1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for automatically controlling the heating/cooking of a food item in a cooking oven having a door, heaters and an oven temperature acquisition system.
2. Description of the Related Art
In a traditional oven the user chooses the oven function to be used, together with the set temperature and (optionally) with the cooking time. These parameters (temperature, cooking time and selected function of the oven) are usually unknown to the user and therefore the food cooking is carried out in a not optimal basis, frequently by using empirical rules or on the basis of the experience if the user. Moreover a possible error in inputting the oven temperature or the cooking time can cause an unrecoverable damage to the food.
A purpose of the present invention is to provide a method for optimising the food preparation/cooking in an oven provided with heaters adapted to heat the cavity thereof.
Another purpose of the present invention is to provide an automatic cooking function able to compensate the influence on cooking performance of different noise factors. Some noise factors that can affect the cooking results are for example: the voltage fluctuation for an electrical oven (that affects directly the power transformed into heat and also the rotation speed of the oven fan), the tolerances/drift of the heating element, the tolerance/drift of closed loop temperature controller (if present), the use of different containers inside the oven and others later described.
Each of the above noise factors influences the cooking performance results when trying to create an automatic cooking function where the oven itself decides automatically the cooking time required.
To compensate the influence of the factors here described the method according to the invention allows an automatic estimate of the “quantity of heat” (in technical words the power) absorbed by the oven. The aim is to control this quantity and to supply to food by food, or to food category by food category, the proper quantity of heating power.
Since the method according to the invention is able to estimate the power to the food, it will be also able to provide the right final energy obtaining the desired cooking result.
The above objects are reached thanks to the features listed in the appended claims.
Further features and advantages of the present invention will be clear from the following detailed description, with reference to the appended drawings in which:
The present invention is based on a model whose simplified version is shown in the following differential equation (1) in the Laplace domain, that is an example of the relation between the power absorbed by the oven (Pin) and the power absorbed by the oven load (food):
where:
The output of the above model (1) is the power to the food; the algorithm uses this information to evaluate the cooking time, that is the algorithm output. So, the core of the algorithm according to the present invention is the model (1).
With the above model and related control process, an oven according to the invention can compensate different noise factors. Particularly, it is able to compensate for the effect on cooking result of different measured initial oven temperature (T′0oven). The applicant has performed two tests in order to show how this compensation has been reached. In the following table 1 the test inputs are reported: different T′0oven values have been used but the same (Pin,Text) values have been fed in the model (1). Test results are showed as Pload(t) vs. time in
The Initial oven temperature compensation allows the algorithm to achieve high cooking performances, whether the user selects a preheating phase or not.
In analogous way, good results are obtained even if two consecutive baking are carried out, whether the oven cooling between them is performed or not.
Another noise factor that can be compensated according to the present invention is the effect of different containers/tools used on cooking result (dripping-pan, baking-pan, pie-dish, shape or colour). Different container/tools involve different heat absorption, and therefore different Pin(t) functions. The algorithm according to the present invention, also thanks to the closed loop feedback control system, is able to detect and make up for this kind of variations because it measures the Pin(t). The explanation on how different food/container power absorption influences the Pin(t) is in the portion of the description referring to the feedback compensation mechanism. According to the model (1), different Pin causes different Pload(t) Even if all other working conditions do not change, the use of different containers drives different power adsorption by the food, therefore different Pin. The measure of this latter allows detecting these changes, therefore updating cooking time to the changed conditions.
Another compensation carried out by the algorithm according to the present invention is the compensation of the opening door effect.
A further compensation is related to the different heaters structural tolerances. Different actuators structural tolerances involve different Pin(t). The tolerance of the heating element resistivity is typically very high mainly for cost reason. The algorithm according to the present invention, together to temperature control system, is able to make up for the effects on the cooking performance. In this way it is not necessary to use more precise (and expensive) components. Typically the oven temperature control loop is enough to compensate the effect of heaters tolerance when temperature is in steady state, but not during preheating phase or transient phase. In this second case, the algorithm according to the invention, by estimating the power to the food, can compensate the effect of heater tolerance. On the mathematical model (1) the effect of tolerances on Pin can be seen thanks to the Ohm law that links power (Pin) with supplying voltage value (Pin=V^2/(R+r)), where R is the nominal resistivity value of the heater and r is tolerance thereof). According to model (1), different Pin causes different Pload(t).
A further compensation is related to heaters performance drift and decay. The heaters suffer performances drift and decay. The algorithm according to the invention is able to offset the effect of drift/decay for the same reasons we exposed in the previous paragraph.
A further compensation is related to the structural tolerances effects of oven temperature acquisition system (oven probe+electronic) and of the performance drift and decay of such system. Since the oven temperature control has to manage a wide range, the oven temperature acquisition system performances are quite poor (+/−5° C.@250° C.) in order to keep low the overall cost of the appliance. This lack of precision causes a big variation of performances from oven to oven. Different close loop temperatures inside the cavity cause different Pin(t) and so also different Pload(t). As far as the compensation for oven temperature acquisition system (oven probe+electronic) performance drift and decay is concerned, it's not uncommon that food bake makes the temperature probe dirty causing the drift of the performance. The algorithm according to the present invention allows compensating also this kind of drift and decay.
A further compensation offsets the ambient temperature variation effects. Feeding up the model (1) by the same Pin(t), the applicant made tests summarized in table 2.
The external temperature Text can be measured by means of a sensor placed outside the cavity or it can be estimated through the temperature sensor in the cavity of the oven.
A further compensation relates to the food insertion delay in case of preheating recipe. Typically, when a preheating phase is required, the oven advises the user when preheating itself is terminated. The user could not react immediately to this information. For this reason the thermodynamic status inside the cavity will be different depending on the delay between the oven notification and user reaction. Different thermodynamic status will cause different Pin(t) as explained in the following “feedback compensation mechanism” paragraph.
Closed loop control uses the measure of output parameters of the system to be controlled in order to establish the change of one of input parameters.
In the following it will be clarifies how the system of
Compensation of disturbances acting on the oven temperature acquisition subsystem.
Compensation of different colour/material of oven containers/tools.
The temperature control loop acts to keep the temperature inside the cavity equal or closed to target temperature: if the load of the oven changes, the control loop will modify the duty cycle in order to keep the same temperature. Different duty cycle means different Pin.
Compensation of food insertion delay.
If the temperature inside the cavity is different when the food is inserted, also the duty cycle acted by the control system will be different and so also the Pin.
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07109162 | May 2007 | EP | regional |
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