The invention relates to a glass or glass ceramic cooking top having at least one zone to be heated, in particular a cooking, grilling, or warming zone, and an electrical heating unit provided on the underside of the zone.
Such apparatus as described above are known commercially. The flat, smooth, pore-free surface of the glass or glass ceramic cooking top allows for easy cleaning. The cooking, grilling, or warming zones according to the prior art are heated by radiant heating elements having spirally wound resistance wires, or tubular heating elements, heating films, or halogen lamps. A temperature limiter is provided to protect the glass or glass ceramic cooking top from overheating. A cutoff temperature of 560° C. to 600° C. is selected for cooking operations. For a warming zone, a cutoff temperature of approximately 100° C. to 150° C. is selected.
Temperature limiters are expensive, with costs in the same range as the heating unit. To avoid temperature limiters, the specific heating capacity of the heating unit could be designed low enough so that overheating of the glass or glass ceramic cooking top would be prevented under all operating conditions. However, this would have the disadvantage of a very lengthy heat-up time, as well as considerable thermal inertia in supplying heat to a cold cooking utensil.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,220,155 describes a heating unit for a glass ceramic cooking top in which heating elements exhibiting PTC behavior are provided on a heat sink disk. The heat sink disk is made of an electrically insulating material with good thermal conductivity, such as aluminum nitrite. A disk made of such a material is costly.
The object of the present invention is to provide a glass or glass ceramic cooking top of the aforementioned type, having a heating unit which operates in an intrinsically safe manner by virtue of a simple design and which in spite of a short heat-up time does not result in overheating of the glass or glass ceramic cooking top, so that a temperature limiter is unnecessary.
The above-referenced object is achieved by the present invention The PTC (positive temperature coefficient) behavior of the resistance heating element causes the affected zone of the glass or glass ceramic cooking top to first heat up quickly, after which the electrical resistance of the heating element becomes so high that no significant further heating of the affected zone occurs. The glass or glass ceramic cooking top is thus protected from overheating without a temperature limiter being necessary.
The described design is economical and robust. The geometry of such a heating unit may be easily adapted to different shapes of the affected zone.
The heating unit is preferably pressed onto the underside by spring elements or adhesively bonded to the underside. A layer of heat sink paste may be provided to improve the heat transfer from the heating unit to the zone.
The heating unit may be formed from a flat, metallic, heat-conducting support element which is adapted to the shape of the zone and lies flat against the underside of the zone. The heating element(s) are positioned on or in the support element.
It is also possible to apply the heating element to the underside of the zone using thick-film technology.
Further advantageous embodiments arise from the following description and the drawings.
A glass or glass ceramic cooking top 1 for a cooking range has four cooking zones 2 and one warming zone 3 (see
Cooking zones 2 in
Cooking zones 2 may also be heated by gas in a manner known per se (see FIG. 3).
A heating unit 7 is provided on underside 6 of glass or glass ceramic cooking top 1 in the region of warming zone 3 or in zones used for other purposes. This heating unit has a surface region 8 which extends on underside 6, essentially over the entire area of warming zone 3. This extension may also be accomplished by positioning two or more heating units 7 side by side on underside 6 (see FIG. 10). Surface region 8 is in flat, heat-conducting contact with underside 6 in the region of cooking zone 2 in order to achieve good heat transfer from heating unit 7 to warming zone 3.
In the embodiment according to
In the embodiment according to
In the embodiment according to
In the exemplary embodiment according to
FIG. 7.
Heating element 18 has a positive temperature coefficient of electrical resistance. Its electrical resistance therefore increases with increasing temperature. Such PTC heating elements are known, and are usually made of doped polycrystalline ceramic using barium titanate, for example, as base material. Electrodes 16, 17 are used to conduct current as well as to transfer heat from heating element 18 to surface region 8 via insulator 14 and shaft 13.
Heating element 18 has a characteristic curve which represents the electrical resistance of the heating element as a function of temperature (PTC characteristic curve or RT characteristic curve). A heating element 18 is used in which the operating range lies predominantly in the low-impedance portion of the characteristic curve. The selection is made according to the desired function of the heating unit for the warming zone or for a cooking zone. At an initial low temperature, heating occurs with high heat output due to the correspondingly low resistance. As the temperature increases, the heat output diminishes in accordance with the characteristic curve, as a result of which no further heating of zone 3 occurs above a temperature specified by the choice of the characteristic curve. Heating unit 7 has self-regulating characteristics with regard to the temperature of zone 3. When a cold cooking utensil or cooking material is placed on zone 3, which has been heated to its final temperature, the temperature of heating element 18 is reduced on account of the heat conduction, so that the heat output of the heating element again increases. Altogether, a sensitive regulation and limitation of the temperature in zone 3 is thus achieved, although glass or glass ceramic cooking top 1 itself has poor heat conduction properties.
The heat-up speed of zone 3 may be increased by the invention, using two or more PTC heating elements.
In another embodiment it is possible to apply heating unit 7 to underside 6 of zone 3 using thick-film technology. Heating unit 7 has an electrical resistance layer, exhibiting the described PTC behavior, situated between two electrically conductive electrode layers. The one electrode layer may be applied directly to underside 6.
This is particularly the case when the glass or glass ceramic cooking top produces sufficient electrical insulation in the temperature range of interest, for example in a warming zone. However, if zone 3 is provided as a cooking zone with higher temperatures than a warming zone, an electrically insulating intermediate layer can be provided between the electrode layer and underside 6 in order to ensure electrical insulation, even at temperatures at which the electrical conductivity of the glass or glass ceramic cooking top increases.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 50 317 | Oct 2002 | DE | national |
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197 11 541 | Sep 1998 | DE |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040149724 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |