This application claims the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 2005-49744, filed on Jun. 10, 2005 in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an oven to cook food. More particularly, to an oven having a plurality of cooking spaces partitioned in a cooking chamber.
2. Description of the Related Art
Examples of an oven having a plurality of cooking spaces are disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 2002-8846 and Korean Registered Utility Model Publication No. 20-209671.
The conventional oven disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 2002-8846 includes a cooking chamber partitioned into first and second cooking chambers by a partition. Microwaves generated from a magnetron are separately supplied into the first and second cooking spaces such that food is cooked individually in the respective cooking spaces. The oven disclosed in Korean Registered Utility Model Publication No. 20-209671 includes a cooking chamber partitioned into a plurality of cooking spaces by a partition and a shelf. The cooking spaces are heated by electric heaters, which are independently controlled, and heat transfer between the adjacent cooking spaces is prevented by the partition.
In each of the ovens, food is cooked individually in the respective partitioned cooking spaces, and different kinds of food are cooked in the respective cooking spaces under different heating conditions.
When different kinds of food are cooked in the respective cooking spaces under different heating conditions, however, heat is transferred from one of the cooking spaces to another cooking space along the wall of the cooking chamber. As a result, it is difficult to maintain the respective cooking spaces at desired temperatures, and heat loss is generated. Specifically, the interior temperature of the cooking space having relatively low temperature is increased by heat transferred from the cooking space having relatively high temperature along the wall of the cooking chamber. Also, the heat is transferred from the cooking space having relatively high temperature to the cooking space having relatively low temperature, and therefore, heat loss is generated.
Accordingly, it is an aspect of the invention to provide an oven that is capable of minimizing heat transfer between adjacent cooking spaces along the wall of a cooking chamber.
Additional aspects and/or advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be apparent from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention.
The foregoing and/or other aspects of the present invention are achieved by providing an oven including an oven body having a cooking chamber, a partition to partition the cooking chamber into a plurality of cooking spaces, and insulating grooves formed at a wall of the cooking chamber to minimize heat transfer between the cooking spaces.
The oven further includes mounting parts provided at the wall of the cooking chamber such that the partition is mounted on the mounting parts, wherein the insulating grooves are disposed adjacent to the mounting parts.
The oven further includes opening/closing devices to open or close the insulating grooves, wherein the opening/closing devices are separated from the respective insulating grooves when the partition is mounted, and close the respective insulating grooves when the partition is removed.
Each of the opening/closing devices includes an opening/closing member hingedly mounted at an outside of the wall of the cooking chamber to open and close the corresponding insulating groove, a spring to support the opening/closing member such that the opening/closing member is rotated in a direction of closing the corresponding insulating groove, and a push protrusion extending from the opening/closing member toward the corresponding mounting part such that the opening/closing member is separated from the corresponding insulating groove when the partition is mounted.
The insulating grooves are arranged around the partition in groups.
These and/or other aspects and advantages of the invention will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the embodiment of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout. The embodiment is described below to explain the present invention by referring to the figures.
In
The cooking chamber 10 comprises an open front surface, through which food is introduced into or removed from the cooking chamber 10. To the front surface of the oven body 10 is vertically hingedly connected a door 14, by which the cooking chamber 11 is opened or closed. At the front surface of the oven body 10 above the door 14 is disposed a manipulation panel 15 comprising a display unit 15a to display operation of the oven, various manipulation buttons 15b, and various manipulation switches 15c.
The cooking chamber 11 is partitioned into a first cooking chamber 11a and a second cooking chamber 11b by a partition 16. Specifically, the cooking chamber 11 is partitioned into the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b when the partition 16 is mounted in the cooking chamber 11, and the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b communicate with each other when the partition 16 is removed from the cooking chamber 11. To this end, mounting parts 17 are provided at opposite side walls of the cooking chamber 11 (the inner walls of the inner case). The mounting parts 17 extend from the front to the rear of the cooking chamber 11.
In addition, food shelves 18a and 18b are mounted in the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b, respectively, such that food is placed on the food shelves 18a and 18b. At the opposite side walls of the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b are provided shelf supporting members 19a and 19b to support the food shelves 18a and 18b.
At the outside of the inner case 13 at the rear of the cooking chamber 11 is mounted a heater case 21, by which a first upper heater compartment 20a and a second lower heater compartment 20b are defined while the first upper heater compartment 20a and the second lower heater compartment 20b are divided from each other, as shown in
At the rear walls of the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b (the rear wall of the inner case) are formed suction holes 26a and 26b and discharge holes 27a and 27b, through which the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b communicate with the first and second heater compartments 20a and 20b, respectively, to circulate air. Consequently, air flows from the first and second cooking chambers 20a and 20b to the first and the second heater compartments 20a and 20b by the first and second circulating fans 22a and 22b, respectively, and is heated by the first and second heaters 23a and 23b. Then, the heated air flows from first and the second heater compartments 20a and 20b to the first and second cooking chambers 20a and 20b by the first and second circulating fans 22a and 22b, respectively.
The first circulating fan 22a and the first heater 23a or the second circulating fan 22b and the second heater 23b are operated, or the first and second circulating fans 22a and 22b and the first and second heaters 23a and 23b are simultaneously operated by user manipulation of the manipulation panel 15, such that food is cooked in either the first cooking chamber 11a and the second cooking chamber 11b or simultaneously in both the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b. When it is necessary to cook food simultaneously in both the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b under different temperature conditions, power sources applied to the first and second heaters 23a and 23b are separately controlled such that the interior temperature of the first cooking chamber 11a is different from that of the second cooking chamber 11b. Therefore, the oven further comprises sensors 28a and 28b to sense an interior temperature of the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b, and a control unit 29 to control the power sources applied to the first and second heaters 23a and 23b based on sensed information of the sensors 28a and 28b, as shown in
To minimize heat transfer between one of the cooking chambers to the other cooking chamber, the partition 16 is made of an insulating member, and an insulating unit is mounted at the side walls of the inner case 13 between the first cooking chamber 11a and the second cooking chamber 11b (the side walls of the inner case). As a result, heat transfer along the partition 16 and the side walls 13a of the inner case 13 between the first and second cooking chambers 1a and 11b is minimized. Consequently, difference in temperature between the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b is maintained, and therefore, heat loss due to heat transfer between the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b is greatly reduced.
In
The insulating grooves 30 separate the opposite side walls 13a of the inner case 13 between the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b from each other to minimize heat transfer between the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b along the opposite side walls 13a. Specifically, the insulating grooves 30 are formed at the opposite side walls 13a of the inner case 12 at the position adjacent to the mounting parts 17, on which the partition 16 is mounted, while extending in the longitudinal direction of the mounting parts 17 to separate the first cooking chamber side and the second cooking chamber side from each other.
As described above, connection parts 31 having a predetermined width are disposed between the respective adjacent insulating grooves 30, when the insulating grooves 30 are formed, such that the side walls 13a of the first cooking chamber 11a are connected to the side walls 13a of the second cooking chamber 11b. As a result, rigidity of the inner case 13 is maintained. At this time, heat may be transferred between the first and second coking chambers 11a and 11b along the connection parts 31. However, the predetermined width of the connection parts 31 is very small as compared to the length of the insulating grooves 30, and therefore, the heat transfer between the first and second cooking chambers 11a and 11b along the connection parts 31 is neglected.
Each of the opening/closing devices 40 to open or close the insulating grooves 30 comprises an opening/closing member 41 hingedly mounted at the outside of the corresponding side wall 13a of the inner case 13, a spring 42 to pressurize the opening/closing member 41 such that the opening/closing member 41 opens or closes the corresponding insulating groove 30, and a push protrusion 45 configured to be separated from the corresponding insulating groove 30 as the opening/closing member 41 is pushed by the partition 16 when the partition 16 is mounted.
The opening/closing member 41 is connected with a fixing member 43, the upper end of which is fixed with the inner case 13, via a connection pin 44. The opening/closing member 41 comprises an opening/closing part 41a, which is formed such that the opening/closing part 41a can be inserted into the corresponding insulating groove 30. Consequently, the opening/closing member 41 can be rotated about the connection pin 44. Through the rotation of the opening/closing member 41, the opening/closing part 41a is inserted into the corresponding insulating groove 30 to close the corresponding insulating groove 30 or is separated from the corresponding insulating groove 30 to open the corresponding insulating groove 30.
The spring 42 is a torsion spring, which is mounted at the connection pin 44. However, the present invention is not limited thereto, any suitable spring may be applied. The spring 42 pressurizes the opening/closing member 41 such that the opening/closing member 41 is rotated in the direction of closing the corresponding insulating groove 30. Consequently, the opening/closing member 41 closes the corresponding insulating grooves 30 while the partition 16 is not mounted.
In
When the partition 16 is mounted, as shown in
While the partition 16 is mounted, air may leak from the first cooking chamber 11a through a gap between the opening/closing part 41a and the corresponding insulating groove 30. In
When the partition 16 is removed, as shown in
In the illustrated embodiment, the insulating grooves and the opening/closing devices are provided at the opposite side walls of the cooking chamber. As an alternative, additional insulating grooves and opening/closing devices may be provided at the rear wall of the cooking chamber in the same fashion such that heat transfer between the first and second cooking chambers is further prevented.
In the illustrated embodiment, the insulating grooves and the opening/closing devices are applied to the oven having the vertically partitioned cooking chambers. As an alternative, the insulating grooves and the opening/closing devices may be applied to an oven having horizontally partitioned cooking chambers.
As apparent from the above description, heat transfer between the first and second cooking chambers is prevented by the insulating grooves formed at the walls between the first and second cooking chambers. Consequently, heat transfer from one of the cooking chambers to the adjacent cooking chamber along the walls of the cooking chambers is minimized.
Furthermore, the opening/closing members are separated from the corresponding insulating grooves when the partition is mounted, and therefore, heat transfer along the walls is minimized. Also, the insulating grooves are closed by the corresponding opening/closing members when the partition is removed, and therefore, the leakage of air through the insulating grooves is prevented.
Although an embodiment of the present invention has been shown and described, it would be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in this embodiment without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined in the claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2005-0049744 | Jun 2005 | KR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2994760 | Pecoraro et al. | Aug 1961 | A |
4780597 | Linhart et al. | Oct 1988 | A |
5618458 | Thomas | Apr 1997 | A |
6545251 | Allera et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
7071448 | Kim et al. | Jul 2006 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2321962 | Dec 1998 | GB |
2002-008846 | Jan 2002 | JP |
20-0209671 | Jan 2001 | KR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060289435 A1 | Dec 2006 | US |