The present invention relates to a water heater, particularly to a water heater using electrically insulating air as a heat conducting medium to increase water temperature.
In general, there are two types of water heaters, one burning natural gas and the other consuming electricity to raise the temperature of water. The latter is often adopted as a replacement for the former to avoid the danger of carbon-monoxide poisoning. However, a conventional electrical water heater employs an electric heating element or coil in direct contact with water through a heat conducting metallic material. In practice, only pure water is a good insulator. A user of an electric water heater could be constantly exposed to electric hazard when, for instance, taking a bath. The present invention overcomes this difficulty by adopting air, a much better electrically insulating medium, to conduct heat from an electric heating element to water. The present invention is not just an electrically safe water heater but also a hot-air sauna machine when injecting hot air into a bath tub. In a cold weather, the present invention can at the same time serve as an air conditioner or a comfortable body dryer in a bathroom.
The primary objective of the present invention is to overcome the problem that the conventional electric water heater may cause electric shock to a user.
To achieve the abovementioned objective, the present invention discloses an electrically insulated air-conducting water heater, which applies a plurality of small hot air bubbles to heat water in a water pool. The present invention comprises an air pump unit, a heating and temperature control unit, and an air venting unit having a plurality of tiny air nozzles.
The air pump unit is an air pump that takes in ambient air and transports it into the heating and temperature control unit. The heating and temperature control unit raises the temperature of the air to a suitable level and generates hot air. The hot air propagates down an air conduit to an air venting unit placed in a water pool. Hot air is released into water through the air venting unit to heat the water.
The air venting unit has a plurality of tiny air nozzles, through which hot air is injected into water in the form of a great number of micro hot air bubbles. Since a micro air bubble has a smaller buoyant force compared with that of a large air bubble, a micro-bubble can be kept in water for a longer time to heat the water. Furthermore, the overall heating area of a great number of micro-bubbles can be significantly larger than that of a single large air bubble of the same volume Therefore, the heat stored in the air can be efficiently conducted to water. The following theory provides a concrete proof to the concept.
It is well known that heat transfer efficiency between two objects is proportional to the surface contact area between them. The following compares the surface area of a large air bubble with that of a number of small bubbles derived from the same air volume of the large bubble. Suppose that a large hot air bubble in water has a radius of rb. Thus, the large hot air bubble has a surface area Sb and a volume Vb, expressed by Equations (1,2), respectively:
S
b=4πrb2 (1)
V
b=4πrb3/3 (2)
Suppose that the large hot air bubble is divided into N small air bubbles of the same size, and assume that each small air bubble has a radius of rs. Thus, the total surface area of small air bubbles in contact with water Ss is given by Equation (3):
S
s
=N4πrs2 (3)
The total volume of the small hot bubbles Vs can be expressed by Equation (4):
V
s
=N4πrs3/3 (4)
It is straightforward to obtain the ratio of the bubble's surface areas for the two cases by taking the ratio of Equations (1) and (3), given by:
S
s
/S
b
=N(rs/rb)2 (5)
For a fair comparison, the air volume is kept constant or Vb=Vs. From Equations (2, 4), the following relationship holds for an equal air volume
N4πrs3/3=4πrb3/3 (6)
or
r
s
/r
b=(1/N)1/3 (7)
By substituting Equation (7) into (5), the area ratio Ss/Sb becomes:
S
s
/S
b
=N
1/3 (8)
Equation (8) clearly shows that a large amount of small air bubbles can have a much larger heat-transfer contact area than does a single large air bubble of the same air volume. Suppose that a plurality of tiny air nozzles divide a large hot air bubble into one million small hot air bubbles. According to Equation (8), the surface area of all the small hot air bubbles is 100 (=(1,000,000)1/3) times greater than that of the large hot air bubble. Thus, the heating efficiency of those small hot air bubbles is 100 times that of the single large hot air bubble. Normally, it is not difficult to fabricate tiny air nozzles on an air venting unit. For example, laser micro-machining is a convenient technique to drill micro-air nozzles on materials.
As mentioned above, a smaller hot bubble has smaller buoyant force and can stay in water over a longer time. According to the Archimedean principle, a body immersed in a fluid gets a buoyant force FB equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces. In other words, a bubble experiences a buoyant force equal to the weight of the water having the same volume as the bubble:
F
B
=ρVg (9)
where V is the volume of a bubble, p is the density of a fluid, and g is the gravitational acceleration. It is evident from Equation (9) that the buoyant force FB and thus the upward acceleration of the bubble in water are proportional to its own volume. In other words, a smaller hot bubble can stay in water longer than a larger one. This increased heating time allows the smaller hot air bubbles to transfer more heat to water.
Thus, the disclosure of using a large amount of hot micro-bubbles to heat water is a key technical advancement of the present invention. The small bubble size not only increases the heat transfer area between air and water but also increases the heating time of air to water. This technical advancement effectively increases the heat transfer efficiency from hot air to water.
