Not Applicable
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
The invention relates to an environmental heating system that utilizes a flowing heated fluid to transfer heat from a heat source to a selected environment. The invention is directed to a hydronic radiant panel heating method and apparatus.
Interior environmental heating systems utilizing fluid to transport heat from a heat generating device, such as a hot water boiler, to tubing embedded in a floor have been used for many years. Fluid circulators are used to move fluid from the heat-generating device to the heat emitting floor tubing through pipe. When multiple heat emitting tubes are used with a single heat generator it becomes necessary to divide the flow of fluid into several tube circuits with a manifold. Flow in these manifolds is often regulated with valves placed in the manifold circuit to variably restrict flow, control fluid temperature or stop flow altogether if necessary. While the heat emitting floor tubing is often embedded in the actual floor construction, such as concrete slabs, it may also be attached to the underside of a wood subfloor or suspended in the air space between floor joists. At times a metal plate, usually of aluminum material, is formed around the tube and attached to the subfloor to conduct the heat from the tube to the underside of subfloor. When suspended in the joist air space, a plate may also be attached to the tubing to act as a thermal fin to assist in dissipating the heat into the joist space by convection. Often times holes are made through the floor joists to accommodate a length of heat emitting tubing to be laced back and forth through a series of adjacent joist spaces.
The invention is directed to a hydronic heating system operable to heat one or more selected living areas to desired temperatures utilizing heat emitting plates installed beneath a wood subfloor within the confines of the air space between the floor joists. The function of the manifold, heat emitting tube, heat emitting plates, joist space and subfloor are contained in a preferred embodiment of this invention. The apparatus specific to this invention are the manifold and the heat emitting plates.
The preferred embodiment of the heat emitting plate of this invention is shown in
An insulation material 8 shown in
The combination of the convective heat from the heat emitting plates coming in contact with the underside of the subfloor, the conducted heat from the heat emitting tubes through the heat emitting plates through the fins to the subfloor and the radiant heat transfer from the surface of the fin to the underside of the subfloor all contribute to the heating of the subfloor material which transfers through the subfloor via conduction.
The heat transfer can be reversed in this same embodiment of the invention where the fluid in the tube is colder than the joist bay air and subfloor. In such a case the heat flow is from the subfloor to the joist air space and through the plate to the tubing trapped in the plate trough and carried away by the fluid in the tube to be rejected elsewhere in the system.
In addition to the heat emitting plates the preferred embodiment of the invention includes manifolds shown in
The preferred embodiment of the invention includes a supply manifold pipe 13, a return manifold 14 and heat emitting plates. The manifold pipes are constructed from a straight length of copper pipe with brass or bronze fittings for connection to plastic or copper tubing commonly used in hydronic heating systems. Fittings 12 are spaced to provide for one fitting per joist bay. Manifolds alternatively could be constructed from plastic or other materials compatible with hydronic heating systems.
Heat emitting plates 2 are formed from thin metal sheet such as aluminum or steel with substantial strength to support the tube without deforming. Plates in the preferred embodiment of the invention have a plurality of perforated holes in the fin portion of the plate accounting for no more than 50% of the fin area. The plates dimensions are such that the width of the plate is approximately two thirds of the width of the joist bay area to be served and of such length to make shipping and installation manageable. Plates are bent in such a manner that one plate nests flush on top of another plate resulting in the least amount of space required for shipping.