Claims
- 1. Fuel-fired heating apparatus comprising:a combustion chamber thermally communicatable with a fluid to be heated; a burner structure associated with said combustion chamber and operative to receive fuel from a source thereof; a wall structure defining a flow path through which combustion air may flow into said combustion chamber for mixture and combustion with fuel received by said burner structure to create hot combustion products within said combustion chamber; and a combustion air shutoff system for terminating combustion air supply to said combustion chamber in response to the presence of a predetermined elevated temperature therein, said combustion air shutoff system including: a temperature sensing structure extending into the interior of said combustion chamber and having a frangible portion disposed within said combustion chamber and being shatterable in response to exposure to said predetermined elevated temperature, and a damper disposed externally of said combustion chamber and operatively associated with said frangible portion, said damper being (1) movable between an open position in which said damper member permits combustion air to flow into said combustion chamber via said flow path, and a closed position in which said damper precludes combustion air flow into said combustion chamber via said flow path, (2) resiliently biased toward said closed position, and (3) blockingly held in said open position by said frangible portion which, when shattered, permits movement of said damper to said closed position.
- 2. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 1 wherein:said fuel-fired heating apparatus is a fuel-fired water heater.
- 3. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 2 wherein:said fuel-fired water heater is a gas-fired water heater.
- 4. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 1 wherein:said combustion air shutoff system is operative, in response to an increased combustion temperature within said combustion chamber created by a reduction in the quantity of combustion air entering said combustion chamber via said flow path, to terminate combustion air supply to said combustion chamber prior to the creation therein of a predetermined elevated concentration of carbon monoxide.
- 5. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 4 wherein:said predetermined elevated concentration of carbon monoxide is in the range of from about 200 ppm to about 400 ppm by volume.
- 6. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 4 wherein:said fuel-fired heating apparatus is a fuel-fired water heater.
- 7. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 6 wherein:said fuel-fired water heater is a gas-fired water heater.
- 8. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 1 wherein:said burner structure is disposed within said combustion chamber, and said temperature sensing structure is positioned adjacent said burner structure.
- 9. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 1 wherein:said frangible portion includes a frangible glass bulb member filled with a fluid.
- 10. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 9 wherein:said fluid is peanut oil.
- 11. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 9 wherein:said fluid is mineral oil.
- 12. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 9 wherein:said fluid is an assembly lubricant.
- 13. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 1 wherein said temperature sensing structure includes:a frame structure disposed within said combustion chamber and operatively supporting said frangible portion, and a rod having a first end portion anchored to said damper for movement therewith between said open and closed positions, and a second end portion movably received in said frame structure and longitudinally facing said frangible portion, said frangible portion, until shattered, preventing movement of said rod toward said frame structure.
- 14. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 13 wherein said temperature sensing structure further includes:a spring member resiliently interposed between said frangible portion and said second end portion of said rod.
- 15. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 1 wherein:said combustion chamber has an outer wall portion defined by an arrestor plate having flame quenching openings therein, and said temperature sensing structure extends into the interior of said combustion chamber through said arrestor plate.
- 16. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 15 wherein:said flame quenching openings have hydraulic diameters, and said arrestor plate having a thickness, and the ratio of said hydraulic diameters to said thickness is in the range of from about 0.75 to about 1.25.
- 17. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 16 wherein:said ratio is approximately 1.0.
- 18. Fuel-fired heating apparatus comprising:a combustion chamber thermally communicatable with a fluid to be heated, said combustion chamber having an outer wall defined by an arrestor plate having a perforated portion defined by flame quenching openings formed in said arrestor plate; a burner structure disposed in said combustion chamber and operative to receive fuel from a source thereof; a wall structure defining a flow path external to said combustion chamber and through which combustion air may flow into said combustion chamber for mixture and combustion with fuel received by said burner structure to create hot combustion products within said combustion chamber; a damper structure disposed externally of said combustion chamber and being resiliently biased toward a closed position in which it terminates air flow through said flow path; and a temperature sensing structure projecting into said combustion chamber and supporting a heat-frangible element within the interior of said combustion chamber, said temperature sensing structure releasably blocking said damper structure in an open position in which it permits combustion air to flow through said flow path into said combustion chamber, and being operative to unblock said damper structure, and permit it to be driven to its closed position, in response to the shattering of said heat-frangible element caused by the presence of a predetermined, undesirably high temperature in said combustion chamber during firing of said burner structure.
