The present invention relates to a refrigerating device with cooling of circulating air. In such a refrigerating device, the evaporator is usually accommodated in a chamber which is separated from the inner chamber provided for the storing of refrigerated goods, and a cold-air pipe out of which air cooled on the evaporator flows into the inner chamber, extends in a wall of the housing of the refrigerating device. The purpose of such a cold-air pipe can vary. In multiflow devices, the cold-air pipe runs along a wall of a storage area of the inner chamber that is to be supplied with this cold air, and it has a plurality of through-apertures distributed over its length so as to release the cold air to this storage area in a spatially distributed manner. A transition piece can be provided at the downstream end of such a cold-air pipe, said transition piece directing the air flow into a last air inlet aperture of the inner chamber. Such a cold-air pipe does not need to be insulated from the storage area along which it flows since the cold air conducted in it serves in any case in cooling this storage area.
In refrigerating devices with storage areas which are temperature-controlled independently of one another a cold-air pipe that extends along a first storage area may be required in order to conduct cold air from the evaporator to a second storage area. It is useful in such a refrigerating device to provide an insulating layer between the cold-air pipe and the first storage area. Also, a transition piece is needed on the end of the cold-air pipe in order to guide the air into the second storage area. If, however, the insulating layer ends shortly before reaching the air inlet aperture, cross-sectional discontinuities in the cold-air pipe result therefrom which cause turbulence, thereby increasing the flow-resistance of the cold-air pipe in an undesired manner.
The object of the present invention is to indicate a refrigerating device with cooling of circulating air, in which the flow resistance to which the cold air is exposed on its way to an air inlet aperture of the inner chamber is minimized.
The object is achieved in that in a refrigerating device comprising a housing which encloses an inner chamber, a cold-air pipe which runs in a wall of the housing, separated from the inner chamber by an insulating layer, and a transition piece which connects one end of the cold-air pipe to an air inlet aperture of the inner chamber, the transition piece comprises a guide wall which connects a wall of the cold-aid pipe which is adjacent to the insulating layer to an edge of the air inlet aperture adjacent to the end of the insulating layer in a continuous manner.
In order to prevent any turbulence from occurring on the guide wall, the latter is preferably continuously curved between the end of the cold-air pipe and the aperture.
In a particularly preferred embodiment, the transition piece comprises an outer shell which connects in a continuously curved manner a side of the cold-air pipe facing away from the inner chamber to an edge of the air inlet aperture facing away from the end of the cold-air pipe and fits foam-tight with an inner skin of the wall. Such an outer shell can be used uniformly both in a refrigerating device comprising an insulating layer between cold-air pipe and inner chamber and in a refrigerating device which does not have such an insulating layer.
The guide wall is preferably incorporated in the shell of the transition piece. In this way, the guide wall is shielded by the shell from insulating foam filling the wall of the housing and no allowance has to be made when attaching the guide wall for this guide wall to fit foam-tight with any other parts.
In order to fix the position of the guide wall in the shell, the shell can be furnished with a ridge protruding into its interior, which ridge penetrates a slot of the guide wall.
The invention is particularly usefully applicable in a refrigerating device, the inner chamber of which is subdivided by a partition into various storage areas and in which the cold-air pipe and the air inlet aperture are located on different sides of the partition.
If the wall of the housing of the refrigerating device has a metal inner skin, this should, in order to guarantee an effective thermal separation between the storage areas on different sides of the partition, preferably be interrupted between the end of the insulating layer and the edge of the air inlet aperture adjacent to said end.
Further features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the descriptions below of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
On the front of a partition 9 (see
Adjacent to the back wall 8, a distributor cap 12 is fastened to the partition 9, on which distributor cap a large number of air holes 13 are formed, through which cold air originating from the evaporator area 3 is distributed in various directions in the upper part of the first refrigerating area 4. Located on the back wall 8 below the distributor cap 12 are several pairs of apertures 14 out of which cold air can likewise flow. The height of these pairs of apertures 14 is chosen such that if refrigerated-goods containers are mounted in the first refrigerating area 4, each pair of apertures 14 supplies one compartment.
A fan is accommodated behind the trough 16, adjacent to the back wall 8, said fan comprising a motor 18, a blade wheel 19 driven by said motor, and a housing 20. An intake aperture is fashioned on the front of the housing 20, in an axial direction of the blade wheel 19. The top half of the housing 20 runs in a circumferential direction tightly about the blade wheel 19; the housing 20 is open toward the bottom such that air which is accelerated radially outwardly by a rotation of the blade wheel 19 flows downward into a chamber 21.
A swivelable flap 22 is accommodated in this chamber 21. In the position shown in the figure, the flap 22 blocks a cold-air supply aperture 23, which leads vertically down to the first refrigerating area 4. The air is in this way forced toward the back wall 8 and into a cold-air supply pathway 24 which in the interior of the back wall 8, separated from the first refrigerating area 4 by a thin insulating layer 25, leads to the second refrigerating area 6. The cold-air supply pathway is composed of a first transition piece 38, which lengthens the chamber 21 into the back wall 8, an air pipe, formed by an extruded profile 35, which extends in the back wall 8 in a straight line downward along the first refrigerating area 4, and a lower transition piece 39 which connects to the lower end of the extruded profile 35 and directs the air into the second refrigerating area 6 through a cold-air feed aperture 37 cut into the inner skin of the back wall 8. In the second refrigerating area 6, the cold air passes into a first distributor chamber 27, which perpendicular to the sectional plane of
A second distributor chamber 31 is located, mirror-image-like relative to the first distributor chamber 27, between the vertical dividing wall 28 and the door 2. The widened upper edge of the dividing wall 28 abutting the partition 5 between the refrigerating areas 4 and 6 separates the distributor chambers 27, 31 from one another and prevents or limits any direct transfer of cold air from the chamber 27 to the chamber 31. In order to create an effective air block between the chambers 27, 31, the upper edge of the dividing wall 28 can be fitted with a sealing strip, not shown in the figure, which is compressed between it and the partition 5 and produces a sealed contact. A narrow gap between the upper edge of the dividing wall 28 and the partition 5 can, however, also be accepted, provided the air flow through this gap remains small relative to that which flows from the first distributor chamber 27 into the pull-out box 7.
From the pull-out box 7 the air flows through apertures 32, which are formed in the horizontal dividing wall 28 between the storage zone and the second distributor chamber 31, down into the latter.
Opposite an air outlet aperture 33 on the side of the second distributor chamber 31 facing the door is an inlet aperture for the air pipe 11 running through the door 2 back to the evaporator area 3. A sealing strip 34 fastened to the front edge of the partition 5 and compressed between said front edge and the door 2 prevents any transfer of air out of the distributor chamber 31 into the first refrigerating area 4 and thereby ensures that the two refrigerating areas 4, 6 can be separated and loaded with cold air without affecting one another.
The component forming the dividing walls 28, 29 is removably assembled in the second refrigerating area 6; in the case examined here, its lateral edges lie on ridges 35 which respectively project by several millimeters out of the side walls of the second refrigerating area 6. This gives the user the facility to remove the dividing walls 28, 29 and to fill the pull-out box 7 with refrigerated goods beyond its top edge, should this be necessary.
If the flap 22 hinged to a partition 26 between the cold-air supply aperture 23 and the cold-air supply pathway 24 is brought to a vertical position, represented in the figure as a dotted outline, it blocks the cold-air supply pathway 24, and the flow of cold air reaches the distributor cap 12 through the cold-air supply aperture 23. In the figure, one of the air holes 13 can be seen through which air flows out of the distributor cap 12 into the first refrigerating area 4. The interior of the distributor cap 112 communicates via apertures which are not visible in the figure with distributor pipes 48 (see
Above the lower end of the extruded profile 35, a flat shell 51 is tilted over, on the foam side, forming a part of the transition piece 39 shown in
A wide flange 55 surrounding the shell 51 is provided so as to be glued in a laminar manner to the inner skin of the back wall 8 and in this way to seal the interior of the shell 51 from the surrounding insulating-foam material.
The guide plate 55 in the interior of the back wall 8 extends behind the plastic profile 58. Together with the shell 51, it lengthens, with no cross-sectional stages, the cold-air supply pathway 24 beyond the lower end of the extruded profile 35 and in this way produces a low-turbulence redirection of the air flow in the horizontal direction and into the first distributor chamber 27 of the second refrigerating area 6. The guide plate fits snugly with a wall 61 of the extruded profile 35 that separates the channels 41 from the insulating layer 25 and connects this wall without cross-sectional discontinuities or kinks to the upper edge of the cold-air feed aperture 37. In an alternative embodiment, in which the insulating layer itself forms the wall 61 of the channels 41, the guide plate can also fit directly in a flush manner onto the end of the insulating layer.
In a simpler model of a refrigerating device, which is not subdivided by a partition into refrigerating areas to be kept at different temperatures, the extruded profile 35 and the inner skin define a single cold-air pipe, which communicates via the apertures 14 with the inner chamber and is also closed off at its lower end by the shell 51 which diverts the air to a last through-opening into the inner chamber. In this simpler device, the guide plate 55 and the insulating layer 25 are omitted; shell 51 and extruded profile 35 can, however, be the same in both devices.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2005 021 535.1 | May 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2006/061173 | 3/30/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/24/2007 |