1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electrical heating device with a frame which, on opposite sides, forms openings for the passage of a medium to be heated. The electrical heating device also has a layer structure arranged in the frame. In a direction transverse to the passage direction of the medium to be heated the said layer structure has several layers which are formed by corrugated-rib elements and at least one heat generating element. The heat generating element here comprises at least one PTC element arranged between parallel contact plates.
2. Description of the Related Art
An electrical heating device of this nature is for example known from DE 199 11 547, U.S. Pat. No. 5,854,471, EP 0 350 528 or DE 197 06 199.
The state of the art as presented in EP 2 161 514 A1 is also regarded as class-forming. This state of the art is also the basis of the problem definition which is also based on the present invention. This involves providing an electrical heating device of the generic type which enables an increased heating power with a compact construction.
Here, with generic electrical heating devices, due to the self-regulating properties of the PTC element there is the problem that with increasing temperature and also heating power the resistance of the PTC elements increases sharply so that the power dissipation of the PTC elements is reduced. Since, on the other hand, the electrical heating devices are particularly used in motor vehicles, they should have a compact design so that the suggestion that two electrical heating devices formed in the conventional way are arranged one behind the other in a HVAC in the flow direction or passage direction of the medium to be heated must be rejected, because it is contrary to the requirement of a compact design.
EP 2 161 514 A1 suggests that several corrugated-rib elements are arranged one behind the other in the direction of flow of the air to be heated and within a uniform frame. According to the prior-art suggestion at least two heating blocks are arranged one behind the other in the passage direction of the air to be heated. Here, the heating blocks are provided at least offset, i.e. the heat generating elements of the individual heating blocks are not directly situated one behind the other in the passage direction of the medium to be heated. Rather, they have a lateral spacing to one another in this passage direction in this otherwise parallel alignment of the layers of the various heating blocks relative to one another. The heat generating elements of one heating block are here located centrally behind the corrugated-rib elements of the other heating block. Here, the suggestion according to EP 2 161 514 A1 is obviously being led by the consideration that the exiting air heated in the flow direction of the front heating block has experienced the strongest heating directly adjacent to the heat generating element, whereas the central region in the extrapolated direction of the individual corrugated-rib elements experiences only a relatively slight heating of the air due to the largest distance of this central region from the heat generating element, so that this relatively cool air should meet according to the notion the region of strongest heating effect of the following heating block.
However, with the known suggestion, due to those heat generating elements, which are located after the through-flow corrugated-rib elements and arranged in their flow path, the passage openings for the air are displaced by the electrical heating device, whereupon a relatively high flow resistance results. Thus, however the heating power and the effectiveness of the electrical heating device is also reduced, because it is not solely defined by the temperature change caused by the electrical heating device, but rather by the amount of air heated by this temperature change. Furthermore, only part of the area provided for the heat exchange with the air is used, because the corrugated-rib elements located in the flow direction after the heat generating elements are shaded from these heat generating elements and namely by approximately one third of their area for a corrugated-rib height of 10 mm and a thickness of the heat generating element of approximately 3 mm.
The object of the present invention is to provide an electrical heating device with an increased heating power. Here, the intention of the present invention is to provide especially a scalable electrical heating device, i.e. a device of a nature such that it can be adapted to different heating powers without a large outlay. The intention of the present invention is also to provide a frame with which an appropriate heating device can be realized in an economical manner.
The object is resolved in the present invention by an electrical heating device having a frame, which forms on oppositely situated sides openings for the passage of a medium to be heated, and a layer structure, which is arranged in the frame and which comprises the layers of corrugated ribs and heat generating elements. The heat generating element has at least one PTC element arranged between parallel contact plates. The individual layers extend from one opening of the housing to the other in the passage direction of the medium. In the passage direction of the medium to be heated, at least two corrugated-rib elements are arranged one behind the other, and their corrugated ribs are arranged lateral to the passage direction of the medium to be heated. In the inventive electrical heating device, plural corrugated-rib elements are arranged as separate elements in a single layer, i.e. one after the other in the passage direction of the medium, which is a direction perpendicular to the appositively situated side openings of the frame. The corrugated-rib elements are arranged offset laterally to the passage direction of the medium, i.e. perpendicular to said passage direction, but within the same layer. In other words, the offset is an offset in the longitudinal direction of the corrugated-rib elements, which is the extension direction of those elements defining the layer. In a view of the heating device according to the invention in the passage direction of the medium to be heated at the height of the corrugated-rib elements arranged one behind the other, the corrugated ribs of the elements provided in at least two, preferably three or more, levels one behind the other in the flow direction can be recognised. The individual corrugated ribs are only shaded correspondingly slightly. Nevertheless, from the transition from the corrugated rib provided on one input level to the one situated behind, at best a corrugated rib assigned to an output level, destratification of the flow is achieved in that the flow path is modified by the corrugated ribs provided offset. A turbulent flow is produced on the transition between the two corrugated-rib elements provided offset, which leads to an improved thermal transfer from the corrugated ribs to the medium to be heated. With otherwise the same components the thermal conduction is increased by at least 5%. With more than two corrugated-rib elements provided one behind the other on different levels preferably each of the consecutively following corrugated-rib elements is arranged offset to the one in front in the direction of flow. Furthermore, all corrugated-rib elements are preferably provided such that their corrugated ribs are overall each offset to one another.
Due to the appropriate measure a very effective thermal transfer between the corrugated-rib elements and the medium to be heated is produced in a layer of the layer structure, which is normally formed by elements with identical function of the heating block, which are arranged exactly one behind the other in the passage direction of the medium to be heated. Here, the formulation of the application request is being led by the impression that the medium passes at right angles through the frame to those areas which form the openings for the passage of the medium to be heated.
The frame here is normally formed by an embodiment, which surrounds the layer structure at least on both face sides, preferably fully circumferentially, whereby sides extending at right angles to this circumferential surround however form one or several sufficiently large openings, which normally leave the corrugated-rib elements completely or at least mainly free, so that they can be fully or almost fully subjected to the flow of the medium to be heated. The openings can be reinforced by lateral or longitudinal struts. Longitudinal struts here normally extend parallel to the layers of the layer structure and often at the height of the heat generating elements, whereas lateral struts extend at right angles to this and are used for mechanically stiffening the frame, in particular when—as with a preferred embodiment of the present invention—the heating block or layer structure is held in the frame under tension by one or several springs integrated into the layer structure, so that the elements of the layer structure are only located adjacent to one another by the clamping force of the spring element. This clamping force on one hand gives a good electrical contact between the parallel contact plates and the PTC element(s) arranged between them and on the other hand it gives a good thermal contact between the heat emitting elements and the corrugated-rib elements abutting them and pressed against them by the spring force.
In view of the most economic manufacture possible the layer structure of the electrical heating device is formed from identical elements in each case. If several heat generating elements are parts of the layer structure, they are identically formed in each case. Also, the corrugated-rib elements provided one behind the other in one level and the corrugated-rib elements stacked one above the other in the layer structure, optionally with an intermediate location of a heat generating element, are identically formed in each case. Depending on the specified heating power, the corrugated-rib elements can also each have a different thickness, i.e. extension in the flow direction of the medium to be heated so that for the required heating power in each case the optimum size is provided, particularly the thickness of the heating block. Normally, the heat generating elements assigned in each case to the corrugated-rib elements are formed according to the thickness of the corrugated-rib elements.
Here, normally two corrugated-rib elements are located on one heat generating element on different sides. Consequently, according to the invention normally at least four corrugated-rib elements abut one single heat generating element. This heat generating element does not necessarily have to be manufactured as a uniform heat generating element, whereby an appropriate embodiment is to be preferred. This means that with a uniform heat generating element all PTC elements are provided in a uniform positional frame, which on the top and bottom sides has contact plates to which the corrugated-rib elements directly or indirectly abut. Therefore, on one side of the heat generating element corrugated-rib elements corresponding to the number of corrugated-rib elements provided one behind the other in the flow direction abut directly or preferably indirectly separated by an insulating layer, e.g. of a plastic film and/or a ceramic layer, on the contact plates provided there. This applies correspondingly to the oppositely situated side.
