The present invention relates hairdryers and, more particularly, to an improved hairdryer in which the air intake is cleansed of dust particles with an electrostatic precipitator.
It is known in the art to filter intake air into a hair dryer in order to cleanse the air, which is to be blown upon the head and face. Prior art filters have employed various direct filter medias of various densities. However, the coarse filters remove little dust and the fine filters interfere significantly with the airflow. A clogged filter can result in hairdryers that quickly overheat and, as a result, can cycle on and off during normal use.
It is known in the art to utilize electronic precipitators to cleanse air in room air cleaners by charging airborne dust particles and then collecting these charged particles in a grounded filter medium.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a hairdryer that overcomes the shortcomings of known hair dryers mentioned above. These and other objects are achieved by the present invention described herein.
The present invention avoids the problem of passive porous filters used in a hair dryer intake by employing an electronic precipitator to more efficiently remove air contaminants such as dust, smoke and pollen particles. The active filtration allows more efficient removal of airborne particles while reducing the resistance to the airflow.
A charged screen can be employed at the air intake to ionize air upstream of a grounded, porous media, with a potential between the screen and media of at least 3 to 10 KV. The collection media can made of a number of alternative porous and conductive materials, such as a carbon-loaded plastic foam, metallized glass fiber or metallic foam. The electrical activation of the downstream media allows a much coarser filter pore to be used than in a passive media. Alternatively an array of metal plates or an expanded metal or woven screen can also be used as a dust collector. Dust collecting media or plates can be designed for easy removal for cleansing.
An assembly of porous, dielectric foam sandwiched closely between opposing electrode screens can be used as the charging device and as a removable collecting cartridge. The proximity of the opposing electrical fields to the insulating filter media results in the dielectric material actively and efficiently collecting dust.
Alternatively, a grounded media or collection screens can be used downstream of a high Voltage, ionizing point source or a similar array of point sources. With these or similar ionizing and collection structures, intake air to a hairdryer can be efficiently cleaned with considerably less resistance to the airflow through the dryer.
The precipitator device can be designed to be switched on or off, and the device can also be switched selectively through various voltage levels to increase or decrease the amount of ionization and the filtering efficiency of the aircleaner. The insulation and electrode architecture is designed to avoid visible arcs or sparkovers.
The high voltage generation can be accomplished with a number of well-known electronic circuits. Coil windings and piezo crystals can generate sufficient voltage. The high voltage generator can be housed within the dryer body, within the handle of the dryer, inside the filter structure, pendant on the dryer supply cord, or at the wall plug. The generator and leads to the precipitator can be wired into the dryer or they can be designed with the generator and power supply cord independent of the hairdryer so that the active filter can be sold as an optional add on to a conventional hairdryer.
In addition, when the filter media does eventually become clogged with dust particles, the increased resistance will reduce the air intake. When the air volume is significantly reduced the dryer temperatures will climb. It is common to employ a “split circuit” in hairdryers, which switches out a large portion of the heater on a thermostat, while maintaining the dropping circuit to the motor. The present invention employs a neon light wired across the temperature-limiting thermostat of the split circuit, so that when the thermostat opens, the neon will see an increased current, sufficient to light, thereby indicating the need to clean the filter.
The present invention is more fully understood by reference to the following detailed description of an illustrative embodiment with the drawings identified below.
Referring to
While a preferred embodiment of the invention has been herein disclosed and described, it is understood that various modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention.
This application is related to and claims priority from U.S. Provisional application 60/554,265 (filed 18 Mar. 2004).
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5215558 | Moon | Jun 1993 | A |
6176977 | Taylor et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6635153 | Whitehead | Oct 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050204577 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60554265 | Mar 2004 | US |