1. Technical Field
The present principles relate to air conditioning devices. More particularly, it relates an electrostatic air conditioner.
2. Discussion of Related Art
Electrostatic air purifiers and conditioners are known and often utilize parts referred to as “corona” wire or “corona electrode”, “collecting electrode”, and barriers between these electrodes. These parts are contained within a housing, while the corona electrode and the collecting electrode are most often removable from the housing for periodic cleaning. The barriers serve to protect a sparkover or creeping (along the surface) discharge between the electrodes.
In other known devices, an ion collecting member (Collecting cartridge or collecting electrode) and an ion emitting member (Corona electrode or corona frame) are supported on the floor of the housing.
In both of the above designs the electrodes are attached flush to the walls of the housing in order to prevent dirty air from bypassing between the electrodes and the walls.
The disadvantage of such designs is that contaminating matter (vapor or particles), containing chemically aggressive or electrically conductive matter enters into the housing with the air and settle on the barriers, housing's floor and/or on the walls.
Such an aggressive or conductive matter contaminates plastic barriers and walls and makes them electrically conductive. After a while the contamination is difficult or even impossible to remove. Being chemically aggressive this matter penetrates deeply into plastic body and changes non-conductive material's (like ABS) physical properties making it semi-conductive material. The barriers and walls being semi-conductive shorten the distance between the electrodes and provoke the electrical discharge (spark or creeping discharge) between the corona wire and the collecting electrode.
When the device is new (and barriers are non-conductive) the air gap between the corona frame and the collecting cartridge is equal to D. The gap D is selected of such length that no electrical discharge like spark or arcing between the electrodes takes place while the corona discharge occurs and ions are emitted from the corona electrode to the collecting electrode. When the barriers between these electrodes become semi-conductive the ions emitted from the corona wire travel to the barrier's top. This ions' flow constitutes an ionic current flowing from the corona electrode to the barrier. The barrier then assumes the electrical potential that is close to the electrical potential of the corona wire effectively shortening the gap D. The same event happens when particles settle on the walls.
In this event an electrical discharge may occur from the barriers' edges (or from the contaminated walls) to the collecting cartridge. This unfortunate event shortens the lifetime of electrostatic air conditioning systems when they are employed in certain geographical, industrial or climatic regions with chemically aggressive or electrically conductive contaminations present in the air.
In the prior art, the corona frame is made of electrically insulating material (plastic). On this frame thin corona wires are located. The wires are parallel to each other. At the bottom and at the top of the corona frame the conductive wires meet and touch an electrically insulating material of the frame. The electric field strength at the spot where two materials touch each other is substantially higher than in the middle part of the wires. To alleviate the electric field raise additional insulating barriers are installed on the frame. These barriers are located at the side of the corona frame that is closest to the opposite electrodes.
The disadvantage of such design is the same as above, i.e., the dust, containing chemically aggressive or electrically conductive matter (vapor or particles), enters into the air conditioner and settles on the corona frame barriers.
When the barrier becomes semi-conductive, the ions emitted from the corona wire go to the corona frame barriers' edges. The barrier then assumes the electrical potential that is close to the electrical potential of the corona wire, effectively shortening the gap between the corona electrodes and the collector electrodes.
Therefore some “hissing” and even sparking may occur from the barrier edges (or from the contaminated walls) to the corona or collecting electrodes. Again, this unfortunate event shortens the lifetime of electrostatic air conditioning system that works in certain geographical, industrial or climatic regions where chemically aggressive or electrically conductive contaminations are common in the air.
Another drawback to existing corona frame designs is the wire vibration that occurs from time to time and which causes unpleasant noise, as well as may lead to the wire degradation and damage.
Still another previous art disadvantage is that when a corona wire needs a replacement, the whole frame is disposed or new wires are attached to the frame by rather cumbersome and time consuming process. This increases cost and maintenance expenses.
Still another disadvantage of the existing air conditioners is that some undesirable electrical discharge may take place when foreign matter is trapped between the electrodes or the electrodes became dirty.
Therefore there is a need for simple yet reliable mean for undesirable discharges detection.
The electrostatic air conditioning system of the present principles is free of the above-noted deficiencies.
According to an implementation, the electrostatic air conditioner system includes a housing generally having two vents and four sides. An ion emitting member (corona frame) and an ion collecting member (i.e., collecting electrode, or cartridge) are positioned within the housing such that the ion emitting member and the ion collecting member are located at a first distance D from each other and substantially parallel to each other. A high voltage generator is configured to provide a potential difference at output terminals between the ion emitter member and the ion collecting member.
