1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to heat exchangers and, more particularly, to a shower tray as well as to a method for manufacturing a shower tray.
2. Description of Related Art
Such a shower tray is known, for example, from WO 2010/088784 A1 of the same applicant. The heat exchanger comprises a plane cover plate as a run-off surface, over which waste water runs off The cover plate is formed from chrome steel, forms the base of the shower tray and can be integrally formed with the shower tray. The plate either consists of two layers, of which the one is profiled and is placed below the other, by which means meandering channels are defined between the plates, or pipes through which water to be heated flows, are soldered against a plate.
DE 44 06 971 shows a shower tray, on whose lower side channels, through which cold water flows, are attached by way of welding on pipes (tubes) or profiles.
NL 1031082 shows a heat exchanger below a shower tray, with which pipes are soldered via a narrow web onto a run-off surface.
WO 2009/030503 describes the manufacture of thermal solar collectors, with which heat fluid pipes are welded onto an absorber plate with a laser.
GB2420973 shows a shower tray with a heat exchanger with an undercut tray wall, into which an elastic region of an insertable tray base snaps. In another embodiment, a further undercut region of the tray edge can cooperate with projections of the tray base, in order with a rotation of the tray base, to lock or release this.
As a whole, the construction height is too high and the cleaning too difficult with existing heat exchangers of this type. The cleaning is also technically relevant, since the cleanliness of the heat exchanger has a large influence on the efficiency of the heat exchanger. Moreover, the manufacture is complicated and the material weight very large.
It is therefore the object of the invention, to create a shower tray of the initially mentioned type that has a comparatively small construction height and is simple to clean. A further object is to provide a suitable manufacturing method for such a shower tray.
According to a first aspect of the invention, thus a shower tray with a heat exchanger is present, wherein the heat exchanger is arranged below the shower tray for a heat recovery from waste water, for heating fresh water, wherein a first heat exchanger surface is in contact with the waste water, and a second heat exchanger surface is in contact with the fresh water, and the first heat exchanger surface forms the base or a part of the base of the shower tray. Thereby, the shower tray is manufactured of aluminium or of an aluminium alloy. Metal alloys which have a weight component of at least 80% aluminium are considered as aluminium alloys. Hereinafter, when one speaks of aluminium, this is also to be understood as an aluminium alloy. It is also possible to manufacture the tray from a metal with a thermal conductivity of above 100 W/(mk).
In one embodiment, the second heat exchanger surface is formed by pipes (tubes), which are connected to the base of the shower tray by way of a material-fit connection, in particular welding or soldering
In further embodiments, instead of pipes, intermediate spaces are present between the base and one or more plates, for example of metal. Thereby, the intermediate spaces form channels for leading the fresh water, as described in the already mentioned WO 2010/088784, which is herewith included by way of reference, in particular with its
It is the case with all embodiments: in order to effect a good heat transfer, a turbulent flow should be present in the pipes or the channels. For this reason, the inner diameter of the pipes is kept small, or the inner side of the pipes is profiled, which for example can also be effected by way of deforming the pipes from the outside. The flow resistance of the pipes increases by way of such measures, which is why several pipes are led in parallel. Thereby, the length of the pipes is essentially the same.
In one embodiment, the pipes are composite pipes (or dual pipes) with an outer layer of aluminium or of an aluminium alloy and with an inner layer of copper or a copper alloy. Copper alloys which have a weight component of at least 50% copper are considered as copper alloys. Hereinafter, a copper alloy is also meant when one speaks of copper.
In another embodiment, a copper pipe is welded onto the tray base of aluminium, in particular by way of laser welding. For this, a weldable anodising layer is formed on the tray base preferably beforehand.
In one embodiment, the shower tray and the outer side of the pipes are anodised. The pipes are closed with a cap, for example, during the anodisation, so that the copper layer in the pipes is not dissolved by the anodisation bath. Preferably, the anodising is effected after the welding, by which means the welding procedure is simplified. The other way round however would make the connection of the pipes to connection elements of copper after the anodising more complicated, since the occurrence of a galvanic element is to be prevented.