The heat generating elements provided in the upward direction adjacent to one another are preferably spaced from one another by two identically formed corrugated-rib elements. In other words the distance in height of adjacent heat generating elements corresponds to twice the height of the corrugated-rib element.
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention the corrugated-rib elements arranged one behind the other in the flow direction are each assigned to separate PTC elements. Here, the individual corrugated-rib elements define a layer, i.e. those corrugated-rib elements provided in the passage direction strictly one behind the other are therefore each arranged in levels one behind the other. A corresponding level normally has approximately the corresponding dimension of a thickness of the corrugated-rib element in the passage direction. Within these individual levels the PTC elements assigned to each corrugated-rib element are assigned. Here, this involves the PTC elements of a uniform layer, i.e. those PTC elements which are provided in the passage direction strictly one behind the other. With this further development an embodiment is specified in which corrugated-rib elements are arranged in one level of the layer structure and adjacently in the high direction and in which various layers of corrugated-rib elements sandwich in between in each case the PTC element(s) assigned to these corrugated-rib elements. The corresponding PTC elements here are normally located within the front and rear sides given by the corrugated-rib elements, whereby in a first approximation it is without further ado plain that these front and rear sides of all corrugated-rib elements of a level essentially concur. The PTC elements are accordingly located within an envelope surface, which is defined by the two corrugated-rib elements assigned to the PTC element. Preferably the envelope surface is solely defined by the corrugated ribs of these corrugated-rib elements. In the sectional view the PTC elements are always accordingly located between the corrugated-rib elements assigned to them, by means of which a thermal interaction between the corrugated ribs and the heat generating elements provided on the various levels is prevented.
According to a preferred further development of the present invention the PTC elements are arranged in a uniform heat generating element extending over several levels. Accordingly, the several corrugated-rib elements provided in various levels only bridge partial regions of this uniform heat generating element assigned to these corrugated-rib elements. The heat generating element accordingly has in the width direction, i.e. passage direction of the medium to be heated, an extension, which corresponds to a multiple of the width of one of the corrugated-rib elements corresponding to the number of the corrugated-rib elements provided one behind the other in the flow direction. Accordingly, corrugated-rib elements can be used for electrical heating devices of different heating power in an identical way. In each case identical corrugated-rib elements are provided, irrespective of whether heat generating elements are only provided in one or several levels. The adaptation of the corrugated-rib elements to the required heating power only occurs through displacement of the normally elongated corrugated-rib elements relative to one another so that the corrugated ribs of the corrugated-rib elements are offset to one another. In comparison the heat generating elements are directly adapted to the required heating power. An electrical heating device with corrugated-rib elements only provided in two levels has accordingly one heat generating element which extends over these two levels in the passage direction of the medium to be heated, whereas an electrical heating device equipped with three corrugated-rib elements provided in one layer one behind the other has a heat generating element, which corresponds in width to three times the width of the corrugated-rib elements so that these corrugated-rib elements can be brought three in a level into abutment on the uniform heat generating element.
With a view to further simplification for production the corrugated-rib elements are provided on one side with covering elements. On one face side these covering elements cover the bent region of a meander-type sheet metal strip essentially normally forming the corrugated-rib element. The covering elements can also lightly grasp the corrugated ribs at the edge on their front and rear sides and be joined frictionally or positively locked to the corrugated ribs by bending.
According to the preferred further development, the heat generating element is provided on one side with a sheet metal cover bridging the contact plates. Normally, on this side of the heat generating element the bent ends of the meander-type sheet metal strip of the corrugated-rib element directly abut the sheet metal cover. On the oppositely situated side of the heat generating element the covering elements provided on the corrugated-rib elements preferably indirectly abut the heat generating element contact plate provided there and namely preferably with the intermediate positioning of an insulating layer. Thereafter the pressure force applied point by point at these places on clamping the layer structure in the frame is equalised by the sheet metal cover on one side and the covering element on the other side. An equalisation of this nature is particularly advantageous if an insulating layer is provided between the contact plates and the sheet metal cover or the covering element, so that the corrugated-rib elements are provided potential-free in the electrical heating device and are not just electrically connected by the electrical strip conductors to the PTC elements.
