The present invention relates to a pump, in particular for dishwashers, comprising a housing consisting of a housing base, a housing cover and a heating device disposed therebetween for the purpose of heating a washing liquor, the device forming a ring-shaped side wall of the housing, further comprising an impeller arranged in the housing, an intake port arranged axially in the housing cover relative to the axis of rotation of the impeller, and a discharge port.
A pump of said kind for dishwashers is known from DE 201 07 363 U1. A disadvantage with said pump is the vertical arrangement of the discharge port with respect to the axially arranged intake port. The discharge port projects beyond the basic cylindrical shape of the pump, resulting in a greater extension of the pump in the radial direction. The pump requires more installation space and reduces the useful volume of the dishwasher. A further disadvantage of said pump is the small effective heating surface of the ring-shaped heating device, which furthermore is opened up by the discharge port. In order to be able to heat the washing liquor in a short time it is necessary to make available to the heating device a high heating capacity with correspondingly high temperatures. This can lead to problems such as, for example, premature aging, particularly at the connection points between the heating device and the adjacent plastic parts, at which points sealing elements may also be present. This results in porosity of the sealing material or, as the case may be, of the adjacent plastic parts and consequently leads to leaks in the appliances.
The object underlying the invention is to disclose a simple and inexpensive pump of the type cited in the introduction which has smaller external dimensions, in particular in the radial direction, while avoiding the aforementioned disadvantages.
This object is achieved according to the invention in the case of a pump of the type cited in the introduction in that the discharge port is arranged in the housing cover. Arranging the discharge port in the cover enables the external dimensions of the pump to be reduced in the radial direction relative to its longitudinal axis. The installation space, in particular the installation height required for the pump, is reduced as a result. If the pump is installed horizontally underneath the washing tub with the longitudinal axis of the pump parallel to the bottom of the washing tub, valuable installation height can be saved. The useful volume of the washing tub can be increased in size as a result.
Preferably it is provided that a longitudinal axis of the intake port is arranged at an acute angle relative to the longitudinal axis of the discharge port. In addition the intake port can be connected directly to a drain at the sump of the washing tub via very short connecting elements or even without connecting elements and the discharge port can be connected to a feed line to the spray system. With an arrangement of two connections corresponding to the intake port and discharge port at the sump, additional parts such as hoses and their fastening means can be dispensed with.
The arrangement of intake port and discharge port in the cover inventively enables a simple design of the heating device, specifically having a tube with closed circular ring-shaped cross-section. Expensive and labor-intensive manufacturing redesign or machining steps for an opening in the heating device can thus be dispensed with. It can therefore be manufactured largely using standard parts. Furthermore, the washing liquor can be heated more uniformly in a tube without openings than in a ring having openings because a large-area undisturbed flow of the water along the entire lateral surface of the tube is established.
A tube of this type is also easy to replace. Moreover, with a tubular side wall a structurally simpler design of the housing of the pump is possible, wherein the housing cover and the housing base can be made from plastic and the tubular side wall can be manufactured separately from metal. As well as allowing cost-effective production of the complex geometries of the housing cover and the base, the use of plastic also enables the overall weight of the pump to be reduced. Plastic is also a poor conductor of heat, which means that the heated washing liquor can be circulated in the pump virtually without energy loss. The tube of the heating device is advantageously made of metal, since owing to its good heat-conducting properties it transfers a maximum of the heat energy to the washing liquor.
Furthermore the housing cover can be produced also using the injection molding method, for example, without involving appreciable additional overhead for the discharge port. The certain complexity, already present, of the shape of the cover on account of the intake port is not significantly increased as a result of the additional arrangement of the discharge port.
The thermal energy required for heating the washing liquor is provided according to the invention by a heating means that is in contact with the tube of the heating device from outside.
For example, thick-film resistors, tubular heating elements or heating wires that directly touch the outside of the tube can be used as heating means. Since there are no interruptions in the tube, the orientation of the heating means on the tube is essentially freely selectable. The heating means can be disposed e.g. in the form of rings arranged parallel to one another, in a spiral shape or as flat strips at right angles or parallel to the tube's longitudinal axis. The method for attaching the heating means to the lateral surface of the tube, for example by printing the tube with the thick-film resistor material, is made easier as a result. The heating device can have a temperature sensor, for example an NTC or PTC resistor, as protection against overheating.
The tube can also consist of temperature-resistant plastic, in particular electrically conductive plastic. In this embodiment variant the heating means can already be integrated into the tube, with the result that the application of heating means can be eliminated as a production step.
