This invention relates to a hand held appliance, and in particular a hand held appliance having a heater.
Hand held appliances such as hair care appliances and hot air blowers are known. Such appliances are provided with a heater to heat either fluid flowing through the appliance or a surface at which the appliance is directed. Most devices are either in the form of a pistol grip with a handle including switches and a body which houses components such as a fan unit and a heater. Another form is for a tubular housing such as found with hot styling devices. Thus, generally the option is to have fluid and/or heat blowing out of an end of a tubular housing and either to hold onto that housing or be provided with a handle orthogonal to the tubular housing.
This makes the appliance either bulky or sometimes difficult to use as the appliance can be long and/or heavy. A solution to this is two provide a curved form as this reduces the length and can remove some of the bulk. It is known to have a curved hair care appliance with a curved section and then to provide a fan unit in a straight section on one side and the heater in a straight section on the other side. This has the problem that in the curved section fluid can become turbulent resulting in pressure losses and the production of noise. This could be mitigated by turning vanes in the curved section but that adds weight and cost to the appliance. Thus, the inventors have combined the use of a curved hairdryer with the use of a curved ceramic heater so features of the heater can be used to turn and direct the fluid flowing through the curved section and heat this fluid at the same time. This makes the design smaller, quieter and the fluid flowing from the outlet of the appliance can be engineered to exit at any convenient angle regardless of the location of the fluid inlet.
Thus, according to a first aspect, a hand held appliance comprises a fluid flow path extending between a fluid inlet and a fluid outlet and a ceramic heater within the fluid flow path wherein the fluid flow path is non-linear and the heater is non-linear.
Preferably, the appliance further comprises a housing wherein the housing houses the heater and encloses the fluid flow path, and wherein the housing is curved. In a preferred embodiment the heater is curved.
Thus, according to a second aspect, a hand held appliance comprises a housing, a fluid flow path extending between a fluid inlet and a fluid outlet and a ceramic heater within the fluid flow path wherein the housing houses the heater and encloses the fluid flow path, and wherein the housing is curved and the heater is curved.
Preferably, the housing comprises a straight section and a curved section and the heater is housed within the curved section.
In a preferred embodiment the heater comprises at least one heating element comprising a flat ceramic plate and a conductive track.
Preferably, the heating element is arcuate.
Thus, according to a third embodiment, a housing, a fluid flow path extending between a fluid inlet and a fluid outlet and a ceramic heater within the fluid flow path are provided wherein the housing houses the heater and encloses the fluid flow path, and wherein the housing is curved and the heater is curved.
In a preferred embodiment the heating element has a constant curvature.
Preferably, the heating element curves around an angle of 10° to 170°. In a preferred embodiment the heating element curves around an angle of 80° to 120°.
In a preferred embodiment the heater comprises a heating element and a plurality of fins extending away from the heating element wherein, the plurality of fins dissipate heat from the heating element into the fluid flow path.
Preferably, the heating element is an arcuate flat plate and the plurality of fins extend away from the heating element and are also arcuate.
In a preferred embodiment each one of the plurality of fins follows the same angle of curvature as the heating element.
Preferably, the heater comprises a heating element and a plurality of fins extending away from the heating element wherein, the plurality of fins direct flow of fluid flowing within the heater.
In a preferred embodiment, the plurality of fins comprise a channel extending between adjacent pairs of the plurality of fins and wherein each channel directs flow through the heater.
Preferably, each channel is defined by a surface of a pair of adjacent fins and a portion of a surface of the heating element and wherein, each channel dissipated thermal energy from the heating element into fluid flowing within the fluid flow path.
In a preferred embodiment the housing comprises a straight portion and a curved portion.
Preferably, within the straight portion, the housing houses a fan unit.
In a preferred embodiment, within the straight portion the housing comprises a handle.
Preferably, the appliance is a hair care appliance. It is preferred that the appliance is a hair dryer.
The invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
The fluid flow path 400 is non-linear and flows through the straight section 12 and the handle 20 in a first direction 120 and exits from the curved section 14 in a second direction 130. At the fluid outlet 440, the fluid flow path 400 has turned 90°, thus the first direction 120 is orthogonal to the second direction 130. However, this is just one example, different degrees of curvature can be used.
The hairdryer 10 can be considered to have an inlet plane extending across the first end 22 of the straight section 12 and an outlet plane extending across the fluid outlet 440 and the inlet plane and the outlet plane are non-parallel.
A second example of an appliance 100 is shown in
Referring now to
The heaters 80, 180 are single sided unified heaters and there are a few ways of manufacturing them. In one example, the heating element 88 can be fired and then sintered fins 84 can be bonded to the sintered heating element 88 using a bonding paste such as a glass bonding paste. Alternatively, the fins 84 can be attached to the flat ceramic plate 82 in the green state and they can be co-fired as a single unit.
Once each part of the heater has been made the two parts are bonded together.
In all the examples shown, a three dimensional heater has been produced using a two dimensional heating element 88.
The examples showing fins 84 have an added benefit that the fins are used to dissipate heat from the heating element 88 and as they follow the curve of the heater 80, 90, 180, 190 the fins 84 assist in turning flow around the curve, reducing turbulence which reduces pressure losses through the heater as the fluid is turned from a first direction 120 to a second direction 130, 140 and also reduces the production of noise.
In the example without fins, as shown in
Thus, thermal exchange from the heater to fluid flowing in the fluid flow path can be achieved by increasing the available surface of the heating element or by providing a cooling feature such as the fins which wick heat from the heating element towards the tips of the fins due to a thermal gradient, this heat is then exchanged with fluid that flows passed the fins which increases the thermal gradient causing more heat to be drawn along the fins.
In order to enable any angle of exit from the fluid outlet, the appliance is provided with a housing that extends beyond the heater. In
The conductive track can be formed from two tracks as described, however one track can be used or more than two. Use of a single track may limit the temperatures setting available to the user whereas multiple tracks enable different wattage to be turned on and off giving more levels of temperature and more accurate control. Different wattage can be achieved by a number of different identical tracks or each track could be rated to a different number of watts. Also, although three connection points are shown, each track could have individual connection points or a different sharing arrangement could be used.
Suitable ceramic materials include aluminium nitride, aluminium oxide and silicon nitride.
According to various aspects, appliances have been described above as having a fluid flow and this has been used instead of air flow as it is known to use hair care appliances with refillable containers of serums or even water to hydrate hair as it is being styled. Indeed it may utilise a different combination of gases or gas and can include additives to improve performance of the appliance or the impact the appliance has on an object the output is directed at for example, hair and the styling of that hair.
The invention has been described in detail with respect to a hairdryer however, it is applicable to any appliance that draws in a fluid and directs the outflow of that fluid from the appliance.
According to various aspects, appliances can be used with or without a heater; the action of the outflow of fluid at high velocity has a drying effect.
According to various aspects, appliances have been described without discussion of any attachment such as a concentrating nozzle or a diffuser however, it would be feasible to use one of these known types of attachment in order to focus the exiting fluid or direct the fluid flow differently to how it exits the appliance without any such attachment.
The invention is not limited to the detailed description given above. Variations will be apparent to the person skilled in the art.
This application is a national stage application under 35 USC 371 of International Application No. PCT/GB2017/050079, filed Jan. 12, 2017, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB2017/050079 | 1/12/2017 | WO | 00 |