With a view to obtaining the best possible scaling of the electrical heating device, which facilitates a modular construction and therefore an economical manufacture of electrical heating devices with different heating powers, a frame is suggested with the present invention for an electrical heating device. This frame and its further developments also further form the electrical heating device as such.
The frame has two frame elements forming the openings and at least one frame intermediate element arranged between them. These elements of the frame, i.e. the frame elements and the at least one frame intermediate element, can be joined together by mutually engaging latching lugs so that, for example, for preassembly the frame intermediate element can be permanently assigned to one of the frame elements by latching and the frame can be closed overall by latching. The latching elements are however formed such that the frame can be formed and closed by the frame elements alone. In a kit system of this nature several frame intermediate elements can, of course, be inserted, which are each formed identically and which in each case can be joined to the two frame elements by latching. The frame according to the invention is furthermore formed such that through the frame elements alone a frame can be formed, which forms in the passage opening of the medium to be heated an accommodation space for the layer structure in which it can be accommodated, provided the layer structure in a generally known manner only has one level of corrugated ribs and heat generating elements. A layer structure of this nature is located in the said accommodation space essentially in the passage direction, by means of which a compact construction is produced in this direction. The frame according to the invention is furthermore developed such that with a frame formed from the frame intermediate element an accommodation space, which as a rule is formed for the exact accommodation of a layer structure with several levels of corrugated ribs and heat generating elements, is formed extending in the passage direction of the medium to be heated. Also a layer structure of this nature formed from several corrugated-rib elements arranged one behind the other in a layer in the passage direction is accordingly basically fitted in this thus formed frame in the passage direction. Both frame arrangements accordingly facilitate a compact and space-saving accommodation of the relevant layer structure. The frame elements can be used identically in each case, irrespective of how many corrugated-rib elements are arranged in a layer one behind the other in various levels. This widening of the layer structure is just covered by the frame intermediate element. Here, a single frame intermediate element normally widens the accommodation space exactly by the width amount contributed by one corrugated-rib element arranged in a further level.
According to a preferred further development the frame elements are each formed identically, i.e. they can be manufactured in a single injection mould and joined by being rotated by 180° relative to another. If several frame intermediate elements form the frame, they are also preferably formed identically. The outer sides of the frame elements and of the frame intermediate element preferably have a retaining element part. This retaining element part protrudes beyond the outer side and is formed such that on a frame solely formed by the frame elements and on a frame formed by the frame elements and the frame intermediate element a retaining element is formed by interacting retaining element parts. The retaining element part accordingly and normally just forms the half of a complete retaining element. The retaining element part can in particular be formed hook-shaped and namely such that after the joining of the elements forming the frame by mutually interacting retaining element parts, a hole is enclosed in which a mounting screw can be fitted, for example, in order to attach a mounting flange and/or a housing of a control device for the electrical heating device to the face side of the frame.
Further details and advantages of the present invention are given in the following description of embodiments in conjunction with the drawing. Here, the drawing illustrates the basic construction of an electrical heating device into which a heat emitting element is built, which itself can be solely essential to the invention. The drawing shows the following:
The control section 4 is formed on the outside by a connecting housing 6, which—as shown particularly in the illustration according to FIG. 4—consists of a screening housing 8, which is formed as, for example, a deep-drawn or cast, respectively deep-drawn metal shell, a plastic housing element 10, which is inserted into the metal shell 8 and a housing cover 12. In the joined state the housing cover 12 can grasp over a free flange of the sheet metal cup 8 and be formed of metal so that the interior of the control section 4 is completely screened by a metallic connecting housing 6. The housing cover 12 can however also be formed from plastic.
The housing cover 12 bears a female plug housing 14 for the power current and a further female housing element which is formed as a control plug housing 16. Both plug housings 14, 16 are joined as plastic elements to the metallic housing cover 12 and form guide and sliding surfaces for in each case a male plug element which is not illustrated.
