The present invention is related to a radiant heater for an electric cooking hob, provided with a thermal switch for turning on and off a warning lamp to indicate the state of the hot plate during heating and cooling.
Radiant heaters of the above-mentioned type are known, with a built-in thermal switch whose electrical contact is used for switching on a warning lamp indicating that the cooking plate is still “hot” with a hazardous residual temperature, the threshold of which is set at 60 –70° C. The thermal switch has to switch the warning contact during the onset of the heating of the cooking plate as well as during cooling to warn of a residual temperature higher than the aforesaid threshold value. The bimetallic sensor does not make direct contact with the hot plate, but the switch response time should be correlated to the actual temperature of the plate. For this purpose the thermal switch is situated on an area of the heater to receive proportionally the heat transmitted to the plate so that the value reached in the sensing element, always higher than on the plate, closely follows the changes in said real value. The switch actuating point is set at a suitable temperature point for switching in both plate heating and cooling directions, taking into account also the thermal hysteresis of the switch, which leads to a lower switching point during cooling.
Detecting the residual cooking plate temperature by means of a bimetallic sensor separated from the plate itself, as in the prior art solutions, presents the problem of the influence of the heat transmitted from adjoining heaters, which raises the ambient temperature and heats the peripheral wall of the heater. This problem is particularly evident in the case of the so-called “warmer” type radiant heater, which is used solely for warming precooked foods or holding them at the maximum plate temperature of around 300° C. The power of the heater is low compared with the adjoining cooking heaters of the same hob, which heat their respective hob area up to 550° C. For this reason the cover or metal support tray that encircles the heater, ends up hot due to the transmission of the adjoining heaters switched on at the same time. The problem of the temperature in the outer wall of the heater becomes critical when the ceramic body of the bimetallic sensor is submitted directly to heating from the adjoining heaters, so that the sensitive disc of the bimetallic switch may reach a temperature of around 100° C., and it loses correlation with the actual temperature of the plate area it has to detect. Alternatively, the outer heating of the built-in bimetallic switch may come from heat sources below the heater.
In the known solutions, for example that disclosed in DE-A- 2627373, the thermal switch for turning on the warning lamp is fixed at the peripheral edge of the heater and for its operation it has an expanding rod coupled to the heating resistors from which it receives heat.
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,121,587 a second bimetallic switch built into the radiant heater operates at a temperature of less than 35 100° C. to indicate residual heat and is disposed in an air duct built into the insulating outer wall of the heater, so that no expanding rod is needed for its actuation. But attached to the sensitive element this sensor has an additional heat transmitting member that receives the radiation of the heating resistors in order to obtain a quick response of the heat sensitive element of the cooking plate. Owing to the influence of external heating on the sensor, the bimetal disc does not follow the variation in the late area heated closely, and it therefore requires a high adjusting point for actuating the switching contact, well separated from the maximum warning threshold value of 80° C. at the hot plate.
Publication US-2002/0185489-A1 describes a radiant heater only for warming or “warmer”, which uses a bimetallic switch for turning on a “hot” plate warning lamp. The sensor is built into the heater secured between the peripheral insulating ring and the horizontal base of the heater, in a hole space shaped to the outline of the body of the sensor. Owing to the fact that the ceramic body has no heat insulation against the transmission of external heat, the bimetallic disc may reach a temperature of more than 100° C., even when the heater if off. Therefore, while the heater plate area is cooling, the temperature detected at the bimetallic sensor follows an almost asymptotic slope above 100° C. (represented by the dotted line in
The type of thermal switch or bimetallic sensor used in the heaters in the prior art are of the type described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,059,817, provided with a cylindrical sensor body and a heat receiving metallic base in direct contact with the internal bimetallic temperature-sensitive disc. Another type of known bimetallic thermal switch with a built-in radiant heater is described in publication DE-1123059-A and it is also compact with a ceramic body whose heat-receiving side presents a recess through which a bimetallic plate is deformed, while the terminals are situated on the opposite side of the body, facing longitudinally.
The object of the present invention is an electric radiant heater adapted to a cooking hob provided with a top heating plate and various radiant heaters, which has a built-in thermal switch including a bimetal sensing element sensitive to a temperature of the radiant heater, for switching a hot plate warning lamp on and off above and below a residual temperature threshold value in the heated plate area.
