This application claims priority to German Application No. 10 2013 214 319.2, filed Jul. 22, 2013, the contents of which are hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
The invention relates to a method for operating a gas oven, and also to a correspondingly designed gas oven.
Electronic control units for gas ovens, which via a spark plug generate an ignition spark in order to ignite the gas burner, are known. They can also undertake flame monitoring.
The invention is based on the object of creating a method which is referred to in the introduction, and also of creating a gas oven which is suitable for its implementation, with which problems of the prior art can be avoided and with which it is possible in particular to operate a gas oven in a convenient and diverse manner using a control unit which is not excessively complicated.
This object is achieved by means of a method and also by means of a gas oven. Advantageous and also preferred embodiments of the invention are the subject of the further claims and are explained in more detail in the following text. In this case, many of the features are described only for the method or only for the gas oven. Regardless of this, however, the features shall to be able to apply independently both to the method and to the gas oven. The wording of the claims is rendered by specific reference to the content of the description.
The gas oven has a muffle as an inner chamber, in which are arranged an upper gas burner at the top and a lower gas burner at the bottom. Furthermore, a thermostat, of known design per se, is advantageously provided in the muffle for temperature regulation. The gas oven has any type of electronic control unit, for example with a DSI (Direct Spark Ignition) system in order to control the gas burners or their gas valves. With this, one associated gas valve per gas burner can be activated. Furthermore, the electronic control unit can be designed for igniting the gas burners, especially using a spark plug on the gas burner.
According to the invention, for an operating mode with top heat and bottom heat, that is to say a so-called combination operation, the upper gas burner and the lower gas burner in the muffle are operated alternately to each other, that is to say operated advantageously with heating phases in each case, and especially advantageously with pauses on each gas burner between the heating phases. This means that the upper gas burner and the lower gas burner are not in operation at the same time since this could create problems with the combustion conditions in the muffle, or ignition problems or extinguishing of the flame on the upper gas burner could occur on account of the lack of fresh air supply and air vortices on the upper gas burner due to the combustion gases of the lower gas burner. However, this combination operation with alternating operation of the upper gas burner and lower gas burner has the great advantage that heat can be supplied to the food to be cooked from the top and from the bottom. In particular, in the case of such a combi-operation an upper heating device is operated in the manner of a grill, or with the effect as a grill, since food which is to be cooked is not covered on its upper side in most cases. As a result of the alternating operation, a desired temperature for the food to be cooked can be maintained in the muffle in all cases without any problem, and can be adjusted and monitored by means of a thermostat or temperature controller. In this way, it is therefore ensured that a desired temperature prevails in the muffle for the cooking process. Furthermore, it is also possible to supply heat to the food to be cooked from the top—in the manner of an aforesaid grill—in phases and altogether over a significant time period or up to half the duration of the overall cooking process.
Such control units for gas ovens are simply known under the heading of Direct Spark Ignition. Using these control units, single-acting or double-acting solenoid valves can be actuated, wherein the gas valves are advantageously not proportional valves but designed only for opening and for closing. Consequently, one or two gas burners in one or two cavities of a gas oven can therefore be operated with such a DSI. The DSI can open and close the solenoid valves in order to supply the gas burner with gas. Furthermore, the DSI advantageously creates an ignition spark, via a spark plug, at the gas burner for igniting the gas. Also, flame monitoring can be undertaken by the control unit or by the DSI, wherein this can be advantageously carried out via an ionization current measurement. These two last-named functions can also be undertaken by a differently designed electronic control unit.
An advantageous electromechanical controller can be a thermostat. It can be mechanically adjusted to a specific predetermined temperature and then operated with a known hysteresis when this predetermined temperature is exceeded or not reached. In any case, it does not deliver permanent signals which correspond to the measured temperature but operates at a predetermined temperature or indicates that the temperature has been exceeded or not reached. When such a so-called DSI is being used, the use of such a thermostat is advantageous since it only connects the mains voltage to the corresponding input of the DSI. When a completely electronic control unit is being used, in contrast to this, the temperature in the muffle is measured by means of a thermistor, for example, and the control unit derives the heating requirement from the comparison of desired and actual temperatures. The operation according to the invention is conceivable in both embodiments, however.
In an advantageous embodiment of the invention, the upper gas burner and the lower gas burner are always operated alternately or always consecutively. This means that after a specific operating period of the upper gas burner the lower gas burner is operated and no other, and then the upper gas burner is operated again. This, on the one hand, can always be carried out consecutively in the manner of an alternating continuous power generation. Between each heating phase of one of the gas burners, that is to say either of the upper gas burner or of the lower gas burner, a pause is alternatively and advantageously made without operation of one of the gas burners. When an aforesaid thermostat or an electromechanical thermostat is being used, this pause can especially serve, for example, for slowly carrying out the heating up of the muffle, or repeatedly with short pauses between the heating phases, in order to enable a more accurate temperature measurement via the thermostat. Also, after operation of one of the gas burners, the conditions in the muffle can be normalized and disturbing vortices can also subside until the other gas burner is then ignited.
During a heating phase, a changeover from one gas burner to the other gas burner is advantageously made after a specified time. This can even be provided during the heating up of the gas oven or of the muffle. In this case, a short pause can indeed be provided without heating between two so-called partial heating phases of the gas burners, but this does not have to be so. As a result of the alternating operation of the two gas burners even during the heating up of the muffle, a uniformly distributed heating up is ensured.
