1. Field of the Invention
The present invention pertains to a high efficiency furnace and a low profile furnace that each comprise a compact enclosure for residential use and an air distribution blower housing that is designed with an outer wall having an exponentially increasing expansion angle and an enlarged air outlet opening. The enlarged outlet opening slows down and spreads out the air flow from the blower housing over a greater area of the secondary heat exchanger and the primary heat exchanger of the high efficiency furnace, and over a greater area of the heat exchanger of a low profile furnace. Thus, the blower housing enables less air pressure drop through the heat exchangers, which increases the efficiency of the blower operation. The design of the blower housing also efficiently turns the velocity head of the air flow to usable static pressure at the housing air outlet. The enlarged air outlet opening of the blower housing is achieved without increasing the exterior dimensions of the blower housing whereby the blower housing is used in a compact enclosure for residential use. This is accomplished by utilizing a unique design volute outer wall of the blower housing that has a unique exponentially increasing expansion angle in the direction of air flow through the blower housing and compact relative positioning of the blower housing and heat exchangers in the furnace enclosure.
2. Description of Related Art
High efficiency residential natural gas powered furnaces are becoming more and more common. A furnace of this type is defined in the industry as a 90+AFUE (Annul Fuel Utilization Efficiency) furnace. A 90+ furnace converts more than 90% of the fuel supplied to the furnace to heat, with the remainder being lost through the chimney or exhaust flue. These particular types of furnaces employ a primary heat exchanger found in most any type of furnace, plus an additional secondary heat exchanger. The secondary heat exchanger increases the capacity of the furnace to convert the heat of the gas combustion to the distribution air flow from the furnace, and thereby defines the furnace as a high efficiency furnace.
The typical construction of a high efficiency furnace 10 is shown in
An air inlet opening is typically provided in a side wall or in the bottom of the furnace enclosure. The air inlet opening can be covered by an air filter that allows ambient air in the environment surrounding the enclosure 12 to easily pass through the opening and enter the enclosure interior 14. Alternatively and more frequently, the air inlet opening of the furnace enclosure communicates with a cold air return duct system of the residence. The cold air return duct system channels ambient air from throughout the residence to the furnace enclosure.
The furnace enclosure also has an air distribution outlet opening 18. The outlet opening communicates with an air distribution conduit or duct system of the residence in which the furnace is installed. In
In the typical construction of a high efficiency furnace represented in
An air distribution blower 26 that draws ambient air into the furnace enclosure 12 is positioned just below the secondary heat exchanger 24. A motor (not shown) of the blower rotates a fan wheel 28 in the interior of the blower in a clockwise direction as viewed in
A typical blower 26 includes a blower housing that contains the fan wheel 28. The typical blower housing includes an exterior or outer wall 32 having a scroll or volute configuration. The outer wall 32 spirals around the fan wheel 28 in the direction of fan wheel rotation. A pair of side walls 34, only one of which is shown in
As shown in
The air distribution blower 26 of the typical high efficiency furnace represented in
The present invention overcomes the efficiency problems associated with the constructions of prior art 90+ furnace blowers by providing a blower with a unique housing design that spreads out the distribution air flow over the secondary heat exchanger to a larger extent than the existing blowers of the prior art. This enables the blower to operate with less of a pressure drop through the heat exchangers than that of prior art blowers. The scroll design of the blower housing also efficiently turns the velocity head of the air flow through the housing to usable static air pressure. In addition, it has been found through testing that the blower housing design of the invention applied to a low profile 80+ furnace blower has a similar or superior static efficiency to that of a regular profile blower. In a similar manner to the 90+ furnace, in an 80+ furnace where the primary heat exchanger is located close to the blower housing air outlet opening, the enlarged air outlet opening of the blower housing of the invention directs air over a larger area of the primary heat exchanger than blower housings of the prior art, and thereby creates energy savings. This enables the design of the blower housing to be employed in low profile 80+ furnaces to provide an efficiency gain, even though there is no secondary heat exchanger in the low profile furnace. The improved efficiency of the blower housing enables a reduction in the exterior dimensions of the furnace enclosure in which the blower housing is used.
In the typical construction of an air distribution blower, the pressure loss is proportional to the air flow velocity squared through a given restriction of the blower housing. Just a 15 percent increase in a two dimensional rectangular plane that represents the effective flow area across the secondary heat exchanger of the furnace can potentially create a (1.15×1.15=1.3225), (1/1.3225=0.756) 25% increase in efficiency due to air pressure loss at the secondary heat exchanger.
With this in mind, the high efficiency furnace of the present invention employs a blower housing with an enlarged air outlet opening, while the exterior dimensions of the blower housing remain substantially the same as those of the prior art blower housing used in a high efficiency furnace.
The blower housing of the present invention employs a fan wheel with forward curved impeller blades for low noise and for reducing the size of the fan wheel. Fan wheels with forward curved impeller blades are known to create large amounts of pressure and air flow for a relatively small size of fan wheel.
To obtain a large air outlet opening in the blower housing without increasing the exterior dimensions of the blower housing, the present invention utilizes an exponentially increasing expansion angle along the length of the blower housing volute-shaped outer wall. Alternatively, the blower housing of the invention utilizes an exponentially increasing expansion angle along a substantial portion of, or substantial portions of the outer wall. Where the expansion angle of the volute outer wall of prior art blower housings increases at a constant rate, the expansion angle of the volute outer wall of the blower housing of the present invention increases exponentially as the outer wall extends around the fan wheel in the rotation direction of the fan wheel. The exponentially increasing expansion angle of the volute outer wall provides a very large air outlet opening while still having a volute shape around the entire length of the blower housing outer wall following the outer wall cutoff.
In a preferred embodiment, the expansion angle of the last quarter of the volute-shaped outer wall length, from 270° to 360° of the volute-shaped length increase at an exponential rate in a range of 1.5 to 2.1. This exponent range of 1.5 to 2.1 has proved to be critical to the operation of the high efficiency blower housing of the invention. The expansion angle increasing at a smaller exponential rate than the preferred range does not create the desired coriollis component to pull the air flow through the impeller or the required scroll housing volume. The expansion angle increasing at a larger exponential rate than the preferred range will concentrate excessive air flow through a small portion of the impeller and the overall expanded blower housing will not smoothly convert the air flow velocity head in the blower housing to static pressure. All of these attributes are important for a high efficiency blower housing's operation.
Further features of the invention are set forth in the following detailed description of the invention and in the drawing figures.
The high efficiency furnace 10′ of the present invention also includes an external housing enclosure 12′ that contains the interior volume 14′ of the furnace. Only a rear wall 12R and a left side wall 12LS of the furnace enclosure 12′ are entirely shown in
The primary heat exchanger 22′ is positioned at the top of the enclosure interior volume 14′ adjacent the distribution air outlet opening 18′. The secondary heat exchanger 24′ is positioned just below the primary heat exchanger 22′. The use of both a primary heat exchanger and a secondary heat exchanger qualifies the furnace of the invention as a high efficiency furnace, or a 90+AFUE furnace.
The blower 38 of the invention is positioned in the enclosure interior 14′ at the same position as the prior art blower 26, i.e., just below the secondary heat exchanger 24′. Comparing the prior art of
The apparent way to increase the exhaust area size of the blower housing air outlet opening is to increase the expansion angle of the blower housing outer wall. However, the prior art practice has been to design blower housings with a constant expansion angle. Some prior art blower housings have used increasing expansion angles, but the manner in which the blower housing's expansion angles were increased did not achieve the desired effect due to either the rate of increasing the expansion angle being inadequate, or the rate of increasing the expansion angle being too large and thus missing the desired effect. Additionally, increasing the expansion angle of the blower housing outer wall creates an extremely large blower housing that does not fit adequately in the typical furnace enclosure. The resultant additional size of the furnace enclosure needed to house a blower housing having an increased expansion angle creates a negative aspect for the consumer, i.e., the furnace enclosure requires more space in the consumer residence. Additionally, the manufacturer of the furnace must add cost to make the larger enclosure to accommodate the blower housing. Thus, merely increasing the exhaust area of the air outlet opening of a blower housing by increasing the expansion angle of the blower housing outer wall is not a viable option.
To obtain a large exhaust area of the blower housing air outlet opening, the blower housing 48 of the present invention utilizes an exponentially increasing expansion angle in the design of the blower housing volute outer wall 56.
Furthermore, the blower housing of the invention does a superior job of pulling the air flow through the forward curved impeller blades, along with converting the air flow velocity through the housing scroll to usable static pressure. Although the blower housing of the invention has special benefits with respect to its use in furnaces by reducing the pressure through those furnaces, the blower housing of the invention also has superior efficiency as a blower housing used in an air handler where high efficiency is desired.
As stated earlier, the larger air distribution outlet opening 58 is achieved by employing an exponentially increasing expansion angle in the design of the volute-shaped outer wall 56 of the blower housing, as opposed to the constant increasing expansion angle employed in the design of prior art blower housings. The enlarged air outlet opening 58 is also achieved with the overall blower housing width dimension, the length dimension and the depth dimension of the blower housing 48 being the same as that of prior art blower housings. The improved efficiency of the blower housing enables a reduction in the exterior dimensions of the furnace enclosure in which the blower housing is used.
