The present invention relates to a heating burner for a heating system.
Heating burners are used in a wide variety of applications. They are used for heating buildings, areas and liquids, either for day-to-day use or, for instance, for a swimming pool. Even if the requirements arising in the various fields of application do, in part, differ quite widely, one requirement on the burner is common to all applications. The problem is to achieve a specific required temperature in the system to be heated at any time, whereby the temperature can vary widely over time, but with the reaction time of the heating burner being short. A factor which makes this more difficult is that the system often reacts slowly to heating by the burner.
In order to meet this requirement, the majority of heating burners have an input that specifies the desired setpoint temperature, and at least one sensor that determines the actual temperature in the system. Internal control methods attempt to regulate the heating burner, or rather its combustion flame, so that the actual temperature corresponds as closely as possible to the setpoint temperature. It must be noted in respect of this control method that the reaction time of the full heating system is relatively slow, the requirements on the setpoint vary constantly and that efficient and maintenance-free heating is required. A high efficiency of the heating burner, and combustion producing little exhaust gas and no soot from the fuel used, is also a precondition for commercially available heating burners.
Essentially, two methods for the control of heating burners are distinguished; these may be used either individually or in combination:
In intermittent control, a range is determined around the desired setpoint temperature. The heating burner knows only two states during combustion. In the burning state, fuel is burnt under no control, and thermal energy is produced. In the switched off state, no fuel is burnt, no additional thermal energy is passed to the heating system. If the actual value falls below the lower bound of the range for the setpoint value, the heating burner is ignited and burns until the actual value exceeds the upper bound of the range. The burner is then switched off and remains in this state until the actual value determines that ignition is necessary again. An actual value temperature graph, as is normally found for a heating burner with intermittent control, can be found in
The modulating method regulates the calorific output analogously to the actual value of the temperature in the system. For example, the fuel supply can be regulated within the framework of a control range. As the control range is, however, finite, it is necessary to change over to the intermittent control method if the value exceeds or falls short of the control range. The disadvantages described for this method apply in the same way, if not more so.
With this method it is also difficult to regulate the controlled variables (such as air supply and fuel supply) so that efficient, low pollutant combustion is given over the entire control range.
Proceeding from this prior art, the problem to be solved by the present invention is to provide a heating burner that will produce a desired calorific output in an efficient and low polluting fashion.
The problem is solved according to the invention by a heating burner according to the features of claim 1.
The problem is solved according to the invention by a heating burner for a heating system with a control device having at least one primary sensor for determining the calorific output from the heating burner and having actuators which comprise an ignition device for igniting fuel, an air delivery device for delivering combustion air and a fuel delivery device for delivering fuel to the ignition device, wherein the volume delivered by the fuel delivery device is essentially freely variable and the control device adjusts the actuators such that the fuel is ignited in periodically recurring ignition intervals and is burnt for a variable combustion interval wherein the calorific output is controllable by the control device by means of the duration of the combustion interval within each ignition interval.
The central idea behind the invention is, thus, that the control device ignites the fuel at regular intervals and allows a flame to burn at a predefined output. The calorific output produced by the heating burner is regulated solely by the duration of combustion, i.e. by the variable combustion interval. The control device essentially needs only distinguish between three phases within a combustion interval, an initialisation phase in which the combustion output is increased up to a predefined value, a constant combustion phase in which the combustion output is held at a constant value, and a stop phase in which the combustion output is reduced back down to practically zero.
The control device can thus be designed such that it operates the actuators so effectively for these three phases that efficient combustion of the fuel is guaranteed. The actuators in the control device are particularly concerned with the regulation of the fuel/air ratio and thus, according to the invention, at least the volume delivered by the fuel delivery device is freely adjustable. The thermal losses in the heating system overall, and in particular in the pipes, are less as a result of the precise regulation of the calorific output.
The ignition intervals are preferably less than or equal to 60 seconds. This ensures rapid reaction of the heating burner and the actual output of the heating burner adapts itself perfectly to the desired output. Overshoot and undershoot by the calorific output can be avoided.
Preferably the fuel is a liquid fuel, more particularly rapeseed oil or other natural oils.
It is advantageous if the actuators comprise a motor that sets a truncated cone in rotation around its own longitudinal access so that fuel introduced into the truncated cone via an inlet exits via an exit opening and is atomized by the centrifugal force. The truncated cone is thus a cylindrically formed tube through which fuel is introduced at the inlet opening where the tube has the lesser diameter; said fuel being driven towards the exit opening by the rotation. If the truncated cone is driven rapidly enough, the fuel exiting through the exit opening will be atomized because of the centrifugal forces acting on it. The molecule chains in long chain liquid fuels will be cracked.
The ignition device preferably comprises a heat recovery feature fabricated from a thermally conducting material and giving off heat arising on the combustion of the fuel to the fuel flowing in behind. The heat recovery feature may, for instance, be a rod, a pipe with internally mounted, motorized impeller or another design suited to leading off a part of the heat generated when the fuel is burnt. The heat is diverted to a fuel supply line. In this way, the incoming fuel can be heated to just below the ignition temperature without the need to provide additional preheating.
Alternatively, it is also conceivable that the incoming fuel is preheated to a temperature above the relevant ignition temperature so that the fuel ignites immediately air is supplied.
This heat recovery feature is preferably arranged at least in part inside the hollow cylinder described above and projecting from the outlet opening. Thus the heat occurring at the outlet opening of the truncated cone is transported away towards the inlet opening of the truncated cone. As there is a lack of oxygen inside the truncated cone, the fuel can be preheated to temperatures above the ignition point. Ignition only occurs when the fuel exits from the truncated cone through the outlet opening.
