This application is a national stage filing under 35 U.S.C. §371 of PCT/EP11/64274, filed Aug. 19, 2011, which claims priority to German Patent Application DE 10 2010 040 297.4, filed Sep. 6, 2010.
The invention relates to a method for controlling a domestic appliance, in particular a washing machine or dishwasher for cleaning items of clothing and crockery respectively, when it is connected to at least one electric mains grid, which is especially branched off a public mains grid, within an individual household, the at least one electric mains grid being an intelligent system, such as a system allowing smart metering, so that measured power consumption is detected according to different consumption tariffs and information on the availability of a currently applicable consumption tariff or a switch-off condition for preventing peak loads in the mains grid is made available to the domestic appliance to be operated.
The invention also relates to a device, with which the method described above can be performed.
As background to the invention it has been identified that with new mains grids, which in particular allow smart metering, the economical operation of a domestic appliance, for example a washing machine or dishwasher, means that changes have to be made to the operation of said appliance, for example slowing down, speeding up and interruptions, which can significantly affect the result of the cleaning process of said appliance, if such influencing factors are not taken into account in some manner. In particular the cleaning action, which is based on the use of detergents or their individual components in the cleaning process, might be affected, as the detergents or their individual components are only able to allow their cleaning action to develop optimally, if they can be matched to specific temperatures and reaction and action times. Individual components, such as enzymes, in the detergent only have a very short life for example and require quite specific temperatures to have an optimum action.
Strategies are set out in DE 10 2008 062 349 A1 for domestic appliances, such as washing machines, dryers or dishwashers, in private households, which are operated on mains grids with smart metering, for how the domestic appliances can be operated price-optimally at times when the costs of drawing power are low but the domestic appliances according to the disclosure of this publication are only considered in respect of ohmic consumers of high output. The interruptions and resumptions of the operation of the domestic appliances according to this publication, as required by the focus on favorable consumption tariffs, are however not examined in respect of the cleaning result.
Intelligent power measurement or smart metering (digital power metering with extended functional scope) takes into account the fact that in future energy supply companies feeding into the public or their own mains grid, will be required to offer load-variable or time-based tariffs to their energy customers by way of their mains grids and to disseminate corresponding information in an appropriate manner. The power meters used up to now, for example Ferraris meters, will then no longer be used. However it should generally be considered that mains grids with integrated intelligence are also suitable for further aspects, such as a data exchange between energy customers and external service providers. It is also possible to optimize grid management by analyzing available data, especially from energy customers.
The use of such newly embodied mains grids, branched grids from which are present in a household, on which the generic domestic appliances are operated, means that the operation of the domestic appliances can be optimized in respect of available power tariffs. Washing and rinsing can therefore take place at low-tariff times. However it is also necessary to assume that there will be some very quick switches from high tariffs to low tariffs. However the domestic appliance should be operated mainly at low-tariff times,
As well as the new energy supply company grids, it is also necessary in a household to take account of domestic grids, which can be connected temporarily to the generic domestic appliances in addition to the public grids of the energy supply companies. The question of taking into account a lower tariff in each instance can also be important here.
The prior art also includes domestic appliances, such as washing machines, in which for each cleaning program the detergent is dosed by the operator introducing a quantity of detergent into the widely known detergent drawer at least not exclusively but with automatically controlled dosing of the detergent or components of the detergent taking place in addition or instead. The publication DE 10 2007 028 173 A1 provides for a storage facility for liquid or gel-type detergent components, to which a controllable dosing facility for the stored detergent components is connected. In the publication DE 100 62 111 C1 the absorption behavior of the laundry introduced into the laundry drum is determined for the automatic subsequent dosing of a liquid detergent present in a storage container external to the washing machine. In the publication DE 10 2008 042 655 A1 storage containers for liquid detergents or detergent components are provided within the actual housing of the domestic appliance, for example a washing machine, with electrically driven feed or immersion pumps projecting therein. A control unit, the principle of which is explained, serves to activate the feed pumps based on information supplied about soiling, load, type of laundry and the like, thereby dosing the detergent components optimally.
The object of the invention is therefore to specify a method for controlling a domestic appliance, in particular a washing machine or dishwasher, which produces an optimum treatment result even when taking account of inexpensive consumption tariffs.
An associated device together with a controller is also specified, which is suitable for performing the method.