According to the invention the intake port projects centrally into the region of the heating device and extends as far as the impeller on the end face side while forming a radial gap. In addition to enabling a compact design this has the advantage that the washing liquor sucked in through the intake port can be conducted in a targeted manner in a uniform axial flow right up to the intake aperture of the impeller. During the operation of the pump the washing liquor sucked in through the intake port can already be preheated as the housing parts and consequently also the intake port are heated correspondingly. This effect can be reinforced by additional heating means in or at the intake port.
The flow of the washing liquor sucked in from the direction of the cover is redirected through 180 degrees in the impeller and then flows in a spiral shape coaxially to the sucked-in washing liquor in a ring-cylindrical space on the inside of the heater back to the cover. In order that this flow reversal process proceeds with minimum energy loss, in an advantageous embodiment of the invention the impeller has cover disks curved in the direction of the housing cover for the purpose of redirecting the axially sucked-in washing liquor flow in the axially opposing direction toward the discharge port. Toward that end the cover disks can be curved in a hemispherical shape in order to redirect the washing liquor drawn in axially centrally or, as the case may be, centrally by the impeller from the intake port between the cover disks of the impeller on a curved path virtually fully through 180 degrees. The outer diameter of the cover disk pointing toward the intake port is smaller than that of the opposing cover disk, since in that way the washing liquor can be optimally redirected into the hollow-cylindrical space.
The blades of the impeller responsible for the pump effect can also assist the redirection of the flow by means of their shape and arrangement. In a further advantageous embodiment of the invention the impeller has radially angled blades. The blades can be curved over their entire radial length and in the direction of the pressure-side outlet openings of the impeller. In this arrangement the curvature can be more pronounced at the ends of the blades in order to impart the desired flow direction to the flow upon its emersion from the impeller.
In the region of the outlet openings of the impeller the flow has a large radial direction component owing to the rotation of the impeller. According to a further preferred embodiment variant of the invention, a guide mechanism to further facilitate flow redirection can therefore be arranged between the impeller and the discharge port. It can consist of fixed guide blades which are arranged in a ring shape downstream of the outlet opening of the impeller. The guide blades can extend radially slightly angled in the ring-cylindrical space. Their blade surface can be curved in order to further counteract the swirl of the flow emerging from the impeller. This leads to an increase in the flow component in the axial direction.
According to a further advantageous embodiment of the invention the guide mechanism is arranged on the cover. For that purpose the guide mechanism can be permanently joined to the cover as an independent part or else be integrally molded on the cover as a single piece. A single-piece embodiment requires fewer individual parts and therefore reduces the cost of manufacturing the pump housing.
In a further advantageous embodiment variant of the invention the housing cover has spiral-shaped guide elements for directing the flow of the washing liquor from the heating device into the discharge port. The guide elements facilitate the transition of the washing liquor from the ring-cylindrical space into the cylinder-shaped discharge port by focusing the flow in the direction of the discharge port. The guide elements are preferably integrally molded in the shape of guide spirals fixedly in the cover on the outside around the intake port. They are to be embodied in such a way that the transition of the washing liquor into the discharge port takes place without significant loss of kinetic energy.
In the manufacture of the cover from plastic, too, there are limits to the complexity of the manufacturable geometries due to production constraints. Said limits are reached, for example, if it were no longer possible to remove parts nondestructively from the casting mold after the casting process on account of undercuts. In an alternative advantageous embodiment variant of the invention the housing cover therefore consists at least partially of an elastomer. This allows the cover to be removed from the mold nondestructively even in the case of very complex geometries. Furthermore, owing to its rubber-elastic properties the elastomer part of the cover possesses the capability to adapt to the washing liquor flow to a large extent during the redirection from the heating device into the discharge port. As a result special spiral-shaped guide elements for guiding the flow can be largely dispensed with.
In order to make sure that the cover made of the elastomer material fulfills the requirements in terms of stability and shape retention with respect to parts adjacent to it—in particular the impeller—in an advantageous embodiment of the invention rigid molded parts can be used to stiffen the housing cover. They can ensure a defined position in particular of the intake port with respect to the impeller in order to rule out collisions. Furthermore the leak-tightness of a rigid part of the cover e.g. with respect to the heating device can be ensured with greater reliability. In this case sections of the elastic cover are clamped tight between the tube of the heating device and the rigid molded parts.
The principle of the invention is explained in more detail below by way of example with reference to a drawing, in which:
During operation the pump 10 sucks washing liquor out of a washing tub of a dishwasher centrally via the intake port 18. Inside the housing cover 16 the washing liquor is heated before being pumped back via the discharge port 20 into the washing tub of the dishwasher once again. The washing liquor is heated in this case by means of a heating device (cf.