The air venting unit further comprises an air-storage volume and a thermal conductive structure. The air venting unit is immersed in water in a water pool or a bath tub. The thermal conductive structure is made of heat conducting materials with two planar sides, one exposed to the air-storage volume and the other exposed to water in the water pool. The hot air propagates down the air venting unit through an air conduit. The heat energy stored in the hot air can be quickly transferred to water via the thermal conductive structure in contact with the air-storage volume. The tiny air nozzles of the air venting unit divide the hot air into small hot bubbles. The residual heat energy stored in the hot air is carried to the small hot air bubbles and released to water.
In summary, ambient air is taken into an air pump unit and heated by the heating and temperature control unit to form hot air. The hot air is sent into an air venting unit through an air conduit. When the hot air is transported into an air storage volume in contact with a thermal conductive structure in the air venting unit, the hot air quickly transfers part of its heat energy to the thermal conductive structure to heat up the temperature of the water in contact with the other side of the thermal conductive structure. The hot air in the air-storage volume is then released to water through a plurality of tiny air nozzles, which generate a large number of air bubbles to continuously transfer heat to water, massage a user in a bath tub, or warn up the temperature of a cold bathroom.
According to the aforementioned concepts, the present invention employs electrically insulating hot air as a heating medium for a water heater. Electric energy is first transferred to heat energy stored in air, which is then transferred to water through a thermal conductive structure, or a large number of hot air bubbles in water, or both. This water heating process ensures electric insulation between the electricity and a user in water. The high speed air bubbles ejected from the tiny air nozzles in the air venting unit can at the same time generate ultrasound to massage or clean a user in the water pool, dry the body of a person or a pet animal, and warm up a cold bathroom.
The technical contents of the present invention are described in details with reference to the drawings above.
Refer to
Refer to
The air venting unit 30 may further comprise a thermal conductive structure 37 having two opposite surfaces. The thermal conductive structure 37 is made of partially or fully heat conducting materials with two surfaces. One surface is exposed to the air-storage volume 33 to extract heat from the hot air, and the other is exposed to the water 3 in the water pool 5 to release heat to the water. In the first embodiment, the thermal conductive structure 37 is arranged at one side of the air venting unit 30, facing down the bottom of the water pool 5 to avoid a direct contact with a user 6. The thermal conductive structure 37 can be a high thermal-conductivity material such as a metal plate with or without a honeycomb structure, or simply some plastic or rubber with good heat conductivity.
Refer to
The air venting unit 30 may further have at least one sucking disk 35 on the surface facing the bottom of the water pool 5. In the first embodiment, the air venting unit 30 is fixed to the bottom of the water pool 5 or commonly a bathtub by a plurality of sucking disks 35. The sucking disks 35, with some finite height, can provide a gap space between the thermal conductive structure 37 and the bottom of the water pool 5, in which the water 3 can contact the thermal conductive structure 37 to absorb the heat energy from the thermal conductive structure 37. In the first embodiment, a plurality of protrusions 34 is arranged on the upper surface of the air venting unit 30. The protrusions 34 on one hand prevent a user from blocking the air nozzles 32 when lying on the air venting unit 30, and on the other hand provide some pressure points to a user when a user lies in the water pool 5 to enjoy sauna massage.
Refer to
In conclusion, the electrically insulated air-conducting water heater of the present invention adopts non-conducting air as a heat-transfer medium to heat water, so as to avoid potential electric hazard to a hot-water user. The non-conducting air is collected by an air pump, heated electrically in the heating and temperature control unit of the present invention, and injected into water directly as a form of bubbles to heat water. To effectively transfer the stored thermal energy in the hot air to water, injecting micro-bubbles into water from micron-size air nozzles is disclosed as a major advancement and key embodiment of the present invention. A second embodiment of the present invention is to firstly transfer part of the thermal energy of the hot air to a thermally conductive material in contact with water and secondly inject the hot air bubbles into water for further water heating. A user of the present invention can adjust the temperature of the air through the heating and temperature control unit of the present invention according to the desired water-heating rate, the desired bathroom temperature, or personal joy and comfort from a hot-bubble sauna. The present invention can function simultaneously as an electrically safe water heater, a hot-bubble sauna machine, a hand dryer, a hair dryer, a body dryer, and an air conditioner to a human user or a pet animal.
The embodiments described above are only to exemplify the present invention but not to limit the scope of the present invention. Any equivalent modification or variation according to the spirit of the present invention is to be also included within the scope of the present invention. For example, the generation of the hot air does not require an installation of the air pump unit in front of the heating and temperature control unit. A system reversing the sequence of the installation is still well within the scope of the present invention. Also, the diameters of the air nozzles are not necessarily uniform for all nozzles. The present invention can adopt different size nozzles at different locations on the air venting unit to optimize the heating rate to water and the comfort to a user.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
100118661 | May 2011 | TW | national |