This object is achieved with a method as specified in the introduction in that the domestic appliance is operated according to the following method steps:
a) when an inexpensive consumption tariff is available, the appliance is put into operation as intended, the history of the cleaning process being continuously recorded,
b) when no inexpensive consumption tariff is available or a switch-off condition for preventing peak loads in the mains grid is met, the appliance is not put into operation as intended or a previously started operation is interrupted, and
c) when information about an inexpensive consumption tariff is available, operation of the domestic appliance is resumed, the dosing of at least one component of a detergent being carried out as a function of the recorded history of the cleaning process.
It is possible with the inventive method, with the tariff or price signals made available with the energy supply by the relevant grid with intelligent power measurement or smart metering, to operate the domestic appliance in a cost-effective manner without any loss of cleaning power occurring due to inadequate effectiveness of the supplied detergent or detergent components. Because the cleaning process is recorded continuously in respect of its essential data, in other words its history, and said data is stored, in a similar manner to a black box, the required quantity of detergent or a detergent component can be dosed very precisely when a favorable consumption tariff is available again. This means that not only is the treatment sequence influenced in the very short term but a future sequence is too.
Although the invention relates to the new grids, which the energy supply companies have to offer due to statutory requirements with load-variable or time-dependent tariffs in the short term, it should also be possible to apply it to internal grids or isolated grids, particularly as said isolated grids are also operated taking into account cost aspects and the prevention of peak loads and therefore signals relating to energy costs and the prevention of overloading are available to the domestic appliance. It is then better not to operate the domestic appliance on a domestic grid available as a result of branching from the public mains grid any more but to use a domestic grid which has for example a photovoltaic basis or a supply from an electric generator, the drive motor of which supplies sufficient waste heat to heat the house. In this context mention should also be made of the production of electric energy using wind power, which is possible for a number of households or an individual household. It should also be noted that isolated grids can also extend over a number of households, for example a housing estate. It should also be taken into account that decentralized power plants with a photovoltaic or wind power basis can be joined to the public mains grid, so that virtual power plants can be assumed.
So that the domestic appliance does not resume its operation immediately during a very brief phase with an inexpensive consumption tariff, the grid is monitored continuously. It can then be forecast with a very high degree of probability that the recorded information about a favorable consumption tariff will be available for a longer period than the process time of the domestic appliance.
If the electric power consumed by the domestic appliance, in particular that used for heating the wash or rinse liquor, is measured continuously and recorded for the completed process sequence or history, very reliable information can be obtained to allow the respectively completed sequence of the cleaning process to be assessed. The heat input into the wash liquor still represents a major component which, together with the chemistry of the detergent and/or the movement introduced in a relative manner by the mechanical system of the domestic appliance (in the case of washing machines the items of laundry are lifted and dropped again by the agitators of the reversing drum; in the case of dishwashers the spray arm rotates with the jet of liquor or water exiting therefrom) triggers the cleaning action.
The continuous measurement of the temperature of the wash or rinse liquor provides informative values and data relating to the cleaning capability of the detergent and rinse agent. A temperature drop also says a lot about the cleaning process taking place and the heat output required when operation resumes.
It is also possible to detect and register foaming. The publication DE 10 2008 028 030 A1 shows how this can be done by means of an electric field. However other measuring methods are also possible. The surface tension of bubbles produced in the wash liquor can also be measured, thereby allowing conclusions to be drawn about detergent dosing in the wash liquor, which should then be registered. Detection of foaming and detergent dosing can also take place in combination with the detection of a temperature change, allowing even more precise conclusions to be drawn about the cleaning action due to detergents that have been introduced.
If the domestic appliance is switched on by the user at a time when no inexpensive consumption tariff is available, the domestic appliance will not start to operate as intended. So that the user does not have to make repeated attempts to switch it on, the switching on operation is stored in the domestic appliance as a slumber state, so that when the anticipated low consumption tariff is available, the domestic appliance can immediately start to operate as intended.
If it can be assumed based on a forecast that no inexpensive consumption tariff will be available for quite a long time and there is a second mains grid available in the household in question, for example from a solar unit, a generator with heat-power coupling or another decentralized power plant, such as a microgrid, it is also within the scope of the present invention for the domestic appliance then to be operated on this grid and for temporary disconnections from said grid (switch-off conditions to prevent overloading) also to produce a good cleaning result due to the application of the inventive method.
As it can also be economically expedient for the user of the domestic appliance not just to utilize one inexpensive consumption tariff but also a number, which do not exceed a certain price level, it should also be possible to use a plurality of such consumption tariffs. The information about said tariffs can be routed from an interface of the correspondingly configured smart meter in a wired or wireless manner to the corresponding domestic appliance. Other information-conveying interfaces, for example internet routers or other gateways, can also be used. A manual input by way of a keyboard can also take place for quite simple instances.
To achieve the inventive object, a device for controlling a domestic appliance is also provided with the features described in the introduction and for the inventive method, the domestic appliance also having:
The specified device is suitable for allowing the method according to the invention to be performed. The advantages specified in relation to the method are therefore also achieved. In so far as only the features associated with the invention have been specified in relation to the device, it should of course also be the case that the other sequences also take place in a program-controlled manner using the computer of the controller, to which end reference is made for example to the publication DE 199 08 363 B4.
The subject matter of the claims that are dependent on the independent claim relating to the device also serves to develop the device.
The invention is described schematically in more detail in the figures which follow with reference to exemplary embodiments. Identical reference characters denote identical or comparable parts. In the figures:
For a better understanding of the sequences currently provided compared with conventional sequences without the requirement of repeated resumption of operation, the conventional sequence of a domestic appliance, for example a washing machine, is first explained briefly.
With reference to the diagram in
If the domestic appliance, for example a washing machine, is not adapted to the behavior of the new mains grid with smart metering, a behavior as illustrated in
However if the domestic appliance, for example a washing machine, is adapted to the behavior of the new mains grid with smart metering, the behavior illustrated in
The washing machine 1 is also fitted with a module 5 for detergent or detergent components, which are referred to in the following as 5a, 5b and 5c. Each of the components can be fed or dosed into the wash liquor in a selectively controlled manner. To this end the module for each component is connected to an immersion pump driven by an electric motor or an electrically activated valve or solenoid valve, which is activated from a power output of the controller 3. The elements cited by way of example, such as immersion pump or solenoid valve, are referred to in the following as dosing control elements. Associated with the stored detergent components 5a, 5b and 5c therefore are dosing control elements 6a, 6b and 6c. When one of the dosing control elements is activated, the relevant detergent component is released according to the activation period. The relevant quantity of a detergent component, optionally with a certain quantity of fresh water, is then introduced into the liquor housing enclosing the laundry drum. This is shown schematically in
With reference to
As set out above, the active period of the detergent can thus be extended despite a previous switching off of the domestic appliance. This is assisted by the fact that, between the heating phases H2 and H3, in other words during the transition from time segment III to time segment IV—see arrow Intro4—a further dosing of a detergent component, for example 5c, takes place by means of activation by way of the dosing control element 6c.
The activation sequence for the dosing control elements does not have to be the same every time. A different activation sequence for the dosing control elements can also be used or there can be a combination of dosing control element activations. More or fewer than three detergent components and associated dosing control elements can also be used. At the start of a wash program—see time segment I—it can generally be assumed that instead of the arrow Intro2 a quantity of detergent component or combination of detergent components 5a to 5c determined by the selected wash program—generally in conjunction with the load size and type of laundry—will be predefined. Instead of the arrow Intro3 and Intro4 however the cleaning or washing process continues, so this has to be taken into account. According to the invention provision is made for the history of the cleaning process to be taken into account for the dosing of at least one component of the detergent, for example the detergent component 5a to 5c.
It is also necessary for the success sought with the present invention that the actually available grid is monitored. To this end a monitor 15 can be implemented in the computer 3a of the controller 3—communicating with its computer 3a—so that information is received about the behavior of the available grid, for example the public mains grid. It can be derived from such monitoring whether information received about the availability of a low consumption tariff should be evaluated such that quite long availability of the signaled favorable consumption tariff can be assumed. It is thus possible to eliminate tariff switches that are too short when controlling the domestic appliance. However other strategies for preventing the domestic appliance possibly responding incorrectly to tariff switches that are too short are also possible. For example the dosing of detergent on the switch to the low tariff can be delayed or divided into a number of doses, which are then only introduced when the low tariff is available again. It is therefore possible to determine a future process sequence by means of the program implemented in the ROM by reading out the data stored in the history store 7.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2010 040 297 | Sep 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/064274 | 8/19/2011 | WO | 00 | 2/20/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2012/031870 | 3/15/2012 | WO | A |
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20100175719 | Finch et al. | Jul 2010 | A1 |
20110186098 | Hasse et al. | Aug 2011 | A1 |
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Number | Date | Country |
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10062111 | Jul 2002 | DE |
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102008062349 | Jun 2010 | DE |
WO 2010003952 | Jan 2010 | WO |
Entry |
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DE 102007019350 English Translation. |
International Search Report PCT/EP2011/064274 dated Feb. 13, 2012. |
National Search Report DE 10 2010 040 297.4 mail date Jan. 19, 2011. |
Search Report dated Jan. 19, 2011 issued in related German Application No. 10 2010 040 297.4 (4 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130145565 A1 | Jun 2013 | US |