In one embodiment, an edge region of the shower tray comprises a further or a reinforced coating, in particular a layer produced by powder coating, for example with aluminium oxide, or paint layer. An increased abrasion resistance can be achieved in the edge region by way of this.
In one embodiment, the complete shower tray comprises a coating that permits a corrosion protection or wear protection, and/or a wetting of the surface (hydrophilic coating).
In another embodiment, the shower tray is shaped by way of a forming process, in particular by way of deep-drawing or hydroforming or by way of superplastic deformation. It can additionally also be formed by bending and welding individual sections of the shower tray.
The use of aluminium as a base material leads to a series of advantageous that synergistically complement one another and that improve the efficiency and the manufacturability.
The combination of hydroforming for shaping the tray, and anodising as a surface treatment is advantageous: drawing traces on the upper side of the tray which arise with normal forming with a male and female die, would have to be subsequently treated or be laminated by a material-depositing method (coating, painting). Essentially no such drawing marks arise on hydroforming a tray (or not in a region where they disturb), and thus an anodisation can take place, without the trough surface having to be subjected to post-treatment.
On forming, in particular by way of hydroforming, different variants of shower trays can be manufactured in the same shape. These variants have the same shape of the recess with the shower base and the heat exchanger, but differently large outer edge regions as standing surfaces around these. A set of shower trays having different variants can be manufactured in this manner.
A further advantage of the manufacture by way of hydroforming is that undercut portions can be shaped in a particularly simple manner, thus without the use of slides.
In one embodiment, the shower tray comprises a cover (lid), and moreover a first edge and a second edge, wherein the first and the second edge lie opposite one another, and wherein an inclined support region for supporting the cover is present on the first edge, and an undercut edge region is present on the second edge of the shower tray which lies opposite the first edge. The cover due to the inclination in the support region is pressed into the undercut region when loaded. Preferably, no undercut regions are present in the support region, and the cover can be lifted upwards without further ado. In contrast, in the undercut region, the cover cannot be lifted without previously pulling the cover in the horizontal direction towards the second edge, out of the undercut region.
In one embodiment, reinforcement profiles are arranged on the lower side of the shower tray. The shower tray can be designed thinner and lighter by way of this. The reinforcement profiles can be welded to the shower tray or bonded to this. The reinforcement profiles can have a U-profile and thus encompass or bridge one or more of the pipes. This necessitates the reinforcement profiles being attached on the shower tray after attaching the pipes.
Preferably, the following steps are carried out for manufacturing a shower tray:
The method in one embodiment can comprise the further steps:
This insulation layer prevents a flow of charge carriers in the region between the outer layer of the pipes (for example aluminium) and the manifolds or transition pipes (for example of a copper alloy) and the formation of a galvanic element in the case that this region should become contaminated and/or moist. The transition pipes, for example, are of copper. The insulation layer, for example, is formed by a shrink hose or by a coating in the region of the connection between the manifolds or transition pipes and a section of the pipes or their outer (aluminium) layer.
The method for manufacturing a shower tray, in particular with the use of hydroforming, can be carried out in a repeated manner, wherein shower trays with outer edge regions extended to a differently far extent are manufactured, wherein such outer edge regions connect to edge regions of a recess of the shower tray. These outer edge regions form a standing surface after the installation of the shower tray. Thus shower trays for showers with differently large standing surfaces can be manufactured with the same forming tool.
According to a second aspect of the invention, thus a shower tray with a heat exchanger is present, wherein the heat exchanger is arranged below the shower tray for a heat recovery from waste water for heating fresh water, wherein a first heat exchanger surface is in contact with the waste water and a second heat exchanger surface is in contact with the fresh water, and the first heat exchanger forms the tray base or a part of the tray base. Thereby, the shower tray is manufactured of a steel alloy, and a base pate, also called sheet plate or heat exchanger plate, of a different material is fastened in the region of the tray base below the shower tray, on the tray base, by which means a thermally conductive connection to the tray base is formed essentially over the compete surface of the base plate. Again, pipes are connected to this base plate by way of a material-fit connection, below this base plate, in particular by way of welding or soldering, wherein these pipes form the second heat exchanger surface.