In the proposed design both ion emitting member and ion collecting member contain active area and non-active (passive) area. The active areas are located at certain distance from the sides of the housing. This prevents undesirable discharge between the electrodes through the walls in the case of plastic being contaminated with conductive and/or chemically aggressive matter.
The electrostatic air conditioner system therefore comprises a housing having inlet and outlet vents and sides, such as walls, floor and a top; an ion emitting member (corona frame) and an ion collecting member (collecting cartridge) positioned in said housing, wherein at least one of the ion emitting member and the ion collecting member comprises an active and a passive area, said active area containing conductive electrodes while said passive area containing non-conductive media; said active area being located at a second distance f (for ion emitting member) and third distance K (for ion collecting member) from the sides of the housing.
At least one of the ion emitting and ion collecting member is removable from the housing for periodic cleaning or wire replacement.
The ion emitting member preferably contains thin wire-like electrically conductive electrodes connected to a first terminal of the high voltage generator. As a general rule, the electrical potential of this ion emitting member is positive with regard to the electrical potential of the ion collecting member.
The ion collecting member contains flat plate-like elongated collecting electrodes connected to a second terminal of the high voltage generator. The second terminal's electrical potential is negative with regard to the ion emitting member electrical potential.
As a rule of a thumb both second distance f and third distance K should be equal to or greater than a half of the first distance D, i.e., f≧D/2 and K≧D/2.
In order to minimize electric field strength at the points where the electrodes meet the plastic frame smooth shape conductive members are implemented. They are located at ends of the ion emitting and/or ion collecting electrodes and electrically connected to electrodes directly or via electrically conductive media.
These conductive members are of elongated shape and are substantially orthogonal to the corresponding electrodes they are electrically connected to. In a preferable implementation, such smooth conductive member is propagated along a perimeter of the active area.
To provide better insulation at least one part of said passive area located on one member (ion emitting or ion collecting) is recessed with regards to the corresponding electrode away from the opposite member (ion collecting or ion emitting member correspondingly).
In order to facilitate corona wires periodic replacement the ion emitting member comprises of permanent and replaceable parts. Such replaceable parts comprises corona wires and supports, where the corona wires are attached to the supports; and the supports are attached to the permanent part of the ion emitting member
In order to prevent wire from vibration the ion emitting member includes a supporting member which is located preferably in the middle of the active area and is in mechanical contact with corona wires.
In order to provide good air filtration and at the same time to present low air resistance the collecting electrodes are flat and the repelling electrodes are placed between the collecting electrodes. The repelling electrodes comprising flat parts substantially parallel to air flow and protuberant parts substantially orthogonal to the air flow. These protuberant parts (like bulges) repel charged particulates toward the collecting electrodes to facilitate their collection.
The ion collecting member may also comprise one or more middle support members being configured to support the collecting electrodes and repelling electrodes mid-way between their respective ends.
Both ion emitting and ion collecting middle support members are preferably positioned on opposite from the opposite member (i.e., ion collector or ion emitter correspondingly) side.
As for the ion collecting member the middle support is preferably made of slightly electrically conductive, i.e., anti-static, material in order to provide the inter-electrodes capacitance discharge.
An antenna-like electrical discharge detector is located in the vicinity of the ion-emitting and/or ion collecting members. It may be a rod, or a wire, or a coil, or a metal frame capable to detect slight electrical discharge signal and send an electrical signal to the high voltage generator.
If the high voltage generator receives such a signal it reduces the generated potential difference in order to quench the electrical discharge.
These and other aspects, features and advantages of the present principles will become apparent from the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments, which is to be read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
The present principles may be better understood in accordance with the following exemplary figures, in which:
The present principles are directed to air conditioning devices, and more particularly those air conditioning systems that utilize electrostatic filters.
The present description illustrates the present principles. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements that, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the present principles and are included within its spirit and scope.
All examples and conditional language recited herein are intended for pedagogical purposes to aid the reader in understanding the present principles and the concepts contributed by the inventor to furthering the art, and are to be construed as being without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions.
Moreover, all statements herein reciting principles, aspects, and embodiments of the present principles, as well as specific examples thereof, are intended to encompass both structural and functional equivalents thereof. Additionally, it is intended that such equivalents include both currently known equivalents as well as equivalents developed in the future, i.e., any elements developed that perform the same function, regardless of structure.
