The invention relates to a hot water appliance for heating and holding hot water at a desired temperature, and which is connectable to a public water supply and to a kitchen tap.
EP 1 173 715 describes a hot water appliance comprising a hot water tank and a vacuum insulation. The construction of the hot water appliance described therein is especially suitable for storing pressurized water of a temperature of more than 100° C., so that upon dispensing of the stored water, for instance via a draw-off tap, instantaneously boiling water is dispensed. In the hot water tank is an electric heating element which heats the water and holds it at a desired temperature. Also provided is a temperature sensor, as well as a water supply pipe which is connectable to the public water supply system and a water discharge pipe which is for instance connectable to a draw-off tap. In EP 1 173 715 the upper side of the water tank is provided with a flange on which a detachable cover is mounted with bolts. On top of the detachable cover, the hot water appliance is provided with an insulation material to minimize heat loss via the cover. In order to further limit the heat loss at the top between the hot tank and the cool outer jacket, the connection between reservoir and jacket is implemented as a thin-walled ring-shaped collar with which the tank is suspendedly connected to the jacket. Due to the thermal resistance of this collar, the direct heat conduction loss between the hot tank and the cool jacket is limited.
The invention contemplates the provision of a hot water appliance that has a still better efficiency than the hot water appliance known from the prior art. That is to say, a hot water appliance with which even less heat is lost in keeping the hot water in the water tank of the hot water appliance at the storage temperature.
To this end, the invention provides a hot water appliance according to claim 1. More particularly, the invention provides a hot water appliance comprising:
In the hot water appliance according to the invention, the water tank is wholly enclosed by a vacuum jacket. This is in contrast to the hot water appliance described in the background section, where on the cover of the water tank, insulation material was placed and no vacuum jacket was present. With the configuration according to the invention, a still better insulation is obtained, as a result of which less heat loss occurs. Also, the heat conduction loss of the collar-shaped connection between tank and vacuum jacket of the hot water appliance as described in the background section is absent because the tank is wholly enclosed by a vacuum space.
Further, the hot water appliance according to the invention has a more compact and a simplified and lighter construction due to the redundancy of the cover, the collar-shaped connection between tank and vacuum jacket, and the associated required insulation material above the cover of the hot water appliance as described in the background section.
In addition, by virtue of its simplified construction, the hot water appliance according to the invention consists almost entirely of metal parts, in consequence of which it is properly and sustainably recyclable and can be produced at lower cost.
The hot water appliance according to the invention is of particular advantage when so-called boiling water appliances are used. The volume then typically amounts to 20 liters at a maximum, more particularly the volume is preferably in the range of 3 to 8 liters. The holding temperature of the water in the tank is 90° C. at a minimum and is preferably in the range of 105° C.-108° C. The pressure in the vacuum space is preferably 10−4 mbar, preferably at least 10−5 mbar.
Given a water tank volume of for instance 3 liters and a holding temperature of 108° C., the hot water appliance according to the invention enables a heat loss of the hot water tank of approximately 2 W to be realized, 0.5 W of which is conduction loss and 1.5 W radiation loss.
In an embodiment, the water tank may be exclusively borne by the at least one functional pipe.
By a functional pipe is meant a pipe that must in any case be present for fulfilling a different function than bearing the water tank. A functional pipe can be, for example, a water supply pipe or a water discharge pipe. Also, it may be a pipe for therein including particular components such as electric cabling, an electric heating element and/or a temperature sensor. Such pipes have to extend into the interior of the water tank and so must also pass the vacuum vessel wall. In consequence of this, these pipes form a path of heat conduction from the water tank to the vacuum vessel wall. However, the presence of a number of these functional pipes is necessary and by presently providing these with yet another, second function, namely, bearing or supporting the water tank in the vacuum vessel, there is not, for this second function, an extra heat conduction bridge between the water tank wall and the vacuum vessel wall being created.
In an embodiment, the weight of the water tank may be transferred via the at least one functional pipe to the vacuum vessel wall. In this embodiment, further, the vacuum vessel wall, in turn, can serve for support of the whole hot water appliance on a flat plane/surface. In an alternative embodiment, it would also be possible to connect the functional pipes with a fixed object of the external world, so that the weight of the hot water appliance is transferred directly via the at least one functional pipe to the fixed object of the external world.
A part of the at least one functional pipe that extends between the water tank wall connection and the vacuum vessel wall connection determines a heat transport length lh for heat conduction from the water tank wall connection to the vacuum vessel wall connection and has a wall sectional area A. When ribbed or bellows-shaped functional pipes are used, the heat transport length lh may be greater than the pipe length. In an embodiment, a ratio between heat transport length lh in mm and wall sectional area A in mm2 can satisfy the formula lh/A>4 mm−1. Given a heat transport length/wall sectional area quotient in that range, the heat conduction via the at least one functional pipe can be limited such that the heat losses via the at least one functional pipe through heat conduction are virtually negligible.
A similar slight heat loss may also be effected with an embodiment where the part of the at least one functional pipe that extends between the water tank wall connection and the vacuum vessel wall connection has a heat transport length lh that is greater than 60 mm. In addition, the material of the at least one functional pipe is preferably stainless steel or a like metal having a relatively low heat conductivity coefficient. Certainly when also the wall thickness of the stainless steel functional pipes is then in the range of 0.4 to 1.0 mm and the diameter is less than 8 mm, heat conduction from the water tank to the vacuum vessel wall via the at least one functional pipe may be negligible.