Preferably, the heat exchanger plate is fastened on the lower side of the tray base by way of a fixed connection, preferably by way of a bonding or welding method, for example with a bonding film or by way of an epoxy resin. The welding method can be friction welding. The epoxy resin can have added aggregates for increasing its thermal conductivity.
In one embodiment, the shower tray comprises an enamel layer on the upper side, and is not enamelled on the lower side, wherein ribs for the mechanical stabilisation of the shape of the tray base are arranged on the lower side. These ribs for example are about 10 mm high and stabilise the tray base during the enamelling: they prevent a warping, which would bulge out the tray base to the top or to the bottom, whereupon the waste water would no longer run off over the tray base in a uniform manner.
In one embodiment, the enamel layer has added aggregates (additives) for improving its thermal conductivity, in particular added metal particles. These, for example, are rust-free of stainless steel (also called Inox), in particular CrNi steel. Although such steels seen per se are poor heat conductors, as aggregates on enamelling they surprisingly lead to an improvement of the thermal conductivity of the enamel.
Such an enamel layer can also be applied independently of the application of the heat exchanger, for example, for coating cooking utensils. According to a further aspect of the invention, an enamel layer is created that has a comparatively high thermal conductivity.
The shower tray according to the first aspect of the invention can be understood and realised completely independently of a shower tray according to the second aspect of the invention.
Individual elements of the first or second aspect however, where technically realisable, can be transferred to the respective other aspect, and produce the same effect there.
The method for manufacturing a shower tray of a steel alloy comprises the following steps
Preferably, the ribs are coated, in particular by way of painting, in a further step for the corrosion protection.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the following steps are carried out for enamelling the shower tray
One avoids the lower side being coated at a high temperature with a thick scale layer, by way of the lower side (with the ribs) also being enamelled.
According to an alternative embodiment of the invention, the following steps are carried out for enamelling the shower tray:
According to a further aspect of the invention, a semifinished product for manufacturing the shower tray is created. This comprises a plane base plate with pipes welded thereon.
In one embodiment, the base plate comprises cut-outs for leading through ribs of the shower tray.
With both aspects of the invention, thus with the shower tray as well as with the semifinished product, the heat exchanger for example has a width of between 50 cm and 150 cm and a length between 50 cm and 150 cm. The width and length according to one embodiment are at least approximately equal to 75 cm.
The term “shower tray” in this application is understood to comprise the term “bath tub”. In a further embodiment, the shower tray is thus a bath tub. In this case, the heat exchanger for example has a width of between 20 cm and 70 cm and a length between 80 cm and 200 cm.
A pipe distance between the pipes of the heat exchanger which run in parallel is 1 cm to 5 cm or 2 cm to 5 cm, in particular at least approximately 2.4 cm (measured from pipe middle to pipe middle), in the embodiments of both aspects of the invention. In contrast to pipes of heat exchanger in solar collectors, where greater temperature gradients are present, the pipe distance in particular is smaller than 7 cm. Moreover, likewise in contrast to pipes of heat exchangers in solar collectors, for example the distances between welding spots are also about 2 mm (from middle to middle of the welding spots), wherein for example the welding spots themselves have a diameter of less than 2 mm, and the pipe diameters are smaller, i.e. with inner diameters of between 4 mm and 10 mm, in particular 4.75 mm.
In the embodiments of both aspects of the invention, manifolds, to which the pipes are connected, are arranged outside the run-off surface. In this manner it is possible for an as large as possible surface of the run-off surface to act as a heat exchanger.
In embodiments of both aspects of the invention, the gradient of the tray base for example is between 3% and 4.5%, in particular 3.5%. This applies to the tray base in the assembled condition. This therefore also applies to the angle between the upper edges of the tray and the tray base, amid the assumption that the edges of the tray are to be assembled horizontally. A particularly good heat transfer results with this gradient, unexpectedly better than with a smaller angle, such as 2% for example.
Further preferred embodiments are to be deduced from the dependent patent claims. Thereby, features of the method claims according to context can are combinable with the device claims and vice versa.
The subject-matter of the invention is explained in more detail hereinafter by way of preferred embodiment examples which are represented in the accompanying drawings. In each case schematically are shown in:
The reference numerals applied in the drawings and their significance are listed conclusively in the list of reference numerals. Basically, the same parts are provided with the same reference numerals in the figures.
