Many restaurants' success depends on how quickly customers can be served with food items that a customer orders and on the quality of the food when it is served. If the rate at which a restaurant prepares food products equals the rate at which those same food products are ordered and sold, a restaurant can theoretically have freshly-prepared foods ready to serve for customers as they arrive. Since it is not always possible to match food production with customer ordering rates, and since certain fast food restaurant customers expect to receive their ordered food items quickly, many fast food restaurants prepare various food items and keep them ready for sale until a customer arrives and purchases a pre-cooked food item.
Holding ovens to keep food warm are well known. Many such ovens allow a cooked food item to be put into the oven from one side of the oven and taken from the oven on the opposite side whereby food preparers add food to the oven and food servers take food from the oven.
While food holding ovens are well known and enable a restaurant service provider to keep food warm until served, a refrigerated food holding cabinet that provides the same or nearly the same functionality might enable a restaurant to keep foods like salads, cold until they are ready for consumption. Unlike a conventional refrigerator, which has a door that opens and closes, and which is awkward to use in many restaurants, a refrigerated, point-of-use holding cabinet would therefore be an improvement over the prior art.
The cabinet in the figure is sized, shaped and arranged to have four vertical levels or tiers denominated by the letters, A, B, C and D. The tiers A-D are considered herein to be “stacked” on top of each other with the “A” tier being the top or upper-most tier. The “B” tier is below the “A” tier but above the “C” tier. The “D” tier is the bottom or lowest tier in the cabinet 10.
The tiers are vertically separated from each other and defined by planar, horizontal and thermally-insulated shelves 46, best seen in
The separation distance or space between the top and bottom panels 46A and 46B defines an intra-shelf space. The intra-shelf space between the plates 46A and 46B is preferably at least partially filled with a thermally insulating material such as a “rock wool” or fiberglass to thermally separate the panels 46A and 46B from each other but to also thermally separate vertically adjacent tiers A-D from each other. Thermally insulating the panels 46A and 46B from each other thus facilitates a temperature differential between vertically-adjacent tiers A-D.
As best seen in
Computers that control refrigeration equipment are operatively coupled to the information-bearing displays, user controls and to the heat-absorbing refrigeration equipment and devices described below. The computers are preferably computers as disclosed in the Applicant's co-pending patent application entitled “Food Holding Cabinet Power Supplies with Downloadable Software,” which was filed on Nov. 16, 2009 and which is identified by U.S. application Ser. No. 12/618,957. That patent application discloses, among other things, apparatuses and methods by which compartments of a food holding cabinet can be individually controlled using microprocessors having downloadable software. The content of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/618,957 is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Each depicted cabinet embodiment is configured to have in each tier A-D, two, side-by-side, thermally-conductive and refrigerated, food-storage-tray-receiving members 50, which are referred to hereafter as tray-receiving members 50. As can be seen in the figures, each tray-receiving member 50 has two open ends, which are proximate to the front and rear sides 40 and 45 respectively. The tray-receiving members 50 also have a generally flat bottom 84 bounded by two vertical sides 88, shown in
Tray-receiving members 50 are cast or extruded aluminum, which is considered herein to be a thermally conductive material. They are able to absorb or “sink” heat from an item placed inside a tray-receiving member as long as the temperature of the tray-receiving member 50 is less than the temperature of an item therein. Stated another way, the tray-receiving members 50 sink or absorb heat from food and/or food holding trays 55 placed inside the tray-receiving member 50, as long as the tray-receiving members are refrigerated or cooled to a temperature less than the food or food holding tray 55 placed inside. Depending on the size and shape of the food item, food holding tray 55 and tray-receiving members 50, heat energy can be transferred from a food item and/or tray 55, into a tray-receiving member 50 by one or more of conduction, radiation, and/or convection currents inside a tray-receiving member 50.
Food holding trays 55 preferably have an exterior shape best seen in
The cabinet 10 has a plurality of front panels 42, best seen in
The tray-receiving members 50, which are also referred to herein as compartments 50, are configured to receive food holding trays 55 through the openings 44 in the front and rear panels 42. An alternate cabinet embodiment not shown has a “closed” rear panel, which receives food holding trays 55 into tray-receiving members 50 through U-shaped openings 44 in the front panel 42.
The contents of the Applicant's co-pending patent application Ser. No. 12/763,553 are incorporated herein by reference. That application was filed Apr. 20, 2010, and is entitled, “Point-of-Use Holding Cabinet.”