Referring to
In this implementation, the corona frames 10 which are used in conjunction with collecting cartridges and each have an active area 14 and passive or inactive 16 areas. The corona frame 10 has an outer frame 12, and the active area 14 comprises the space occupied by the electrodes 18 (e.g., thin corona wires). As shown, the corona wires 18 are located in the central area of the frame 12, and thereby make up the active area 14. The periphery of the frame 12, which is the inactive area 16, is occupied by non-conductive passive media (e.g., plastic and/or air). In this implementation a handle 20 can be integrated into the frame 12 to assist in the insertion and/or removal of the corona frame from the housing of the electrostatic air conditioner.
When both the corona frame and the collecting cartridge's active areas are kept away from the walls as shown in the above configurations, and there are not any barriers between them, three positive things occur:
First, the chemically active or electrically conductive matter (vapor or particles), that enters into the air cleaner does not settle on the barriers because in the present implementations, there are no barriers;
Second, most of the chemically active or electrically conductive matters do not settle on the housing walls because moving air (through the inactive areas) blows such material/matter away from the walls. Most of the air is drawn through the active area; and
Third, chemically active or electrically conductive matter that is passing near or along the housing walls is not electrically charged (i.e., it did not pass through the corona frame active area) and, therefore, does not settle on the walls and, as a result, cannot make walls electrically conductive.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that “creeping” path from the corona electrodes/wires to the collecting electrodes will now be of a considerably longer distance: that is, from the corona wire to the “leg”, then along the wall or the floor, then along another “leg” to the collecting electrode.
As a general design rule of the thumb, the creeping path between the electrodes should be at least twice as long as the air gap between those electrodes. Therefore, the passive/inactive area width (i.e., the distance from the active area to the nearest wall) should be no less than half of the air gap between the corona frame and the collector cartridge.
Even better results may be achieved if the passive/inactive area is slightly recessed away from the opposite electrode.
When some of the electrodes are contaminated, broken, or loose, undesirable electrical discharge may occur. In such event, the high voltage generator should detect the electrical discharge (like spark or hissing) and shut the voltage OFF.
The proposed means for the electrical discharge detection is an antenna 7 as shown in the
Referring to
Bars 50 and 52 serve two functions: first, they smooth the electric field near the electrodes' ends; and second, in a case that the conductive contaminants settle on the bars, no electrical discharge may take place between those bars and their corresponding electrodes since they are electrically connected to each other.
In this implementation, the insulating barriers are removed from the corona frame, and the conductive bars 52 are installed on or near the ends of the corona frame and are electrically connected (directly or via resistor) to the corona wires 108. Since these bars are smooth, they decrease the electric field strength near the wires' ends playing essentially same role as plastic barriers in previous art. Having essentially the same electrical potential as the corona wires 108, these bars 52 can not cause any electrical discharge between the wires 108 and the bars 52. The conductive bars 52 are preferably located at the side of the corona frame closest to the collecting cartridge but may be located at the opposite side of the corona wires as well, i.e., behind the wires if one looks from the collecting cartridge side.
Another advantage of this new design is that the passive (or inactive) areas 106 are added to all four sides of the active area 104 (i.e., the area occupied by the corona wires 108). Finally, according to one preferred implementation, the corona frame 100 is made up of permanent 112 and replaceable 114 parts. The plastic frame 112 with conductive bars 52 and the middle support 110 make up the permanent parts, while the outermost supports 114 with the corona wires 108 attached to them, make up the replaceable parts. The middle support 110 functions to mitigate and/or prevent vibration of the corona wires 108.
As can be seen in
Referring to
In accordance with the preferred implementation described above, the replaceable parts/supports 114 are the parts to which the corona wires are attached. When the corona wire should be replaced, only these replaceable supports with the attached corona wires are removed and disposed of. A new pair of replaceable supports 114 with new corona wires 108 attached thereto then replaces the removed assembly. The replaceable supports 114 can be made of environmentally friendly and inexpensive materials, like, for example, cardboard.
With the above implementation, the present invention provides several advantages over the known art: 1) when wire replacement is necessary, only the wires and the cheap replaceable supports are disposed of, thus maintaining the other more expensive parts of the corona frame intact; 2) wire replacement is now easy and even enjoyable; and 3) the corona frame can be made as strong as necessary, and could even use more costly material to increase performance, since the frame is no longer disposable.
Generally speaking, a spare wire with two supports is located (and supplied as a spare part) at a separate fixture. This Fixture may hold several sets of wires with the wire replaceable supports.
In the
Two replaceable supports 134 are separated from each other by the corona wire length. The supports 134 with the attached wires 108 are packed to the fixture 130 at the manufacturing facility where the wires 108 are attached to the replaceable supports 134 being in the fixture.
