The present invention relates to a refrigeration device, particularly a domestic refrigeration device, having a no-frost design.
A no-frost refrigeration device conventionally comprises at least one storage chamber for items to be cooled and an evaporator chamber in which an evaporator and a ventilator are accommodated. The ventilator serves to drive air circulation running through the storage chamber and the evaporator chamber, and by means of which the storage chamber is cooled. The storage chamber and the evaporator chamber of a device of this type are usually surrounded by a common housing, the interior space of which is divided by an intermediate wall into the evaporator chamber and the storage chamber.
Moisture introduced into the refrigerator with the items to be cooled or by opening the door should condense only on the evaporator, since in a period when the evaporator and the ventilator are out of operation, the evaporator can be defrosted and the moisture collecting thereon can be conducted out of the appliance without resulting in noticeable warming of the items to be cooled in the storage chamber.
A problem can arise if the route of the air between the storage chamber and the evaporator chamber is not sufficiently precisely defined. Ideally, the entirety of the air drawn out of the storage chamber should be conducted past the evaporator in the evaporator chamber in order to dehumidify said air at the evaporator and to prevent residual moisture condensing out on the ventilator. If, however, there is not an adequate seal between the evaporator chamber and the storage chamber, it can occur that air leaking out of the storage chamber is drawn through gaps between the separating wall and the housing directly into the intermediate space of the evaporator chamber which lies, in terms of flow, between the evaporator and the ventilator. The relatively warm and moist leakage air mixes in the intermediate space with the air cooled at the evaporator. As a result of the consequent cooling, the relative air humidity can rise to over 100%, with the result that condensation forms on surfaces lying further downstream. If too much condensation collects at the ventilator, the ventilator can ice up, with the result that the storage chamber can no longer be cooled.
Furthermore, air leakage impairs the energy efficiency of the refrigeration device since firstly, the driving energy expended by the ventilator to draw in the leakage air does not contribute to cooling the storage chamber, and secondly, in order to achieve a desired temperature in the storage chamber, the evaporator must be cooled to a temperature that is all the lower, the stronger is the leakage air stream.
It is therefore desirable to design a no-frost refrigeration device from the outset such that the leakage air quantity drawn in by the ventilator remains restricted to a minimum.
This aim is achieved in a no-frost refrigeration device having at least one storage chamber for items to be cooled and an evaporator chamber, comprising an evaporator and a ventilator for driving air circulation running through the storage chamber and the evaporator chamber, wherein the evaporator chamber comprises a housing having at least two parts, the first housing part having, at least locally, a flexible surface, and a rib formed on the second housing part is pressed in a sealing manner into the flexible surface.
Preferably, the second housing part is an intermediate wall which separates the evaporator chamber from the storage chamber.
The flexible surface on the other hand can be part of a common housing or can be mounted on a common housing which surrounds the storage chamber and the evaporator chamber.
If the storage chamber and the evaporator chamber are delimited, in known manner, by a common inner container, the flexible surface can suitably be part of a covering element mounted on the inside of the inner container.
The flexible surface is preferably made from a closed-pore foam material, particularly expanded polystyrene (EPS).
The second housing part can be made, for example, from a flexible layer glued into the inner container. Preferably, however, said housing part is configured as a rigid integral molded part, since a molded part of this type can be made more exactly conforming to a wall contour of the second housing part than the inner container, which is generally formed by deep-drawing.
If the ventilator is arranged downstream of the evaporator, the rib should suitably seal at least one intermediate space of the evaporator chamber lying, in the direction of flow, between the evaporator and the ventilator.
A mounting for the ventilator can suitably be formed on the second housing part. The rib can then suitably extend round a suction aperture of the ventilator formed in the second housing part.
Further features and advantages of the invention are disclosed by the following description of exemplary embodiments, making reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Embodied on the roof of the lower inner container 6 is an undercut 8 which extends as far as close to the front edge of the roof. Said undercut 8 is lined over a large proportion of the surface thereof with a shell-like molded part 9 made from closed-pore foam material, particularly EPS; only an edge region of the cover close to the rear wall is recessed. The molded part 9, which is shown in a perspective view obliquely from below in
The evaporator 16 represented in
Leakage air drawn in by the ventilator without passing the evaporator 16 and mixing in an intermediate space 27 between the evaporator 16 and the rear wall 20 with cold air from the evaporator 16 could cause icing up of the ventilator 21. It is therefore important, particularly in the vicinity of the intermediate space 27, to ensure that the edges of the molded part 9 and the evaporator shell 15 lie tightly against one another. In order to ensure this, particularly in the region of section 23, a sharp-edged, radially outwards extending rib 28 is formed thereon which, when during assembly of the refrigeration device, the evaporator shell 15 is pressed against the molded part 9, and presses in cutting manner into the molded part 9 at the height of the recess 14.
In a separating wall between two storage chambers 1, 2, passages can be provided between the storage chambers and the valves or flaps, said passages enabling the air circulation driven by the ventilator 21 to be conducted through the storage chamber 2 or the storage chamber 1.
Naturally, the rib 28 must not be restricted to the section 23, but can extend over other regions of the upper edge of the evaporator shell 15. In general, however, the rib 28 does not extend forwardly past the evaporator 16, since a lack of seal between the molded part 9 and the shell 15 upstream from the evaporator 16 has no effect on the tendency of the ventilator to ice up and can be accepted.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 003 263 | May 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/055811 | 4/29/2010 | WO | 00 | 10/27/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/133435 | 11/25/2010 | WO | A |
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3834779 | Turner | Sep 1974 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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101263351 | Sep 2008 | CN |
WO 2007031457 | Mar 2007 | DE |
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WO2007031457 | Mar 2007 | EP |
2 378 237 | Feb 2003 | GB |
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Entry |
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English Translation of the First Office Action for corresponding Chinese Application No. 2010800221305, issued May 15, 2013, 5 pages. |
International Search Report PCT/EP2010/055811. |
English Translation of Russian Decision on Granting for corresponding Russian Application No. 2011148075, dated Feb. 12, 2014, 4 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120042683 A1 | Feb 2012 | US |