This application relates to a heated PTC element having a fault protection circuit.
Heated floor panels are known and utilized in any number of applications. One proposed application is in an aircraft cabin. In particular, a location near an aircraft door is being considered to be provided with such panels.
One type of heated floor panel is a positive temperature coefficient (“PTC”) panel. Such panels are formed of a material that heats when provided with electric current. Conductors are interlaced within a substrate of PTC material and current is supplied to the conductors, which, in turn, causes the substrate to heat.
There are concerns with these panels, particularly, as occupants of the aircraft cabin are exposed to the panels. One concern has to do with shock hazards or dielectric breakdown, which can lead to arcing or smoke damage. As an example, if the panel is damaged, the PTC could be compromised.
A heater electrical short protection arrangement has a heating layer that is at least partially electrically conductive. A conductive layer is initially electrically insulated from the heating layer. A circuit in electrical communication with the conductive layer is configured to halt a supply of electrical energy to the heating layer in response to current flowing into the conductive layer.
A method is also disclosed.
These and other features may be best understood from the following drawings and specification, the following of which is a brief description.
Heated floor panels are generally known. The heating layer 22 is formed of a substrate that may be any number of materials. As examples, a carbon-loaded silicone-based film may be utilized. Alternatively, an ink/paste layer may be utilized as the substrate. Further, a PTC material may coat a fabric. The spacing of the conductors is designed based upon desired heat-up rates, power density, and heating patterns. The PTC substrate is tailored through chemistry, thickness, length, etc. to control heater performance.
In general, a PTC heating layer is characterized as reaching a desired temperature. At the point it reaches its desired temperature, the resistance of the substrate increases greatly which will limit the flow of power to the heater. Thus, a PTC heating layer could be characterized as operating around a steady-state design temperature.
An insulating layer 24 separates the heating layer 22 from an electrically conductive layer 26. The layer 26 can be a guard screen or a film. The insulating layer 24 may be a dielectric material. Another insulating layer 27 and an outer skin 29 may be included.
Power is supplied from 28 to the heating layer 22. A control 31 controls the amount of current flowing through a supply line 33 to the heating layer 22.
A protection circuit 41 is shown mounted on supply line 33. A switch 30 is downstream of protection circuit 41. Protection circuit 41 may be provided with a transformer 38 that can operate an optical latch circuit 32 to open the switch 30 under certain conditions. As shown, line 31 communicates layer 26 to circuit 41.
As long as the insulation layer 24 sits between the conductive layer 26 and heating layer 22, no voltage will exist on line 34. Under these conditions, the circuit 41 will not open the switch 30. Thus, the heated floor panel 20 can operate to heat a floor.
At such a point, the circuit 41 will see the voltage on line 34 and open the switch 30, as shown.
This will stop current flow from source 28 to the heating layer 22. Once power is shut off, the switch 30 will return to a closed position and the panel can be repaired or otherwise evaluated.
While a heated floor panel is utilized, the protective benefits of this disclosure may extend to other PTC heater applications.
The protection features of this disclosure would benefit other type heating layers than just PTC heaters. Also, protection circuits that stop the supply of electrical energy to the heating layer in ways other than opening a switch may come within the scope of this disclosure.
Thus, the disclosure could be broadly stated as comprising a heater electrical short protection arrangement having a heating layer being at least partially electrically conductive. A conductive layer initially electrically insulated from the heating layer. A circuit in electrical communication with the conductive layer configured to halt a supply of electrical energy to the heating layer in response to current flowing into the conductive layer.
The disclosure also extends to a method of providing heat that includes supplying power to a heating layer that is at least partially electrically conductive and with a conductive layer electrically insulated from the heating layer. A circuit in electrical communication with the conductive layer, selectively stopping the supply of power to the heating layer should current flow into the conductive layer.
Although an embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.