The present invention relates to home soda machines generally and to the operating pressure of such machines in particular.
Conventional carbonation of water involves adding CO2 to water in a sealed environment. Henry's Law states that at a constant pressure, the amount of a given gas that can dissolve in a given type and volume of liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas in equilibrium with that liquid and temperature. Therefore, the higher the pressure of the gas above the liquid (in this case, the water), the greater the CO2 absorption.
For high carbonation levels, such as 7 g/l to 10 g/l, in a typical home soda machine, the standard pressure level allowed in the bottle is typically set to 8 bar.
As a safety measure, the carbonation machine may also include a safety valve 18 set to a higher pressure, such as 11 bar, which will release only if exhaust valve 16 fails in some way.
In addition, the yield point of the bottle (i.e. the point at which it may start to expand and eventually fail) may be set to a further higher pressure, such as 17 bar. With proper usage, the bottle will not fail under regular operating pressure. However, if the carbonation machine is misused such that safety valve 18 and exhaust valve 16 no longer work, the bottle may fail. For non-dishwasher safe plastic bottles, the yield point may be reduced by subjection of a bottle to a heat source greater than 50 degrees Celsius, such as the temperature that occurs in a dishwasher.
There is therefore provided, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a home soda machine to carbonate a liquid within a removable bottle at an operating pressure within the bottle at or below 6 bar to a carbonation level of at least 3.5 g/l.
Moreover, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the home soda machine also includes a carbonation unit to receive pulsed CO2gas at at least 50 bar to provide the CO2 gas turbulently within a liquid within the removable soda bottle and an exhaust valve to control an operating pressure of the machine to a maximum of 6 bar.
Further, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the home soda machine also includes a carbonation tube to provide the pulsed CO2 gas under a surface of the liquid.
Still further, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the exhaust valve is set to a pressure level retaining a cushion of CO2 gas above the liquid which keeps the liquid from flowing up into the carbonation head with released CO2 gas.
Additionally, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the exhaust valve is set to 6 bar.
Moreover, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the yield point of the removable bottle is less than 16 bar.
Further, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the bottle is manufactured from glass or plastic.
There is therefore provided, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a method for a home soda machine. The method includes using turbulence to mix CO2 gas under a surface of a liquid in a removable home soda bottle, the turbulence caused by CO2 gas of at least 50 bar moving through a small orifice and controlling an operating pressure of the machine to a maximum of 6 bar.
Moreover, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the method also includes providing the CO2gas via a carbonation tube.
Further, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the controlling includes modulating carbonation pulses of the CO2gas into the liquid to prevent the liquid from flowing up into the carbonation head with released CO2 gas.
Still further, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, operating pressure is set to 6 bar.
The subject matter regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the concluding portion of the specification. The invention, however, both as to organization and method of operation, together with objects, features, and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following detailed description when read with the accompanying drawings in which:
It will be appreciated that for simplicity and clarity of illustration, elements shown in the figures have not necessarily been drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions of some of the elements may be exaggerated relative to other elements for clarity. Further, where considered appropriate, reference numerals may be repeated among the figures to indicate corresponding or analogous elements.
In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures, and components have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the present invention.
Applicant has realized that Henry's law is true only for pressurized gases which are kept above a liquid for a long period of time, enough time to enable the gas to dissolve into the volume of liquid. However, as Applicant has realized, this is not what happens in home bottle carbonation machines, which carbonate by injecting pressurized CO2 gas directly into a liquid in the bottle. As Applicant has realized, such machines provide CO2 at a high pressure, such as 60 bar, which is pulsed until the pressure in the bottle increases to a maximum allowed pressure, such as 8 bar.
Moreover, Applicant has realized that, in these machines, the carbonation head does not provide the gas on top of the water but generally provides it, via the tube, within the water, causing turbulence in the water as it exits. Thus, the gas above the liquid is not in equilibrium with the gas dissolved in the water and therefore, Henry's law does not apply.
Applicant has realized that, as a result of the turbulence, significantly lower pressure levels may be utilized to achieve the same desired carbonation level than have been utilized in the past. Furthermore, the amount of energy in an explosion of a bottle, which is a significant concern, is a function of the pressure and thus, the lower the pressure, the significantly lower the energy of explosion. In other words, the soda machine and the bottle both become much safer.
Reference is now made to
Low pressure carbonation head 22 may receive pressurized CO2, at a high pressure, such as 45 to 80 bar, from canister 12 and may provide the CO2, via tube 13, to bottle 24. After carbonation and release of the extra accumulated gas, a consumer may remove bottle 24 from low pressure carbonation machine 20. Low pressure exhaust valve 26 may be similar in structure to exhaust valve 16 but may have a lower release point, thereby to define a lower operating pressure for home soda machine 20. For example, low pressure exhaust valve 26 may release gas at 5 bar instead of at 8 bar. In an alternative embodiment, low pressure exhaust valve 26 may release gas at 3 bar or lower. It will be appreciated that the release parameters of low pressure exhaust valve 26 may be determined by adjusting the tension of the spring standard to pressure exhaust valves.
Low pressure safety valve 28 may be similar in structure to safety valve 18 but may have a lower release point. For the 5 bar example above, low pressure safety valve 28 may release gas at 7.5 bar instead of at 11 bar. For the 3 bar example above, low pressure safety valve 28 may release gas at 5 bar.
