The present invention relates to a refrigeration appliance, in particular a household refrigeration appliance, in which a refrigeration chamber is separated from a surrounding thermal insulation layer by means of a wall, typically an inner container wall, and a line runs through an opening in the wall. The thermal insulation layer is typically produced by a synthetic resin being injected into a cavity on the side of the wall facing away from the refrigeration chamber and being allowed to expand therein. If the opening, through which the line runs, is not adequately sealed in this process, the expanding foam can penetrate the refrigeration chamber through this opening. If this occurs, the affected appliance must usually be discarded since an elimination of all traces of the penetrated foam is not possible. Moreover, with an inadequate sealing of the opening, there is the risk of moisture from the refrigeration chamber entering the thermal insulation layer and hampering its insulation effect.
A known technique for sealing such an opening involves wrapping adhesive tape around a pipe support molded around the opening on the wall and wrapping adhesive tape around the line. This technique requires a high degree of manual labor and the impermeability against moisture is difficult to ensure. Instead of the adhesive tape, a butyl pad can also be used; however, a further time-consuming work step of vulcanization is required at the installation location.
The object of the invention is to create a technique which enables a reliable sealing of the opening with a minimal expenditure of time.
The object is achieved according to the invention by, in the case of a refrigeration appliance having a refrigeration chamber, a thermal insulation layer and a wall extending between the refrigeration chamber and the thermal insulation layer, a pipe support which is integral with the wall and surrounds an opening in the wall and a line extending through the pipe support, an elastic sleeve that has a first end section, fixed on a free end of the pipe support, and a second end section, abutting the line.
In order to prevent the sleeve from detaching from the wall during the assembly, particularly if the refrigerant pipe has to be moved through the sleeve which is already mounted on the wall, the sleeve can be fastened to the pipe support in a form-fit manner and/or by means of adhesion.
In particular, if the sleeve is only subsequently slid onto the already mounted refrigerant pipe and the pipe support, a friction fit between the sleeve and the pipe support may be sufficient.
In order to ensure that the sleeve is fixedly connected to the wall before the foaming process, the first end section can be elastically expanded through the pipe support.
The form-fit anchoring can be provided by a bulge in the pipe support or the first end section which protrudes outward or inward in the radial direction of the opening, said bulge being received by a notch in the respective other component.
According to a preferred embodiment, it is sufficient if this form fit along the line is only effective in one direction. For this purpose, the pipe support can extend on a side of the wall facing away from the thermal insulation layer, and the first end section can have a notch, which receives at least one end of the pipe support which faces away from the wall. It is then possible firstly to slide the sleeve into the opening to put over the free end of the pipe support from the side of the refrigeration chamber, and then to slide the line through the opening from the same side. Here tension exerted onto the sleeve in any case reinforces the engagement of the pipe support into the notch, but cannot result in leakage.
To ensure that the pipe support inside the refrigeration chamber does not impede the attachment of other components, it can be molded to the base of a protuberance of the wall which protrudes into the thermal insulation layer.
To ensure a tight attachment of the sleeve to the line, the second end section of the sleeve should be expanded elastically by the line inserted therein.
The second end section can be molded as a pipe section with a diameter which is constant in the longitudinal direction of the sleeve; in this way an effectively sealing contact with the line is ensured over the entire length of the second end section.
In order to facilitate the introduction of the refrigerant pipe into the sleeve, it may be useful if the entire inner surface of the pipe section does not abut the pipeline. Therefore, the second end section can advantageously have at least one projection which protrudes from an inner surface of the pipe section. The projection preferably extends around the entire periphery of the inner surface.
In order to improve the flexibility of the sleeve, it may have a wavy intermediate section, in which regions with a large cross-section and regions with a small cross-section alternate with one another.
The regions with a small cross-section preferably have an inner diameter which is greater than the outer diameter of the line, so that upon insertion into the sleeve the line can pass unhindered through these regions.
The regions with alternately large and small diameters are relatively complicated to mold. In order to simplify manufacture of the sleeve, regions with cross-sections which decrease gradually toward the second end section can be formed instead in the intermediate section.
These regions with different cross-sections can be connected by walls aligned radially with respect to a longitudinal axis of the sleeve.
A greater flexibility of the sleeve can be achieved if the regions with different cross-sections overlap with one another in pairs in the axial direction, and the walls which connect adjacent sections are widened in each case in the manner of a truncated cone and toward the second end section.
If the sleeve is integrated in the refrigeration appliance, a longitudinal axis of the first end section and a longitudinal axis of the second section can have alignments which deviate from one another by at least 45°.
The line can be in particular a refrigerant line, for instance for supplying an evaporator arranged in the refrigeration chamber.
After assembly, the sleeve is preferably embedded in the thermal insulation layer of the refrigeration appliance.
Further features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the description of exemplary embodiments provided below, with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
The sealing of the opening 6 then raises problems in particular if the refrigerant line 5 in the vicinity of the opening 6 in the thermal insulation layer 4 is molded to form an arc 7. Such an arc 7, which extends over an angle of approx. 90°, is frequently required to form a transition between a line section 8, which intersects a wall 9, typically a rear wall, of the inner container 3 at a right angle, and a line section 10, which, in the thermal insulation layer 4, runs parallel to, and as far as possible at a minimal distance from, the wall 9. A sealing sleeve 11, which is arranged between the edges of the opening 6 and the refrigerant line 5 intersecting the opening, in order to keep the insulation foam from the layer 4 away from the refrigeration chamber 1, is shown schematically; longitudinal axes 14 of its two end sections, which coincide in the relaxed state of the sleeve 11, are forced through the refrigerant line 5 in a configuration which is twisted by approx. 90° with respect to one another.
Here the opening 6 is surrounded by a pipe support 12 which protrudes in the direction of the refrigeration chamber 1. The pipe support 12 can be obtained, for instance, by the wall 9 being heated to a plastically deformable state and perforated by a pin in order to form the opening 6.
The pipe support 12 could protrude into the refrigeration chamber 1 from the plane of the wall 9; in the case shown here, it is molded to the base of a depression 13 of the wall 9, so that it does not project beyond the surrounding wall 9 into the refrigeration chamber 1, but instead a channel extends around the pipe support 12.
The sleeve 11 shown in sections along its longitudinal axis 14 in
The central section 17 of the sleeve 11 has the form of a flexible hose, in which regions with a large cross-section 20 and regions with a small cross-section 21 alternate with one another. The diameter of the regions 20 and the diameter of the regions 21 in each case reduce gradually toward the second end section 18. This measure facilitates the demolding of the sleeve 11 from an injection molding tool, particularly the removal of a pin used to mold the interior of the sleeve 11.
The second end section 18 has the shape of a pipe piece with a constant diameter. This diameter is marginally smaller than the refrigerant line 5 to be inserted into the sleeve 11, so that if the refrigerant line 5 runs through the sleeve 11, the second end section 18 tightly abuts it.
When the refrigerant line 5 is inserted from the refrigeration chamber 1 side, the sleeve 11 is held on the pipe support 12 in a form-fit manner; a tensile force, which acts on the sleeve 11 when the refrigerant line 5 is pushed forward, holds the flange 16 against the base of the channel 13.
The friction between the refrigerant line 5 and the second end section 18 ensures that the sleeve 11 is under tensile stress after the refrigerant line has been inserted, said tensile stress pressing the flange 16 against the base of the channel 13, and thus contributing to the flange 16 remaining immobile in the channel 13, even if it is exposed to an overpressure of the expanding insulation foam during the foaming process.
The central section 17 is easy to stretch as a result of the wave shape and can therefore also adjust without any problem to the shape of the arc 7, without stress forces that occur in the sleeve 11 driving the flange 16 out of the channel 13 again. The friction between the flange 16 and the pipe support 12 and an outer wall 22 of the channel 13 is sufficient to fix the flange 16 in this position in the channel 13 as well and to keep the opening 6 foam-tight.
In order to further reduce the tendency of the flange 16 to detach from the pipe support 24 when the sleeve 11 is under tensile or bending stress, a form-fit can be provided between the flange 16 and the pipe support 24. To this end, as shown in the right half of
In the case shown in
While the sleeve in
In the case of the sleeve 11′ in
In order to facilitate the introduction of the refrigerant pipe 5 into the second end section 18, a truncated cone-shaped transition 32 can be formed between this and the central section 17′.
The sleeve 11″ in
The sleeve 11″ is also easy and cheap to produce since it is free of undercuts; moreover, it can adjust well to an arc 7 in the refrigerant line 5 by at least one of the truncated cone-shaped regions only folding down on one part of its periphery.
In the central section 17′″ of the sleeve 11′″ in
The sleeve 11* in
All embodiments of the sleeve described above can be provided on its second end section 18 with a reinforcing peripheral flange 31, as shown in
When the second end section 18 is expanded over its entire length by the inserted refrigerant line 5, the resulting friction can significantly hamper the insertion of the refrigerant line 5, especially in the case in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2018 219 746.6 | Nov 2018 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2019/078822 | 10/23/2019 | WO | 00 |