1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to an immersion heater, for example, for use in heating equipment for molten metal such as an aluminum holding furnace, and particularly relates to an immersion heater including a metal heating element of an Fe—Cr—Al based alloy or the like.
2. Description of the Related Art
Conventionally, as an immersion heater for use in molten metal such as molten aluminum, there has been an immersion heater employing a metal heating element. For example, in Japanese Utility Model Application Laid-Open No. 5-21275, there is disclosed an immersion heater having an insulating cylindrical body arranged so as to be suspended inside a ceramic protecting tube (immersion tube) having a bottomed cylindrical shape, a wire heating element (heating part) having a circular cross section arranged inside a spiral groove formed in an outer circumference portion of this insulating cylindrical body, and an insulating cover closing an opening end of the ceramic protecting tube, and one end of each terminal rod is connected to the wire heating element, and the other end of the terminal rod passes through the insulating cover.
However, since the immersion heater of the above-described JP 5-21275 is configured to hold, suspended inside the protecting tube, the insulating cylindrical body into which the wire heating element is fitted, in a case that a strip metal heating element which is wound spirally is employed, and that planar portions of the strip heating element are spiral heating portions opposed to each other, the following problem arises.
Specifically, once misalignment between the protecting tube and the cylindrical body is caused, an outer circumference border of the strip heating element, which is wound spirally, is pressed to an inner wall of the protecting tube, resulting in trouble that the heating element is deformed in this pressed portion to come into contact with an adjacent portion of the heating element. Especially in a horizontal dip method, horizontal cantilever supporting in which a back-end portion of an immersion heater is supported by a side wall of the furnace is employed, and thus, the heating element is similarly supported by the horizontal cantilever, and additionally, weights of the cylindrical body and the heating element themselves are added, thereby causing downward deflection, which brings about a state where the lower outer circumference border (on the hearth side) of the spiral heating element is likely to be pressed to an inner wall of the protecting tube. This increases a possibility of causing the foregoing trouble.
Consequently, an object of the present invention is to provide an immersion heater capable of completely avoiding a situation where an outer circumference border of a spiral heating element is pressed to an inner wall of a protecting tube, and preventing disconnection due to contact between adjacent portions of the heating element.
To achieve the above object, an immersion heater of the present invention includes a ceramic bottomed protecting tube, an insulating cylindrical body inserted into said ceramic bottomed protecting tube, a metal heating element held inside a spiral groove formed in an outer circumference surface of said insulating cylindrical body, an insulating cover closing an opening portion of said ceramic bottomed protecting tube, and first and second terminal rods, one-end portions of which are connected to a fore-end portion and a back-end portion of said metal heating element, respectively, and other-end portions of which pass through said insulating cover and are located outside said ceramic bottomed protecting tube. The metal heating element is a strip heating element, and one edge portion of this strip heating element is inserted into, and held in said spiral groove to form a spiral heating part, and cylindrical-body supporting members that each have a diameter smaller than an inner diameter of said ceramic bottom protecting tube and larger than an outer diameter of the spiral heating part and are fitted into a hollow portion of said insulating cylindrical body are arranged in openings at a fore-end and a back-end of said insulating cylindrical body, respectively.
According to the immersion heater having this configuration, since employing the strip heating element can increase a surface area of the heating element, the temperature of the heating element can be kept lower at the same output as compared with a wire heating element, and durability is improved by suppression of scaling loss and the like.
Moreover, since the cylindrical-body supporting members attached to both ends of the cylindrical body holding the strip heating element as the spiral heating part each have the diameter smaller than the inner diameter of the protecting tube and larger than the outer diameter of the spiral heating part, a gap between an outer circumference border of the strip heating element and an inner wall surface of the protecting tube is securely formed, by which a situation where the outer circumference border of the spiral heating part is pressed to the inner wall of the protecting tube can be avoided, and as a result, deformation due to the pressing of the outer circumference border of the strip heating element is not caused, and the disconnection by contact between the adjacent portions of strip heating element can be securely avoided.
In the immersion heater of the present invention, a through-hole through which said first terminal rod connected to the fore-end portion of said metal heating element passes and a notched portion through which a connection plate joined and fixed to a fore-end of said first terminal rod is inserted may be formed in said cylindrical-body supporting member on the fore-end side, and a through-hole through which said first terminal rod passes, and a notched portion through which a connection plate joined and fixed to a fore-end of said second terminal rod is inserted may be formed in said cylindrical-body supporting member on the back-end side.
According to the immersion heater having this configuration, connection work between the connection plate and the metal heating element can be performed easily and electric connection can be securely performed.
In the immersion heater of the present invention, a space between said cylindrical-body supporting member on the back-end side and said cover inside said protecting tube may be packed with a thermal insulator.
According to the immersion heater having this configuration, heat transfer from the spiral heating part to the terminal parts is suppressed, so that deformation due to thermal expansion of the terminal rod can be prevented, and in a horizontal dip method, molten metal can be prevented from flowing outside when the protecting tube is damaged.