Each support 134 has a provision (clip, plug) 136 for the attachment to the permanent corona frame. When the permanent frame engages the replaceable supports 134 that provision 136 holds (secures) the supports 134 on the frame. As an example of such provision a clip (plug) 136 is shown in the
The whole fixture 130 with one set of the replaceable supports and wires is shown in the
In the
The frame 214 reaches the new replaceable supports 134 and is pressed down against the new replaceable supports. The clips/supports 134 on the new replaceable support 134 push up against the clips/supports of the old replaceable supports 214 and displace them out of the permanent part 112. New replaceable supports 134 attach themselves to the permanent part 112 by four clips 136 (
In this manner, the new wires 108 are applied to the corona frame, and the old wires 208 are released and new wires are attached with the single step.
The corona frame design allows it to be symmetrically placed into the air purifier cabinet by rotating by 180°.
According to one novel aspect of the present principles, the collecting electrodes are made up of a combination of flat thin plate-like collecting electrodes and “bulged” repelling electrodes. The flat and thin collecting electrodes feature becomes available due to the increased distance between the closely spaced collecting electrodes and the corona electrodes/wires located far from them, as shown in the
In
In the configuration shown in the
Those of skill in the art will appreciate that the design set forth by the present principles provides several advantage over known designs. For example, there is less air resistance due to the thin and “flat” collecting electrodes, therefore greater CFM and CADR produced by the air conditioner. In addition, the present design not only provides better collecting efficiency (i.e., the collecting electrodes bulges do not push air away from their surfaces as in the prior art), it requires less material for the collecting electrodes (i.e., no heavy bulges) which translates into lower manufacturing cost.
Referring to
The passive area 316 is at the periphery of the collecting cartridge 220 and generally contains no electrodes. The only conductive part within the passive area is the HV contact hidden in the leg, and a wire that connects the HV contact to the electrode. As is understood, the HV contact and the wire do not perform any air cleaning work.
The passive area 316 may be made air penetrable or non-penetrable. In the first case, the frame supporting ion emitting or ion collecting member can have an opening allowing air to flow between the active area 314 and the sides of the housing. In the second case the passive area 316 blocks air passage and is made from a non-conductive material, such as, for example plastic.
As shown in
Each separator 338 is made of non-conductive material such as plastic. Alternatively it may be made of antistatic material, i.e., the material with low electrical conductivity. On the other side of the bottom separators the contact strips 360 are located (See
Antistatic support 410 has low electrical conductivity that does not present substantial electrical load, i.e., current through the middle support is very low. However, this current is great enough to discharge stray capacitance in order of seconds. In this case the risk of electrical zapping is greatly diminished.
For an example, the cartridge's stray capacitance C is equal to 500 pF. To discharge it within 5 seconds time constant τ should be equal to 1 sec. Therefore, middle support resistance R should be equal to R=τ/500*10−12=2*109Ω. Presuming the potential difference between the collecting and repelling electrodes equal to 6 kV, power losses P at the middle support are equal to P=6,0002/2*109=0.018 W. It will be appreciated that this is a negligible amount of dissipated power.
In the claims hereof, any element expressed as a means for performing a specified function is intended to encompass any way of performing that function. The present principles as defined by such claims reside in the fact that the functionalities provided by the various recited means are combined and brought together in the manner which the claims call for. It is thus regarded that any means that can provide those functionalities are equivalent to those shown herein.
Reference in the specification to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” of the present principles, as well as other variations thereof, means that a particular feature, material, structure, characteristic, and so forth described in connection with the embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the present principles. Thus, the appearances of the phrase “in one embodiment” or “in an embodiment”, as well any other variations, appearing in various places throughout the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment.
These and other features and advantages of the present principles may be readily ascertained by one of ordinary skill in the pertinent art based on the teachings herein. It is to be understood that the teachings of the present principles may be implemented in various forms of hardware, software, firmware, special purpose processors, or combinations thereof.
Although the illustrative embodiments have been described herein with reference to the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that the present principles is not limited to those precise embodiments, and that various changes and modifications may be effected therein by one of ordinary skill in the pertinent art without departing from the scope or spirit of the present principles. All such changes and modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the present principles as set forth in the appended claims.
This application claims priority from and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/848,086 filed Dec. 26, 2012.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2013/051440 | 7/22/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/105217 | 7/3/2014 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140174294 A1 | Jun 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61848086 | Dec 2012 | US |