With the exponentially increasing expansion angle of the outer wall 56 of the blower housing, as the blower housing volute outer wall 56 extends around the blower housing in the rotation direction of the fan wheel, the scroll volume aggressively becomes larger in the interior of the housing. This is especially true as the outer wall 56 approaches the air outlet opening 58. This increase in the interior volume enables exhaust velocities of air flow to be reduced, and creates a blower housing where a greater portion of the air flow velocity head is converted to static pressure. This increases efficiency because the air flow velocity head energy would have been lost outside of the scroll interior. This further increases the overall efficiency of the blower housing.
The blower housing outer wall 56 has a volute-shaped portion that defines a majority of the length of the outer wall. The volute-shaped portion of the outer wall 56 could also be described as having a scroll configuration or a spiral configuration. These general configurations are common to blower housings of the prior art. However, the novel configuration of the blower housing outer wall 56 of the invention is defined as having an exponentially increasing expansion angle as the volute-shaped wall 56 extends in the rotation direction around the fan wheel axis of rotation 44. As viewed in
Beginning from the fan wheel beginning point (a) at the zero degree circumference of the fan wheel, and extending around the fan wheel circumference in the clockwise direction of rotation of the fan wheel shown in
The beginning of the volute or scroll shaped configuration of the outer wall 56 begins just past the cut-off portion 72 in the direction of rotation of the fan wheel 44. The beginning end of the volute-shaped length begins at a point (B) on the outer wall 56. Point (B) is radially aligned with the 73 degree point (b) on the circumference of the fan wheel 44. Although the cut-off 72 is shown aligned with the 73° point (b) in
The radial spacing between the points on the fan wheel circumference and their radially aligned corresponding points on the volute-shaped portion of the outer wall 56 is determined by the equation: Y=A+Bxc
In the above equation, the “x” value is the circumferential distance on the fan wheel circumference at which the radial spacing between the fan wheel and the volute-shaped length of the outer wall is being calculated. This value is raised to the exponential power of (c). It has been determined empirically that the value (c) for points on the circumference of the fan wheel 42 from the zero degree fan wheel point (a) to the 270 degree fan wheel point (k) is an exponent in the range of 1.2 to 1.4. In the example, the exponent is 1.3. For points on the circumference of the fan wheel from the 270 degree fan wheel point (k) to the fan wheel point corresponding to 360 degrees (o), the value of the exponent “c” is in the range of 1.5 to 2.1. In the example, the exponent is 1.81.
In an illustrative example of the above-referenced equation, the “A” factor is a minimum height factor for the blower housing 48. In the example that follows, the minimum height factor “A” is 0.625 inches. The factor “B” in the above equation is a factor picked by the furnace designer to create as large of an exhaust opening as is practical, along with keeping the blower housing within size restrictions of the furnace enclosure 12′. The furnace designer designs the blower housing to allow a reasonable flow of air around the blower housing in the enclosure 12′, while trying to hold down the exponential expansion of the blower housing outer wall 56 as much as possible, while at the same time obtaining the primary objective of a large air outlet opening 58. In the example that follows, the factor “B” is 0.05645 for points on the circumference of the fan wheel 42 from the zero degree fan wheel point (a) to the 270 degree fan wheel point (k), and is 0.0128 for the points on the circumference of the fan wheel from the 270 degree point (k) to the 360 degree fan wheel point (o).
The following is a table setting forth the circumferential points on the circumference of the fan wheel 42 and the corresponding radial distance (Y) to the radially aligned point on the volute-shaped length 56 of the blower housing outer wall calculated using the equation Y=A+Bxc.
The above table sets forth the exponentially increasing expansion angle of the volute-shaped outer wall 56 of the invention based on a fan wheel 42 having a diameter dimension D of 10.625 inches. It can be seen that the size of the fan wheel influences the circumferential dimensions measured to the fan wheel points (b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o) which are raised to an exponential value to obtain the radial spacing between each of the respective points on the circumference of the fan wheel 42 and a radially aligned point on the volute outer wall 56. A blower housing having a volute outer wall 56 designed according to the earlier set forth equation and as illustrated in the above table provides an enlarged air outlet opening 58 without significantly increasing the overall dimensions of the blower housing 48 from that of prior art blower housings.
