The invention relates to an electric circuit for wiring at least one heating element having a supply voltage from a voltage source.
For turning electric heating elements on and off, as well as for operating them, temperature-controlled heating systems in which electronic devices, such as for example a control having a temperature-sensitive element, that monitor the temperature of the system and, if necessary, turn the heat either on or off, are used at the present time. Such systems are often used in vehicle seat-heating systems. In systems of this kind, high production costs and susceptibility to defects due to the use of complicated electronic circuits are disadvantageous.
Also known are thermostat-controlled heating systems in which a temperature-sensitive switch used in the thermostat turns the flow of heat on and off directly. Such systems are less costly, but they only operate with locking switches, i.e., switches capable of being fixed in switched-on position. There the problem arises that the turned-on heating system remains in this state of operation even when the heat is no longer needed. Also, turning off the ignition in a motor vehicle does not cause the system to switch off, so that the next time the ignition in the motor vehicle is activated, the heating system is necessarily turned on again.
The present invention is directed toward an electric circuit for wiring at least one heating element, whose production costs are reduced in comparison with existing electronic control devices, while operating reliability is increased.
The electric circuit according to the invention has the following elements: a voltage source delivering a supply voltage, at least one heating element, at least one selector switch, which has at least one neutral position and one non-fixable switching position, at least one relay with a relay-actuated contact that is open when the relay is disconnected from the supply voltage and is closed when the relay is acted on by the supply voltage, while when the contact is closed the heating element is acted on by the supply voltage, as well as a thermal switch that is in contact with the heating element and opens when a predetermined temperature is reached. The relay and the thermal switch are connected in series, whereby setting the selector switch to the first non-fixable switching position causes the relay to change the switching status of the contact from open to closed or vice versa.
It is thereby ensured that, even with minimal manufacturing costs for the electric circuit, the heating is acted on by the supply voltage only up to a predetermined temperature and then is automatically turned off.
An additional advantage of the invention is that after the vehicle ignition is turned off, the heating system is also turned off, so that it can only be reactivated by actuation of the selector switch. This results in high reliability of the electric circuit according to the invention, since heating inadvertently left on after the supply voltage in the motor vehicle is turned off is automatically shifted into a turned-off state.
Such an electric circuit further permits the selector switch as well as the thermal switch to be made smaller in size, since there is no flow of heat through these elements.
In another example, the relay is a single-pole relay, and when the contact is closed, the relay is acted on by the supply voltage, in the first switching position of the selector switch the relay is acted on by the supply voltage, and in the second switching position of the selector switch the relay is disconnected from the supply voltage in order to open the switching status of the contact. In another aspect of the invention, the relay is a double-pole relay.
According to another embodiment, the voltage source, in the second switching position of the selector switch, can be short-circuited by a first resistance. The voltage source can be a direct-current voltage source that has a first pole and a second pole, the relay can have an input and an output, the heating elements, which are connected in series, can have a first and a second connection, where the first connection, via the contact, is connected to the first pole of the direct-current voltage source and the second connection is connected to the second pole of the direct-current voltage source. The thermal switch can be connected between the output of the relay and the second pole of the direct-current voltage source, where in the first switching position of the selector switch the input of the relay is electrically connected with the first pole of the direct-current voltage source, and in the second switching position of the selector switch the input of the relay is electrically connected with the second pole of the direct-current voltage source and where the first connection of the heating elements is electrically connected with the input of the relay. In a further aspect, a diode can be connected between the input of the relay and the first connection of the heating elements, owing to which, in the first switching position of the selector switch, a voltage is obtained in the direction of the heating elements. The input of the relay can also be connected by a light-emitting diode to the second pole of the direct-current voltage source. In any of these embodiments, the selector switch can be an automatic resetting selector switch.
In another aspect of the invention, a second thermal switch is provided, where the first thermal switch is associated with a first heating element and the second thermal switch is associated with a second heating element, and where the first and the second thermal switches can switch at different temperatures. The second thermal switch can have at least one first switching position in which the first flow of heat travels through the two heating elements connected in series, and at least one second switching position in which substantially all of the potential of the supply voltage is applied to the second heating element. In a further aspect, the second thermal switch can be connected in parallel with the first heating element, where in its first switching position it is open and in its second switching position it is closed.
In still a further embodiment of the invention, the relay has an input, output, first connection and second connection. The input (IN) feeds the supply voltage from a first pole of a voltage source. The first connection (set/reset) connects with the selector switch, whose switching into a non-fixable switching position causes change of the switching status of the contact located in the relay. The output (OUT) acts on the heating elements by the supply voltage. Finally, the second connection (GND) is connected by the at least one thermal switch to a second pole of the voltage source.