In one embodiment of the invention, a thermostat for the temperature control can have a cycle time. In the event that a heating phase of one of the gas burners, especially during the heating up of the muffle, is shorter than the cycle time of the thermostat, a changeover of the gas burner during a thermostat cycle can also be carried out after a heating phase for the heating up during continuous operation of the gas burner. Therefore, the specific conditions here can be taken into account.
In an advantageous embodiment of the invention, a changeover of the operating mode of the gas oven from a purely lower-heat operation using only the lower gas burner or from a purely upper-heat operation using only the upper gas burner to a joint operation or combi-operation of both gas burners with a changeover between the two gas burners can be carried out. In this case, a currently operated gas burner can be further operated up to the end of a cycle or of the thermostat cycle before, or possibly after a short pause, a changeover to the other gas burner is made. Therefore, the operation of the gas burners, or a heating up, or an increase of the temperature in the muffle is interrupted as little as possible.
Alternatively, during a changeover of the operating mode, the previously operated gas burner can be shut down immediately, as explained before for a changeover between the gas burners. The other gas burner is then ignited either directly or, advantageously, after a certain delay time. This goes both for a preceding lower-heat operation and for a preceding upper-heat operation.
In one embodiment of the invention, it can be provided that in the event that a changeover of the operating mode of the gas oven is carried out during a pause of the gas burners, the other than the last used gas burner is operated during the next operation of the thermostat. Therefore, a changeover of the gas burners is then always carried out again, seen over a longer time.
The variation of the cycle time is advantageous only up to a certain point. If in particular a cycle time becomes excessively long, it can happen that the food to be cooked is heated for a very long time or even heated for an excessively long time from one side only and therefore unevenly. This again can be undesirable. This can especially also occur during a heating-up process.
As a result of an awkward ratio of cycle time of the temperature control and cycle time of the changeover operation, it can also happen that one burner is operated over the desired cycle time, but the other burner is stopped after several seconds by the end of the heating cycle. In this case, an inequality between the two heating modes would arise. This can be met by the interrupted cycles of the changeover operation being correspondingly continued or recovered in the respectively next heating cycle of the temperature control as compensation. Therefore, an arbitrary distribution of the changeover cycles within the thermostat cycles can ensue.
These and additional features, apart from the claims, also come from the description and the drawings, wherein the individual features can be realized by themselves in each case or in groups in the form of a sub-combination in an embodiment of the invention and in other fields and can represent advantageous and separately protectable embodiments for which protection is claimed here. The division of the application into individual sections and subheadings does not limit the statements which are made under these in their generality.
Exemplary embodiments of the inventions are represented schematically in the drawings and are explained in more detail in the following text. In the drawings:
Shown schematically in
Shown in
In the case of an under-heat operating mode, the output of the thermostat 24 is connected via the corresponding contact bank of the selector switch to a so-called heat-request channel of the DSI 34 which is associated with the lower gas burner 16. If mains voltage is applied to the heat-request channel then the gas valve of the corresponding burner is opened and ignition initiated. In the upper-heat operating mode, the output of the thermostat is connected to the heat-request channel of the DSI 34 which is associated with the upper gas burner 14. In the combined operating mode with upper heat and lower heat, the output of the thermostat 24 is connected to both heat-request channels of the DSI 34. An alternating operation between the gas burners 14 and 16 is then carried out, that is to say when both heat-request channels are energized or engaged at the same time or delayed by only fractions of a second. In this case, according to the invention only one of the two gas burners is ignited since both are certainly never to be operated together. The selection of the gas burner can be carried out arbitrarily or according to predetermined programming. This can be seen with reference to
In
According to
From the views of
From the two lower lines along the X-axis, it is to be seen that during the operating phases a heat request exists in each case for both gas burners 14 and 16. The control unit 22 or the DSI 34 then engages the gas burners but in an alternating manner.
Furthermore, it is known that a clock time or cycle time tT,in or tT,out of the thermostat depends on its hysteresis, a position of the thermostat sensor in the muffle 12, the thermal insulation of the oven 11 or of the muffle 12, the heat output and the predetermined temperature. Therefore, a cycle time of the thermostat can vary, as is to be seen from
In order to avoid such an excessively long, uneven heat input, in a further embodiment of the invention it can simply be provided that the gas burners are changed over after a firmly established or predetermined time. This is shown in
Alternatively, it is also possible, however, that a changeover cycle of a gas burner, which has been interrupted by the cycle of the thermostat before its end, is recovered in the next cycle. Therefore, an arbitrary distribution of the changeover cycles within the thermostat cycles ensues—see
Shown in
If a changeover between the gas burners 14 and 16 is carried out during the time tT,out, then with the next operation of the thermostat not the last used, but the other, gas burner is operated. This is to be clearly seen in
In a once more further development stage of the invention, it is also conceivable that during the program run, tT,in and tT,out are measured and from this the optimum values for the other four described times are calculated. Furthermore, in the best case the times tOH,out and tUH,in are even close to zero so as not to interrupt a heat supply for an unnecessarily long time.
If instead of the electromechanical thermostat together along with a thermostat sensor 24 an electronic control unit is used, that is to say without DSI, with a temperature-dependent resistance as a temperature sensor, it is possible to continuously access measured values of the temperature sensor. As in the case of a DSI, there is no dependency upon “in” or “out” signals which the thermomechanical thermostat delivers.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2013 214 319.2 | Jul 2013 | DE | national |