This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority of the prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2016-007943, filed on Jan. 19, 2016, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
A certain aspect of the embodiments discussed herein is related to microwave applicators, exhaust gas purifiers, heaters, and chemical reactors.
Currently, exhaust gas purifiers that employ a diesel particulate filter (DPF) as a device to remove particulates contained in exhaust gas, such as particulate matter (PM), are put to practical use. During use of such exhaust gas purifiers, particulates such as PM deposit in the DPF, and accordingly, regeneration of the DPF is required. As methods of regenerating the DPF, for example, Japanese Laid-open Patent Publication Nos. 2006-140063 and 4-179817 and Japanese Patent No. 4995351 propose methods that employ high-frequency electromagnetic waves, such as microwaves, radiated from a microwave applicator. According to such methods, the DPF is exposed to electromagnetic waves such as microwaves to heat and burn particulates such as PM deposited on the DPF, so that the DPF is regenerated.
Microwave applicators are also employed in food warmers that heat food, chemical reactors, etc. Further reference may be made to Japanese Patent No. 2689722 and Japanese Laid-open Patent Publication No. 2002-70530 for related art.
According to an aspect of the embodiments, a microwave applicator includes a housing configured to contain an object of heating, multiple microwave resonators provided on and around a periphery of the housing, a microwave conductor interconnecting the microwave resonators, and a microwave generator configured to generate microwaves of different frequencies. Each microwave resonator is configured to resonate the generated microwaves of a resonant frequency of the microwave resonator, and to emit the resonated microwaves to the object of heating contained in the housing. Among the microwave resonators, a first microwave resonator and a second microwave resonator have respective resonant frequencies that are different from each other.
The object and advantages of the embodiments will be realized and attained by means of the elements and combinations particularly pointed out in the claims.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory and not restrictive of the invention.
According to the above-described exhaust gas purifiers, the DPF is regenerated by being exposed to electromagnetic waves such as microwaves to cause particulates such as PM to be subjected to dielectric heating to be oxidatively decomposed. It is difficult, however, to make the intensity of emitted microwaves uniform in the DPF, thus causing an uneven intensity distribution of microwaves to cause temperature differences in the DPF. Therefore, the amount of removal of particulates such as PM may differ between regions in the DPF, thus resulting in incomplete regeneration of the DPF.
In an attempt to make the intensity of emitted microwaves uniform, emission of microwaves that are different in phase from two antennas is proposed. According to this technique, however, because the emitted microwaves are weak in an area near the antennas within a distance of less than or equal to the half of the wavelength of the microwaves, an object of heating is less likely to be heated in this area where the intensity of microwaves is low. As a result, the object of heating is not uniformly heated. Thus, an uneven intensity distribution of microwaves is caused when the microwaves are emitted. The same is the case with food warmers or chemical reactors.
Therefore, there is a demand for a microwave applicator that is less likely to cause an uneven intensity distribution of emitted microwaves to be able to uniformly heat an object of heating.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be explained below with reference to accompanying drawings. The same member is referred to using the same reference numeral, and a repetitive description thereof is omitted.
[a]First Embodiment
A microwave applicator according to a first embodiment is described with reference to
Specifically, the housing 20 and one of the microwave waveguides 41 are connected to opposite sides of each of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h, and the microwave waveguides 41 are interconnected by the microwave coaxial tubes 42. Microwaves generated in the microwave generator 50 propagate through the microwave waveguides 41 and the microwave coaxial tubes 42 to be supplied to the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h.
The waveguide resonators 30a through 30h are so formed as to be different from one another in the resonant frequency at which microwaves resonate. The microwave generator 50 may be controlled by a controller 60 (
For example, as typified by a waveguide resonator 30 depicted in
The exit of each of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h is connected to the housing 20. The entrance of each of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h is connected to one of the microwave waveguides 41. Microwaves that have resonated in the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h at their respective resonant frequencies are radiated toward and heat the object of heating 10 provided in the housing 20.
According to this embodiment, a radiation thermometer 70 (
According to the microwave applicator of this embodiment, the resonant frequency may differ among all of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h, or may be the same in some and differ between some and others of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h.
