The present invention relates to an electric blower for use in an air conditioner or the like coupled to a duct to supply an airflow necessary to a refrigerating cycle or the like in response to the duct condition.
There has been the kind of conventional electric blower that, observing always a fan rotation speed and the PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) signal for an electric motor to calculate the amount of airflow to compare the calculated amount of airflow with an amount of target airflow, corrects the control signal sent to the electric motor if there is a difference between the two, which is so-called a feedback control method. The technology is disclosed for instance in Japanese Patent Unexamined Publication No. H07-301450 (hereafter referred to as patent document 1).
However, owing to pulsations occurring inevitably in the airflow of electric blowers, conventional electric blowers cannot continue to operate stably matching the amount of target airflow with the calculated amount of airflow, but is operated always fluctuated in the rotation speed. Moreover, elements having big inertia such as the electric motor and fan included in the feedback control system could cause overshooting or depending on conditions the pulsation could be amplified to cause an unstable rotation speed fluctuating largely
The present invention aims at providing an electric blower to solve the above-mentioned drawbacks, which can operate stably keeping an amount of target airflow in response to conditions of duct.
To solve the above-mentioned drawbacks the electric blower of the present invention includes an electric motor, a blower with a fan driven to rotate by the electric motor, and a controller to control the electric motor. The controller comprises: a load-detector to detect output data on the magnitude of the load; a rotation-speed-calculator to calculate output data on the fan rotation speed required for the blower to discharge the amount of target airflow according to the magnitude of the load of the fan output from the load-detector and the given amount of target airflow; a rotation-speed-selector to switch over the rotation speed from the load-detection-rotation-speed determined previously to the rotation speed required for the blower to discharge the amount of target airflow according to the data output from the rotation speed calculator; and a timing-device to determine the operation timing for the load-detector, rotation-speed-calculator and rotation-speed-selector respectively.
The configuration can perform a stable operation for the controlled airflow without amplifying the pulsation in the rotation speed, because the timing device is allowed to work according to need such as before the operation starts or when a load condition varies to detect the duct condition beforehand and can operate the blower at a rotation speed capable of discharging the amount of target airflow in response to the duct condition detected.
Generally, an amount of airflow is proportional to a rotation speed of a fan included in a duct when the duct condition is determined and the duct condition affects relative gradients or the like. If, therefore, the duct condition is detected somehow the relation between the amount of airflow and rotation speed can be determined. The duct condition is detectable as a load of the blower and the load of the blower is detectable as an output force of an electric motor as well. Moreover, because the output force of the electric motor is proportional to the product of the rotation speed and torque of the fan, the duct condition can be detected from the torque of the electric motor when the rotation speed is kept constant. In case of a DC motor, whose torque is proportional to the input current, the torque can be detected by measuring the motor input current. Therefore, the duct conditions can be detected by measuring the motor input current.
The present invention is to detect the duct condition according to a value showing the magnitude of the load of the blower (hereafter referred to as a blower-load-variable) obtained from the input current of the electric motor operating at a predetermined rotation speed. To measure the blower-load-variable, the blower must operate at a predetermined rotation speed.
Namely, through the operation to detect the load by measuring the input current of the electric motor operating at a predetermined rotation speed, the duct condition is detected as a blower-load-variable. A fan rotation speed to discharge the amount of target airflow in response to the duct condition is calculated according to an empirical formula having been obtained from the characteristics of the blower. Subsequently, controlling the motor to rotate the fan at the given rotation speed can realize an operation for a stable airflow without doing any constant feedback control.
Now, exemplary embodiment of the present invention is described with reference to the drawings. The present invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiment only.
Electric motor 25 supplies a driving force necessary to rotate blower 20. A DC brush-less motor is employed in the exemplary embodiment. The driving shaft of electric motor 25 is coupled to blower 20 directly.
Blower 20 flows air through duct system 15 forming an air-path. A sirocco fan is used in the blower of the exemplary embodiment.
Controller 10 includes variable-motor-controller 30, airflow-controller 35 and system-controller 40.
Variable-motor-controller 30 controls the rotation speed of the electric motor, in response to control-signal Fo produced in airflow-controller 35. Additionally, variable-motor-controller 30 detects the motor rotation speed, and sends it to airflow-controller 35 as motor-rotation-speed-signal Rm.
Airflow-controller 35 includes timing-device 100, load-detector 105, rotation-speed-calculator 110, rotation-speed-selector 120 and control signal feeder 90.
Timing-device 100 allows to start load-detector 105 at a prescribed timing.
Load-detector 105, receiving signals from timing-device 100, outputs load-detection-rotation-signal Fra to drive electric motor 25 at a load detection rotation speed. Load-detector 105, additionally, outputs blower-load-variable Tra according to the electric motor input current Im measured at this time.