The thermal sensing switch is fixed inside the heater separate from the cooking plate, isolated there from the influence of the adjacent heaters of the cooking hob. The temperature value detected is faithfully correlated to the true value in the heated plate area, both during heating and during cooling. Thereof the actuation of the switch is thereby achieved in both directions within an acceptable residual temperature range in the plate area of 65°±15
The preferably bimetal type thermal switch is disposed in an air cavity within the heater under the cooking plate, wherein the heating resistors are mounted. In one embodiment of the invention the type of thermal switch used is a compact body bimetal sensor whose heat receiving side for the sensing element is directly facing the radiation of the heating resistors. Positioned in this way, the bimetal sensor is isolated from the influence of the external heating produced by the adjacent cooking heaters switched on at the same time. A quick sensor response to plate heating is also achieved as well as precise temperature detection during cooling, closely correlated to the real value in the heated plate area. The response time to cooling is not delayed unnecessarily, due to the fact that the bimetallic sensor is isolated from the metal cover of the present heater, through the interposition of the peripheral isolating wall thereof, and its air cavity in which the sensor is enclosed inside the heater.
The radiant heater according to the invention does not use additional fixing means either for the bimetallic sensor, since it is situated up against a surface of the heating resistor insulating carrier or base. The sensor is secured and pressed here by the elastic force of rigid electrical connection cables. In this way, its position relative to the heating resistors is fixed and does not vary either moved by the thermal constraints in the sensor body.
In reference to
The bimetallic sensor 7 has a compact electrical insulating body 7a, with an external metal base 7b on one side, which is exposed to direct radiation from at least one heating resistor 5, and a temperature-sensitive bimetal disc 7c housed in the receiver side of the body 7a, which actuates an electrical contact 9 of the normally open sensor, whose closure switches on a warning lamp (not shown in the drawings) of the residual temperature in the plate area 5a on the heater. The heating resistors 5 may be the flat strip or coiled wire type, and they are installed on the surface of the insulation base 4, e.g. guided in a groove 10. The power of the “warming heater” described here as an example is 250 W, normally less than the power of the adjacent 750 –1250 W cooking heaters.
The bimetallic sensor 7 is disposed in the air cavity 13, resting on the surface of the insulating base 4, with the metal base 7b facing one of the resistors 5, at a separation distance “A” there from. The height “H” of the cavity 5 is, as in other heaters, the standard one of 20 –25 mm. The body 7a of the bimetallic sensor is preferably square section so as to attain stable support on the insulation base 4. The metal base 7b is thereby in a vertical position facing the resistor 5, in direct contact with the bimetal disc 7c, since a commercial sensor model is chosen for economic cost reasons. The metal base 7b of the sensor may be flat, as is shown in the
The sensor body 7a is isolated from the external thermal influence, being set apart from the insulating ring 6 by a separating space “S” (
Other compact thermal switch models 7 of the bimetal type may be used instead of the above-described sensor with a receiving metal base 7b, with the side of the sensor body 7a where the sensing element is housed facing the heating resistor 5, and with the electrical terminals issuing from the opposite side.
Between the plate 5 and the bimetal sensor 7 there has to be a separating space “B”, because of cooking plate is considered an electrical conductor when heated. A space “B” of at least 3 mm is chosen, so the centre of the bimetal disc 7c is brought closer to the resistor 5 so as to improve radiation transmission. For the same purpose the sensor 7a body support surface is moulded in the form of a recess 4a of the same or greater depth “C” than the guide groove 10. Besides facilitating the installation of the sensor 7, this support also prevents later displacements.
The electrical contact 9 of the sensor is joined by two rigid cables 11 to the peripheral electrical connector 8, from which the warning lamp is switched on by way of a line 12. Following the objective of retaining in position the bimetallic sensor within the heater, the elasticity of the metal cables 11 extended with a small angle of inclination produces a force “F” applied to the sensor body 7a against the support surface 4a. The position of the sensor 7 is thus held fixed against the movements caused by the thermal constraints. Instead of using rigid intermediate connection cables 11, the sensor body 7a may be retained by means of the direct connection of the rigid output terminals 11 of contact 9 to the rigid terminal of electrical connector 8.
In a temperature (T)/time (t) diagram
The moments of time t0 to t5 marked in the diagram in
In the example described in
In reference to curve PA in
With the arrangement of the bimetallic sensor 7 according to the invention, a differential interval smaller than 40° C. is attained between the two ZT values at the plate, referring to the moments “t1” of closure and “t5” of opening of switch 9, which matches up with a rated actuating interval of TU=65°±15, the body of the sensor 7a being fixed in the heater cavity 13 and in a position “A” relative to one of the heating resistors, and separated by a space “S” from the peripheral insulating wall 6, as well as a space “B” from the cooking plate for its electrical insulation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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200401433 U | Jun 2004 | ES | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4059817 | Hollweck et al. | Nov 1977 | A |
4791397 | Wells | Dec 1988 | A |
6121587 | Leiprecht et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6756569 | Bates et al. | Jun 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050274710 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |