The present invention generally relates to fuel-fired heating appliances and, in representatively illustrated embodiments thereof, more particularly provides a fuel-fired instantaneous water heater having a special construction that permits it to utilize a low temperature plastic vent structure.
Fuel-fired instantaneous type water heaters have combustion systems designed to heat water as it is being supplied to one or more plumbing fixtures to which it is operatively connected as opposed to heating a stored quantity of water for subsequent delivery to such fixtures. Due to their high flue exhaust temperatures, conventional power vented instantaneous fuel fired water heaters installed indoors have typically had to utilize category III high grade stainless steel (AL-29-4C) vent systems and materials. These necessary stainless steel vent systems, which are usually specified and/or supplied in kit form with the water heater, are expensive, difficult to install, non-interchangeable across various manufacturers, and difficult to source through retail and wholesale distribution centers.
It would be highly desirable to provide a fuel-fired instantaneous type water heater which could utilize a lower cost plastic vent system instead of the conventionally required stainless steel vent system. It is to this goal that the present invention is primarily directed.
In carrying out principles of the present invention, in accordance with representative embodiments thereof, a fuel-fired fluid heating apparatus is provided which is illustratively a fuel-fired instantaneous type water heater. Because of a unique design of the heating apparatus a low cost plastic vent system may be utilized therewith instead of a conventional, more costly metal vent system.
From a broad perspective, the fuel-fired fluid heating apparatus comprises an outer housing having a combustion gas outlet opening, and a heat exchanger disposed in the outer housing. The heat exchanger structure has a first flow path extending therethrough and adapted to receive and discharge a flow of fluid to be heated, and a second flow path extending therethrough, the second flow path being in thermal communication with the first flow path and adapted to receive a flow of hot combustion gas and discharge the combustion gas flow through the combustion gas outlet opening.
A wall structure defines a third flow path external to the heat exchanger structure, and the heating apparatus further comprises a fuel burner operative to receive fuel and pressurized combustion air from sources thereof combust the received fuel and combustion air, and create the flow of hot combustion gas. Blower apparatus is incorporated in the heating apparatus and is operative to (1) discharge a first flow of air into the fuel burner as pressurized combustion air, and (2) discharge a second flow of air into the third flow path as cooling air which mixed with and cools combustion gas being discharged from the second flow path.
The use of blower-discharged air as combustion air delivered to the burner, and heat exchanger-bypassing cooling air to reduce the temperature of combustion gas discharged from the fluid heating apparatus permits the temperature of the cooled combustion gas to be less than about 200° F. so that a low cost plastic vent system can be connected to the outer housing, at the combustion gas outlet opening therein, to receive and discharge the cooled combustion gas.
According to other aspects of the invention, the first flow path is enveloped by the second flow path, with the first flow path being defined by a pipe-based heat exchanger disposed within a combustion chamber through which the second flow path extends. Preferably, the third flow path is interposed between and at least partially bounded by an interior surface portion of the outer housing and an exterior surface portion of the heat exchange structure. Preferably a fourth flow path is also disposed within the outer housing, between the heat exchanger structure and a portion of the outer housing, for flowing ambient air through the outer housing to an inlet portion of the blower apparatus. Air flow through the third and fourth flow paths serves to reduce the exterior surface temperature of the outer housing.
Preferably, the fuel burner is a variable firing rate fuel burner, and the blower apparatus is operative to discharge a selectively variable quantity of air. The fluid heating apparatus illustratively includes a temperature sensor operative to sense the temperature of the cooled combustion gas and responsively output a sensed temperature signal, and a control system operative to utilize the sensed temperature signal to control at least one operational aspect of the fluid heating apparatus.
In a first representative embodiment thereof, the blower apparatus includes a single air blower having an outlet communicating with the fuel burner and the third flow path. In a second representative embodiment thereof, the blower apparatus includes a single air blower, and the fluid heating apparatus further comprises proportioning apparatus operative to supply selectively variable portions of air discharged from the single air blower to the fuel burner and to the third flow path. In a third representative embodiment thereof, the blower apparatus includes a first air blower operative to discharge air only into the fuel burner, and a second air blower operative to discharge air only into the third flow path. Preferably, the blower apparatus, in each of its three illustrative embodiments, is disposed within the outer housing.
