The present invention relates to a method for aerating and deaerating an oven, which has at least two oven muffles disposed one above the other, the feed apertures of which are or can be closed in each case by a door, wherein cooling air is drawn off from an outside area surrounding the oven, and the drawn-off air is blown at least partially into interior spaces of the doors and then blown out into the outside area after flowing through at least a part of the interior spaces, and wherein the drawn-off air is blown into the upper door in an upper section of that door and flows substantially downward from above through the interior space of the door. Moreover, the invention relates to an oven, which has at least two oven muffles disposed to one above the other, the feed apertures of which are or can be closed in each case by a door, for carrying out this method.
A method and oven of this kind are known from EP 2 031 309 A2. The previous oven disclosed in this document comprises two oven muffles disposed one above the other and each having a feed aperture, which can be closed by a door. The oven further comprises an air conveyance device, which is arranged above the upper oven muffle near the housing rear wall of the oven. The conveyance device draws off air from an outside area of the oven to blow at least part thereof into interior spaces defined in the two doors. Specifically the interior spaces of the doors are connected in series, and the drawn-off air is blown through an inlet aperture at the upper end of the upper door into the interior space thereof and is then conveyed through the interior spaces of both doors downwardly in succession, to leave the oven through an outlet aperture provided at the bottom end region of the lower door.
The problem involved with this arrangement consists in that the conveyance path of the air through the interior spaces of both doors is comparatively long, which may lead to poor cooling results in the lower end region of the bottom door, in particular as the air has been heated up along its way through the interior spaces.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to provide a method for aerating and deaerating an oven of the above mentioned kind as well as an oven for carrying out this method, which enable a comparatively even cooling effect on the two doors.
According to the present invention this object is solved in a method of the initially mentioned kind in that the drawn-off air is blown into the interior space of the lower door at a bottom end section thereof and flows substantially upward through the interior space of the door, and that the air blown into the interior spaces of the two doors is blown out into the outside area after flowing through the interior spaces of the doors in the lower section of the upper door and the upper section of the lower door. Moreover, this object is solved in an oven of the above mentioned kind in that the inlet opening of the lower door is provided in a bottom end section of that door and the outlet aperture is provided in the upper end section of that door, so that air entering the interior space of the lower door flows substantially upward through the interior space of the door, and that the air leaving the interior spaces of the upper door and the lower door are blown outwards into the outside area.
The invention is based on the idea, that the doors of oven muffles can be cooled evenly if the cooling air flows through the doors in a counter current manner, namely substantially downward from above through the interior space of the upper door and substantially upward from beneath through the interior space of the lower door. The air can then be blown out to the outside area in the middle section of the oven between the two doors, where it does not trouble any person using the oven. In this case the interior spaces of the two doors have blow-out openings associated thereto for blowing out the air exiting the interior spaces to the front side of the oven.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention the cooling air is drawn into and through the interior space of the lower door solely by the venturi effect of the air blown out of the interior space of the upper door. For this purpose the blow-out openings associated to the upper oven door and the lower oven door are arranged close to the each other, so that cooling air is drawn into and through the interior space of the lower door by the venturi effect of the air blown out of the interior space of the upper door. In this embodiment no separate conveyance or blowing device is necessitated to convey a cooling air through the interior space of the lower door. Instead the cooling air is automatically sucked into and transported through the interior space by the venturi effect of the air exiting the interior space of the upper door.
Preferably, the door cover of the lower door is formed as a curved guiding element to guide the air leaving interior space of the upper door and/or the air leaving the interior space of the lower door to the blow out opening. In this embodiment the door cover of the lower door is used as a guiding element to obtain good flowing characteristics in the exit section of the doors, where the flow direction of the air has to be changed from substantially vertical to horizontal.
In a similar way, the door cover of the upper door may be provided in its upper section with a curved guiding element for guiding the air entering the door into the interior space.
According to a further embodiment of the invention the cooling air drawn in from the outside area prior to being introduced into the interior space of the upper door is conveyed along at least a part of the outside area of the upper oven muffle or of an air conveyance element contiguous with the outside area of the oven muffle. In this case, the exterior space around the oven muffle will be directly cooled by the cooling air drawn in from the outside area of the oven.
In a manner known per se the interior spaces of doors can be defined in different ways. Specifically the doors usually have an outer pane facing the outer area and an inner pane facing the oven muffle in the closed state of the door. Then an interspace, which is confined by the outer pane and the inner pane and/or an interspace, which is confined by the inner pane or the outer pane on the one hand and an intermediate pane of the door arranged between the outer pane and the inner pane on the other hand and/or an interspace, which is confined between two intermediate panes arranged between the inner pane in the outer pane is defined as the interior space of the door through which the air is conveyed.
Further advantages and features of the present invention may be obtained from the subclaims as well as the following description of an exemplary embodiment of the present invention making reference to the accompanied drawing. In the drawing,
The doors 7, 8 each define an interior space 9, 10 with an inlet aperture 11, 12 and an outlet aperture 13, 14, through which air for cooling purposes can be conveyed in a vertical direction (arrows L1 and L2). In case of the upper door 7 the inlet aperture 11 is provided in an upper section and the outlet aperture 13 in a bottom section of that door 7, and in case of the lower door 8 the inlet aperture 12 is provided in a bottom section and the outlet aperture 14 is provided in the upper end section of that door 8. The outlet apertures 13, 14 of the two doors 7, 8 have blow out openings 15, 16 associated thereto for blowing out air exiting the interior spaces 9, 10 to the front side of the oven 1.
The lower oven door 8 has no separate conveyance device associated thereto. Instead—as may be readily obtained from FIGS. 2 and 3—the blow out openings 15, 16 associated to the upper oven door 7 and the one hand the lower oven door 8 on the other hand are arranged so close to each other, that cooling air is drawn into and through the interior space 10 of the lower door (arrow L2) 8 solely by the venturi effect caused by the air blown out of the blow-out opening 15 of the upper door 7.
To obtain good flowing characteristics in the exit sections 19, 20 of the doors 7, 8, where the flow direction of the air has to be changed from substantially vertical to horizontal, the door cover 8a, i.e. the top wall of the lower door 8 is formed as a curved guiding element for guiding the air leaving the interior space of the upper door 7 and the lower door 8 towards the blow out openings 15, 16.
In a similar way the upper door 7 is provided in its upper section with a curved guiding element 7a for a smoothly redirecting the air entering through the inlet aperture 11 from an almost horizontal entry direction to the vertically downward direction, in which the air is conveyed through the door 7.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10003650 | Apr 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/001584 | 3/30/2011 | WO | 00 | 12/26/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/120675 | 10/6/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
8006687 | Watkins et al. | Aug 2011 | B2 |
20100065035 | Armstrong et al. | Mar 2010 | A1 |
20100065036 | Watkins et al. | Mar 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1586821 | Oct 2005 | EP |
2853720 | Oct 2004 | FR |
2026685 | Feb 1980 | GB |
Entry |
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International Search Report for PCT/EP2011/001584, dated May 11, 2011, 3 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130186386 A1 | Jul 2013 | US |