The microwave generator 50 may vary the frequency of generated microwaves. Therefore, a semiconductor device, more specifically, a high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) using nitride semiconductors, is used for the microwave generator 50.
Referring to
According to the microwave applicator of this embodiment, the microwave generator 50 varies the frequency of generated microwaves. The microwaves thus generated with a varied frequency in the microwave generator 50 resonate in one of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h, and the microwaves that have resonated are radiated into the housing 20. Changing the frequency of microwaves changes the waveguide resonator in which the microwaves resonate. The microwaves of the resonant frequencies of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h are radiated into the housing 20 from the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h in which the microwaves have resonated. As a result, the object of heating 10 provided in the housing 20 is uniformly heated.
Next, an exhaust gas purifier according to the first embodiment is described with reference to
The exhaust gas purifier of this embodiment includes the microwave applicator of this embodiment that applies microwaves to an object of heating. That is, the exhaust gas purifier of this embodiment includes a particulate capturing part 110, which is an object of heating, a housing 120, the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h, the microwave waveguides 41, the microwave coaxial tubes 42, the microwave generator 50, the controller 60, and the radiation thermometer 70. The waveguide resonators 30a through 30h are provided around a cylindrical portion of the housing 120 to radiate microwaves that have resonated in the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h toward the particulate capturing part 110 provided in the housing 120. The waveguide resonators 30a through 30h are preferably provided on the downstream side in the direction of the flow of exhaust gas in the exhaust gas purifier.
The particulate capturing part 110, which captures particulates such as PM contained in exhaust gas, is formed of, for example, a DPF. The
DPF is formed of, for example, a honeycomb structure whose adjacent gas passage openings are alternately closed at each end to cause exhaust gas entering a gas passage through its entrance opening to exit from the exit opening of a gas passage different from the gas passage the exhaust gas has entered.
The housing 120 is formed of a metal material such as stainless steel. The housing 120 includes a housing body 120a that covers the periphery of the particulate capturing part 110, and an inlet port 120b and an outlet port 120c connected to the housing body 120a. According to the exhaust gas purifier of this embodiment, exhaust gas discharged from, for example, an engine flows in the direction indicated by the dashed arrow A to enter the housing 120 through the inlet port 120b, and passes through the particulate capturing part 110 provided in the housing body 120a to be purified. Thereafter, the exhaust gas purified in the particulate capturing part 110 exits from the outlet port 120c in the direction indicated by the dashed arrow B.
According to the exhaust gas purifier of this embodiment, the microwave generator 50 varies the frequency of generated microwaves. The microwaves thus generated with a varied frequency in the microwave generator 50 resonate in one of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h, and the microwaves that have resonated are radiated into the housing 120. Changing the frequency of microwaves changes the waveguide resonator in which the microwaves resonate. The microwaves of the resonant frequencies of the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h are radiated into the housing 120 from the waveguide resonators 30a through 30h in which the microwaves have resonated. As a result, the particulate capturing part 110 provided in the housing 120 is uniformly heated.
The radiation thermometer 70, which is an example of a measurement device configured to measure the temperature of an object of heating, may measure the temperature of the particulate capturing part 110 region by region. The radiation thermometer 70 is connected to the controller 60. The controller 60 may control the frequency of microwaves generated in the microwave generator 50 based on information on the temperature distribution measured in the radiation thermometer 70. Instead of employing the radiation thermometer 70, multiple thermocouples may be buried in the particulate capturing part 110 as a measurement device to measure the temperatures of regions of the particulate capturing part 110.
Next, the results of simulating a distribution of maximum temperatures at the time of heating the particulate capturing part 110 are described.
As illustrated in
In contract, as illustrated in
Thus, according to the microwave applicator of this embodiment, it is possible to substantially uniformly heat the particulate capturing part 110, which is an object of heating.
[b]Second Embodiment
Next, a heater according to a second embodiment is described. A heater according to this embodiment includes a microwave applicator similar to the microwave applicator of the first embodiment, and is used to heat, for example, food.
The waveguide resonators 330a through 330c are so formed as to be different from one another in the resonant frequency at which microwaves resonate. Specifically, the resonant frequency is a frequency f1 in the waveguide resonator 330a, a frequency f2in the waveguide resonator 330b, and a frequency f3in the waveguide resonator 330c. The frequencies f1, f2 and f3 are different from one another.