The plastic housing element 10 accommodates a conductor board 18 within it which is partially covered by a pressure element 20 which is explained in more detail in the following. The conductor board 18 has a plus connecting contact 22 and a minus connecting contact protruding over it, which lie exposed in the power plug housing and are electrically connected to the strip conductor. The conductor board 18 furthermore bears a control contact element 26 which contains control element contacts and which can be reached by lines via the control plug housing 16. As can be seen from
On the end side oppositely situated to the conductor board 18 the plastic housing element 10 forms two cooling channels 30 for heat sinks 32 which are only indicated in
The omitted sheet metal shell 8, which is not illustrated in
The power section 2 has a frame 44 which is circumferentially enclosed in the embodiment according to
On oppositely situated outer sides 54 the frame 44 forms in each case openings 56 for the passage of air to be heated by the air heater illustrated in the embodiment. In the illustrated embodiment these openings 56 are stiffened by lateral struts 58, which join oppositely situated side edges of the frame 44.
In its interior the frame 44 defines an accommodation space 60 which is adapted such that the layer structure 46 can be accommodated closely fitted in the frame 44.
The heating block or layer structure 46 is essentially formed by the heating bars 62 which are illustrated in
As can be seen especially from
As
The contact plates 82 are dimensioned such that they are accommodated within the positional frame 76, but are arranged circumferentially with a spacing to the positional frame 76. The circumferential gap so formed is labelled with the reference numeral 84 in
Access to the interior of the positional frame 76 is solely given on the face side of the positional frame 76 and by connection pieces 92 which are formed as one part from its material and which fully circumferentially surround a channel 94 for accommodation of pin-shaped contact elements 96. On their free ends the connection pieces 92 bear sealing elements 98, formed from a thermoplastic elastomer or from PTFE, with a labyrinth type of sealing structure, which can be joined to the associated connection pieces 92 by overmoulding or plugging on. On the face side of each positional frame 76 two connection pieces 92 with identical embodiment and sealing are provided for the accommodation of two contact pins 96 for electrically contacting the contact plates 82.
As can be furthermore taken from
On its upper side illustrated in
As
As
In the illustrated embodiment the previously described layer structure 46 is held in the frame 44 under spring tension. For this purpose the frame 44 has spring insertion openings 120, formed by the two frame elements 48, which can be seen in
As
The contact pins 96 each penetrate contact surface elements 134 which are formed from sheet metal by punching and bending and which group several contact pins 96 of the same polarity within the connecting housing 6 so that they are assigned to a heating stage. The lower contact surface element is a first plus contact surface element 134, whereas the upper contact surface element is a minus contact surface element 136. As
Centrally between the heat sinks 32 and at the edge of the plastic housing element 10 mounting eyes 160 can be seen in each case for the previously generally mentioned pressure element 20. As particularly illustrated in
The sectional view according to
In
The contact surface elements 134, 136 contact the conductor board 18 through contact tongues 144, 146. A second plus contact tongue 186 (cf.
As previously described, the heat sink 32 is also retained sealed in the heat sink insertion opening 164. Here the embodiment, i.e. the one in
Correspondingly, the position of the power switch 178, the conductor board 18 and the pressure element 20 does not change with a power switch 178 having greater thickness. Rather, the heat sink 32 in the heat sink insertion opening 164 is forced in the direction towards the power section 2, so that the sealing element 172 compresses more while retaining the sealing of the heat sink 32 and—compared to the illustration in FIG. 9—the latching ridges 170 are arranged in a further lowered position, i.e. spaced further from the latching shoulders 168.
