1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to drying devices, and more particularly to a drying device adapted for improved and faster and more comfortable drying of a user's hands and/or hair.
2. Description of the Related Art
Conventional hand dryers dry an individual's wet hands in one of two ways, evaporative drying or “blow-off” drying. (In the blow-off case, a small amount of evaporation occurs, but it is incidental and minimal since the airstream is not warmed.) Conventional evaporative hand dryers include a blower for generating an air stream through a ducting system to an exit air outlet that directs the air stream onto the hands of the user. The air stream is heated by a heating device to evaporate the moisture off the user's hands. The hand dryers generally include a push button, sensor or other means to actuate the blower and heater for a predetermined time period (e.g., 30 seconds).
The drying time for conventional evaporative hand dryers is relatively slow, taking 30 to 45 seconds or more to dry a user's hands. Conventional dryers suffer from low energy efficiency. The low energy efficiency is a result of the following operating factors: heating up the internal dryer components; not maximizing and optimizing air flow temperature, direction and velocity; not compensating locally for evaporative cooling; and not addressing the problem of a stagnation boundary layer of air and water molecules which inhibits evaporation of water at the skin surface of the hands. Attempts to improve energy efficiency in the prior art include providing an enclosure for the hands, recirculating air and predrying the air.
A major impediment to evaporation is the presence of a stagnation boundary layer, which is a region adjacent to the surface of the water. The stagnation boundary layer corresponds to the transition region from where air containing evaporated water molecules are moving and where water molecules adjacent to the water surface (or any other surface) are not moving or moving much slower. In this stagnation boundary layer, the water molecules evaporating will accumulate, and about as many will flow back to the water surface as will flow away into the flowing stream of air. This stagnation boundary layer inhibits the net evaporation of surface water. By breaking up the stagnation boundary layer with a strong component of air flow perpendicular to the surface, the evaporation is increased. Rather than accumulating in the stagnation boundary layer and inhibiting the net evaporation of water, the water molecules in the stagnation boundary layer are swept away, as fast as they accumulate, by the air breaking up the stagnation boundary layer. U.S. Pat. No. 6,038,786, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference, discloses a hand dryer that improves dispersion of the boundary layer.
To diffuse the stagnation boundary layer, a second type of conventional hand dryers uses “blow-off” or “air knife” technology instead of evaporation (although a small amount of evaporation occurs). These blow-off dyers provide an intensive blast of high velocity air which when suitably deployed, blows or skives droplets of water off the user's hands.
It has been found that after using a conventional “blow-off” hand dryer, the hands feel cold and slightly moist, as a result of the heat loss and subsequent cooling due to evaporation of some of the residual moisture that has not been blown off. The hands are cooled during blow off drying because even air that has not been heated will evaporate some water, and the remaining water and surface will thus be cooled by the heat loss due to evaporation. This discomfort is present during drying and for about 30 seconds after drying until the hands return to normal temperature.
The above-discussed and other drawbacks and deficiencies of the prior art are overcome or alleviated by the dryer of the present invention. An exemplary embodiment of the invention is a dryer, which uses an optimized air outlet to generate both optimal force and temperature at the user's hands. The air outlet is sized and shaped to entrain a sufficient amount of air so as to increase force of the airstream while not entraining too much air, which would otherwise significantly reduce the airstream temperature. Additionally, the air outlet design allows for control of the width of the warm air zone within the airstream. This optimized air outlet provides reduced drying time and in-process comfort and results in improved dryer performance and comfort. The above-discussed and other features and advantages of the present invention will be appreciated and understood by those skilled in the art from the following detailed description and drawings.
