Basic exhaust hoods use an exhaust blower to create a negative pressure zone to draw effluent-laden air directly away from the pollutant source. In kitchen hoods, the exhaust blower generally draws pollutants, including room-air, through a filter and out of the kitchen through a duct system. An exhaust blower, e.g., a variable speed fan, contained within the exhaust hood is used to remove the effluent from the room and is typically positioned on the suction side of a filter disposed between the pollutant source and the blower. Depending on the rate by which the effluent is created and the buildup of effluent near the pollutant source, the speed of exhaust blower may be manually set to minimize the flow rate at the lowest point which achieves capture and containment.
Hoods are intended to act as buffers which match the flow of fumes, which varies, to the constant rate of the exhaust system. But basic hoods and exhaust systems are limited in their abilities to buffer flow. The exhaust rate required to achieve full capture and containment is governed by the highest transient load pulses that occur. This requires the exhaust rate to be higher than the average volume of effluent (which is inevitably mixed with entrained air). Ideally the oversupply of exhaust should be minimized to avoid wasting energy. Hoods work by temporarily capturing bursts of effluent, which rise into the hood due by thermal convection and then, giving the moderate average exhaust rate time to catch up.
One problem with the buffer model is that the external environment may displace fumes and thereby add an excess burden of ambient air into the exhaust stream. This results in fumes being injected into the occupied space surrounding the hood. These transients are an on-going problem for hood design and installation. all the effluent by buffering the and containment by providing a buffer zone above the pollutant source where buoyancy-driven momentum transients can be dissipated before pollutants are extracted. By managing transients in this way, the effective capture zone of an exhaust supply can be increased.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,066,064 shows a backshelf hood with an exhaust intake located at a position that is displaced from a back end thereof. A short sloping portion rises and extends at a shallow angle toward the inlet from the back end of the hood recess.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,941,039 shows a backshelf hood with side skirts and sloping wall from a rear part of the hood to an inlet located near the middle of the hood. The front of the hood as a horizontal portion (baffle) that extends between about 15 percent and about 20 percent of the front to back dimension of the hood. This part is claimed to direct air in a space above the baffle toward the exhaust inlet and to direct air that is drawn from the ambient space in a horizontal direction thereby encouraging rising fumes to be deflected toward the exhaust inlet.
An eyebrow-type exhaust hood (also called a cap or vent cowl-type hood) may be used above a door or opening such as a pizza, conveyor oven, bakery oven, broiler, steamer. This type of hood overhangs an access opening for the oven or similar equipment and captures thermal plumes that flow upwardly from the access opening. The capture zone is generally at least as wide as the opening. The depth may vary with some designs being shallower than the face of the appliance. Such hoods may be mounted directly on the appliance. Conveyor ovens can project forward of the oven mouth such that the hood may or may not overhang the source of effluent. This type of hood may also be used for conveyor washers, sintering ovens, and other sources of hot effluent.
Referring to
A grease trough 170 collects grease from the filter cartridges 110. The angle of the baffle plate 120 with respect to the filter support plate 115 defines a flow transition 135 leading to the faces of the filter cartridges 110. The position of the baffle plate 120 also defines a slot 135, indicated by the double arrow, through which the effluent stream is drawn by an exhaust system (not shown) connected to the plenum 125 by an exhaust collar 105. The baffle plate 120 also defines a sloping rear planar boundary of the recess 130.
Referring now also to
Hot gasses escape from the ends 231 and 232 as well as from material carried on the conveyor terminals 225 and 230. The latter may be open to the flow of gasses allowing plumes, indicated by arrows 210, to rise through the conveyor terminals. Some plumes, such as indicated at 205, may flow around the conveyor terminals 225 and 230. Plumes rising close to the ends 231 and 232 tend to stay close to the ovens 220 due to the Coanda effect (or wall flow) so that some of the fumes will tend to flow along the baffle plate 120 until sucked into the slot 135.
Plumes rising further away from the ovens 220 will tend to be captured in a suction zone (not indicated separately) around the slot 135. The forward edge 141, which drops downwardly, defines a shallow canopy that helps to buffer and capture flow that is further away from the ovens 220. A common exhaust duct 260 connects the collars 105 of the two eyebrow hoods 100 and leads them to a further common duct 150 that is connected to an exhaust fan (not shown).
By locating the slot 135 in a position remote from the walls 231 and 232 of the ovens 220, a suction zone is defined remote from the ovens 220 to capture fume plumes, such as 205, which rise remote from the ovens 220. Additionally, the baffle plate 120 provides an inclined, partially vertical surface along which plumes closer to the ovens 220, such as 206, may cling and thereby be guided to the slot 135. This configuration allows filters to be located conveniently close to the exhaust collar 105 at a rear end of the eyebrow hood 100. The remotely located suction zone allows the reach of the hood 100 to be extended and its capture efficiency is equivalent to a larger conventional hood with a deeper and more extended canopy.
Referring now to
Referring now to
A grease trough 470 collects grease from the filter cartridges 410. The angle of the baffle plate 420 with respect to the filter support plate 415 defines a flow transition 435 leading to the faces of the filter cartridges 410. The position of the baffle plate 420 also defines a slot 435 through which the effluent stream is drawn by an exhaust system (not shown) connected to the plenum 425 by an exhaust collar 405. The baffle plate 420 also defines a sloping rear planar boundary of the recess 430. In the present embodiment, the slot 435 is extended by en extended portion 421, which in this case is horizontal. The baffle plate 420 may also, in an alternative configuration, be flat but inclined at an angle less than that shown in
Referring now to
Referring now to
As in the eyebrow hood of
Referring to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Also illustrated in the present embodiment is a spoiler 618. The spoiler 618 spreads any Coanda plumes in the x-axis direction so that a fast moving pulsatile thermal plume is less likely to flow past the inlet slot 675. Essentially, it is a mechanism for transverse (x-direction) mixing of the z-*y-direction momentum that is tangent to the surface of the baffle 615 (or, put another way, the transverse mixing of the component of the flow along this surface's gradient). Paradimatically, a transient plume that is localized with respect to the x-axis may overwhelm the suction capacity of the inlet slot 675 at a particular point along x. If such a plume is spread across the x-axis by turbulent mixing, its locally high velocity may be reduced and the resulting wider (and slower) plume may be more easily handled by the suction of the inlet slot 675. The spoiler may be provided with or without other features and in combination with any of the foregoing features discussed in connection with this or the other embodiments to the same effect.
Referring to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring to
It will be observed that various features have been described in connection with the foregoing embodiments. These features may be combined in combination and various subcombinations. As can be seen in
As shown in
Still another feature of the
The above features may be employed in subcombinations. For example, the continuous wall 1000 may be provided in other configurations, for example, with an inlet located lower than the top of the hood 1005 or without side skirts 1015 or lip 1050. For another example, the low aspect-ratio hood design may have more conventional structures such as ones that do not provide the continuous surface 1000; i.e., baffle 120 (
The present application is a national stage entry of International Patent Application No. PCT/US06/00579, filed Jan. 6, 2006, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/593,331, filed Jan. 6, 2005.
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PCT/US2006/000579 | 1/6/2006 | WO | 00 | 3/13/2008 |
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