This application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Patent Application DE 10 2007 047 451.8 filed Oct. 4, 2007, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention pertains to a liquid evaporator and to a process for generating vapor from a liquid to be evaporated.
Liquid evaporators, which are used to release an anesthetic or as respiration humidifiers for a patient, are known from respiration technique.
In a liquid evaporator known from DE 10 2005 054 344 B3, a liquid to be evaporated is delivered into a liquid feed duct by means of capillary forces. The liquid evaporator has no movable parts. The capillary pump consists of a porous material, especially sintered glass or sintered ceramic, which is in connection with the liquid to be evaporated. The water moving by the capillary effect is evaporated in the liquid feed duct heated from the outside. A porous material acting as a capillary wick is arranged for this in the liquid feed duct. A certain quantity of vapor can be generated from the liquid to be evaporated with a regulation of the temperature of the liquid feed duct heated from the outside. One drawback of the prior-art device is thermal inertia, especially the delayed motion of the liquid in the liquid feed duct, and the duration of heating of the heating elements and hence of the liquid feed duct. There is only limited or no possibility to guarantee that vapor will be available in a short time.
The prior-art liquid evaporator is suitable for providing vapor continuously, which can be embodied without problems. Delays may occur in the supply of vapor in case of intermittent vapor generation for the above-mentioned reasons.
A liquid evaporator is used, among other things, with a respirator, especially in an open respiration system. A respirator generates breathing air during the patient's inspiration phase. The expiration air of the expiration phase is discharged into the environment in an open system. The breathing air of the inspiration phase is enriched with moisture. Thus, vapor is needed during the inspiration phase only.
Continuous production of vapor makes necessary the intermediate storage of a large quantity of vapor during the patient's expiration phase at low respiration rates and large tidal volumes especially when the liquid evaporator known from DE 10 2005 054 344 B3 is used with a respirator. Intermediate storage of vapor is, however, difficult to achieve, because vapor that is generated may easily condense under the relatively cold ambient conditions.
Vapor production exclusively during a phase of inspiration would therefore be advantageous. A humidifier with a mechanical pump, as it is described in DE 198 08 590 B2, can embody, in principle, the short-term provision of vapor. However, parts subject to wear, which must be replaced by the user at regular intervals, are present in a mechanical pump.
Based on the state of the art, the object of the present invention is to provide a liquid evaporator, which makes it possible to supply vapor rapidly and, in particular, does not require a mechanical pump.
This object is accomplished by a liquid evaporator and a process for generating vapor from a liquid to be evaporated according to the invention.
The liquid evaporator according to the present invention is provided, at a liquid reserve of a liquid to be evaporated, at least one liquid feed duct and an evaporating unit adjoining the at least one liquid feed duct, with at least one working electrode and at least one counterelectrode arranged at a spaced location from the at least one working electrode. An electrical field generated by an electrical voltage between the at least one working electrode and the at least one counterelectrode brings about a motion of the liquid to be evaporated through the liquid feed duct. The design of the liquid evaporator according to the present invention makes it possible for the liquid to be evaporated to move by means of the electrocapillarity within the at least one liquid feed duct and to be evaporated in the process at the same time by the evaporating unit in the liquid feed duct or adjacent to the liquid feed duct. The at least one working electrode forms at least one portion of a wall of the liquid feed duct.
The phenomenon of electrocapillarity takes advantage of the fact that the surface tension of liquids can be modified by the generation of an electrical field. The contact angle between the liquid and the wall of the liquid feed duct thus changes as well. It is thus possible to let the liquid to be evaporated move in the liquid feed duct by reducing the contact angle from over 90° (hydrophobic state) to an angle of less than 90° (hydrophilic state).
The at least one working electrode is advantageously provided with a hydrophobic layer. The at least one working electrode has no direct contact with the liquid to be evaporated. One advantage of this embodiment is that when an electrical voltage is applied between the at least one working electrode and the counterelectrode, no electrolysis can take place. Thus, a higher voltage can be applied between the at least one working electrode and the counterelectrode compared to a working electrode without a hydrophobic layer. It is also possible to use corrosive liquids to be evaporated.
In another advantageous embodiment, the hydrophobic layer of the at least one working electrode consists at least partly of Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE also known as Teflon®). Teflon® has a high heat resistance, so that the at least one heating element of the evaporating unit can be arranged in this embodiment in the longitudinal direction of the liquid feed duct. The heating element may surround the liquid feed duct.
In yet another preferred embodiment, the at least one working electrode completely surrounds at least part of the liquid feed duct. Motion of the liquid to be evaporated can be advantageously accelerated hereby.
Furthermore, another liquid feed duct with another working electrode may be provided in the liquid evaporator according to the present invention. The additional working electrode can be connected to another counterelectrode or to the counterelectrode of the working electrode of the first liquid feed duct.