The microwave generator 50 may be controlled by the controller 60 to vary the frequency of generated microwaves. For example, it is assumed that the object of heating 310 is a box lunch that contains rice 310a, meat 310b, and vegetables 310c. According to this embodiment, in the box lunch, the rice 310a and the meat 310b are to be heated while the vegetables 310c are not to be heated. The box lunch is placed in the housing 320 so that the rice 310a is positioned over the waveguide resonator 330a, the meat 310b is positioned over the waveguide resonator 330b, and the vegetables 310c are positioned over the waveguide resonator 330c.
Thereafter, the microwave generator 50 generates the frequency f1. The frequency f1 is the resonant frequency of the waveguide resonator 330a. Therefore, microwaves of the frequency f1 resonate in the waveguide resonator 330a to be emitted to the rice 310a of the box lunch. Because the frequency f1 is neither the resonant frequency of the waveguide resonator 330b nor the resonant frequency of the waveguide resonator 330c, microwaves are scarcely emitted from the waveguide resonators 330b and 330c. Accordingly, it is possible to heat the rice 310a alone in the box lunch.
Next, the microwave generator 50 generates the frequency f2. The frequency f2 is the resonant frequency of the waveguide resonator 330b.
Therefore, microwaves of the frequency f2 resonate in the waveguide resonator 330b to be emitted to the meat 310b of the box lunch. Because the frequency f2 is neither the resonant frequency of the waveguide resonator 330a nor the resonant frequency of the waveguide resonator 330c, microwaves are scarcely emitted from the waveguide resonators 330aand 330c. Accordingly, it is possible to heat the meat 310b alone in the box lunch.
Thus, it is possible to heat the rice 310a and the meat 310b while not heating the vegetables 310c in the box lunch, which is the object of heating 310. Furthermore, according to this embodiment, the microwave generator 50 may be controlled by the controller 60 to vary the frequency of generated microwaves while measuring the temperature of the object of heating 310 with the radiation thermometer 70.
In other respects than those described above, the second embodiment may be the same as the first embodiment.
[c]Third Embodiment
Next, a chemical reactor according to a third embodiment is described. A chemical reactor according to this embodiment includes the microwave applicator of the first embodiment.
The waveguide resonators 430 are so formed as to be different from one another in the resonant frequency at which microwaves resonate. According to this embodiment, an internal temperature distribution of the housing 420 is measured with the radiation thermometer 70, and the microwave generator 50 is controlled by the controller 60 to generate microwaves of such a frequency as to increase the intensity of microwaves for a low temperature region inside the housing 420 based on the measured temperature distribution.
According to this embodiment, when a property of the object of heating, such as color, is subject to change depending on the condition of heating or temperature, a device for detecting electromagnetic waves such as light, for example, a light-receiving element or an image capturing device, may be employed as a measurement device along with or in lieu of the radiation thermometer 70.
In other respects than those described above, the third embodiment may be the same as the first embodiment.
According to a microwave applicator of an embodiment, it is possible to uniformly heat an object of heating.
All examples and conditional language provided herein are intended for pedagogical purposes of aiding the reader in understanding the invention and the concepts contributed by the inventor to further the art, and are not to be construed as limitations to such specifically recited examples and conditions, nor does the organization of such examples in the specification relate to a showing of the superiority or inferiority of the invention. Although one or more embodiments of the present invention have been described in detail, it should be understood that the various changes, substitutions, and alterations could be made hereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2016-007943 | Jan 2016 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4934141 | Ollivon | Jun 1990 | A |
7138615 | Williamson | Nov 2006 | B1 |
7303603 | Gregoire | Dec 2007 | B2 |
7475533 | Hirata | Jan 2009 | B2 |
7931727 | Gonze | Apr 2011 | B2 |
20110017706 | Takahashi | Jan 2011 | A1 |
20110108548 | Nobue | May 2011 | A1 |
20120103975 | Okajima | May 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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H04-119817 | Jun 1992 | JP |
2002-070530 | Mar 2002 | JP |
2006-140063 | Jun 2006 | JP |
4995351 | Aug 2012 | JP |
2011070721 | Jun 2011 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170204757 A1 | Jul 2017 | US |