Referring now to the drawings wherein like elements are numbered alike in the several Figures:
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is a dryer that provides decreased drying time and also provides the user with a high degree of comfort. Comfort is a feeling of warmth, both during and after the drying process has been concluded, and a sufficient level of dryness after the drying process has concluded. In the experiments performed related to the invention, dryness was considered attained when the residual water on the hands (or other surface) is 0.20 grams or less. This is based on the subjective feelings of comfort from a number of subjects, followed by measurement of the weight of water remaining on the hands of the subjects. The residual water was measured using a process that takes into account variations in hand size, hand movements during drying, soaping, and ambient temperature and humidity. This is a higher comfort standard than currently accepted in the industry. In today's practice, conventional evaporative dryers remove about 90% of the baseline water so that on average, after a 30 second drying cycle, about 0.40-0.50 grams of residual water remains on the hands. In addition to enhanced comfort due to less residual water, the invention provides “in-process comfort” which is a feeling of warmth during the drying cycle. Such comfort normally correlates to a residual water amount of 0.20 grams or less.
The exemplary embodiment of the invention achieves reduced drying time and comfort by incorporating an optimum combination of both blow-off and evaporative drying. This can be noted in
It is possible to program the motor speed electronically during the dryer cycle and thus minimize the time span of the blow-off phase. Since the most forceful air stream is required only during the first 2-3 seconds, motor speed can be throttled down, after the blow off phase, to just enough to break up the stagnation layer after that period without affecting drying efficiency. This will result in a quieter evaporation phase. An additional advantage is that more electrical power can be made available during the evaporation phase to speed evaporation.
Control of the motor speed, and numerous other functions, may be performed through a single control card containing multiple solid state circuits that work together as a single control system, thus eliminating redundant circuit elements. In addition, the control card may implement supplemental functions such as providing a proximity sensor capability for detecting the presence of the hands in the drying location, etc. Advantages of this multi-function control card include a small size, which allows more physical room inside the dryer housing for the motor and for additional insulation, etc. than is conventional. Another advantage is the capability for controlling functions far more complex than are available in conventional dryer control circuits. Lastly, a single control card provides significantly decreased cost compared to individual controls that do not work together as a single control system.
To obtain high force and high temperature in the air stream exiting the air outlet 16, entrainment of the air stream is managed. Entrainment is the phenomenon of outside air being drawn into the air stream through a Venturi effect. As the speed of an airstream increases, entrainment increases. Entrained air increases blow-off performance because the entrained air increases the mass and momentum force of the air stream and thus provides more force to the drying surface. For a given airstream speed, entrainment further increases with decreasing air outlet opening. This is because relatively more of the airstream is in contact with the outside air because the ratio of perimeter (where entrainment occurs) to cross sectional area increases. As shown in
P/A=(2*Pi*r)/(Pi*r*r)
where Pi=3.14159.
The P/A ratio has an effect on the drying time. In
It is clear from this empirical data that when the perimeter to area ratio is in a range from about 5 to about 7, the fastest drying occurs. Nevertheless, a tradeoff must be made between drying time and user comfort. Smaller diameter outlets result in higher force of the airstream which may lead to user discomfort. Outlets having a P/A range of about 2.5 to about 7 have provided satisfactory results.
While entrainment of cool room air can increase air stream force, it also reduces the airstream temperature. Accordingly, to perform more effective evaporation and to provide the user with in-process comfort (i.e., warm hands during and immediately after drying) it is important not to entrain too much air. Entraining air causes a reduction of temperature of the heated air that is used for the later stages of hand drying which involves evaporation of water films that cannot be readily blown off. Thus, the entrained air is concentrated in an outer sheath of the air stream so that the temperature of the core region of that air stream is only minimally affected by the lower temperature of the air in that outer sheath.
Circular air outlets provide an advantage over other outlet shapes because they give the lowest P/A ratios for the largest enclosed areas because the perimeter of a circle encloses the greatest area of any geometrical figure. This means that the core region of the air stream is thicker and the sheath region (holding lower temperature air) is thinner than for any other outlet shape. This makes it harder for the temperature of the core region of the air stream to be degraded by the lower temperature entrained air in the sheath than for any other outlet shape. Air outlet shapes of other forms such as ellipses, slots, etc., will also provide satisfactory results, but, depending on the degree of deviation from the circular, may exceed the desired range of P/A ratios—under which condition they will work poorly. This is also the case for multiple airstreams from the same blower source.