A single compressor 62, single condenser 66 and a single fan 70 comprise a single, refrigeration system 60, and are depicted as being located along the right-hand side of the stacked tiers A-D, but nevertheless within the right-hand side panel 35 of the cabinet 10A. U-shaped, heat-exchanging evaporator coils 68 are mechanically attached to the outside or the “underside” of the tray-receiving members 50 in each tier A-D. The coils 68, which are typically made from copper or aluminum, are considered to be located outside or beneath the tray-receiving members 50 but “inside” the cabinet.
Attaching the evaporator coil 68 to a tray-receiving member 50 thermally couples the heat-exchanging evaporator coil 68 to the tray-receiving member 50 and vice-versa. For clarity and claim construction purposes, the evaporator coil 68, the working fluid, as well as the entire refrigeration system 60, are all considered herein to be heat-absorbing refrigeration elements, since each of them is in either direct or indirect thermal communication with a corresponding tray-receiving member 50, and, each of them functions to remove or absorb heat energy from a tray-receiving member 50 and food items therein.
In one embodiment of the cabinet 10A, multiple, heat-exchanging evaporator coils 68 are connected in series to each other and a single compressor and condenser mounted substantially as shown in
In a cabinet that uses a liquid-phase/vapor-phase refrigeration system, a preferred way of providing independent temperature control of different tray-receiving member 50 is use a plurality of gas refrigeration systems 60 in each cabinet 10A. Components that include a compressor, condenser and expansion valve for small, conventional refrigeration systems 60 are readily provided along one or both sides of the tiers, above the top tier and/or below the lowest tier with each gas refrigeration system 60 being connected to a corresponding single evaporator coil 68 that is mechanically attached to and therefore in thermal communication with, a single, corresponding tray-receiving member 50. In such an alternate embodiment, one or more different tray-receiving members can be kept at a particular temperature by controlling the corresponding refrigeration system 60. Such an embodiment facilitates the temperature control of individual tray-receiving members 50, adds some functional redundancy to the cabinet 10A, and increases the overall heat absorption capacity of the cabinet 10A, but at the expense of additional manufacturing cost and complexity.
As best seen in
Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that controlling tray-receiving member temperature is important to preserving food freshness. Foods stored in the cabinets are preferably kept at or below about forty degrees Fahrenheit. And, unless the food items are to be stored for extended periods of time, food items kept the cabinet 10A are also preferably kept from freezing.
Tray receiving member 50 temperature control is preferably effectuated in part using a semiconductor temperature sensor 180, as described in the Applicant's co-pending patent application identified by U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/759,760, filed on Apr. 14, 2010. That patent application is entitled “Temperature Sensor for a Food Holding Cabinet.” Its contents are incorporated herein by reference in entirety.
The generally parallelepiped-shaped food holding trays 55 preferably have a substantially planar bottom 155 and four generally planar sidewalls 255. The sidewalls 255 are substantially orthogonal to the bottom 155 and surround an upwardly-facing, open top side 355 through which food is placed into or removed from the tray 55.
The open top side 355 of a tray 55 is surrounded by “lip” 455 that extends outwardly and away from the open side 355 by about ½ inch. The “lip” 455 allows the tray 55 to “rest” or “sit” on horizontal shoulders 100 in the tray-receiving member 50 sidewalls 88. The shoulders 100 extend away from each other horizontally. One or more optional, elongated handles 655 extend away from the tops of corresponding sidewalls 255.
Food holding trays 55 are preferably made from a thermally-conductive material such as aluminum to enhance heat transfer from the tray 55 into the thermally-conductive tray-receiving member 50, regardless of how the tray-receiving member 50 is refrigerated. The generally U-shaped cross section of the tray-receiving members 50 facilitates the trays' insertion into, and removal from, tray-receiving members 50. More importantly, the generally U-shaped cross section being substantially the same shape of a tray-receiving member 50 means that more area of a tray is exposed to or in contact with a corresponding surface of a tray-receiving member, which means that heat energy in a tray 55 is more effectively transferred to a refrigerated, tray-receiving member 50 than might happen if the two bodies' shapes were significantly different.