- 19. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 18 wherein:said fuel-fired heating apparatus is a gas-fired water heater.
- 20. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 18 wherein:said frangible element is a fluid-filled glass bulb.
- 21. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 20 wherein:said glass bulb is filled with peanut oil.
- 22. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 20 wherein:said glass bulb is filled with mineral oil.
- 23. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 20 wherein:said glass bulb is filled with an assembly lubricant.
- 24. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 18 wherein said temperature sensing structure includes:a frame structure secured to the inner side of said arrestor plate and supporting said heat-frangible element, a rod having a first end portion anchored to said damper structure for movement therewith, and a second end portion movably received by said frame structure and facing said heat-frangible element, movement of said rod by said damper structure toward said frame structure being precluded by said heat-frangible element until it is shattered by heat within said combustion chamber.
- 25. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 24 wherein said temperature sensing structure further includes:a spring member resiliently interposed between said heat-frangible element and said second end portion of said rod.
- 26. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 25 wherein:said frame structure includes a first portion secured to the inner side of said arrestor plate, and a second portion removably secured to said first portion and carrying said heat-frangible element and said spring member.
- 27. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 26 wherein:said second portion of said frame structure is removably secured to said first portion of said frame structure by a twist-lock connection therebetween.
- 28. Fuel-fired heating apparatus comprising:a combustion chamber thermally communicatable with a fluid to be heated; a burner structure associated with said combustion chamber and operative to receive fuel from a source thereof; a wall structure defining a flow path through which combustion air may flow into said combustion chamber for mixture and combustion with fuel received by said burner structure to create hot combustion products within said combustion chamber; and a combustion air shutoff system operative to sense the temperature in said combustion chamber and responsively prevent combustion air supply to said combustion chamber via said flow path in response to said temperature reaching a level correlated to and indicative of a predetermined, undesirably high concentration of carbon monoxide present in said combustion chamber and created by a reduction in the quantity of combustion air entering said combustion chamber via said flow path, said combustion air shutoff system including a temperature sensing structure including a frangible element disposed within said combustion chamber and being heat shatterable in response to said combustion chamber temperature reaching said level.
- 29. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 28 wherein:said fuel-fired heating apparatus is a fuel-fired water heater.
- 30. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 28 wherein:said fuel-fired heating apparatus is a gas-fired water heater.
- 31. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 28 wherein:said predetermined, undesirably high concentration of carbon monoxide is in the range of from about 200 ppm to about 400 ppm by volume.
- 32. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 28 wherein:said frangible element is a frangible glass bulb member containing a fluid.
- 33. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 32 wherein:said fluid is peanut oil.
- 34. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 32 wherein:said fluid is mineral oil.
- 35. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 32 wherein:said fluid is an assembly lubricant.
- 36. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 28 wherein:said combustion air shutoff system further includes a combustion air shutoff damper movable between open and closed positions, and said temperature sensing structure further includes a frame structure disposed within said combustion chamber and operatively supporting said frangible element, and a rod having a first end portion anchored to said damper for movement therewith between said open and closed positions, and a second end portion movably received in said frame structure and longitudinally facing said frangible element, said frangible portion, until shattered, preventing movement of said rod toward said frame structure.
- 37. The fuel-fired heating apparatus of claim 36 wherein said temperature sensing structure further includes:a spring member resiliently interposed between said frangible element and said second end portion of said rod.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/801,551 filed on Mar. 8, 2001 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,497,200 and entitled “FUEL-FIRED HEATING APPLIANCE WITH COMBUSTION CHAMBER TEMPERATURE-SENSING COMBUSTION AIR SHUTOFF SYSTEM”, the full disclosure of such copending application being hereby incorporated herein by reference.
US Referenced Citations (40)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0040373 |
Nov 1981 |
EP |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry |
Star Sprinkler Catalog Sheets—Sep., 1992. |
Battelle Final Report “Evaluation of Firexx . . .” Aug. 15, 1994. |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09/801551 |
Mar 2001 |
US |
Child |
10/200234 |
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US |