In alternate embodiments of the invention, the expansion angle of the volute outer wall 56 of the blower housing could increase exponentially with there being a single exponent value for the entire length of the volute-shaped outer wall 56. The expansion angle could increase exponentially with there being a single exponent value along a substantial portion of the volute-shaped outer wall length 56, but not the entire length. Additionally, the expansion angle could increase exponentially along separate portions of the volute-shaped outer wall length, with there being different exponent values for the separate portions of the volute-shaped outer wall length.
In the alternate embodiments of the invention, in the last 90° of the volute-shaped side wall length from point (K) to point (0) or from 270° to 360° on the volute-shaped length of the outer wall, the expansion angle increasing at an exponential rate in a range of 1.5 to 2.1 enables the exhaust velocities of the air flow to be reduced, and creates a blower housing where a greater proportion of the air flow velocity head is converted to static pressure. This increases the efficiency of the blower housing because this velocity head energy would have been lost outside of the blower housing. This further increases the overall efficiency of the system. Too large of an expansion angle outside of the desired range would over-expand the blower housing and the area of air flow through the housing resulting in the air flow velocity head conversion to static pressure being too little and ineffective, failing to provide the effect needed.
In further embodiments of the invention, the blower housing of the invention could be employed in a low profile furnace, specifically an 80+AFUE furnace, as well as in other types of furnaces and air handlers, and also in AC units. The alternate embodiment of a 80+ furnace is illustrated in
In addition to being employed in a 90+ furnace and an 80+ furnace, the blower housing 48 of the invention may be employed in an air handler. Air handlers (abbreviated AHU) are employed in HVAC systems to move air through the systems. A typical air handler comprises a metal enclosure containing the blower housing of the invention. The air handler enclosure is typically communicated with one or more other enclosures containing heating and/or cooling coils and air filters. The air handler typically communicates with duct work that distributes the conditioned air through a building and returns the air to the air handler. Air handlers are also used to distribute air and return air directly to and from the area being served by the air handler without duct work. In the typical operation of an air handler, the rotation of the fan in the blower housing of the invention would pull air through the air filter and the heating and/or cooling coils to the blower housing and then distribute the conditioned air from the blower housing.
Although the above equation and the above described method of designing the volute-shaped outer wall of a blower housing based on the circumference dimensions of the fan wheel are described with reference to a particular fan wheel diameter dimension, there are particular blower housing and fan wheel dimension relationships that provide the synergistic effect of the increased efficiency of the blower housing of the invention. In the blower housing of the invention these synergistic results are achieved when the ratio of the minimum radial dimension of the air outlet opening (for example, the minimum dimension between the cutoff 72 at point (B) and the end of the straight portion 74 of the blower housing outer wall 48 opposite the point (O) shown in
The dimensional relationships between the fan wheel and the blower housing outer wall of the invention set forth above result in the synergistic increase in the efficiency of the blower housing of the invention. This synergistic increase in efficiency is the result of three basic principles.
(1) The enlarged air outlet opening of the blower housing spreads out the flow of air exiting the blower housing over the furnace heat exchanger to a greater extent than prior art blower housings, and thereby reduces the pressure loss across the furnace. This lowers the required pressure that the blower must generate.
(2) The flow of air moving through the fan wheel is concentrated in the last half of the scroll configuration of the blower housing, and especially in the last 90° of the scroll configuration from point (K) to point (0) or from 270° to 360° on the volute-shaped length of the outer wall. Here the outer wall increases at an expansion angle of 10° or greater. This creates a higher air flow velocity through the forward-curved blades of the fan wheel, which increases static pressure gained on the fan wheel due to the coriollis effect. The higher air flow velocity also increases the velocity head off of the forwarded-curved blades of the fan wheel. This effect reduces the size of the fan wheel required in the blower housing for an equal powered blower, and increases the efficiency due to greater pressure being generated on the fan wheel blades.
(3) The blower housing volume aggressively becomes larger in the direction of fan wheel rotation in the blower housing of the invention, especially toward the air outlet opening. This enables the exhaust velocities of the air flow to be reduced, and creates a blower housing where a greater portion of the air flow velocity head is converted to static pressure. This increases the efficiency of the blower housing because this velocity head energy would have been lost outside of the blower housing. This further increases the overall efficiency of the system.
The above described embodiments of the invention were chosen in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
As various modifications could be made in the constructions herein described and illustrated without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the foregoing description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative rather than limiting. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
This patent application is a continuation-in-part of patent application Ser. No. 11/935,726, which was filed on Nov. 6, 2007, and is currently pending.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11935726 | Nov 2007 | US |
Child | 12631415 | US |