In addition, an outer circumference portion on an opening end portion side of said ceramic bottomed protecting tube may be formed into a taper shape that is tapered toward a fore-end thereof.
According to the immersion heater having this configuration, providing a heater attachment port engaged with the tapered outer circumference portion in a furnace side wall when the immersion heater is attached to the furnace side wall enables precise positioning and robust attachment of the heater.
In the immersion heater of the present invention, said terminal rod fixed to said cylindrical-body supporting member on the fore-end side so as to be connected to the fore-end portion of said metal heating element may pass through said cylindrical body, said cylindrical-body supporting member on the back-end side and said cover to extend, and a compression spring may be arranged between a fastener provided in said terminal rod and said cover outside said cover.
According to the immersion heater having this configuration, a tension is constantly given to the terminal rod, which can suppress the deformation due to thermal expansion of the terminal rod.
In the immersion heater of the present invention, said terminal rod connected to the fore-end portion of said metal heating element may be formed into a pipe shape, and a thermocouple is inserted into, and arranged in said pipe-shaped terminal rod.
According to the immersion heater having this configuration, inserting and arranging the thermocouple inside the pipe-shaped terminal rod enables precise temperature measurement inside the cylindrical body having the heating part. In this case, packing a fore-end opening of the pipe-shaped terminal rod with a thermal insulator can prevent the molten metal from flowing outside through an inside of the pipe-shaped terminal rod when a fore-end portion of the protecting tube is damaged.
In the immersion heater of the present invention, an insulating cylindrical spacer may be arranged between said cylindrical-body supporting member on the back-end side and said cover in a state where said insulating cylindrical spacer contains said terminal rod.
According to the immersion heater having this configuration, one end portion of the cylindrical spacer abuts on the cylindrical-body supporting member on the back-end side and another end portion thereof abuts on the cover, respectively, and this can make the position of the cylindrical body and the heating part inside the protecting tube precisely constant.
In the immersion heater of the present invention, a plurality of through-openings may be formed in a circumference wall of said insulating cylindrical body.
According to the immersion heater having this configuration, directly giving radiation heat of the strip heating body through the through-holes increases responsiveness of the temperature measurement by the thermocouple, and forming the through-holes decreases a heat capacity of the cylindrical body holding the heating element, resulting in reduction in power consumption.
Hereinafter, referring to the accompanying drawings, embodiments of the present invention are described.
The immersion heater 1 includes a protecting tube 2 made of ceramics. The protecting tube 2 is made of silicon nitride-based fine ceramics or the like, and is formed into a bottomed cylindrical body with a fore-end closed and another end opened. A taper member 3 is fixed to an outer circumference portion in a back-end portion of the protecting tube 2 so as to form a part of the protecting tube 2. The taper member 3 is made of ceramics similar to the protecting tube 2, and an outer circumference surface thereof is formed into a taper shape, which is tapered toward the fore-end side. The outer circumference taper shape of this taper member 3 corresponds to a taper shape of an inner circumference surface of a heater attaching port of a furnace side wall (not shown) on which the immersion heater 1 is mounted. Thereby, when the immersion heater is attached to the furnace-side wall from the outside, by engaging the taper-shaped outer circumference surface of the taper member 3 of the protecting tube 2 with the taper-shaped inner circumference surface of the heater attaching port, precise alignment and robust attachment of the immersion heater 1 is enabled. The taper member 3 may be formed integrally with the protecting tube 2 in advance.
A back-end opening portion of the protecting tube 2 is closed by a cover 4 made of an electrical and thermal insulating material such as a glass-fiber reinforced composite. The cover 4 has a disk-shaped insertion portion 4a of a small diameter that is inserted into the opening portion of the protecting tube 2, and a flange portion 4b of a large diameter that abuts on an opening rim portion of the protecting tube 2, as shown in a front elevational view and a side elevational view of
A cylindrical body 6 made of an electrical and thermal insulating material such as ceramics having an alumina content of not less than 90% is inserted into and arranged in the protecting tube 2. In an outer circumference surface of the cylindrical body 6, a spiral groove 7 continuing from a fore-end to a back-end is formed as shown in
In the spiral groove 7, one edge portion of a strip (in the embodiment, a width 10 mm, and a thickness of 1 mm, but not limitative) heating element 8 made of a metal such as a Fe—Cr—Al based alloy, for example, is held and the other edge portion of the heating element 8 is projected, for example, by about 6 to 7 mm from the outer circumference surface of the cylindrical body 6. This constructs a spiral heating part 9 continuing from the fore-end to the back-end in an outer circumference portion of the cylindrical body 6.
The strip heating element 8 is spirally formed in advance so that planar portions thereof are opposed to each other, as shown in
Moreover, through-openings 10 are formed in a wall of the cylindrical body 6 as shown in
Cylindrical-body supporting members 11 made of an electrical and thermal insulating material such as ceramics having an alumina content of 70 to 80% are attached to the fore-end and the back-end of the cylindrical body 6, respectively. As shown in the front elevational view and the cross-sectional view of
The flange portions 11b of the respective cylindrical-body supporting members 11 attached to the front and the back of the cylindrical body 6 each have a diameter smaller than an inner diameter of the protecting tube 2 and larger than an outer diameter of the spiral heating part 9. This allows a gap to be securely formed between an inner circumference surface of the protecting tube 2 and an outer circumference border of the heating part 9, which securely prevents the heating part 9 (i.e., the strip heating element 8 constructing this) from being pressed to the inner circumference surface of the protecting tube 2.
