The present invention relates to a refrigerating appliance comprising an evaporator and at least one compartment cooled by circulating air from and to the evaporator. In a refrigerating appliance of this type known from DE 10 2005 021 560 A1 a distribution chamber is formed adjacent to the cooling compartment which is separated from said compartment by a perforated wall. The holes can be covered on the distribution chamber side by a fleece in order to prevent a strong stream of cold air from the distribution chamber hitting sensitive cooled items in the compartment and drying them out. The airflow slowed down by the diffusion layer can however result in condensation water only being removed inadequately from the compartment. Thus cooled items in the compartment can become damp, which is also not desirable.
The correlation between the amount of moisture in the compartment and whether or not the holes are covered by the fleece is not immediately obvious to a user because the amount of moisture that the user observes in the compartment is primarily a function of the type of cooled items stored in said compartment. It is therefore highly probable that a user will not handle the fleece correctly and will not set appropriate storage conditions for the cooled items in question.
The object of the present invention is to further develop the known refrigerating appliance in such a way that the probability of incorrect use is reduced.
The object is achieved by the features claimed in claim 1: As the user can directly specify the desired circulation condition, in particular the degree to which moisture is removed from the content of the compartment, the user does not need to know the correlation between the position of the control element and the circulation conditions that result from it. In such cases what is specified by the user is usually based on an empirically calculated value stored in a data memory, although the user can if necessary also change this value and transfer the changed value to another data memory or, alternatively, overwrite the specified value with the changed value.
According to a first, simple embodiment the control unit is set up to ascertain the specified value by offering the user various values relating to the circulation condition from which to choose.
According to a more developed embodiment, which can be combined with the first embodiment in an appliance in various operating modes, the control unit is set up to ascertain the specified value by offering various types of cooled item possibly accommodated in the storage compartment from which to choose and selecting a suitable value relating to the circulation condition for the specified cooled item on the basis of the user input specifying the type of cooled item.
In order that the correct choice of circulation condition can be made it is preferable that an assignment table be stored in the control unit that assigns suitable values relating to the circulation condition in each case for a quantity of types of cooled item.
As various types of cooled item can be accommodated in the storage compartment simultaneously, the control unit ought to be able to react appropriately to the input of a user who specifies various types of cooled item. If the circulation condition is a quantitative amount, i.e. can be expressed in numbers that give a smaller/larger ratio, it is preferable for the control unit to be set up to select a value relating to the circulation condition to be adjusted at the control element that is at least as great as the lowest value assigned to a specified type of cooled item and is not greater than the highest value assigned to a specified type of cooled item.
A rule for selecting the adjustable value of the circulation condition when several types of cooled item are input can be specifiable by the user.
The following can be considered as possible rules:
a. Select the respective lowest value assigned to a specified type of cooled item,
b. Select the respective highest value assigned to a specified type of cooled item,
c. Form a mean value from among the values assigned to the specified types of cooled item.
The refrigerating appliance can comprise a circulation path for circulating air from an evaporator to the storage compartment that passes through a diffusion layer, as well as a circulation path that bypasses the diffusion layer. In this case an element is expediently provided as a control element in such a position as to influence the distribution of the circulating air to the two circulation paths.
In particular, air passage openings can be formed in a wall separating an air flow area from the compartment, and a diffusion layer can be moved, by means of the motor, between a first position in which it covers the air passage openings and a second position in which it enables air to stream through the air passage openings while bypassing the diffusion layer.
In the second position the diffusion layer in particular can be offset from the dividing wall.
Further features and advantages of the invention emerge from the description given below of exemplary embodiments which refer to the enclosed figures. The figures show
Formed on the front side of a dividing wall 9 separating the evaporator area 3 from the first cooling area 4 (see
Attached on the dividing wall 9 adjacent to the rear wall 8 of the carcass 1 is a distribution cowl 12 on which a plurality of air holes 13 is formed, through which the cooling air coming from the evaporator area 3 is distributed in the upper part of the first cooling area 4 in various directions. Located on the rear wall 8 below the distribution cowl 12 are several pairs of openings 14 out of which cooling air can also flow. The height of these pairs of openings 14 is selected so that when cooled item carriers are installed in the first cooling area 4, each pair of openings 14 supplies a compartment delimited by the cooled item carriers.
Accommodated behind the channel 16, adjacent to the rear wall 8, is a fan which comprises a motor 18, a blade wheel 19 driven by said motor and a housing 20. On the front side of the housing 20, in the axial direction of the blade wheel 19, is formed an induction opening. The upper half of the housing 20 runs in the circumferential direction closely around the blade wheel 19; the housing 20 is open at the bottom so that a rotation of the blade wheel 19 causes air accelerated radially outwards to flow down into a chamber 21.
Accommodated in this chamber 21 is a swivel-mounted flap 22. In the position shown in the figure the flap 22 blocks a cold air supply opening 23 which leads vertically downwards to the first cooling area 4. This means that the air is forced out towards the rear wall 8 and into a cold air supply path 24 which leads within the rear wall 8 from the first cooling area 4, separated by a thin insulation layer 25, to the second cooling area 6. If the flap 22 swivel-mounted on a dividing wall 26 between the cold air supply opening 23 and the cold air supply line 24 is put into a vertical position, shown in the figure as a dotted outline, it blocks the cold air supply path 24 and the cold air flow reaches the distribution cowl 12 through the cold air supply opening 23. One of the air holes 13 through which the air flows out from the distribution cowl 12 into the first cooling area 4 can be seen in the section depicted in
The cold air supply path 24 leads to a distribution chamber 27 which extends into the dividing wall 5 separated from the first cooling area 4 by an insulation layer above the second cooling area 6. Arranged between the distribution chamber 27 and the second cooling area 6 is a horizontal partition wall 29. It is provided with a plurality of openings 30 (see
From the cooling area 6, air flows via the air line 11 formed in the door 2 back to the evaporator area 3. To prevent an uncontrolled transfer of air between the cooling areas 4, 6 at different temperatures, the dividing wall 5 has a sealing profile 34 on its leading edge abutting the door 2.
