This application claims benefit from, and priority to, each of Patent Cooperation Treaty Application Number PCT/EP2009/065137, filed Nov. 13, 2009, and German Patent Application 10 2008 044 302.6, filed Dec. 3, 2008.
The present invention relates to a refrigeration appliance, in particular a domestic refrigerator, comprising a body and associated internal lighting. The internal lighting is designed to fulfill a plurality of disparate requirements. On the one hand, uniform illumination of the interior of the body over its entire height is required, even when the propagation of light in said interior is impaired by shelves and refrigerated items placed thereon; on the other hand, the illuminants used for the lighting must take up as little space as possible in the interior and also impart little heat thereto.
Powerful light-emitting diodes, particularly white emitting LEDs, which have been available for a number of years, offer the promise of ideally fulfilling these requirements. A refrigeration appliance in which light-emitting diodes are used for interior lighting is disclosed e.g. in DE 298 14 243 U1. This publication proposes accommodating light-emitting diodes in recesses in a side wall of the appliance body. Proposed mounting locations for the light-emitting diodes are, on the one hand, guide grooves in the side wall which are intended for accommodating and guiding glass shelves; alternatively, large-area recesses with LEDs can be disposed at the level of a compartment between two guide grooves, or a vertically elongated recess intersects the guide grooves. The light-emitting diodes disposed in the guide grooves essentially inject their light into the shelves. By essentially propagating therein by total internal reflection, the light can be distributed unobstructedly over the entire height and breadth of the interior, but only a small amount of light emerges from the shelves, so that the effectiveness of the lighting remains poor despite a theoretically good luminous efficacy. Moreover, the light essentially emerges from the shelves at locations where total internal reflection is disturbed, these being in practice mainly dirty locations. Any soiling of the shelves is therefore clearly visible, but the cleaner the shelves, the less light can reach the outside.
The light-emitting diodes accommodated in the large-area recesses do not have these disadvantages. In order to spread the light of said LEDs and achieve uniform lighting of the interior, it is proposed to seal the recesses with a diffuse pane in each case. Such a pane scatters the light in all directions, not only onto the refrigerated items, but also into the eyes of a user standing in front of the appliance. As the diffusing panes are much brighter than items illuminated thereby in the interior, it is difficult to avoid dazzling the user.
The object of the present invention is to create a refrigeration appliance with interior lighting wherein light lost on injection into the interior is minimized and dazzling of the user is at least largely eliminated.
In the case of a refrigeration appliance comprising a body with an interior enclosed by walls and an open front, wherein a recess sealed by a translucent pane is formed in a body wall extending from the front in the depth direction, said recess accommodating at least one light-emitting diode module, this object is achieved by said pane being at least locally clear and a light cone of said light-emitting diode module lying completely within the interior.
As a result of the light cone of the LED module being completely within the interior, a user standing in front of the body cannot directly see an emitting surface of an LED, thereby eliminating direct dazzling. Indirect dazzling from the translucent pane is eliminated insofar as, even where the latter is clear, it scatters no light in the direction of the viewer.
The pane is preferably essentially flush with the wall surface surrounding the recess in order not to interfere with the use of the interior.
The recess is preferably surrounded by an edge zone slightly sunken into the wall, into which zone the pane engages in a form-fit manner. This facilitates the mounting of the pane, as its position is clearly predefined by the position of the recesses in their edge zone.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the subject matter of the invention, the recess is provided on at least one of the lateral walls of the body, in particular in the vicinity of its open front, thereby resulting in particularly uniform lighting viewed in the depth direction of the body.
While conventionally the transparent covers of refrigerator internal lighting frequently have sharp edges, particularly on their inner sides facing the light source, in order to produce prisms, Fresnel lenses or other light refracting structures, with the body according to the invention a region of the pane transilluminated by the light cone is preferably without sharp edges, thus also reliably eliminating dazzle caused by light scattered by such edges.
In order to shape the light cone of the LED module in an expedient manner, the light-emitting diode can be surrounded by a reflector.
The recess in the wall of the body is preferably prism-shaped, i.e. triangular when viewed from above, a front side of the prism being adjacent to the open front of the body and a back side being closer to the back wall of the body. In order not to be directly visible to the user, the light-emitting diode is preferably disposed on the front side of the prism.
The recesses are preferably disposed on the front sides of the two lateral walls.
To help reduce the risk of dazzle and provide good lighting, particularly at the back of the interior, the front side of the prism is oriented at a greater angle to the pane than the back side.
With particular preference, the front side of the prism near the door and the back side include an obtuse intermediate angle.
In order to facilitate assembly, a plurality of light-emitting diode modules can be expediently accommodated in the same recess.
In order to minimize the depth of the recess, said plurality of light-emitting diode modules are expediently vertically staggered.
One or more recesses are particularly easy to produce if, according to a preferred embodiment of the invention, it is provided that the recess is implemented as so-called preformed inserts, i.e. as separate components, and inserted in appropriately dimensioned cutouts in the internal paneling of the interior, particularly inserted such that a thermal insulation material introduced into liquid initial components is prevented from escaping.
The recess can essentially extend over the height of the interior, or a plurality of vertically spaced recesses can be provided in the same wall.
Particularly in the latter case, the plurality of light-emitting diode modules of a same recess preferably have vertically fanned-out main beam directions in order to also illuminate a region of the interior above of below one of the recesses.
The front and back sides of the prism-shaped recess preferably include an obtuse intermediate angle.
Further features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Formed around the prism-shaped recess 8 is a slightly sunken edge zone 11 in the side wall 6 into which the glass pane 7 is inserted in a form-fit manner.
The recess 8 can be thermoformed in one piece with the surrounding inner surface of the side wall 6, preferably in an operation involving the thermoforming, familiar per se to the average person skilled in the art, of an inner container integrally forming the inner surfaces of the side walls, of a back wall and of the top and base of the body. However, it is also possible to cut openings corresponding to the shape of the glass pane 7 in a thermoformed inner container of this kind, said openings being backed on the foam side with a shell forming the sides 9, 10. The use of such a shell—preferably metallic or mirrored—is particularly expedient if a highly reflective surface, especially of the back side 10 of the recess 8, is required. In addition, the use of a shell separate from the inner container offers the possibility of pre-mounting light-emitting diode modules 12 thereon prior to installing the shells in the body 1.
Light-emitting diode modules 12 are disposed on the front side 9 of the recess 8, as shown in
The glass pane 7 is clear and flat on both surfaces so that no scattering centers are formed. The pane 7 does not therefore appear bright when light from the light-emitting diode 16 shines through it. As it reflects, the back side 10 also does not appear bright to a user standing in front of the appliance. Dazzling is thus reliably eliminated.
A second embodiment of the invention is shown in
Using the surrounding reflectors 15, the beam of a light-emitting diode is largely shapeable as required. While in the arrangement in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 044 302 | Dec 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/065137 | 11/13/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/16/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/063553 | 6/10/2010 | WO | A |
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2995649 | Cyrus | Aug 1961 | A |
7736010 | Lee | Jun 2010 | B2 |
7905614 | Aoki | Mar 2011 | B2 |
20080247154 | Lim et al. | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20090056360 | Krauss | Mar 2009 | A1 |
20100220460 | Hall | Sep 2010 | A1 |
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1143741 | Feb 1997 | CN |
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2006336985 | Dec 2006 | JP |
2008039359 | Feb 2008 | JP |
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2009115407 | May 2009 | JP |
Entry |
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International Search Report PCT/EP2009/065137. |
Report of Examination including National Search Report CN 200980148767.6 mailing date Jan. 14, 2013. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110277493 A1 | Nov 2011 | US |