This application claims priority under 35 USC 119 to German Patent Appl. No. 10 2015 109 068.6 filed on Jun. 9, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a personal air flow device for a vehicle.
2. Description of the Related Art
Personal air flow devices, dashboard vents or air outlets are terms used in vehicle technology to refer to the air distributors and air nozzles for a wide variety of air ducts in or under the dashboard, in the ceiling-mounted air-conditioning system or for the warm air blower or cold air blower behind and/or under the front seats of the passenger compartment of a vehicle.
DE 100 03 798 B4 describes a device with two air outlets for ventilating the passenger compartment of a vehicle. The device can move the impact location of the two air jets to permit both diffuse flow conditions and air jets with a long range to be generated, as well as allowing any desired flow directions to be set. The setting of the flow direction can be made by adjustable air-guiding lamellas in the air outlets.
DE 102 35 526 A1 also describes the alternating influencing of two air jets after they flow into the passenger compartment of the vehicle. The direction of the air flows can be adjusted by movable air-guiding lamellas. In addition, a fan effect can be generated by alternating shutting and opening of the air ducts using additional closing flaps.
The invention makes provides a personal air flow device for a vehicle.
The invention relates to an air flow device configured so that it is no longer necessary to provide any adjustable lamellas. Rather, the air flow is influenced by the orientation of fixed lamellas or even only by housing walls. The impetuses of various air flows are shaped as a result in such a way that the direction of resulting air flows can be changed. Parameters of these impetuses are the direction, flow speed and air mass. Further parameters that can exert an influence with this principle are the arrangement of the air ducts that influence one another as well as the position of the point at which the flows interact.
It is possible, in principle, for it to be sufficient to change one of the six specified parameters—cross section, flow speed, air mass, direction, arrangement of the air ducts that influence one another, and the position of the point at which the flows interact. However, it is also possible for a compromise or interplay of all or several of these parameters to be implemented. It is necessary to consider, for example the same cross section with a different mass flow, the same mass flow with different cross sections, a separate mass flow for each duct or a single mass flow that is divided into ducts, changing of the mass flow by means of an air-conditioning unit, shut-off flaps or a change in the cross section (in each case infinite or incremental), a change in direction by means of air-guiding elements, a change in direction by changing the duct position, a change in direction by opening or closing a bypass that has an outflow or outward suction, a direction that is predefined permanently by a flow duct, arrangement of the ducts, for example, in a triangle, in a star shape or linearly, a different shape, for example round or rectangular, of the ducts, an identical or different number of ducts, position of the point at which the flows interact, for example spatial separation or combination of the individual air flows in a duct, or an outflow that can be adjusted in the manner of a spot or diffusely.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is illustrated in the drawing and will be described in more detail below.
The air mass flows {dot over (m)}1, {dot over (m)}2 can be controlled relative to one another in such a way that they are superimposed to form a total air mass flow whose direction can be controlled according to the discussed embodiments by modifying the cross section A1, A2 and/or the throughput rate {dot over (m)}1, {dot over (m)}2 of at least one of the two air flow ducts 11, 12. The direction of the total air mass flow can be adjusted by a changing, brought about in this way, of the impetuses of the individual interacting air mass flows {dot over (m)}1, {dot over (m)}2. The air flow ducts 11, 12 according to the first and second embodiments have for this purpose a flap 15 for reducing their respective cross section A1, A2, while the air mass flows {dot over (m)}1, rime which are shown in
The fifth embodiment in
A further example of an angle controller is illustrated in
A comparable effect can be achieved equally well without the use of air-directing elements. In the seventh embodiment in
In the ninth embodiment in
An eleventh embodiment is illustrated in
In addition, all four blowing-out points have fixed lamellas, with the result that the air mass flows intersect. Depending on which air mass flow has the greatest impetus, a certain total air mass flow therefore is produced. For instance, in the calculation example in
As is demonstrated figuratively by the implementation examples in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2015 109 068.6 | Jun 2015 | DE | national |