The embodiment of an electrical heating device illustrated in the figures has heat generating elements, which are formed in a special way to lengthen creep paths and to reduce the risk of creepage current transmission. This special arrangement is elucidated in the following, in particular with reference to
As can be seen in particular in
Furthermore, the heat generating elements 66 are particularly EMC protected. For example, the positional frame 76 is basically completely surrounded by a screen, which is formed on one hand by the sheet metal cover 110 of the positional frame 76 and on the other hand by the sheet metal cover 70 of the corrugated-rib elements 64. As illustrated in
All the corrugated-rib elements 64 are furthermore joined together by latching elements formed on the metal shell 8, which are not illustrated in the drawing, but can be formed as described in EP 2 299 201 A1 which originates from the applicant, the disclosure of which, to this extent, is included in the disclosure content of this application. It only matters that the metal shell 8 electrically forms joined protrusions which contact the corrugated-rib elements 64 such that all corrugated-rib elements 64 are directly or indirectly electrically joined to the metal shell 8 and are connected to ground.
The previously discussed embodiment has heat generating elements 66, the receptacle 78 of which is hermetically sealed with respect to the ambient, so that moisture and contamination cannot access the PTC elements 80. In this way high insulation of the PTC elements 80 is obtained, since any charge carriers of the insulation of the PTC elements 80, which can access the receptacle 78 in the state of the art, impair the insulation. With the present invention also all heat generating elements 66 are inserted into the connecting housing 6. Normally for checking the required sealing after joining the power section 2 a testing bell is placed on the plastic housing element 10 on its free end, which is usually closed off by the housing cover 12, the said testing bell abutting the free edge of the plastic housing element 10 for sealing. Through this testing bell the part of the electrical heating device connected to it is subjected to increased hydrostatic pressure, for example by compressed air. A certain pressure level is held and checked whether it is reduced over time by any leaks. If this is not the case, the component is assessed as passing the test.
Accordingly, firstly during the manufacture of the illustrated embodiment the power section 2 is manufactured separately. First, the heat generating elements 66 are assembled. Here, the sheet metal cover 110 can close off the underside and thus, in any case after the adherence of the insulating layer 90 assigned to the sheet metal cover 110, the positional frame 76 which is open on one side on the underside, so that the PTC elements 80 can be inserted from the other side and then the assigned contact plate 82 can be placed on them to finally put the insulating layer 90 in place on the said contact plate and to seal it against the positional frame 76 through the adhesive edging 88. In the described method with particular reference to
Once all elements of the layer structure 46 have been placed into the frame element 48, the frame 44 is closed by putting the other frame element 48 into place and latching it. Thereafter, the respective spring elements 121 are inserted through the spring insertion openings 120 between the layer structure 46 and an external edge of the receptacle 60 produced by the frame 44. Finally, the spring elements 121 are clamped against one another as described in EP 2 298 582. Thereafter, the power section 2 prepared in this way is joined to the metal shell 8 and the plastic housing element 10. Due to their form tapering to a tip, the ramp surfaces 124 here act as positioning and centring aids, so that the retaining element 126 can be effectively introduced into the positioning opening 127. The retaining element 126 normally here precedes the contact pins 96 so that first coarse positioning is carried out using the retaining elements 126 and then the contact pins 96 are introduced into the cylindrical sleeve receptacles 132.
Compared to the previously described embodiment,
Instead of a shell-shaped housing element accommodating the plastic housing element 10, a screening contact plate 192 is provided which abuts, positively locked, outer contact bases of the plastic housing element 10. This furthermore forms cavities 194 in which screening contact tongues 196 of the screening contact plate 192 are accommodated. The screening contact tongues 196 are each provided at the height of a heat generating element 66 and contact the edge 112 of this element 66. Furthermore, the screening contact plate 192 forms spring bars 198, formed by punching and bending, which each abut one of the heat sinks 32 on the face side and contact it. As can be especially seen in
Furthermore, as can particularly be taken from
Complete screening of all current-carrying elements of the embodiment is produced. Furthermore, the heat sinks 32 are connected to ground through the screening contact plate 192, so that the reliable electrical insulation between the power switch 178 and the heat sink 32 can be checked by monitoring the ground potential obtained on the connecting bolt 200. Any defect in the electrical insulation can be detected and output to prevent the service personnel from receiving an electrical shock during service work on the electrical heating device due to inadequate electrical insulation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11010085.6 | Dec 2011 | EP | regional |