The partition wall 29 can be installed in the carcass 1 so that it can be removed, for example as shown in
Each of the plates 40a, 40b is intended to carry an air-permeable fleece 50 not shown in
Each of the plates 40a, 40b is suspended at its edge facing towards the rear wall 8 or the air inlet opening 37 from a free end of a two-arm pivot lever 41a, 41b. Controlled by a control unit 42 that can be rotary-driven by an electric motor 39 and is shown in greater detail in conjunction with
Two sensors 54 are provided to record the position—raised from or resting on the dividing wall 29—of the edges of the plates 40a, 40b facing towards the rear wall and to relay said position to a control circuit 56 (see
The result of the two ramps 45a, 45b being suitably offset from each other at an angle is that there is a position of the control element 42 in each case in which the pins 49 of the two pivot levers 41a, 41b touch the base plate 43, a position in which one pin 49 touches the top section 47 of the ramp 45a while the other pin 49 touches the base plate, a position in which both pins 49 touch the top section 47 of the ramp 45a or 45b assigned to them, as well as a position in which one pin 49 touches the top section of the ramp 45b while the other touches the base plate 43. Expediently the positions follow each other in the stated sequence during a rotation of the control element 42. The direction of rotation of the motor 39 is selected so that the pins 49 glide in each case along the gently rising flanks 46 to the top section 47 and subsequently fall back along the steep flanks 48 to the base plate 43. The fact that the flanks 48 are kept steep means that on the one hand the angle intervals at which one of the four positions is present can be made large so that only a small degree of precision is required in the control of the angle of rotation of the control element 42, whereas on the other hand the gentle rise of the flanks 46 makes it easier for the pins 49 to slide onto the ramps 45a, 45b and facilitates the associated lifting of the plates 40.
A second embodiment of the partition wall 29 and of parts mounted on it is shown in an overhead view in
Rotatable control elements 42 coupled, for example, by an electric motor not shown in the diagram, each comprise a base plate 43 and an eccentric projection raised from it, here in the form of a circle sector-shaped rib 52. If the rotation of the control element 42 causes the rib 52 to press against the plate 40a or 40b, as shown by the example of the right-hand plate 40b in
The fact that the ribs 52 of the control element 42 are set at a suitable angle to each other means that four states can also be set here, in which either the two plates 40a, 40b rest on the partition wall 29, one plate rests on the wall in each case and the other is raised, or both plates 40 are raised.
By contrast with the diagrams shown in
Diverse variations and developments of the exemplary embodiments described here are possible. Thus, for example, the rotatable control elements 42 can be replaced by linearly displaceable ramps, or other drive mechanisms for moving the plates 40a, 40b can be provided.
In order that the position of the plates 40a, 40b can be adjusted to the cooled items stored in the assigned pull-out drawer 7 at any time, a user interface 55 is provided at which a user—by selecting from a displayed menu, for example—can specify the type of cooled item stored in each pull-out drawer and, on the basis of an assignment table, an electronic control circuit 56 selects and sets the position of the plates 40a, 40b that is appropriate to the respective cooled items.
In step S2 the control circuit 56 specifies a default position for the plate 40a or 40b corresponding to the compartment on the basis of the content indicated for each compartment 7. This is done by consulting a table 56 stored in the control circuit that gives a default plate position for every type of cooled item offered to the user to choose from in step S1. In the simplest case this default position either has the value 0 or the value 1, depending on whether the plate is lying flat or is fully raised. Intermediate values for the position of the plate can however also be given in the table.
If the user has only specified one type of cooled item for a compartment 7, the default position specified for the compartment corresponds to the position given in the table for that cooled item. If various types of cooled item are specified, as a default position for the compartment a mean value for the default values that apply to the types of cooled item contained therein can be the highest or the lowest of these default values. Which of these three alternatives is chosen can depend on the type of cooled item specified. If, for example, loose leafy vegetables are specified, the default value for this item is then most likely to be selected as the default plate position, as this cooled item becomes damaged more rapidly when conditions become very dry, whereas for other types of cooled item a mean value is calculated. In each case, two numerical values in the interval of [0.1], one for each compartment 7, are obtained as the default position.
In step S3 the default positions obtained in this way are compared with a circuit threshold. In the simplest case the circuit threshold can be a constant, e.g. 0.5. If the default position is above this, a decision is made to raise the relevant plate; if it is below it, the plate should be lowered. If the sensors 54 report that both plates 40a, 40b are already in the default position calculated for them
then the motor 39 remains switched off and the process transfers to step S4, in which the fan is
operated in order to circulate cold air between the evaporator area 3 and the cooling area 6.
If both plates 40a, 40b are not in the default position the control circuit sets the motor 39 running until either the sensors 54 in step S5 report that the default position has been reached or until it is ascertained in step S6 that a maximum permitted running time of the motor 39 has been exceeded. If the latter is the case, a malfunction is present, for example because one of the plates 40a, 40b is frozen solid to the partition wall 29 and as a result the control unit 42 is prevented from rotating and the malfunction is indicated to the user on the display screen of the user interface 55.
According to a more developed embodiment, step S3 is also periodically repeated by the control circuit 56 in step S4 after the fan starts operating, as indicated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 010 520.1 | Feb 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/051787 | 2/16/2009 | WO | 00 | 8/2/2010 |