Claims
- 1. A furnace having upper and lower zones within a furnace chamber incorporating different heating methods and adapted for tempering glass panels having a top surface with a lower emissivity than a bottom surface, the furnace comprising:
rollers for carrying and supporting the glass panels as the panels traverse through the furnace chamber; the lower heating zone within the chamber including radiative heating elements disposed within the lower heating zone for heating the bottom surface of the glass panel, said radiative heating elements forming a primary source for heating the lower surface of the glass panel; the upper heating zone within the chamber including nozzle assemblies for forcing heated air onto the top surface of the glass panel and heating the top surface of the panel thereby, fan assemblies for circulating air drawn from the chamber to the nozzle assemblies, and radiative heating elements disposed in a return air path between the glass panel and the fan assemblies for heating the air as it is drawn from the chamber by the fan assemblies.
- 2. The furnace of claim 1, further including ductwork coupled between the fan assemblies and the nozzle assemblies, the ductwork positioned laterally within the furnace chamber and including left and right plenums through which air from the coupled fans are directed.
- 3. The furnace of claim 2, wherein the ductwork including a center that is offset from a center axis of the furnace chamber.
- 4. The furnace of claim 3, wherein the ductwork is affixed on one end to alternating left and right sides of the furnace chamber.
- 5. The furnace of claim 2, wherein the ductwork is tapered from the plenums toward the furnace center to maintain generally constant air velocity along the ductwork length as air exits the nozzle assembly.
- 6. The furnace of claim 5, wherein the ductwork is tapered from between about 15and 25 degrees from horizontal.
- 7. The furnace of claim 2, wherein the ductwork includes a cross-sectional opening that is at least three-times an exit orifice area through the nozzle assemblies.
- 8. The furnace of claim 2, wherein the ductwork includes an opening height to opening width ratio of about 5:1.
- 9. The furnace of claim 2, wherein the ductwork is spaced along the length of the furnace chamber by a dimension that is approximately equal to a width of the ductwork.
- 10. The furnace of claim 1, wherein the nozzle assemblies include a nozzle plate incorporating a two-dimensional array of orifice jets.
- 11. The furnace of claim 10, wherein the two-dimensional array of orifice jets includes at least two rows of orifice jets that are offset with respect to one another.
- 12. The furnace of claim 10, wherein an additive area of all orifice jets is no greater than approximately 7.5% of a plan area above the glass panels.
- 13. The furnace of claim 10, said nozzle plate being spaced above from the top surface of the glass plate between approximately 4 to 12 times a diameter of the orifice jets.
- 14. The furnace of claim 1, wherein the radiative heating elements are mounted laterally between the nozzle assemblies.
- 15. The furnace of claim 14 further including a pair of radiative heating elements disposed between each nozzle assembly in stacked relation to the glass panel so that return air that has impinged upon the top surface of the glass panel flows proximate and is heating thereby a first of the pair of heating elements before flowing proximate a second of the pair.
- 16. The furnace of claim 15, said first of the pair of heating elements includes multiple heating zones disposed along a length of the first heating element.
- 17. A glass tempering furnace comprising a lower shell and an upper shell forming a heating chamber therebetween, said lower shell resting on a floor surface and said upper shell constrained from expansion in a downward direction and suspended above said lower shell by a pre-loaded rod-spring support system, said rod-spring support system including:
a shelf rod attached at a proximal end to a lower portion of the upper shell and a distal end passing up through a roof of the upper shell; and a spring preloaded between the roof of the upper shell and the distal end of the shelf rod whereby expansion of the shelf rod due to heating within the furnace is accommodated by extension of the pre-loaded spring at the distal end.
- 18. The glass tempering furnace of claim 17, wherein the rod-spring support system further includes a sealing base plate in contact with the roof of the upper shell and through which the shelf rod passes, and a top nut plate accommodating the distal end of the shelf rod wherein turning the nut plate causes the spring to compress and pre-load.
- 19. A method for tempering low-emissivity glass having a treated top surface with a lower emissivity than a bottom surface thereof, the method comprising:
carrying a glass panel on rollers through a glass tempering furnace comprising an upper heating zone located above the rollers and a lower heating zone located below the rollers, the glass panel being supported on the rollers with treated top surface exposed; heating the bottom surface of the glass using substantially only radiant and conducted heat; forcing heated air through nozzles from the upper zone onto the treated surface of the glass panel and directing the forced air from the treated surface in a return air path; heating the air directed within the return air path; and drawing the heated air from the return air path through a fan and directing the drawn air to the nozzles.
- 20. The method of claim 19, wherein the step of heating the air directed within the return air path includes disposing a heater laterally within the upper zone and within the return air path, and causing the heater to emit heat in different amounts along a length of the heater.
- 21. The method of claim 19, further including suspending the upper heating zone on springs preloaded to support substantially all of the weight of the upper heating zone.
- 22. A glass tempering furnace comprising:
a chamber; rollers extending laterally within the chamber to form a transport surface for the plate glass; radiant coils positioned along the bottom of the chamber underneath the rollers; a plurality of spaced nozzle assemblies arranged in lateral side-by-side fashion within the chamber above the rollers; fans coupled to the nozzle assemblies to draw heated air from the chamber and force the heated air onto a top surface of the plate glass; and heating elements extending between each of the nozzle assemblies and positioned within a return path of the heated air after it is flowed onto the plate glass surface so that the air then rebounds from the glass plate prior to the air again being drawn up into the fan and blown back down onto the glass.
- 23. The glass tempering furnace of claim 22, wherein the heating elements are electrically heated rods.
- 24. The glass tempering furnace of claim 22, wherein the heating elements comprise an upper heating element and a lower heating element oriented vertically with respect to one another, said upper heating element sized to generally re-heat air within the return path and said lower heating element having multiple zones of unequal heating length and power for radiative heating of the plate glass.
CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims the benefit from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/425,886 filed Nov. 12, 2000 whose contents are incorporated herein for all purposes.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60425886 |
Nov 2002 |
US |