As best seen in
The sidewalls' 88 attachment, as shown in
A close inspection of
Flavor transfer and tray refrigeration is also improved using a cover over a tray-receiving member 50. As can be seen in
The space above the shoulders 100 receives, and the shoulders 100 support, a removable and reversible cover 160 for food holding trays 55 placed into a tray-receiving member 50. The cover 160, which is preferably formed by casting or extruding, has a cross-sectional shape reminiscent of an upper-case letter “I” laid on one side. The cover 160 has a horizontal web section 164, which is “attached” to two, support legs 162. The support legs 162 are parallel to each other and orthogonal to the web section 164. The support legs 162 are sized, shaped and arranged, substantially as shown in
The horizontal web section 164 joins the vertically-oriented support legs 162 along a horizontal line vertically offset from the center line of the support legs 162. In a first orientation of the cover 160 best seen in the left-hand side of
The distance of the sidewalls 100 above the bottom 84 of the tray-receiving member 50 and the shoulder width are a design choices but those dimensions are selected to enable a food tray 55 having an exterior, peripherally “lip” 455 to be slid into a tray receiving member 50 such that the tray's lip 455 rests on the shoulders 100 with an air gap between the sides of the tray 55 and the side walls 88 of the tray-receiving member 88 and with an air gap between the bottom 155 of the food holding tray 55 and the bottom 84 of the tray-receiving member 50. In such an embodiment, heat energy from the tray 55 is radiated from the tray 55 and absorbed by the cold surfaces of the tray-receiving member 50. Heat is also carried from the tray 55 by convection currents.
In another embodiment, tray-receiving member 50 has side walls 88 that do not have shoulders but are instead smooth or substantially smooth. In such an embodiment, a tray-receiving member has a horizontal separation distance between the side walls that is sufficient to allow a food holding tray 55 to rest directly on, and in direct thermal communication with the bottom of the tray-receiving member 50. Having an exterior surface of a food holding tray 55 in direct thermal contact with one or more surfaces of a tray-receiving member facilitates heat conduction from the tray 55 into a refrigerated, thermally-conductive tray receiving member.
The working fluid used in the cabinet 10B of
The coil 120, which is preferably aluminum or copper, is mechanically attached to the underside of “outside” of the tray-receiving members 50 using thermally-conductive adhesive or mechanical fastening methods described above.
The liquid used in the second cabinet embodiment 10B is considered to be chilled or refrigerated if the liquid in the tank 110 is at least twenty degrees Fahrenheit, below the ambient air temperature. Due to the nature of the refrigeration cycle used in the cabinet 10B shown in
In addition to being able to selectively route chilled liquid using electrically operated valves, the chilled liquid volumetric flow rate through the heat exchanging coils 130 can be modulated electrically, further enabling individual temperature control of different tray-receiving members 50.
The refrigeration system 100 shown in
A disadvantage of using Peltier devices 140 to sink heat from tray-receiving members 50 is that heat energy from the hot side of a Peltier device needs to be dissipated in order for the Peltier device 140 to be able to absorb heat into the cold side. In the cabinet 10C shown in
For completeness,
As mentioned above, each cabinet embodiment controls tray-receiving member 50 temperature using one or more semiconductor temperature sensors 180 thermally coupled to a tray-receiving member 50. In
In
An electrical signal from a semi-conductor temperature sensor 180 that represents a tray-receiving member temperature is provided to a computer, as disclosed in the applicants co-pending patent application Ser. No. 12/618,957. The computer thereafter issues control signals to the refrigeration device, whether the device is the refrigeration system 60 depicted in
The master controller 74 reads electrical signals from one or more semiconductor temperature sensors 180 thermally coupled to various tray-receiving members 50. The CPU 74 turns the refrigeration system 60 on and off in response to temperature information received from the sensors 180. In one embodiment, the refrigeration system 60 is turned on when all of the sensors 180 indicate that the tray-receiving member 50 temperature is too high. In another embodiment, the refrigeration system is turned on when at least one temperature sensor 180 indicates that its corresponding tray-receiving member 50 temperature is too high.
As with the embodiment shown in
As with the embodiments shown in
In each of
Those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the bottom and sidewalls of a tray-receiving member 50 define a cavity or void wherein a food holding tray 55 can be placed. Those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that food to be kept cold can also be placed into the refrigerated, cavity without being in a tray 55. The term, “tray-receiving member” should therefore not be construed to require use of a food holding tray. A “tray-receiving member” includes a refrigerated device or structure capable of receiving and refrigerating food items such as wrapped sandwiches as well as food holding trays containing food items to be kept refrigerated.
The foregoing description is for purposes of illustration only and not for purposes of limitation. The true scope of the invention is set forth by the appurtenant claims.
This application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/567,821 filed Aug. 6, 2012, which was a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/782,843, filed May 19, 2010, and which issued Dec. 17, 2013, as U.S. Pat. No. 8,607,587.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13567821 | Aug 2012 | US |
Child | 14189269 | US | |
Parent | 12782843 | May 2010 | US |
Child | 13567821 | US |