Referring again to
Moreover, the first terminal rod 12 is in a state where it is contained in an insulating cylindrical spacer 14 between the cylindrical-body supporting member 11 on the back-end side and the cover 4. The spacer 14 plays a role of restricting an interval between the cover 4 and the cylindrical-body supporting member 11, which can make the position of the cylindrical body 6 and the heating part 9 inside the protecting tube 2 precisely constant.
Outside the cover 4, a fastener 18 made of, for example, a metal washer is fixed to the first terminal rod 12, and a coil spring (compression spring) 19 is mounted on an outer circumference of the first terminal rod 12 between this fastener 18 and the cover 4 in a compressed state. This allows a tension to be constantly given to the first terminal rod 12, and this tension acts on the cylindrical body 6 through the pair of front and back cylindrical-body supporting members 11, 11, and thus, together with the positioning action of the spacer 14, the foregoing action allows the fixation of the cylindrical body 6 to be firmly maintained, and further can suppress deformation due to thermal expansion of the first terminal rod 12.
Moreover, the thermocouple 20 is inserted and arranged inside the pipe-shaped first terminal rod 12. The thermocouple 20 is inserted from the back-end portion of the first terminal rod 12, and the fore-end thereof is located inside the cylindrical body 6 holding the heating part 9. This enables the precise temperature measurement inside the cylindrical body 6 having the heating part 9. In a case where the thermocouple 20 is not provided, the first terminal rod 12 may be a solid rod.
Inside the immersion heater 1, the second terminal rod 15 made of a stainless steel rod is further inserted and arranged. The second terminal rod 15 passes through the through-hole 5b of the cover 4 and is inserted through the notched portion 12b of the cylindrical-body supporting member 11 on the back-end side, so that as shown in
A space between the cylindrical-body supporting member 11 on the back-end side and the cover 4 inside the protecting tube 2 is packed with a thermal insulator 16 made of, for example, ceramic fibers. This can suppress heat transfer from the spiral heating part 9 to the terminal part and prevent deformation due to thermal expansion of the terminal rod 15, and further, in the case of the horizontal dip method, can prevent outflow of the molten metal when the protecting tube 2 is damaged.
For example, in a state where the immersion heater 1 having the above-described configuration is attached to a side wall of an aluminum holding furnace, and is dipped in molten aluminum (molten metal), the power is fed through the first and second terminal rods 12, 15 to heat the heating part 9, by which the molten metal can be maintained at a desired temperature.
As described above, according to the immersion heater 1 of the present embodiment, since employing the strip one as the heating element 8 can increase a surface area of the heating element 8, the temperature of the heating element 8 can be kept lower at the same output as compared with the wire heating element, and durability is improved by suppression of scaling loss and the like.
Moreover, since the cylindrical-body supporting members 11 attached to both ends of the cylindrical body 6 holding the strip heating element 8 as the spiral heating part 9 each has the diameter smaller than the inner diameter of the protecting tube 2 and larger than the outer circumference diameter of the spiral heating part 9, the gap between the outer circumference border of the strip heating element 8 and the inner wall surface of the protecting tube 2 is securely formed, by which a situation where the outer circumference border of the spiral heating part 9 is pressed to the inner wall of the protecting tube 2 can be avoided, and as a result, the deformation due to the pressing of the outer circumference border of the strip heating element 8 is not caused, and the disconnection by the contact between adjacent portions of the strip heating element 8 can be securely avoided.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008-017579 | Jan 2008 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2009/050972 | 1/22/2009 | WO | 00 | 7/22/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/096311 | 8/6/2009 | WO | A |
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1609688 | Briggs | Dec 1926 | A |
4426568 | Kato et al. | Jan 1984 | A |
5075536 | Towe et al. | Dec 1991 | A |
5084606 | Bailey et al. | Jan 1992 | A |
5791308 | Carter et al. | Aug 1998 | A |
5850073 | Eckert | Dec 1998 | A |
7012226 | George | Mar 2006 | B1 |
7989739 | Eckert | Aug 2011 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 650 020 | Apr 1995 | EP |
53-125546 | Oct 1978 | JP |
58-115792 | Jul 1983 | JP |
63273728 | Nov 1988 | JP |
64-17387 | Jan 1989 | JP |
5-21275 | May 1993 | JP |
7-119969 | May 1995 | JP |
7-249477 | Sep 1995 | JP |
Entry |
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Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) International Preliminary Report on Patentability issued Sep. 10, 2010 in corresponding International Application No. PCT/JP2009/050972. |
International Search Report issued Apr. 21, 2009 in International (PCT) Application No. PCT/JP2009/050972. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100290766 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |