system outlet 68 the refrigerant will be discharged through only the ice making outlet 72 until the liquid level of the refrigerant rises at least to the level of the system outlet 68, at which time the refrigerant can once again be discharged through the system outlet 68. When ice is not being made, the metering valve 74 can be closed by the controller 80. If the refrigeration cycle 56 is to provide a cooling effect to at least one of the fresh food and freezer compartments 20, 24, the compressor 58 is activated by the controller 80 and the refrigerant is discharged from the dryer 64 through the system outlet 68 to be delivered to the system evaporator 32, but not through the ice maker outlet 72 until the metering valve 74 is opened.
The refrigerant conveyed by the system capillary tube 66 transfers some of its thermal energy to refrigerant returning from the System Path via the system heat exchanger 86 and subsequently enters the system evaporator 32. In the system evaporator 32, the refrigerant expands and at least partially evaporates into a gas. During this phase change, the latent heat of vaporization is extracted from air being directed over fins and coils of the system evaporator 32, thereby cooling the air to be directed by the circulation fan 34 (
When ice is to be produced by the ice maker 20, the controller 80 can at least partially open the metering valve 74. Refrigerant from the dryer 64 delivered to the Ice Maker Path through capillary tube 70 provides thermal energy via ice maker heat exchanger 90 to the refrigerant returning from the Ice Maker Path. After passing through the metering valve 74 the refrigerant enters the ice making evaporator 50 where it expands and at least partially evaporates into a gas. The latent heat of vaporization required to accomplish the phase change is drawn from the ambient environment of the ice maker evaporator 50, thereby lowering the temperature of an external surface of the ice maker evaporator 50 to a temperature that is below 0° C. Water exposed to the external surface of the ice making evaporator 50 is frozen to form the ice pieces. The refrigerant exiting the ice making evaporator 50 enters chamber evaporator 46, where it further expands and additional liquid refrigerant is evaporated into a gas to cool the external surface of the chamber evaporator 46. An optional fan or other air mover can direct an airflow over the chamber evaporator 46 to cool the ambient environment of ice pieces stored in the ice bin 35 to minimize melting of those ice pieces.
Illustrative embodiments have been described, hereinabove. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the above devices and methods may incorporate changes and modifications without departing from the general scope of this invention. It is intended to include all such modifications and alterations within the scope of the present invention. Furthermore, to the extent that the term “includes” is used in either the detailed description or the claims, such term is intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising” as “comprising” is interpreted when employed as a transitional word in a claim.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/156,501, filed Feb. 28, 2009, which is incorporated in its entirety herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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61156501 | Feb 2009 | US |