Here or in another embodiment of the liquid evaporator according to the present invention, the working electrode of a first liquid feed duct with the counterelectrode and each additional working electrode of each additional liquid feed duct with each additional counterelectrode can be supplied with voltage separately. The respective working electrodes with the counterelectrodes belonging to them can be actuated individually with correspondingly arranged switching elements. A larger quantity of vapor can be generated from the liquid to be evaporated in a short time as a result. However, the respective working electrodes may also be supplied by a single voltage supply unit only, in which case separate switching on and switching off of the respective working electrode can be made possible with switching elements, which are arranged between the voltage supply unit and the respective working electrode.
The present invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the drawings attached, in which identical structures are designated by the same reference numbers. The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its operating advantages and specific objects attained by its uses, reference is made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated.
In the drawings:
a is a schematic sectional view of a first embodiment of the liquid evaporator according to the present invention, showing a switching element in an open state;
b is a schematic sectional view of a first embodiment of the liquid evaporator according to the present invention, showing a switching element in a closed state;
Referring to the drawings in particular,
The distance between the working electrode 3 and the counterelectrode 7 is selected to be such that the application of an electrical voltage of a voltage supply unit 10 by a switching element 12 between the working electrode 3 and the counterelectrode 7 generates an electrical field that brings about a motion of the liquid to be evaporated from the liquid reserve 1 into the liquid feed duct 2. The electrical voltage of the voltage supply unit 10 may be either direct current (d.c.) voltage or an alternating current (a.c.) voltage.
The diameter or the width of the liquid feed duct 2 depends on the electrical voltage of the voltage supply unit 10, which voltage is present between the working electrode 3 and the counterelectrode 7, on the layer thickness and the dielectric constant of the hydrophobic layer 9, the length of the liquid feed duct 2 as well as on the distance between the working electrode 3 and the counterelectrode 7 and the nature of the liquid to be evaporated. Electrically conductive particles in the liquid to be evaporated facilitate the motion of the liquid to be evaporated from the liquid reserve 1 into the liquid feed duct 2. At equal characteristics of the liquid evaporator according to the present invention, the velocity of rise of an electrolyte as a liquid to be evaporated in the liquid feed duct 2 is greater than in case of deionized water or distilled water.
If the voltage of the voltage supply unit 10 is, for example, 220 V, the length of the liquid feed duct 2 is 25 mm, the layer thickness of the hydrophobic layer 9 is 18.5 mm, the dielectric constant of the hydrophobic layer 9 is 2.1, and the liquid to be evaporated is deionized water, the width of the liquid feed duct 2 is approximately 100 μm.
The distance between the working electrode 3 and the counterelectrode 7 is in the range of 1 mm to 10 mm.
The liquid evaporator according to the present invention shown in
The schematic sectional view in
The evaporating unit 16 is arranged downstream of the liquid feed ducts 22, 23 and 24 in the direction of flow of the liquid to be evaporated. The heating elements 17 are arranged at right angles to the liquid feed ducts 22, 23 and 24 within the evaporating unit 16. Individual evaporating channels 18 are provided within the evaporating unit 16 in the longitudinal direction of the liquid feed ducts 22, 23 and 24 in order to embody a large-area evaporating surface in an advantageous manner. Three to four evaporating channels 18 are preferably provided in individual units in the immediate vicinity of the outlet of the liquid feed ducts 22, 23 and 24, the heating elements 17 being arranged between the units of the evaporating channels 18. The liquid feed ducts 22, 23 and 24 are advantageously separated from the evaporating channels 18 by a metal mat 21. The liquid to be evaporated can thus spread out optimally from the liquid feed ducts 22, 23 and 24 onto the evaporating channels 18. A temperature sensor 19 is arranged in the immediate vicinity of the evaporating channels 18 in order to use a measured temperature to control the evaporating unit 16.
The schematic sectional view in
Both the working electrodes 4 of the first and second liquid feed ducts 22 and 23 and the working electrode 4 of the third liquid feed duct 24 may be supplied with electric voltage of the voltage supply unit 10 by the switching elements 12 and 13 as desired.
A basic quantity of liquid to be evaporated can be provided with this arrangement with the sintered glass elements 15. If needed, the quantity of liquid to be evaporated can be briefly increased by applying an electric voltage of the voltage supply unit 10 as desired by means of the switching element 12 to the working electrodes 4 of the first and second liquid feed ducts 22 and 23 as well as by means of the switching element 13 of the working electrode 4 of the third liquid feed duct 24. The quantity of vapor to be generated can thus be increased as desired beyond a basic quantity of vapor, whereby a broad dynamic range of the liquid evaporator according to the present invention beyond the basic quantity of vapor is obtained. A schematic sectional view of the liquid evaporator according to the present invention with three liquid feed ducts 22, 23 and 24, each with a rectangular cross section, is shown in
Vapor of a liquid to be evaporated can be generated rapidly with the liquid evaporator according to the present invention without the use of mechanical components subject to wear. The quantity of liquid to be evaporated can be actively controlled and modified by the design according to the present invention. In particular, it is possible with the liquid evaporator according to the present invention, in conjunction with a respirator or as a component of a respirator, to embody rapid vapor generation exclusively during the phase of inspiration.
While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described in detail to illustrate the application of the principles of the invention, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied otherwise without departing from such principles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 047 415.8 | Oct 2007 | DE | national |