The water tank can comprise a cylindrical water tank sidewall and the vacuum vessel can comprise a cylindrical vacuum vessel sidewall. To augment the efficiency of the hot water appliance still further, in an embodiment, at least between the cylindrical water tank sidewall and the cylindrical vacuum vessel sidewall, a laminate of reflecting foil and glass fiber cloth may be included.
Further elaborations of the invention are described in the dependent claims and will hereinafter be further clarified with reference to one or more examples in the drawings.
In the following detailed description, corresponding parts of the different embodiments are designated with the same reference numerals. The detailed description does not relate exclusively to the examples represented in the figures. The reference numerals specified in the detailed description and the claims have no limiting effect and are only for clarification by referring to examples represented in the figures, of the various embodiments that are discussed in the detailed description.
In the most general terms, the invention relates to a hot water appliance 10 which comprises a water tank 12 provided with a water tank wall 14. Included in the water tank 12 is a heating element 28. The hot water appliance 10 further comprises a vacuum vessel 20 which encloses a vacuum space V. The water tank 12 is wholly included in the vacuum space and the whole water tank wall 14 is bounded by vacuum. The vacuum vessel 20 is provided with a vacuum vessel wall 22 which consists of a number of vacuum vessel parts which are gastightly connected with each other by welding or soldering. Further, the hot water appliance 10 comprises at least one functional pipe 100, 200, 300, 400, 500 which extends through the water tank wall 14 and is gastightly connected with the water tank wall 14 at the location of a water tank wall connection 18. The functional pipe 100, 200, 300, 400, 500 extends also through the vacuum vessel wall 22 and is gastightly connected with the vacuum vessel wall 22 at the location of a vacuum vessel wall connection 24.
The advantages of the hot water appliance as indicated above in its most general terms have already been described in the summary and the advantages described there are understood to be inserted here by reference.
In the embodiment of which an example is schematically represented in
As has already been described above in the summary, in an embodiment, of which examples are shown in
A part of the at least one functional pipe 100, 200, 300, 400 and/or 500 that extends between the water tank wall connection 18 and the vacuum wall connection 24 has a heat transport length lh and a wall sectional area A. In an embodiment, a ratio between the heat transport length lh in mm and the wall sectional area A in mm2 can satisfy the formula lh/A>4 mm−1.
In an embodiment, the part of the at least one functional pipe 100, 200, 300, 400 and/or 500 that extends between the water tank wall connection 18 and the vacuum vessel wall connection 24 can have a heat transport length lh that is greater than 60 mm. In addition, the material of the at least one functional pipe is preferably one of stainless steel, titanium or Incoloy, respectively.
In an exemplary embodiment, of which an example is shown in
In addition, it is preferred that the at least one functional pipe 100, 200, 300, 400 and/or 500 has a wall thickness that is between 0.4 and 1.0 mm.
In an embodiment, the earlier-mentioned water tank wall connection 18 between the at least one functional pipe and the water tank wall, and the vacuum vessel wall connection 24 between the at least one functional pipe and the vacuum vessel wall, can be welded joints.
In an alternative embodiment, the water tank wall connection 18 between the at least one functional pipe and the water tank wall, and the vacuum vessel wall connection 24 between the at least one functional pipe and the vacuum vessel wall, can be soldered joints.
In an embodiment, of which examples are shown in
In an embodiment, of which an example is shown in
A good reduction of radiation loss is for instance obtained when the laminate comprises at least three layers of reflecting foil and at least three layers of glass fiber cloth.
In an embodiment, of which an example is shown in
Such an embodiment has the advantage that the first pipe parts are particularly long, so that the heat transfer via those first pipe parts to the vacuum vessel wall 22 is limited to a far-reaching extent.
In an embodiment, of which an example is shown in
Finally, the at least one functional pipe may further comprise a fifth functional pipe 500 which is a sensor pipe which extends through and is gastightly connected with a fifth vacuum top wall opening and which extends through and is gastightly connected with a fifth water tank bottom wall opening. In the sensor pipe, at least a temperature sensor and cabling to that temperature sensor may be included.
In an embodiment, the water tank and the vacuum vessel can each have a cylindrical configuration. In addition, the first, second, third, the fourth and the fifth vacuum vessel top wall openings can each have a center which is located on a common pitch circle whose diameter is greater than an outer diameter of the cylindrical water tank and less than the inner diameter of the cylindrical vacuum vessel and whose center is located on a vertical axis of the cylindrical vacuum vessel.
The first, the second, the third, the fourth and the fifth, if any, water tank bottom wall openings each have a center which, according to an embodiment, may be located in a common vertical plane.
In an embodiment of which an example is shown in
In an embodiment of which an example is shown in
In an embodiment, of which an example is shown in
In an embodiment, of which an example is shown in
The fixing element can be a second spacer 32 of which an example is shown in
In further elaboration of this embodiment, the second spacer's 32 engagement of the water tank may be realized on the top of the water tank 12 at the location of the axis of the water tank 12. The second spacer's 32 engagement of the upper part of the first pipe part 102, 202, 302, 402, 502 of the at least one functional pipe 100, 200, 300, 400, 500 may be realized on one upper part or on two upper parts 102, 402.
The second spacer 32 is implemented in the example shown as a thin-walled element having a small sectional area so as to keep the heat conduction by the second spacer 32 from the water tank 12 to the first pipe parts 102, 402 as small as possible. The second spacer 32 can absorb both pressure forces and tensile forces, which is relevant for stabilization of the water tank 12 in the vacuum vessel 20, especially during transport of the hot water appliance, to prevent damaging.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments described nor to the examples shown in the figures. The figures and the reference numerals are for clarification only and have no limiting effect. The invention is defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2025785 | Jun 2020 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NL2021/050366 | 6/8/2021 | WO |