This application is entitled to and claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2017-233501, filed on Dec. 5, 2017 and Japanese Patent Application No. 2018-190298, filed on Oct. 5, 2018, the disclosure of which including the specification, drawings and abstract is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a freezing refrigerator. In particular, the present invention relates to a freezing refrigerator having a defrosting function.
In a known defrosting method of a freezing refrigerator, an inflow prevention valve for preventing inflow of refrigerant into an evaporator is closed to forcibly reduce the refrigerant in the evaporator in an operating compressor such that defrosting is performed using the heat generated by a defrosting heater (see, for example, PTL 1).
The freezing refrigerator illustrated in
Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. H10-38453
However, in the conventional configuration, the refrigerant in evaporator 105 is reduced when defrosting is performed, and consequently the effect of vertically uniformizing the heat of the refrigerant in evaporator 105 is reduced. When the effect is reduced, temperature is varied by delay in temperature rise in the upper portion of evaporator 105 and insufficient temperature rise at the entrance of evaporator 105 where a large amount of adhering frost presents. As a result, the total time taken for the defrosting of evaporator 105 is lengthened, and the interior of the refrigerator and/or the freezer is heated, and consequently, the power required for re-cooling is increased.
Since the defrosting time is also lengthened, the energization time of defrosting heater 106 is lengthened, and accordingly the power consumption of the heater is increased. In addition, the defrosting is terminated even when the frost partially remains due to the temperature variation, and the cooling load after the defrosting might be increased.
To solve the above-mentioned problems, an object of the present invention is to provide a freezing refrigerator for efficiently using the heat of a defrosting heater without wasting the heat.
To achieve the above-mentioned object, a freezing refrigerator of an embodiment of the present invention includes: a compressor; a condenser; a dryer; a decompressor; an evaporator; a first pipe including an inlet pipe of the evaporator; a second pipe including an outlet pipe of the evaporator; a first thermal coupling part configured to thermally couple the decompressor and the second pipe together; and a second thermal coupling part configured to thermally couple the first pipe and the second pipe together. The compressor, the condenser, the dryer, the decompressor and the evaporator configure a refrigerant cycle.
According to the above-mentioned configuration, with the outlet side pipe warmed with the condensation latent heat of the refrigerant vaporized with the heat of the defrosting heater in the lower portion of the evaporator, it is possible to increase the temperature of the inlet pipe at a portion where no fin is provided on the entrance side of the evaporator where the temperature is difficult to be raised in the upper portion of the evaporator.
With the evaporator of the freezing refrigerator of an embodiment of the present invention having the above-mentioned configuration, the heat of the defrosting heater in a defrosting operation can be efficiently used without wasting the heat.
Embodiments of the present invention are described below with reference to the drawings.
In
Compressor 1 compresses the refrigerant of vapor phase in the freezing cycle, and serves a function of circulating the refrigerant in the freezing cycle.
Condenser 2 condenses and liquefies compressed refrigerant of vapor phase and liberates the condensation latent heat of the refrigerant.
Dryer 3 sucks moisture in the freezing cycle.
Decompressor (for example, capillary tube) 4 reduces the pressure of the refrigerant of liquid phase.
Evaporator 5 vaporizes the depressurized refrigerant of liquid phase to reduce the temperature inside the refrigerator by using the vaporization latent heat of the refrigerant.
Defrosting heater 6 is designed for melting the frost adhering to evaporator 5, and is disposed below evaporator 5 in the present embodiment.
First thermal coupling part 9 thermally couples decompressor 4 and second pipe 16b. In the cooling operation in which compressor 1 is operating, heat exchange is performed between the high temperature refrigerant passing through decompressor 4 and the low temperature refrigerant discharged from the outlet of evaporator 5 to thereby improve the cooling down performance. First thermal coupling part 9 couples the pipes and transmits heat. Examples of the material of first thermal coupling part 9 include metal and carbon materials.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
By performing a cooling operation with the freezing cycle having the above-mentioned configuration, and by performing heat exchange with the cold air generated by evaporator 5 by using the fan such that the air circulates in the freezing refrigerator, foods are stored in a frozen or cooled state.
Here, as the moisture from foods adheres to evaporator 5 in the form of frost and the frost grows, the heat exchange performance of evaporator 5 decreases. To restore the reduced heat exchange performance, defrosting is performed by temporarily stopping the cooling operation (that is, compressor 1 is stopped), and by energizing defrosting heater 6 to heat evaporator 5. This procedure of the operation is referred to as the defrosting operation. In the defrosting operation, the liquid refrigerant inside evaporator 5 is also vaporized.
In a case that pipe line 18 is disposed in odd-numbered lines, outlet pipe 12b of evaporator 5 located at the lower portion and inlet pipe 12a disposed at the upper portion of evaporator 5 are largely separated away from each other in vertical direction. In the present embodiment, pipe 19 of the outlet side end portion of evaporator 5 located at the lower portion is connected with returning vertical pipe 11 extending in the vertical direction (from bottom to top). Returning vertical pipe 11 is connected with outlet pipe 12b. As a result, inlet pipe 12a (the pipe downstream of expanding portion 13) and outlet pipe 12b are close to each other, and thus second thermal coupling part 8 in which inlet pipe 12a and outlet pipe 12b are thermally coupled with each other is provided.
A part of returning vertical pipe 11 and a part of inlet pipe 12a are welded and thermally coupled with each other at thermal coupling part 8 (corresponding to “coupling part” of the present invention).
Second thermal coupling part 8 includes welding part 15. As illustrated in
In addition, second thermal coupling part 8 may include welding part 15. As illustrated in
In addition, second thermal coupling part 8 may include welding part 15. Welding part 15 joins the flat surface obtained by radially pressing outlet pipe 12b and the flat surface obtained by radially pressing inlet pipe 12a. Thus, the contacting area between outlet pipe 12b and inlet pipe 12a through welding part 15 increases, and the heat exchange effect can be enhanced.