Other advantages will become apparent with reference to the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
In the following, the invention is described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
The electric circuit according to the invention further has a single-pole relay 4, which has a relay-actuated contact 5 that is open when the relay 4 is disconnected from the supply voltage and which is closed when the relay 4 is acted on by the supply voltage. The relay 4 is connected in such a way that when the contact 5 is closed, the heating elements 7a, 7b and the relay 4 are acted on by the supply voltage from the first pole 1a.
Connected in series with the relay 4 is a thermal switch 9, which is in thermal contact with the heating element 7b. In an original state, that is, in a state at ambient temperature, the thermal switch 9 is closed, so that when the selector switch 2, 3 is closed in its first position 3b, current flows through the winding of the relay 4 and through the thermal switch 9. The heating elements 7a, 7b, connected in series, are connected in parallel with the relay 4 and with the thermal switch 9. Still additional heating elements may be provided in parallel or in series with the heating elements 7a, 7b. A diode 12 is connected between the input of the relay 4 and the heating element 7a so that, in the first position 3b of the selector switch, closing in the direction of the heating element 7a is obtained. Connected in series with the diode 12 is a first resistance 11, which in turn is connected via the relay-actuated contact 5 with a first pole 1a of a direct-current voltage source.
Parallel to the relay 4 and the thermal switch 9, a light-emitting diode 10 and a second resistance 14 are connected in series.
Operation of the circuit arrangement represented in
In the first switching position 3b of the selector switch, as already mentioned above, current flows through the relay 4 and through the thermal switch 9. There the diode 12, in the first position 3b of the selector switch, prevents the current from also flowing through the heating elements 7a, 7b. The relay 4, acted on by the supply voltage, then closes the contact 5, which likewise is connected to the first pole 1a of the direct-current voltage source. The current thus flows through the heating elements 7 and through the first resistance 11 connected in parallel thereto, the diode 12, the relay 4 and the thermal switch 9. Further, the current also flows through the second resistance 14 and through the light-emitting diode 10, whereby the turned-on state of the electric circuit is made known visually.
Now, if the thermal switch 9, as a result of heating by the heating element 7a, reaches a predetermined temperature, it switches into an open state, so that the flow of current through the relay 4 is interrupted. Because of the resetting force of the relay-actuated contact 5, the latter is disconnected, owing to which it interrupts the voltage supply of the heating elements 7. The electric circuit is thereby an open circuit.
Another possibility for breaking the circuit may be obtained by switching the selector switch 2, 3 into its second position 3c, whereupon the voltage source is short-circuited via the first resistance 11 and via the diode 12. This causes a voltage drop on the winding of the relay 4, owing to which the relay 4 is cut out and consequently the relay-actuated contact 5 is opened. The supply voltage is thereby withdrawn from the heating elements 7a, 7b.
The third and last possibility for breaking the electric circuit arises when the first pole 1a is disconnected from the direct-current voltage source, so that the voltage is withdrawn from the whole circuit. This condition exists, for example, when the ignition in the motor vehicle is turned off.
In each of the three possibilities described above for breaking the electric circuit according to the invention, the circuit can only be activated again by the selector switch 2, 3 being brought back into its first position 3b.
The switching pulse received from the selector switch 23 causes, in the double-pole relay 25, the “OUT” connection of the relay 25 to be acted on by the voltage fed in by the first pole 1a via the “IN” port. In a next switching operation of the selector switch 23, the relay 25 receives an additional switching pulse, which interrupts the voltage supply of the “OUT” connection of the relay 25.
The two heating elements 7a, 7b, connected in series, are connected between the relay output “OUT” and the second pole 1b of the voltage source, while the second pole of the voltage source 1b is connected by the thermal switch 9 to the “GND” connection of the double-pole relay 25. Now, if the thermal switch 9, owing to heating up by the heating element 7a, reaches a predetermined temperature, it switches into an open state, so that the relay 25 is electrically separated from the second pole 1b of the voltage source. This causes opening of a contact, located in the relay 25 and not shown, between the “IN” and “OUT” connections of the double-pole relay 25.
In this embodiment, too, a light-emitting diode 10 is electrically coupled via a resistance 14 to a connection of the heating elements 7a, 7b, owing to which the turned-on state of the electric circuit is made known visually.
Operation of the circuit arrangement represented in
After the second thermal switch 19 has been opened, operation of the circuit according to the invention continues as presented for the circuit shown in
This embodiment makes it possible to supply the second heating element 7b or seat-heating element with higher heating power P1 for a short time, so that the seat surface, which feels colder to the user due to greater pressure and thinner clothing between person and seat surface, is heated more rapidly than the backrest.
While the invention has been described in connection with one or more embodiments, it is to be understood that the specific mechanisms and techniques which have been described are merely illustrative of the principles of the invention, numerous modifications may be made to the apparatus described without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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DE102005029 180.5 | Jun 2005 | DE | national |