Bottle 24 may have a lower yield point than that of bottle 14. In this embodiment, the lower yield point may be set to maintain the present safety margin between working pressure and yield point. Alternatively, bottle 24 may have a yield point similar to that of bottle 14, which will increase the safety margin of the bottle. Both embodiments provide improved safety over bottle 14 since, as mentioned hereinabove, the energy of explosion is significantly lower when the working pressure of the machine is lower than 8 bar and thus, there may be less damage when bottle 24 explodes.
Moreover, bottle 24 may have a longer lifetime since the pressure changes of the bottle, from its pressurized state to its non-pressurized state, are less dramatic with the lower pressure.
It will be appreciated that at low pressure, home soda machine 20 may operate at the lower pressure defined by the release pressure of low pressure exhaust valve 26. The consumer may pulse low pressure carbonation head 22 multiple times in order to carbonate the liquid. Each time, carbonation head 22 may transfer a small mass of gas from gas canister 12, into the liquid, labeled 30, via tube 13, which may have a small orifice. The high velocity of the mass of gas, caused by pushing the gas through the small orifice, may cause turbulence, labeled 32, in the water as the gas passes through the water and rises to the top of the bottle. The gas above the water may be a “cushion” 34 sitting on top of liquid 30 in bottle 24. Valve 26 may define the maximum pressure of cushion 34.
Applicant has realized that turbulence 32 may be sufficient by itself to carbonate liquid 30 to desired carbonation levels, such as of 3.5 g/l to 12 g/l. However, Applicant has also realized that cushion 34 may be needed to keep liquid 30 from being drawn up through the exhaust path of the machine along with the gas. Cushion 34 may also help to carbonate liquid 30.
Reference is now made to
Low pressure, home soda machine 20 may also be hand-operated. This embodiment may include a mechanism to slow down the release of the bottle after the user has performed the last pulse, in order to enable a full release of cushion 34 and to keep the liquid from squirting into the machine. For example, the mechanism may include a damper or a spring, such as is described US Patent Publication US 2015/0367296, published 24 Dec. 2015 and assigned to the common assignee of the present invention. It will be appreciated that at low pressure, soda machine 20 may provide high levels of carbonation with a pressurized CO2 canister, but at low operating pressures. In fact, the present invention may utilize the lowest carbonation pressure that produces carbonation above 3.5 g/l but keeps the liquid from flowing up into carbonation head 22 with released CO2 gas.
It will also be appreciated that, with the lower operating pressures, the CO2 may be absorbed more efficiently into the liquid. Reference is now made to
Moreover, the efficiency increases with lower pressure. Note that curves 31, 41 and 51, at 6 bar, are generally above curves 32, 42 and 52, at 8 bar, indicating a higher efficiency at the lower operating pressure.
It will further be appreciated that, since the operating pressure of low pressure, soda machine 20 may be 6 bar or lower, the yield point of bottle 24 may be lower and therefore it may have significantly thinner walls than prior art bottle 14. Applicant has realized that, as a result, bottle 24 may be formed of glass or plastic. With lower pressure, not only is that less likely to explode, but the energy of the explosion is so much lower, that a person is less likely to get hurt from the exploding bottle.
As shown in
The hoop stresses σ2 in a 0.5 mm bottle, with a 8.4 cm diameter, at 6 and 8 bar are:
σ8bar=8*8.4/2*0.05=672 atm≈67 MPa
σ6bar=6*8.4/2*0.05=504 atm≈50 MPa
In addition, there are fluctuating stresses caused by changes in pressure, temperature, etc. to which the bottle may be exposed. The bottle has to be designed to withstand hoop stresses and fluctuating stresses so that it may operate for a significant length of time.
On the other hand, the 6 bar point is fully below 5 of the curves and it hits the lowest curve, the AKEST curve, at about 10,000 cycles, a significant improvement over the 8 bar point.
In addition to improving the useful life of bottle 24, reducing the operating pressure of the carbonation machine may also reduce the energy of explosion when bottle 24 bursts, an important safety issue.
In a gas, the stored energy U is:
Where P is the pressure in the bottle (8 bar or 6 bar), V is the volume of gas above the water line (head space), Pa is the initial pressure, Pb is the final pressure and γ is the adiabatic index which is 1.27 for CO2. The smaller the volume and pressure, the smaller the potential energy (U) and the higher the volume and pressure, the higher the potential energy (U). The following table lists the explosion energy in Joules for different initial volumes at different pressures.
As can be seen, the energy at 8 bar for 150 cc is about 50% more than the energy at 6 bar. The energy of 10 bar for 150 cc is roughly twice the energy at 6 bar.
Thus the working yield point of bottle 24 may be reduced in relation to the working pressure. It will be appreciated that as a result of this reduction, the margin between the yield point of bottle 24 and the working pressure of home carbonation machine 20 may be increased. For example, in a scenario using a typical home carbonation system of the prior art, the working pressure is 8 bar with the yield point of the bottle set to 17 bar and the margin is 2.125 times. (17:8). For the same bottle 24 in use with home carbonation machine 20, with the working pressure set to 5 bar the margin is raised to 3.4 times (17:5).
Thus, the reduced operating pressure of low pressure, home carbonation machine 20 produces a much safer operating environment. This is true for the bottle, which is less likely to explode and, even if it does, the effect is significant less dangerous, and for the machine, which provides the same level of carbonation. The manufacturing processes for low pressure machine 20 may be similar to that of the higher pressure machine 10 but the machine and bottle may be much safer and much less expensive to produce, since the materials need to withstand much lower pressures.
While certain features of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications, substitutions, changes, and equivalents will now occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. It is, therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true spirit of the invention.
This application claims priority and benefit from U.S. provisional patent application 62/161,285 filed May 14, 2015 which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62161285 | May 2015 | US |