In one embodiment, the pipes 14 are manufactured of aluminium or of an aluminium alloy. Preferably they are moreover coated on the inner side, for example with polyethylene (PE). In another embodiment, the pipes 14 are composite pipes (bimetal pipes, composite pipes, dual pipes) with an outer wall or an outer layer 141 of aluminium or of an aluminium alloy and with an inner wall or inner layer 142 of copper or a copper alloy, for example of copper deoxidised by phosphorous (Cu-DHP). Exemplarily applied composite pipes have a wall thickness of approx. 0.55 mm aluminium (alloy) and 0.25 mm copper (alloy) with an outer diameter of approx. 6.5 mm (1/4″ inch; 6.35 mm) The inner diameter is thereby approx. 4.75 mm.
The shower tray 10 and thus also the tray base 12 and the pipes 14 are preferably anodised (eloxised), in particular hard-anodised, and by way of this are wear-resistant and at the same time thermally conductive. The edge of the tray that is visible next to the cover 14, additionally to the anodising, can be coated or painted in a different colour. Alternatively to anodising, the tray base 12 can be painted at least on the waste water side, thus the upper side, preferably with a hydrophilic paint.
On anodising the composite pipes 14, these are closed at the ends when manufacturing the shower tray 10, so that the inner layer of copper is not dissolved in the anodising bath.
In an alternative embodiment, the shower tray 10 is rust-free of stainless steel, in particular CrNi steel, and the pipes 14 of copper or a copper alloy are welded on. Such an arrangement however has a reduced efficiency as a heat exchanger.
The material of the base plate 13 and pipes 14 is preferably essentially the same or of the same type, thus for example in each case aluminium (alloy) or in each case copper (alloy). They can be more easily connected to one another by way of this, in particular by way of welding or soldering. In the case that the material is aluminium or an aluminium alloy, the pipes 14 for example are composite pipes, as described above, thus are of aluminium or an aluminium alloy at least at the outer side of the pipes.
The adhesive or bonding layer 15 on the one hand effects a compensation of different expansion of the tray base 12 and base plate 13 on heating, and on the other hand the heat transfer from the tray base 12 to the pipes 14. The bonding layer 15 according to one variant is formed by a bonding film, i.e. by a bonding material which is provided as a thin layer or foil, for example of a thermoplastic material. It can have added aggregates or be strewn with aggregates (on one or both sides), for improving its thermal conductivity, in order to improve the thermal conductivity of the bonding foil. Such aggregates for example are powder of a metal (aluminium, copper, etc . . . ) or of a carbide or boride (SiC, TiC, TiB2).
According to another variant, the adhesive layer 15 is an epoxy resin which can likewise have added one of the mentioned materials as an aggregate for improving the thermal conductivity.
In the case that the cover layer is an enamel layer 16, then according to one embodiment, the parent substance for the enamel layer 16 is provided with a material for improving the thermal conductivity before the enamelling.
According to one embodiment of the invention, this material is a rust-free stainless steel (Inox), in particular a CrNi steel.
Exemplary embodiments for thermally conductive enamel layers are:
With the manufacture of the enamel layer, at least of a ground enamel layer, the shower tray 10 must be enamelled as a whole. Ribs 31 can be welded or soldered on below the tray base 12, in order to prevent a deformation of the shower tray 12 at the high temperatures (850° C.) on enamelling. The lower side of the tray base 12 is sand blasted, or the enamel layer removed in another manner before bonding on the base plate 13 with the pipes 14. The ribs 31 finally receive a new corrosion protection in place of the removed enamel layer.
The run-off 35 in particular can be arranged at a projection 18 of the shower tray 10, so that the base mass of the shower tray 10 is not affected. On installation of the shower tray, for example a suitable opening in the wall 19, for example a lightweight construction wall, behind which conduits are led, is merely to be provided in the region of the projection 18. The run-off region 34 is a channel or recess, which leads the waste water to the run-off 35. A projection 18 and the further features described here with regard to the
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1034/11 | Jun 2011 | CH | national |
59/12 | Jan 2012 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH2012/000127 | 6/7/2012 | WO | 00 | 3/26/2014 |