The ignition device preferably comprises preheating that heats the fuel to ignition temperature, in particular in order to ignite the fuel in the initialization interval or the initialization phase. As there is not sufficient combustion output outside the combustion interval to preheat the incoming fuel adequately in the initialization interval, it is helpful to provide an external preheating device. Preheating may be provided by resistance or inductance. The decisive factor is that the preheating is controllable from the control device and is regulated in accordance with the phases.
The preheating device preferably comprises a heating coil enclosing the truncated cone. In this way, the fuel is heated indirectly via the truncated cone.
The control device is preferably designed such that it controls the fuel delivery device and the air delivery device in such a way that an essentially constant air/fuel ratio is present at the ignition device during the combustion interval, preferably in an initialization interval or initialization phase and a stop interval or stop phase. The air/fuel ratio may be selected such that the combustion of the fuel is guaranteed to be as efficient as possible and more particularly soot-free. Because it uses this type of intelligent control device the heating burner need only rarely be serviced, yet despite frequent re-ignition guarantees efficient utilization of the fuel.
It is advantageous if the heating burner comprises an air flow sensor for determining the delivery rate from the air delivery device. This means that the control device is not only able to control the air needed for igniting and burning the fuel according to a preset mode, but can also regulate it as demanded. In addition to air flow sensors, various temperature sensors may be provided both for fuel and for air, and also flow sensors for the fuel delivery rate.
The control device preferably sets the actuators, more particularly the fuel pump or fuel delivery device and the air delivery device, in such a way that a pilot flame is present outside the combustion interval. Re-ignition of the fuel is thus not necessary and there is no need to provide a device sufficiently powerful to achieve this. Furthermore, because the pilot flame is present, it is possible to avoid explosive ignition of the fuel in the initialization phase. The pilot flame may also be used to provide heat for preheating the fuel and thus securing efficient combustion of the fuel beyond the ignition interval.
The control device is preferably designed such that it controls the fuel pump outside the combustion interval to supply the pilot flame so that less than one percent, preferably less than one pro mille, of the fuel pump's maximum delivery rate is delivered.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are described by the dependent claims.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are described below using the drawings. Where
a shows a block diagram of a control device for a heating burner according to the invention with the associated actuators and sensors;
b shows individual sensors on the control device from
a is a time/temperature graph of a heating burner with intermittent control;
b is a time/temperature graph of a heating burner according to the invention;
a shows the combustion output of a heating burner according to the invention over several ignition intervals;
b shows the combustion output of a heating burner according to the invention over a first ignition interval; and
c shows the combustion output of a heating burner according to the invention over a second ignition interval.
The same reference numbers will be used for identical and identically acting parts in the description below.
A heating burner according to the invention can comprise the components illustrated in
In the present heating burner this primary sensor is a hot water temperature sensor 65 that determines the temperature of a heating circuit heated by the burner. The control device is designed so that it can determine the difference between the actual temperature and a setpoint temperature and regulates the actuators so that this difference at any point in time is as small as possible.
Since the heating burner according to the invention has a very low number of states, that is to say ignition of fuel, combustion of fuel, extinguishing of the combustion flame or reduction of the combustion flame and operation without a combustion flame or with reduced combustion flame, preconfiguration of the control device 10 is conceivable. This preconfiguration determines optimum parameters for controlling the actuators for each of the states referred to. In the embodiment illustrated in
It is possible to dispense with the separate ignition device 50 inside the combustion chamber 1 if preheating 40 heats the fuel above its specific ignition temperature. When the fuel is mixed with the air it will ignite spontaneously. The preheating device 40 thus assumes the functionality of the ignition device 50.
A first opening in the fuel line 21 opens out in the fuel tank 24 from which the fuel is conveyed to a second opening in the fuel line 21. This second opening makes an air tight connection inside the air line 81 with an inlet opening 35 in a truncated cone 32. The truncated cone is driven by a motor 37, not illustrated, in such a way that the fuel entering through the inlet opening 35 is conveyed by the centrifugal force inside the hollow truncated cone 32 towards an outlet opening 36 on the opposite side to the inlet opening 35 but having a larger diameter because of the shape of the truncated cone 32. The centrifugal force applied by the motor 37 causes the unprocessed oil introduced into the truncated cone 32 to be both mechanically cracked on a trailing edge along the outlet opening 36 and mixed with the air surrounding the truncated cone 32 that has been introduced through the air line 81. The motor 37 and the truncated cone 32 thus make up the functional units of the atomizer 70 and the cracker device 30 illustrated in
The preheated fuel ignites as soon as it is mixed with the air. The heat output generated here is not solely given off as the calorific output of the heating burner, but a small portion of the heat is passed to the following fuel flowing into the truncated cone 32 by way of a heat recovery feature 42 which extends into the interior of the truncated cone in the form of a metal rod.
A fuel delivery device 20 and an air delivery device 80 (cf.
As illustrated in
b shows a time/combustion output graph for the first time interval tZ from
A detailed view of the second ignition interval tZ from
1 Combustion chamber
10 Control device
20 Fuel delivery device
21 Fuel line
24 Fuel tank
30 Cracker device
32 Truncated cone
35 Inlet opening
36 Outlet opening
37 Motor
40 Preheating
42 Heat recovery
44 Heating coil
50 Ignition device
60 Sensors
61 Air temperature sensor
62 Air flow sensor
63 Fuel temperature sensor
64 Fuel flow sensor
65 Hot water temperature sensor
70 Atomizer
80 Air delivery device
81 Air line
tB Combustion interval
tZ Ignition interval
tI Initialization interval
tS Stop interval
L Combustion output
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
102006000620.8 | Jan 2006 | DE | national |
102006014633.6 | Mar 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2006/012407 | 12/21/2006 | WO | 00 | 9/11/2008 |