The application relates to a food refrigeration system, more specifically to a system for cooling food containers associated with commercial food cabinets.
Commercial food cabinets are often equipped with removable food pans allowing for ready access to food that needs to be kept cool. In order to keep the food pans cool, fans are placed below the pans to circulate air and otherwise reduce the temperature of the pan environment. Liquids from the food pans can spill down into the fan area. If the liquids contact the motor, this can impact motor performance and negatively interfere with the operation of the cooling system. Similarly, washing of the upper area of the cabinet can be made more difficult if special care must be taken to avoid contacting the fan motor with wash liquid.
Traditionally, both area shielding and shaft seals have been used to limit the contamination. However, neither of these methods can form a complete seal against contact with liquids because of the necessary operation of the fan rotor and impeller.
It would be desirable to provide a refrigeration system wherein the fan motor is completely isolated from the food environment by a fully waterproof barrier.
A fan is part of a cooling system to cool the removable pans of a food cabinet such as a presentation cabinet or preparation table. The fan impeller is mounted on a stationary shaft in the same environment as the food pans, while the electric motor that powers the fan is mounted outside of the operative environment, separated from the fan impeller and the food pans by a sealed, water-tight barrier. The motor is coupled with the impeller by means of magnets mounted on one or both of the fan and the rotor of the motor. Because there is no direct mechanical connection between the motor and the impeller, the need for some type of moving seal through an opening of the internal housing wall is eliminated. The risk of a liquid contacting the motor from a food spill or during washing is greatly reduced.
The cooling frame 60 includes a set of vertical air grills 62, 63, and 64. The cooling frame 60 also includes a horizontal air grill 65. As shown in
A fan impeller 10 draws air from the inner ventilation chamber 8 into the outer ventilation chamber 9 and impels the air toward the evaporator coil 72 which is located in a vertical section of the outer ventilation chamber 9. Air passes the evaporator coil 72 and exits the outer ventilation chamber 9 through one of the vertical air grills 62, 63, and 64. One of these air grills 62 leads to the open environment 7 above the food pan 50; the other two air grills 63 and 64 lead to the inner ventilation chamber 8 directly below the food pan 50. Passing over the evaporator coil 72 cools the air which subsequently passes through the vertical grills, so that when this air comes in contact with the food pan 50 it acts to reduce the temperature of the food pan 50.
Liquids may enter the outer ventilation chamber 9, either from food spills or during a washing procedure. The impeller 10 and stationary shaft 20 are not vulnerable to damage from casual contact with liquids, and the impeller 10 may be easily removed during washing of the upper area of the cabinet. However, contact with liquids may damage the electric drive motor 30 that drives the impeller 10 if the liquids are able to reach those components. Fortunately, the surface 2 separating the rotor 40 from the impeller 10 also works to isolate the motor 30 from the cooling environment 4 without blocking the magnetic coupling between the rotor 40 and impeller 10. Thus, food falling proximate to the impeller 10 during operation does not contact the motor 30, and wash liquid directed to washing the cabinet 70 also does not contact the motor 30.
The number of magnets 18 may vary. In one embodiment, an even number of magnets 18 are used. If an even number of magnets 18 are mounted on the central body 14, the magnets 18 may be aligned in an alternating fashion such that the poles of adjacent magnets are opposite each other, thus reducing a potential source of error in manufacturing. If the four magnets 18 are accidentally placed backwards into the impeller 10, there is no practical effect, as the same number and relative position of the magnets 18 is preserved. It has also been found that the magnetic coupling between the impeller 10 and the rotor 30 is stronger in the case of alternating opposite poles than if all the poles of the magnets 18 are facing the same direction.
As shown in
The stationary fan shaft 20 may be attached to the sealed surface by mechanical means. In one embodiment, the fan shaft 20 may protrude through the sealed surface 2. Because the fan shaft 20 is stationary and does not have to mechanically impart rotation from the motor 30, an effective seal can still be produced at the surface 2 even if the shaft 20 extends completely through the surface 2 as shown in
The drive motor 30 is positioned on the other side of the sealed surface 2 in the motor environment 6, where it is not subject to contact with contaminants from the cooling environment 4. The drive motor 30 is positioned as shown such that the rotor 40 is aligned with the central body 14 of the impeller 10. The magnets 18 of the impeller 10 are aligned with the magnets 48 of the rotor 40 such that the rotor 40 and central body 14 are magnetically coupled. When the motor 30 is activated to rotate the rotor 40, the magnetically coupled impeller 10 also rotates, including the fan blades 12. Rotation of the fan impeller 10 acts to circulate air within the cooling environment 4.
Another embodiment of a cooling assembly is shown in an exploded view as
The shaft 20′ is secured to the sealed surface 2 by means of a screw member 24. In one embodiment, the screw member 24 is a self-sealing screw, such as a screw with a silicon o-ring under the screw head available from McMaster-Carr. The screw member 24 fastens the shaft 20′ tightly to the sealed surface 2. The screw 24 and shaft 20′ are stationary relative to the sealed surface 2, which allows the sealed surface 2 to maintain an effective seal around the shaft 20′.
In the embodiment of
The top surface of the rotor 40′ includes a central recess of sufficient depth such that the rotor 40′, which rotates rapidly during operation of the cooling system, does not come into physical contact with the head of the screw member 24, which remains stationary during cooling.
The embodiments described above are shown by way of illustration and are not limiting on the scope of the invention. Variations, such as in the configuration of the coupled magnets, the fan blades, the motor, or the air circulation within the cooling cabinet, are possible.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Application No. 60/984,222, filed Oct. 31, 2007, and herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60984222 | Oct 2007 | US |