This application is a U.S. National Phase application under 35 U.S.C. §371 of International Application No. PCT/EP2006/004636, filed May 17, 2006. The international Application was published in German on Nov. 22, 2007 as WO 2007/131531 under PCT article 21 (2).
The present invention is related to a gas heated laundry dryer having a heating device including a gas burner and a valve with a gas nozzle.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,291,467 describes a laundry dryer which is equipped with a gas-heated heating device for heating the process air stream. The burner of the heating device is disposed upstream of the inlet opening of a heating channel. The heating channel is inclined upwardly so as to follow the natural orientation of the flame. In the burner of this laundry dryer, primary air is mixed with the gas as combustion air upstream of the burner surface, and secondary air is added at the inlet of the heating channel. At the outlet of the heating channel, tertiary air is added to the hot gas and passed as a process air stream through the drum.
In this burner, combustible gas and air are partially premixed. The so-called “primary air” is drawn in by the injector effect of the gas nozzles. The secondary air portion and the tertiary air portion are drawn in by the process air fan. The secondary air enters the heating channel at the burner head, forming an envelope around the flame so as to prevent contact of the flame with the walls of the heating channel or combustion chamber, and thus to prevent heat transfer to the housing. The tertiary air enters at the end of the flame through holes in the shell of the heating channel. The tertiary air holes are arranged in the lower half-shell relative to the cross section of the heating channel, thereby preventing contact of the flame with the wall of the heating channel. The tertiary air further serves to reduce the temperature of the hot air at the entrance to the process air duct to the temperature of the process air. The gas supply is controlled by a valve and a pilot-flame- or spark-monitoring control system. It has been found that in spite of the constructional features, such as the upwardly inclined orientation of the heating channel and the arrangement of the tertiary air supply in the lower half-shell in the region of the flame end, it is still not possible to achieve a combustion with particularly low pollutant emissions.
German documents DE 103 32 338 A1 and DE 103 32 339 A1 describe a heating device for a laundry dryer, which has a first heating channel and a second heating channel. Both heating channels are circular in cross section, the second heating channel having an enlarged cross section compared to the first heating channel. The head of the burner projects into the inlet opening of the first heating channel, the axial centerline of the burner being located below the centerline of the first heating channel. The outlet opening of the first heating channel projects eccentrically into the inlet opening of the second heating channel in downwardly offset relationship therewith. Due to this feature, the inlet opening for the tertiary air is formed principally at the upper side of the second heating channel. In this manner, the hot gases, which issue from the first heating channel and which flow upwardly due to thermal buoyancy, can better mix with the tertiary air in the upper region of the second heating channel. The first heating channel further has a guide device for secondary air which enters through the inlet opening, said guide device extending at a downward slope in flow direction from a middle upper portion of the first heating channel to the outlet opening thereof. This feature reduces the thermal buoyancy of the flame, causing the flame to be directed downwardly at the end of the first heating channel. This results in a combustion with reduced pollutant and noise emissions.
A similar gas-heated laundry dryer having a heating device is described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,826,607. In that disclosure, there are also provided two heating channels, the outlet opening of the first heating channel, into which opens the flame opening of the burner, having a smaller cross section than the inlet opening of the second channel, and the outlet opening of the first channel projecting into the second channel.
However, the construction including a first heating channel and a second heating channel requires greater effort during manufacture and during installation of the heating device in a laundry dryer. The separate subassembly formed by the first and second heating channels must be accurately aligned with respect to the burner during assembly in order to obtain the desired air flow.
An aspect of the present invention is to provide a gas-heated heating device which allows heating to be effected with low emissions of pollutants and noise and which is relatively simple to manufacture. Another, alternative aspect is that the heating device be installable in a laundry dryer with minimum effort.
In an embodiment, the present invention provides a gas-heated laundry dryer having a heating device. The heating device includes a gas burner, a valve with a gas nozzle configured to supply primary air for formation of a flame and a tubular heating channel configured to enclose the flame. The heating channel includes an inlet opening configured to receive secondary air as combustion air and an outlet opening configured to receive tertiary air mixable with hot gases of the burner. The outlet opening is connected to a process air duct of the laundry dryer. An annular baffle member is disposed in the outlet opening of the heating channel and configured to center, by the secondary and tertiary air, at least one of the flame and a hot air stream in the channel.
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention will be described in more detail below and is schematically shown in the drawings, in which:
The present invention provides a heating device, in particular for a laundry dryer, including a gas burner and a valve with a gas nozzle, at which primary air can be supplied for the formation of a flame, the heating device further including a tubular heating channel which encloses the flame, and at the inlet opening of which secondary air can be supplied as combustion air, and at the outlet opening of which tertiary air can be mixed with the hot gases; the outlet opening of said heating channel opening into an air duct for the process air.
The present invention can provide particularly uniform temperature distribution in the heating channel and a compact design of the heating device which, as a module including the heating channel, valve, burner, ignition device, and temperature monitoring means, can be fastened in the laundry dryer and aligned therewith at a single mounting point during assembly. An annular baffle member in the outlet opening causes the flame and the stream of hot air in the heating channel to be centered by the entering secondary air and tertiary air. This prevents contact of the flame with the wall of the heating channel. The temperature profile in the heating channel is uniform and exhibits an overall low temperature level, without any temperature peaks caused by the formation of flow vortices. This has a beneficial effect on the pollutant level in the combustion air
A bracket 24 for valve 25 and gas burner 11 is fastened to heating channel 16 in the lower region of inlet opening 15 such that it lies on an imaginary extension of the bottom surface line. Bracket 24 positions gas burner 11 within inlet opening 15 of heating channel 16, and is formed with a mounting foot 26 for mounting of the entire heating device 5 in a laundry dryer. A mounting tab 27 is located in the upper region of inlet opening 15 such that it lies on an imaginary extension of the top surface line of heating channel 16, said mounting tab fixing gas burner 11 in the vertical cross-sectional plane of heating channel 16 (see also
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Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/004636 | 5/17/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/17/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/131531 | 11/22/2007 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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1217327 | May 1966 | DE |
19633505 | Feb 1997 | DE |
19925276 | Dec 2000 | DE |
10332338 | Feb 2005 | DE |
10332339 | Feb 2005 | DE |
0761863 | Mar 1997 | EP |
1397357 | Aug 1965 | FR |
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WO 0039504 | Jun 2000 | WO |
03021029 | Mar 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090183386 A1 | Jul 2009 | US |