Schematically depicted in cross-section in
Water heater 10 includes an outer housing 14 having top and bottom end walls 16,18 and opposite vertical wall portions 20,22 extending therebetween. Top end wall 16 has a combustion gas outlet opening 23 therein. The vent system 12, which may representatively be constructed from readily available low cost plastic (DWV-PVC) pipe and associated fittings, illustratively has a vertical inlet portion 24 connected to the top housing end wall 16. From this inlet portion 24, the vent system 12 may extend vertically as indicated by the phantomed flue portion 26, or horizontally as indicated by the phantomed flue portion 28.
Disposed within the outer housing 14, and horizontally inset from its vertical side wall portions 20 and 22, is a vertically elongated heat exchanger structure 30 having two primary portions in thermal communication with one another—(1) a wall structure 32 defining an enclosed combustion chamber 34 having a top outlet 36 communicated with the inlet portion 24 of the plastic vent system 12 via an upper interior portion of the outer housing 14 and the combustion gas outlet opening 23, and (2) a vertically coiled pipe heat exchanger portion 38 disposed within the combustion chamber 34 and having an inlet end 40 coupled to a pressurized cold water inlet pipe 42 external to the wall structure 32, and an outlet end 44 coupled to a hot water supply pipe 46 external to the wall structure 32. The interior of the coiled pipe 38 defines a first flow path adapted to receive and discharge a flow of fluid to be heated, and the combustion chamber 34 defines a second flow path in thermal communication with the first flow path and adapted to receive a flow of hot combustion gas and discharge it through the combustion gas outlet opening 23, as later described herein.
The previously mentioned top outlet 36 of the combustion chamber 34 is partially bounded by a closure portion 48 of the inner wall structure 32 which is connected to the top end wall 16 of the outer housing 14, and a rightwardly and upwardly sloped deflector portion 50 of the inner wall structure 32. For purposes later described herein, the deflector wall 50 forms with the top end wall 16 of the outer housing 14 a dilution air outlet passage 52 that communicates with the vertical inlet portion 24 of the plastic vent system 12 via the combustion gas outlet opening 23.
Disposed within the outer housing 14, and externally extending upwardly along a left side portion of the heat exchanger structure 30, is a bypass air passage 54 having a bottom end wall 56 and communicating with the inlet portion 24 of the plastic vent system 12 via the dilution air outlet passage 52. At the bottom end of the bypass air passage 54 the inner wall structure 32 has a vertical splitter wall portion 58 that extends upwardly along a left side portion of a variable firing rate fuel burner 60 disposed within a bottom interior end portion of the combustion chamber 54 beneath the bottom end of the coiled pipe heat exchanger 38. Burner 60 is supplied with gaseous fuel via a fuel supply pipe 62.
An air inlet passage 64 vertically extends along a right side interior portion of the outer housing 14, externally of the heat exchanger structure 30 between the outer housing top end wall 16 and an inlet plenum 66 extending along a bottom interior end portion of the outer housing 14 beneath the heat exchanger structure 30. An air inlet louver 68 is installed on an upper portion of the outer housing vertical side wall 22 and opens into the vertical air inlet passage 64, and an optional air inlet louver 70 is installed in a lower portion of the outer housing vertical side wall 20 and opens into the bottom inlet plenum 66.
A variable speed air blower 72 is disposed in the plenum 66 and has an outlet 74 positioned along the bottom sides of the burner 60 and the bypass air passage 54. The blower outlet 74 is divided by the splitter wall portion 58 into a first portion communicated with a lower interior end portion of the bypass air passage 54, and a second portion communicated with the interior of the burner 60.
