The disclosure relates to refrigerated cases. More particularly, the disclosure relates to evaporation of defrost water.
Refrigerated cases typically feature an evaporator along a recirculating air flowpath to/from the refrigerated compartment of the case. Water from the air condenses on the evaporator and may freeze. Resulting frost may accumulate on the evaporator and may, in turn, block the airflow. Accordingly, from time to time, a defrost mode is initiated. Exemplary defrost modes may include use of an external heating element (e.g., an electric resistance element) to heat the evaporator and melt the frost. Alternatively, warm refrigerant may be used (e.g., via running the compressor in reverse or using multi-way valves to direct warm refrigerant to the evaporator (which may then function as a condenser or gas cooler in such a defrost mode)).
The defrost operation produces melt water which may pass to a drain and be collected in a pan or other vessel. The melt water, in turn, is then encouraged to evaporate by heating (e.g., by exposure to warm refrigerant). Evaporation may further be facilitated via partial immersion of sponge elements in the accumulation in the vessel. The sponge elements wick water out of the vessel and expose them to air along a large surface area.
One aspect of the disclosure involves a refrigerated case comprising a body. The body has a refrigerated compartment and an air flowpath. The body includes a lower wall below the air flowpath. A drain pipe protrudes from the lower wall and has a lower outlet. A refrigerant-air heat exchanger is along a refrigerant flowpath and within the air flowpath. The body further includes a water trap vessel having an upper end secured to the base, a lower portion surrounding the drain outlet, at least one vessel outlet above the drain outlet, and a segmented rim flange. The body includes a plurality of features engaging an underside of the flange along respective segments to vertically and laterally retain the water trap vessel and permit removal of the vessel via a rotation of the vessel.
In various implementations, the air flowpath may extend from an inlet positioned to receive air from the compartment to an outlet positioned to discharge air to the compartment. The case may further comprise a refrigeration system comprising: said refrigerant flowpath; a compressor along the refrigerant flowpath downstream of the refrigerant air heat exchanger in a cooling mode of operation; a first refrigerant air heat exchanger being a heat rejection heat exchanger in the cooling mode and downstream of the compressor; said refrigerant air heat exchanger as a second heat exchanger and being a heat absorption heat exchanger in the cooling mode; and an expansion device along the refrigerant flowpath, downstream of the first refrigerant air heat exchanger and upstream of the second refrigerant air heat exchanger in the cooling mode. The water trap vessel may comprise a molded plastic. A plurality of slots may segment the flange and form the at least one vessel outlet. The plurality of features may comprise a plurality of threaded fasteners; and the body further may comprise an additional threaded fastener between a respective pair of said segments. The case may further comprise a heated drain pan below the vessel.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves a method for using the case. The method comprises installing the water trap vessel by: lifting the water trap vessel into place; and rotating the water trap vessel in a first direction about a central longitudinal axis of the drain pipe. The installing may be a re-installing and the method may further comprise, prior to the re-installing: removing the water trap vessel by rotating the water trap vessel opposite the first direction; lowering the water trap vessel; and cleaning the water trap vessel.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves a water trap vessel having: an upper end; a lower portion; at least one vessel outlet; and a segmented rim flange. The vessel may comprise a molded plastic. A plurality of slots may segment the flange and form the at least one vessel outlet. The segmented rim flange may have a circular perimeter portion.
The details of one or more embodiments are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
The exemplary case 20 includes a refrigeration system 60 (
In a cooling mode of operation, refrigerant compressed by the compressor exits the outlet 68 and proceeds to the first heat exchanger 70 which acts as a condenser or gas cooler (heating the air flow 84 to reduce the temperature of refrigerant as it flows through the first heat exchanger 70). Refrigerant proceeds downstream along the refrigerant flowpath 64 to the expansion device 74 where it is expanded and its temperature further reduced. The cold refrigerant enters the second heat exchanger 72 (which acts as an evaporator, absorbing heat from the airflow 86 and heating the refrigerant as it flows through the second heat exchanger 72). Refrigerant discharged from the second heat exchanger 72 returns to the compressor inlet 66. Other details, including accumulators, valves, and sensors may be present but are not shown for ease of illustration.
In a cooling mode, moisture in the inlet flow 116 may freeze on the heat exchanger 72 and may produce a frost accumulation which may lead to a blockage. Accordingly, a defrost mode may be initiated. Exemplary defrost may be via a heating element 117 (e.g., an electric resistance element) and/or via directing hot refrigerant to the heat exchanger 72 (instead of cold refrigerant). The defrost operation melts the frost which may flow downward as a flow 130 (e.g., of droplets) and reach a drain 132. An exemplary drain is formed proximate a lower end of the rear duct 104. The drain, in turn, discharges water as one or more flows 140 into an evaporation vessel 142. The exemplary drain 132 is formed by the combination of a drain pipe assembly 150 and a trap vessel 152. The drain pipe assembly 150 is mounted along a drain trough 154 along an upper surface of an insulated wall 156 forming a lower wall/boundary of the base duct.
The exemplary assembly 150 (
The exemplary trap vessel 152 may be manufactured in several stages: first there may be cutting or molding of a precursor (which may be flat or may have a shallow bowl shape) of an appropriate material. Then there may be a pressing/drawing process forming or deepening the bowl (e.g., as distinguished from an injection molding). Thereafter, the recesses may be machined (at least into the bowl portion). Further details of the trap vessel 152 and its installation are seen at
The exemplary trap vessel 152 is secured to the wall 156 via a plurality of fasteners (e.g., threaded fasteners such as screws having washers). In the exemplary embodiment, an exemplary four screws 240 are positioned so that their shafts/shanks engage the rim 178 and the undersides of their heads engage (via washers 242) the underside 244 of the flange. These exemplary screws are positioned at equal radius from the axis 520 at exemplary 90° intervals. A fifth such screw 250 is positioned slightly radially inboard of the screws 240 to define a stop.
In manufacturing the case, the screws 240 and 250 may initially be installed (either to their final depths or slightly proud thereof). A template may be used to position the screws if the screws are self-drilling/tapping or alternatively, may be used to pre-drill holes. After exemplary screw installation, the trap vessel is raised into place in a broken line orientation (
From time-to-time it may be desired to clean the trap vessel. The vessel 152 may be removed via first counter-rotating to the initial broken line (
The deep drawing process may allow the bowl to be economically made. By way of contrast, JP2004353909 shows a more complex system wherein a molded trap vessel has a bayonet fitting engagement with a molded drain member. As is discussed above, engagement directly to the wall may also allow minimal changes when reengineering from a conventional S-trap configuration such as that shown in
Although an embodiment is described above in detail, such description is not intended for limiting the scope of the present disclosure. It will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. For example, when implemented in the reengineering of an existing system configuration, details of the existing configuration may influence or dictate details of any particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Benefit is claimed of U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/302,749, filed Feb. 9, 2010, and entitled “Refrigerated Case Defrost Water Drain”, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety as if set forth at length.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US10/60428 | 12/15/2010 | WO | 00 | 6/13/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61302749 | Feb 2010 | US |