The amount of the entrained air within the cross section of the air stream is controlled to provide comfort and reduced drying time. For the outlet shown in plot E of
Referring to
An exemplary embodiment of the invention has been tested against conventional hand dryers for both airstream temperature and airstream force.
Plots A-C in
Experiments have been performed with a variety of air outlet shapes and sizes to determine the effect of the air outlet on drying.
The preferred air outlet design is a circular tube, with a length larger than the diameter. The length to diameter ratio can be such as but not limited to 3 to 5 times the diameter or larger, or a ratio that encourages the exiting air column to remain in a relatively non-spreading mode while not significantly impeding air flow. The air entrainment is reduced when the periphery is as small as possible compared to the exiting area, and this corresponds to a circular exit, which is the preferred embodiment. However, other exit shapes can be used with a reduction of temperature and force but the result can still be sufficient to give improved drying performance and reduced drying time.
Referring to
In an exemplary embodiment, airflow through the air outlet 16 should be no less than 18,000 linear feet per minute (lfm) while maintaining a water column back pressure no less than 30 inches. This means that the motor driving the blower 12 should be a high speed motor having fan blades that rotate at greater than 15,000 rpm. This is an order of magnitude faster than what is used in conventional evaporation hand dryers. A vacuum cleaner motor is an example of a motor that can be used in blower 12 to satisfy this requirement. Multistage blowers will have the higher exit pressure needed. Present blow-off dryers may use such blowers but not in combination with an internal heater or with the range of air outlet sizes and shapes described above. As a result, conventional blow-off dryers do not attain comfort in addition to drying as this invention does.
An exemplary operating point of the blower 12 corresponds to the case where the air outlet 16 area is adjusted so that the product of the exiting airflow volume and the airflow pressure is at or near a maximum. An approximate value for the air outlet area can be determined by selecting the air outlet area so that the back pressure to the blower 12 is about one half of the blank off (maximum) pressure of the blower 12. In an exemplary embodiment, the blank off pressure for the blower 12 was measured at 90 inches. The circular air outlets with diameters of 0.760″ and 0.0814″ generate back pressures about half this value as shown in FIG. 8.
In order to make the device as quiet as possible, the air outlet, air inlet and motor and blower enclosure are lined with sound absorbing material 40,
The kinetic energy of the airflow is (½)*mass * velocity * velocity. There is more of a benefit from increasing the velocity than in increasing the mass flow. A 10 percent increase in the air velocity is twice as beneficial as a 10 percent increase in the air mass because the kinetic energy increases as the square of the velocity. Increasing the blower rotation speed can increase the velocity of the exiting air. Thus using a blower with a highest rotation speed and/or blower with larger rotator radius can increase the dryer performance. The number of poles and the excitation frequency of the power supply determine rotation speed of a motor. Using a frequency converter to convert the 60/50 Hz power line to a higher frequency drive signal such as but not limited to 440 Hz is one way of increasing the rotation speed. Because of the higher frequency, the coils of the motor must be changed so that the current and power to the motor is not reduced because of the increased reactance of an inductor at higher frequencies.
To increase the frequency of the power driving the motor, the 60/50 Hz line power is converted to higher frequencies by rectifying the ac power to dc, and using the dc to power an oscillator operating at a much higher frequency. Because the dryer motor current can range from 5 amps to about 8 amps, the output oscillator must be a higher power oscillator. The output frequency can be varied, but must be compatible with the inductance of the motor coils.
A switching circuit oscillator is most efficient because the switching transistors only dissipate power during the actual switching on and off because these times are only the times where the product of switch voltage and current is not very low. In the on mode, the current is high but the switch voltage is very low. In the off mode the switch voltage is high but the current is low. The output power is in the form of square waves but this is acceptable to the motor.
Another and more preferable way of increasing the speed of the blower moving the air while using more available motors running on 60/50 Hz is to use gears between the motor and the blower. The gear ratio can increase the blower speed. For a gear ratio of 5:1, a motor speed of 3600 rpm can be increased to 18,000 rpm. Using gears is more cost effective in providing a high-speed motor, and off the shelf motors can be considered. One needs high-speed quiet gears that will last many years but with low duty cycle time.
One way of reducing the cost of the dryer device is to use a high speed brush motor rather than the much more expensive brushless dc motor. Brushless motors have longer lifetime because there are no brushes (usually made of carbon) to wear out. However brushless motors require high power ac excitation at high frequencies, and the associated significant cost of the electronics adds to the cost of the dc, brushless motors.
In an alternate embodiment of the invention, carbon brush motors can be used if the life of the carbon brushes can be increased above the limited life of brush motors. One way is to use longer carbon brushes to partially compensate for the brush wear. The life of brush motors is reduced if the motor is frequently started and stopped. Analysis of the reason for the reduced life suggests that the high current drawn by the brushes at the start can erode the brushes by interface sparks and or transient heating caused by the large starting current. Brush motors that are designed for a fast starting torque have stator field coils in series with the rotor armature and the carbon brushes. Because at the start, when the rotor is not turning, there is no back emf (voltage) produced by the rotor, and the starting current is only limited by the series resistance and inductance of the rotor and stator coils, and can be momentarily large, which can cause additional starting wear on the brushes.
One way of significantly increasing the lifetime of carbon brushes in frequent starting use is to use a current limiter in the current supply. This can be done with an electronic circuit that limits the current, or one that progressively increases the current in a fraction of a second. A preferable and less expensive way is to place a thermistor or surge suppressor in the current supply to the motor, as indicated at 44 in FIG. 14. This thermistor is a resistor that has a resistance that decreases as it is heated by the current flowing through it. The thermal time constant can be such as but not limited to a fraction of a second so that the start of the motor is not noticeably slowed, but the starting current and brush wear is reduced and the motor lifetime is increased. The cost of the control electronics is significantly reduced.
Conventional dryers cannot obtain the reduced drying time and comfort of the present invention for the following reasons. Conventional evaporation dryers have air outlet diameters on the order of 2 inches or more (off scale to the right in FIGS. 10 and 11). As mentioned above, conventional evaporation dryers require 30 to 45 seconds or more to attain a dryness of less than 0.20 grams of residual moisture. Conventional evaporation dryers also typically use a low speed motor. The airstream generated is diffuse and mixes with and is diluted by cool room air. Thus, at distances of 4 to 6 inches from the air outlet exit, where normal hand placement occurs, the average temperature is about 115 degrees F, well below the 135 F attained in this invention, even when a high power internal heater is employed. At the same time, air momentum is so slow as not to entrain enough outside air and thus does not have enough impact energy to destroy the stagnation boundary layer or blow off many water droplets.
Conventional blow-off dryers also cannot obtain the reduced drying time and comfort provided by the present invention. Conventional blow-off dryers use small air outlets, some as small as 0.03″ diameter. As noted above, entrainment is so intense that heating the air with an internal heater will raise the temperature of only the portion of the air, namely only that which is emerging from the inside plenum of the dryer. This is such a small proportion of the total air stream (amplifications of air flow of as much as 25 times due to entrainment are common with air knives) that the temperature of the total air stream would be raised a small amount. Since the airstream is not heated, the conventional blow-off dryers lack in-process comfort (i.e. a feeling of warmth during drying) and the user's hands feel cold or clammy immediately after use until the hands warm through the user's circulation.
The high-speed movement of the motor used in the high volume blower 12 air may generate a high sound level (dB). It may be desirable to reduce the sound level (dB) in certain applications. There are two primary and separate sound sources. The first is generated within the dryer and has been determined to emanate from the blower motor, and primarily exiting through sound (pressure pulsations) in the outlet and inlet airflow.
An alternative to the sound absorbing cavity is an array of sound absorbing projections, with a height of about 0.25 inches high and spaced about ⅓ of the array height. The array is larger than the size of the opening in the blower where the air and sound exit and is located so that the exiting air from the blower impacts the array. The sound will make many collisions with the sound absorbing array of projections, and can be significantly reduced. Vibration absorbing material may be placed in the mountings of the motor to reduce coupling of the vibration of the motor to the dryer housing. In addition, energy absorbing materials may be added to the inside of the hand dryer housing to absorb sound energy vibrations in the air stream and in the dryer housing. This sound deadening material will attenuate the sound rather than reflect it. It may have a memory property (hysteresis), where deformation of the material by sound or vibration will not readily return to the original shape because of the energy converted to heat by the deformation. This material will have temperature stability as required. In addition, labyrinthine muffling baffles, possibly covered with high temperature memory material, may be placed into the air inlet and air outlet paths to further reduce the sound level (dB) without significantly reducing the airflow.
The preferred design involves reducing excess blower power and speed as described above. This reduces blower sound level (dB) and reduces impact sound level (dB). In order to reduce sound level (dB) produced by air impact on the hands while at the same time retaining the fast drying time, blower speed is to be reduced to just above the level at which drying effectiveness is degraded. Any motor speed above that level does not aid drying speed but does increase sound level (dB). The time period of maximum hand impact (the 2 to 3 second blow off period) can be reduced by electronic programming of motor speed as described above.
As a final stage in dryer assembly, taking advantage of nulls that may occur as a function of small variations in blower speed when certain sound level (dB) generation effects tend to cancel each other out can lower any remaining blower sound level (dB). The assembler can fine-tune the final speed, using an acoustic meter as guide, to set the final product at its best null. Although tuning for nulls may reduce sound level (dB), the recommended approach is to reduce the output sound level (dB) sufficiently so that tuning for a null is not needed.
The second source of sound level (dB), impact on the hands, is highest when the angle of impact is normal or 90 degrees. When the air outlet is tilted toward the wall, a component of the air stream skims off the loose water effectively (rather than “blasting” it off).
Angling the direction of the exit nozzle and the air flow slightly towards the wall has the additional advantage that the water droplets blown of the hands are directed towards the wall rather than toward the feet or clothing of the person using the dryer.
It is preferable, but not required, that the hand dryer operate using 15 amps or less. By selecting an appropriate high-speed motor for the blower, ampere drain at 110 volts will not exceed 4 amperes. For a 15-ampere line this leaves 11 amperes for the heater 14 or for a heater/infrared bulb combination. It may be possible to use a motor that requires as much as 10 amperes. If such a motor is used, then this embodiment of the invention may use a current controller to control distribution of current between the blower 12 and the heater 14. An exemplary current controller may be implemented using PLA or microprocessor technology. During the blow-off phase, the current controller directs all or substantially all current to the blower to achieve maximum blow-off. A small amount of current may be directed to the heater for preheating. During transition from the blow-off phase to the evaporation phase, current is transferred from the blower 12 to the heater 14 based on a predetermined function. In the latter stages of the evaporation phase, fast moving air is not critical and substantially all current is directed to the heater 14 while the blower 12 runs at reduced speed and amperage.
As described above, the heater 14 may include an infra-red heat source. An infrared heat source provides heat to the user's hands resulting in increased comfort. It may also provide additional benefits such as killing bacteria in and around the dryer housing. Another benefit is that the visible light emitted by an infrared source will illuminate the hands and may be used to guide the user to best placement for his hands for optimum drying rate. Additionally, an ultra-violet light may be used to reduce bacteria and/or viruses. Air inlet can be from the side rather than from the bottom in order to reduce air entrainment of bacteria on the wall below the dryer.
While the above-described invention relates to a hand dryer, one skilled in the art will recognize that the present invention may be used to dry any number of surfaces, such as one's hair, arms and body. It may also be utilized to dry objects such as but not limited to food items or machine parts, as they are presented in a conveyor belt or other such means.
While preferred embodiments have been shown and described, various modifications and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the present invention has been described by way of illustration and not limitation.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/157,495 filed Oct. 4, 1999, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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