The invention relates to a gas burner for liquid fluid, especially vegetable oil. The gas burner comprises an evaporator for evaporating the liquid fuel. An evaporation chamber of the evaporator is limited by a limiting wall which has a gas discharge channel to produce a gas jet.
A generic gas burner is known from DE 101 61 154. The gas cooker has a burner operated with liquid fuel, preferably vegetable oil. The burner is provided with an evaporator which is connected to an intake pipe for the fuel. The evaporator is provided with a gas discharge channel which is directed towards a baffle device for the gas/air-gas mixture. In the burner operated with liquid vegetable oil fission and recombination processes of the vegetable oil can take place during the evaporation process. In this case, cracking products are produced, forming deposits in the evaporator and at the gas discharge channel. These must be removed after operation of the burner to avoid any blockage of the gas discharge channel.
The object of the invention is to provide a gas burner for liquid fuel which can be operated reliably.
The object is solved by a gas cooker having the features of claim 1. According to the characterizing part of claim 1, the evaporator is embodied at least as double-walled with an inner wall and an outer wall. The two walls can be made of different materials to fulfil different functions. for example, it is favourable if the inner wall consists of a chemically inactive material such as stainless steel. The outer wall of the evaporator can preferably consist of a heat-conductive material such as copper.
It is preferable if the gas discharge channel has an opening edge which tapers from the evaporation chamber. This avoids a sharp-edged transition from the limiting wall of the evaporator into the gas discharge channel. Thus, fewer deposits can settle in the orifice area of the gas discharge channel.
The constriction point of the gas discharge channel is preferably embodied in the inner wall of the evaporator. In this way, both the inlet opening edge and also the constriction point of the gas discharge channel, which are both critical in relation to deposits, can be constructed only in the inner wall of the evaporator which is favourable in terms of production engineering. In this particular arrangement of the constriction point gas creep flows can also be avoided by an annular gap which can be produced during manufacture of the evaporator between opposite boundary surfaces of the inner wall and the outer wall.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the tapering opening edge of the gas discharge channel can be constructed as conical. The opening edge preferably as a cone angle between 50° and 70°. This ensures a particularly smooth transition between the evaporator boundary wall and the gas discharge channel.
The tapering opening edge of the gas discharge channel can go over into the constriction point. The constriction point is advantageously constructed as hollow-cylindrical. In order to achieve a largely stable constriction behaviour of the constriction point, the constriction point advantageously extends over a certain length in the axial direction. On the other hand, such an elongated constriction point results in increased deposits in the gas discharge channel. The length of the constriction point is particularly advantageously about 0.5 mm. The deposits in the area of the gas discharge channel are thereby reduced whilst maintaining a sufficiently stable constriction behaviour.
It is fluid-dynamically advantageous if the gas jet emerges from the gas discharge channel in a conical shape. This ensures good mixing of the emerging gas jet with the ambient air. For the production of a conical gas jet it is advantageous if the outlet opening of the gas discharge channel is expanded in a conical fashion. In this case, a cone angle of the channel outlet opening is preferably greater than a cone angle of the emerging gas jet in order to reduce flow losses.
The evaporator can be embodied as an evaporator tube which can extend through a flame area of the burner. This ensures reliable evaporation of the liquid fuel.
It is preferable if a gas jet opening is constructed in the outer wall of the evaporator, its flow cross-section being greater than that of the constriction point. If the diameter of the constriction point is 0.4 mm, the gas jet opening in the outer wall can well have a diameter of 2 to 4 mm.
In a method of manufacturing the gas discharge channel, a first hole serving as the gas discharge channel and an opposing second hole are drilled in the boundary wall of the evaporator. An opening edge of the first hole which opens into the evaporator chamber is then chamfered by means of a drilling tool which is guided through the second hole. The second hole is then closed by means of a closure element.
Two exemplary embodiments of the invention are described hereinafter with reference to the appended drawings. In the figures:
A gas burner operated with vegetable oil is shown highly schematically in
The two ends of the inner pipe 9 project over the corresponding ends of the outer pipe 11. The coiled evaporator pipe 7 is thus fixed to the cap 6 only via by means of the ends of the inner pipe 9 which is advantageous from the production engineering point of view. The nested tubes 9, 11 are formed into two symmetrical loops 13, 15 which are arranged in a V shape with respect to one another. A gas discharge channel 17 is drilled in the coiled loop 7 in a transition section between the two loops 13, 15. This channel is directed towards a baffle plate 19 located at a distance therefrom.
Both the coiled evaporator pipe 7 and the baffle plate 19 are held within a hollow cylindrical flame conducting sheet 21 shown by the dashed line in
The pipes 9, 11 are placed inside one another before being bent to form the coiled evaporator pipe 7. In this case, a small annular gap 39 can form between the opposing boundary surfaces 35, 37 of the two pipes 9, 11, as indicated in
For operation the burner must first be ignited by means of an external ignition device which is not shown. External ignition is necessary because the ignition point for vegetable oil lies in the range of 300° C. The ignition device can operate with kerosine or diesel oil for example whose ignition point is only about 50° C. The ignition device preheats the coiled evaporator pipe 7 for 30 seconds for example to start a combustion process. The heat thus produced is sufficient to start the evaporation process in the coiled evaporator pipe 7 and to ignite a gas flow emerging from the gas discharge channel 17. In order to maintain a combustion process, a drop in pressure in the container 1 must be compensated by occasionally actuating the air pump 3.
In an orifice area of the gas discharge channel 17 inside the evaporation chamber the gas pressure can increase to about 3 bar whereby a gas jet G is expelled from the gas discharge channel 17 at high speed. The gas jet G emerging from the gas discharge channel 17 is shown by dashed lines in
As a result of the tapered opening edge 31 of the gas discharge channel 17, a deflection of the gas flow from the evaporation chamber 29 into the gas discharge channel 17 indicated by the arrows in
For cleaning the evaporation chamber 29 the coiled pipe 7 with its cap 6 is first unscrewed from the intake pipe 5. A cleaning brush can then be passed through the coiled pipe 7.
As shown in
As is indicated in
To produce the coiled evaporator pipe 7, the two elongated pipes 9, 11 are placed inside one another. The coiled evaporator pipe 7 is then bent helically with the two evaporator pipe loops 13, 15 as shown in
As in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 42 763.5 | Sep 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/10404 | 9/16/2004 | WO | 11/9/2006 |