Second thermal coupling part 8 illustrated in
Second thermal coupling part 8 illustrated in
With the above-mentioned configuration, in the defrosting operation, the liquid refrigerant is retained in the lower portion of evaporator 5, and vaporized by the heat of defrosting heater 6. Since the vaporized refrigerant is output through returning vertical pipe 11, the temperature of the pipe on the relatively outlet side is equal to the saturation temperature of the refrigerant. In comparison with the outlet side, the portion where no fin is provided in the upper portion of evaporator 5 in inlet pipe 12a receives less heat of heater 6, and, since that portion has a lowest temperature, the frosting amount is large and temperature rise is slow in that portion. Temperature rise can be facilitated by second thermal coupling part 8 thermally coupling the above-mentioned portion of inlet pipe 12a and outlet pipe 12b heated with the vaporized refrigerant. As a result, temperature variation in evaporator 5 can be suppressed in its entirety. Thus, the heat of defrosting heater 6 is not wasted, and inlet pipe 12a of evaporator 5, which has been difficult to heat in the related art, can be heated with the latent heat of refrigerant condensation.
While evaporator 5 has a piping configuration in which inlet pipe 12a is disposed in the upper portion and outlet pipe 12b is disposed in the lower portion in the present embodiment, a configuration in which the upper and lower portions are reversed may also achieve the same effect.
Evaporator 5 is a heat exchanger of a fin-and-tube type of ten-folds in the vertical direction and one-line in the front-rear direction, and fin 10 is schematically illustrated in this diagram. In the cooling operation, the liquid refrigerant builds up in a lower portion of returning vertical pipe 11 with gravity. Accumulator 7 is disposed for the purpose of preventing liquid compression due to the above-mentioned liquid refrigerant returning to compressor 1. The outer frame of accumulator 7 and a part of inlet pipe 12a are thermally coupled with each other by second thermal coupling part 8.
It is to be noted that second thermal coupling part 8 may have a configuration in which the outer frame of accumulator 7 and inlet pipe 12a are welded together, a configuration in which inlet pipe 12a is wound around the outer frame of accumulator 7, or a combination of such configurations.
With the above-mentioned configuration, in the defrosting operation, refrigerant that is built up in a lower portion of evaporator 5 in a liquid state and is vaporized by the heat of defrosting heater 6 passes through returning vertical pipe 11 and is then condensed at accumulator 7. Accordingly, the rising temperature of the accumulator 7 and the pipe on relatively outlet side is equal to the saturation temperature of the refrigerant. In comparison with the outlet side, the entrance side pipe of the upper portion of evaporator 5 where no fin is provided receives less heat of the heater, has a lowest temperature, and therefore generates a large amount of frosting, thus resulting in slow temperature rise. By thermally coupling this portion with accumulator 7 heated with the vaporized refrigerant and having larger heat capacity than the pipe part to facilitate temperature rise, temperature variation of the entire evaporator 5 can be suppressed.
In this manner, the heat of defrosting heater 6 used for vaporization of refrigerant is not wasted, and the entrance part of evaporator 5, which is difficult to heat in the related art, can be heated with the condensation latent heat of the refrigerant.
Evaporator 5 is a heat exchanger of a fin-and-tube type of ten-folds in the vertical direction and one-line in the front-rear direction, and fin 10 is schematically illustrated in this diagram. Accumulator 7 which prevents returning of liquid refrigerant to compressor 1 is disposed in returning vertical pipe 11. A part of inlet pipe 12a passes through the inside of accumulator 7.
With the above-mentioned configuration, in the defrosting operation, refrigerant that is built up in a lower portion of evaporator 5 in a liquid state and is vaporized by the heat of defrosting heater 6 passes through returning vertical pipe 11 and is then condensed at accumulator 7. Accordingly, the rising temperature of the accumulator 7 and the pipe on relatively outlet side is equal to the saturation temperature of the refrigerant. In comparison with the outlet side, the entrance side pipe of the upper portion of evaporator 5 where no fin is provided receives less heat of the heater, has a lowest temperature, and therefore generates a large amount of frosting, thus resulting in slow temperature rise. With the configuration in which the above-mentioned portion passes through accumulator 7 heated with vaporized refrigerant and having larger heat capacity than the pipe part, frosting is suppressed in the cooling operation, and temperature rise is facilitated in the defrosting operation, whereby temperature variation of the entire evaporator in defrosting can be suppressed. In this manner, the heat of defrosting heater 6 used for vaporization of refrigerant is not wasted, and the entrance part of evaporator 5, which is difficult to heat in the related art, can be heated with the condensation latent heat of the refrigerant.
While the coupling part for thermally coupling inlet pipe 12a and outlet pipe 12b together in the heat exchanger in which a horizontal pipe folded by a predetermined number of times in the vertical direction is arranged in a predetermined number of lines in the front-rear direction is described in the above-mentioned embodiments, the present invention is not limited to this. For example, the coupling part may thermally couple inlet pipe 12a and outlet pipe 12b together in a heat exchanger including a horizontal pipe which is arranged in a predetermined number of lines in the front-rear direction and folded by a predetermined number of times in the vertical direction.
The freezing refrigerator of the subject application can be widely used not only as a home-use freezing refrigerator, but also as a business-grade freezing refrigerator. Further, the freezing refrigerator of the subject application can be used as a freezing refrigerator of a mobile machine such as an automobile and a ship.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2017-233501 | Dec 2017 | JP | national |
2018-190298 | Oct 2018 | JP | national |