System-controller 40, varying the operation capacity of a variable compressor (not shown) in response to an air-conditioning capacity required, sends rotation-speed-calculator 110 information on an amount of airflow, as target airflow Q, corresponding to the varied compressor capacity.
Rotation-speed-calculator 110 calculates the fan rotation speed for the fan to discharge the amount of target airflow Q by substituting blower-load-variable Tra output from load-detector 105 and the amount of target airflow Q sent from system controller 40 into formula (a) described later. The fan-rotation-speed is then output as fan-rotation-speed-signal Fr.
Rotation-speed-selector 120 switches over rotation-speed-signal Fs input into control signal feeder 90 from load-detection-rotation-signal Fra to fan-rotation-speed-signal Fr according to fan-rotation-speed-signal Fr output from rotation-speed-calculator 110.
Control-signal-feeder 90 sends rotation-speed-control-signal Fo to variable-motor-controller 30 so that rotation-speed-signal Fs from rotation-speed-selector 120 matches with motor-rotation-speed-signal Rm from variable-motor-controller 30.
Formula (a) is determined according to the following procedure.
(1) The blower load condition is detected to determine the blower-load-variable by measuring the input current of the electric motor driving the blower at a predetermined rotation speed.
(2) The fan rotation speed is varied leaving the blower-load-variable kept constant, and then the amount of airflow of the blower is measured in each varied fan rotation speed.
(3) The empirical formula is determined as formula (a) from the relationship between the amount of airflow of the blower and the fan rotation speed in the above experiment by using the least-square method.
An input current value of the electric motor can be directly used as the blower-load-variable, or other value determined unambiguously from the input current value of the electric motor such as the ratio of the electric motor input current to the rated current may also be used as the variable.
Duct system 15 is a conduit tube used to deliver airflow for certain regions to be conditioned. Duct system 15 is for instance installed in a building to supply conditioned airflow to rooms requiring the air. The static air pressure in duct system 15 is affected by form and length of the duct, damper 45, filter 50 and heat exchanger 55.
Now, the work and function of electric blower 1 with aforementioned configuration is described.
A command from timing device 100 starts electric motor 25 at a predetermined rotation speed, which rotates blower 20. When blower 20 reaches a stable rotation speed, rotation-speed-calculator 110 measures blower-load-variable Tra output from load-detector 105. Blower-load-variable Tra thus measured is what reflects the duct conditions determined by the static air pressure in duct system 15, the form and length of the duct, filter 50 and heat exchanger 55.
For example, the rotation speed Fr is given by the following formula (a), using blower-load-variable Tra and amount of target airflow Q at a load detection rotation speed of 600 r/min.
Fr=−642.75+6.0837 Tra+19598.1/Tra+(−121.96+1.819 Tra+4134.1/Tra)Q
Where
With stored data of measured blower-load-variable Tra, rotation speed Fr for the amount of target airflow Q can be calculated by substituting the amount of target airflow signal Q sent from system controller 40 into the above formula (a). The amount of target airflow is supplied to the duct when control signal Fo corresponding to the rotation speed is sent to variable motor controller 30.
The aforementioned configuration can adjust the airflow to an amount of target airflow in response to the coupled duct conditions stably, because blower 20 operates at a rotation speed corresponding to the amount of target airflow required for a duct condition detected previously.
Load-detector 105, rotation-speed-calculator 110 and rotation-speed-selector 120 could start sequentially, and any case such as sequential starting following output from the precedent elements or sequential starting by control means such as timing device or the like could perform the aim of the present invention.
Timing-device 100 may be a type that starts together with electric blower 1. In a newly installed air-conditioner, the type of timing device 100 can detect duct conditions automatically at the start of electric blower 1 instead of having to detect the duct conditions separately. For example, when an operation switch is turned on to operate a compressor (not shown), the load detection operation starts automatically to detect the duct condition by measuring blower-load-variable Tra previously.
Moreover, timing device 100 may be a type that detects the duct condition regularly. For example, by starting a load detection operation at 12 o'clock every day to measure blower-load-variable Tra and to store the data until 12 o'clock next day, the blower can respond to a change of duct conditions in the case of increase in resistance to the airflow owing to a pile of dust on filter 50 in duct system 15.
Additionally, timing device 100 may be a type that operates at the change of airflow condition in duct system 15, and then starts operation of load detector 105. The configuration can detect open/shut condition of dampers installed in branches coupled to the duct.
As described above, the electric blower of the present invention can discharge an amount of target airflow in response to the duct condition and is useful for duct type air conditioners or the like accordingly.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-323376 | Nov 2004 | JP | national |
2005-243864 | Aug 2005 | JP | national |