During heated water delivery use of the instantaneous water heater 10, pressurized water is sequentially flowed inwardly through the pipe 42, through the coiled pipe heat exchanger portion 38, and then outwardly through the pipe 46 to one or more of the plumbing fixtures to which the water heater 10 is operatively connected. At the same time, under the control of a suitable main controller 76 operatively associated with the water heater 10, the variable firing rate burner 60 and the variable speed blower 72 are being operated.
Operation of the burner 60 causes it to generate within the combustion chamber 34 hot combustion gases 78. Operation of the blower 72 draws ambient air 80 external to the water heater 10 inwardly through the upper air inlet louver 68, downwardly through the vertical air inlet passage 64, into the bottom inlet plenum 66 and then into the inlet 82 of the blower 72. Additional ambient air 80 is drawn inwardly through the lower air inlet louver 70 into the bottom inlet plenum 66 and into the blower inlet 82.
A first portion of the air 80, from a portion of the blower outlet 74 to the right of the splitter wall portion 58 as viewed in
A second quantity of the air 80, to the left of the splitter wall portion 58 as viewed in
As can be seen in
If desired, a temperature sensing element, such as the schematically depicted thermistor 88 capable of generating a temperature-indicative output signal 90, may be used to monitor the temperature of the cooled flue gases 86 flowing through the vent system 12. The output signal 90 may be used to terminate or preclude firing of the burner 60 when the sensed flue gas temperature is unacceptably high, or may be fed to the main controller 76 and used thereby as a parameter in the control of the variable firing rate burner 60 and/or the variable speed blower 72.
A first alternate embodiment 10a of the previously described fuel-fired instantaneous type water heater 10 is schematically depicted in cross-section in
The water heater 10a shown in
This blower-discharged air proportioning capability is provided by forming a plenum 92 beneath the burner 60a, the plenum 92 having a bottom wall 94 forming an upper boundary of the bottom inlet plenum 66a. Plenum 92 has an outlet opening 96 disposed beneath a bottom left corner portion of the burner 60a and communicating the plenum 92 with the vertical bypass air passage 54a. Blower 72a, located within the bottom plenum 66a, has its outlet 74a communicated with the plenum 92 just to the right of the outlet opening 96 as viewed in
This ratio may be adjusted using the thermistor temperature output signal 90a routed to the main controller 76a which, in turn, controls the damper 98 in addition to controlling the variable firing rate burner 60a and the variable speed blower 72a. Alternatively, the thermistor 88a (or other type of temperature sensing device as the case may be) may simply be utilized to shut the water heater 10a off when the thermistor-sensed flue gas temperature becomes unacceptably high.
A second alternate embodiment 10b of the previously described fuel-fired instantaneous type water heater 10 is schematically depicted in cross-section in
The water heater 10b shown in
In addition to the desirable result of the present invention of permitting the vent system of a fuel-fired instantaneous type water heater to be formed from a low cost plastic material, another desirable aspect of the invention is that it is air discharged from an air blower portion of the water heater which is utilized as flue gas dilution and cooling air. No flue gases are flowed through any blower portion of the water heater. Accordingly, the interior of such blower portion is not exposed to and chemically deteriorated by such flue gases. Moreover, the flow of ambient air through the outer housing desirably absorbs some of the heat from the internal heat exchanger structure and accordingly reduces the external surface temperature of the outer housing.
While the fuel-fired fluid heating devices shown in
As illustrated, the instantaneous type water heaters representatively have upflow configurations. However, they could alternatively have downflow or horizontal flow configurations without departing from principles of the present invention. Further, while the fluid (water) being heated is flowed through a first heat exchanger flow path enveloped by a second heat exchanger flow path through which combustion gas flows, without departing from principles of the present invention the overall heat exchanger structure could be modified in certain instances in a manner such that the fluid being heated could be flowed through a flow path that is external to a flow path through which hot combustion gas flows.
The foregoing detailed description is to be clearly understood as being given by way of illustration and example only, the spirit and scope of the present invention being limited solely by the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070084420 A1 | Apr 2007 | US |