The very compact design of the pump 10, in particular the small outer diameter of the hydraulic part 14, which is not substantially greater than that of the electric motor 12, enables the pump 10 to be installed in a prone position, which is to say that its longitudinal axis 11 runs essentially horizontally.
Arranged centrally in the housing cover 16 is the intake port 18 which adjoins an impeller 40 with one of its front end faces while forming a radial gap 38. The impeller 40 consists of a cover disk 42 pointing toward the intake port 18 and an opposing cover disk 44 pointing toward the housing base 28. The blades 46 of the impeller 40 extend between the two curved cover disks 42 and 44. The impeller 40 is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to one end of a shaft 48 of the electric motor 12 which projects through the housing base 28 into the hydraulic part 14.
A guide mechanism 52 having angled guide blades 54 is inserted onto a flange-like section 50 of the housing covers 16 approximately at the level of the impeller 40. The housing cover 16 also has spiral-shaped guide elements, a guide spiral 21 for guiding the flow of the washing liquor from the heating device 30, 36 into the discharge port 20.
During operation of the pump 10 the impeller 40 sucks in washing liquor from a washing tub of a dishwasher through the intake port 18 and presses it radially outward as a result of the centrifugal force. Owing to the curvature of the cover disks 42 and 44 the washing liquor is redirected in the process in the radial direction along a curved path in the direction of the guide blades 54 of the guide mechanism 52 by more than 90 degrees parallel to the pump's longitudinal axis 11. To more clearly illustrate the flow path of the washing liquor through the hydraulic part 14, said flow path is shown separately in
The washing liquor subsequently strikes the inside of the metal tube 30, not vertically, but at an angle relative to the longitudinal axis 11. The guide blades 54 of the guide mechanism 52 then help to redirect the washing liquor flow A arriving axially via the intake port 18 in the direction of the discharge port 20. The redirected washing liquor flow then flows along the inside of the metal tube 30 heated by the thick-film resistors 36 and in the process is brought to a desired temperature. This can be accomplished in a short time uniformly and with a relatively small input of energy owing to the length of the tube 30 and the number of thick-film resistors 36. The speed at which the washing liquor flows past on the inside of the tube 30 can be influenced with the aid of the angle of incidence of the guide blades 54 of the guide mechanism 52. The blades can be adjusted for that purpose for example in a program-dependent manner by an actuator connected to a control device.
The rotation of the impeller 40 causes the washing liquor to flow in a spiral shape in the direction of the discharge port 20. At the same time the guide blades 54 of the guide mechanism 52 translate rotatory motion components of the flow into horizontal motion components, with the result that the washing liquor reaches the discharge port sufficiently quickly through a ring-cylindrical space on the inside of the heating device 30, 36. The guide spiral 21 concentrates the flow and imparts to it a largely laminar characteristic upstream of the discharge port 20, through which the washing liquor leaves the hydraulic part 14 again in the direction B.
The elastomer part 117 abuts a central intake port 118 in a leak-tight manner via two ring-shaped ribs 115. The elastomer part 110 is sealed off from a metal tube 130 via two further ribs 113. The metal tube 130 printed with the thick-film resistors 136 is connected on the front end face to a housing base 128 via a sealing element 134 on one side and to an inherently shape-stable ring-shaped cover element 111 via a sealing element 132 on the other side.
Rigid molded parts are provided at the connecting points between the elastomer part 117 and the intake port 118 or, as the case may be, the tube 130 such that the contact pressing force necessary for leak tightness acts at said points. A rigid stiffening ring 107 is arranged at the connecting point to the intake port 118 and a rigid stiffening ring 109 is arranged at the connecting point to the metal tube 130. The stiffening ring 107 formed in an angled shape in cross-section also serves to maintain the inherent shape stability of the elastomer part 117 in the region of the impeller 140. In this way it is also ensured that the elastomer part 117 does not collide with the cover disk 142 of the impeller 140 during operation of the pump 110. At the same time this section of the elastomer part 117, kept stable in its shape by means of the stiffening ring 107, serves to form a radial gap 138 between the cover disk 142 of the impeller 140 and the intake port 118.
Owing to the rubber-elastic properties of the elastomer part 117 of the housing cover 116 it is possible, in the case of this embodiment variant in contrast to the embodiment variant shown in
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10 2007 017 271 | Apr 2007 | DE | national |
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WO2008/125488 | 10/23/2008 | WO | A |
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