The present invention relates to a refrigeration appliance, in particular a domestic refrigeration appliance, with a water supply, as described in International Publication WO 2014/090608 A1, corresponding to U.S. Patent Application US 2015/0300717, for example.
A water supply, which connects the refrigeration appliance to a building water connection, is required in particular when an automatic ice maker is to be operated in a storage chamber of the refrigeration appliance.
In the refrigeration appliance known from International Publication WO 2014/090608 A1, corresponding to U.S. Patent Application US 2015/0300717, a filling pipe, which forms a downstream end of the water supply, protrudes into the storage chamber and is exposed to temperatures below 0° C. there. If the filling pipe does not become completely empty after the ice maker is filled, that results in any water remaining therein possibly freezing. If that freezing water blocks the water supply, the ice production is disrupted.
In order to prevent such a blockage, the filling pipe can be electrically heated. However, that impairs the energy efficiency of the refrigeration appliance considerably, since on one hand energy has to be expended in order to keep the filling pipe frost-free, and on the other hand the compressor of the refrigeration appliance must run for a longer period, in order to bring the heat emitted by the heating of the filling pipe back out from the storage chamber again.
It has also been proposed to use ambient heat to keep the water supply ice-free. That enables the energy expended on operating the heating to be saved, but the increased heat supply to the storage chamber also leads to prolonged compressor running times and to a correspondingly higher energy consumption.
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a refrigeration appliance with a water supply, which overcomes the hereinafore-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known appliances of this general type and in which it is ensured that the water supply is functional at all times, without the maintenance of the functionality impairing the energy efficiency of the appliance as a result.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a refrigeration appliance, in particular a domestic refrigeration appliance, comprising a storage chamber which can be cooled to below 0° C. and a water supply feeding into the storage chamber. The water supply is formed by a resiliently expandable pipeline inside the storage chamber. This does not preclude water, which remains in the pipeline after a filling process, from freezing therein and forming a plug of ice there. Due to the flexibility of the pipeline, however, liquid water fed into the water supply with sufficient pressure can expand the pipeline and thus either create a path past the plug, so that the plug is thawed by water flowing past, or push the plug out of the pipeline as a whole.
Usually the water supply is provided to supply an ice maker in the storage chamber with fresh water. However, in principle other consumers in the storage chamber can also be supplied through the water supply.
A stop valve should be provided in a frost-free section of the water supply, in order to not be impaired in its function by the formation of ice.
Preferably, the pipeline includes a hose made of a resilient rubber material. In principle, the pipeline could also be formed of an inflexible resilient material such as a thin metal sheet, but specific cross sectional shapes of the pipeline, such as a cross or star-shaped cross section, are then required in order to enable the cross sectional expansion to release the ice plug under pressure.
The water supply can be surrounded by a sleeve on at least one part of its length.
The sleeve can serve various purposes. Irrespective of which part of the pipeline it surrounds, the sleeve should be dimensioned in such a way that it inhibits an expansion of the pipeline beyond its resiliency limit.
One section of the pipeline, which protrudes into the storage chamber, can be stabilized by the sleeve, which in particular can be required if that section is formed of a slightly ductile material and could bend under the weight of the water contained therein. The sheathing provided by the sleeve can also serve as thermal insulation of the pipeline in this case and delay the freezing of the water following a filling process.
In particular, if the pipeline also extends outside the storage chamber, it is expedient to place a close limit on a possible expansion of the pipeline there by a sleeve surrounding it, preferably by the sleeve surrounding the pipeline outside the storage chamber with a close fit. Since many resilient materials are more yielding when warm than when cold, without such a limit there would be the risk of the warm part of the pipeline being stretched before the expansion at its cold end is sufficient to remove the ice plug, or the cold end remaining altogether unstretched and the ice plug remaining in place.
The sleeve and the pipeline can be extruded in one piece. The sleeve will then, as a rule, have a greater wall thickness than before, in order to effectively limit the expansion of the pipeline.
The pipeline can also, however, be inserted into the sleeve. This is particularly expedient if the sleeve should only surround the pipeline on one part of its length and/or if a different material is to be used for the sleeve than for the pipeline.
Expediently, the sleeve should separate the pipeline from an insulation material layer surrounding the storage chamber. Thus, a lasting deformation of the insulation material layer caused by repeated expansion of the pipeline, which would lead to a thermal bridge between the storage chamber and the surroundings, would be prevented.
At least in a region of the insulation material layer adjacent the storage chamber it is expedient if the sleeve surrounds the pipeline while retaining play. The pipeline thus, even within the insulation material layer, at a point up to which the ice plug does not reach, has room to expand, which considerably facilitates the spreading of the expansion past the plug toward the end of the pipeline.
Conversely, at least in a region of the insulation material layer facing away from the storage chamber it is expedient if the sleeve surrounds the pipeline without play. This minimizes the inflow of ambient heat to the storage chamber.
Since the resilient expansion is only beneficial for the removal of the ice plug if it takes place in the immediate surroundings, a downstream section of the water supply is preferably not resiliently expandable.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a refrigeration appliance with a water supply, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the figures of the drawings in detail and first, particularly, to
The filling of the tray 5 with water is effected through a water supply 7. This water supply 7 includes a line, typically a pressure-proof, non-expandable hose 8, which extends from a building water faucet 9 to a stop valve 10. The stop valve 10 is accommodated in this case in a machine space 11 of the refrigeration appliance. The water supply 7 also includes a line 12 fitted in the refrigeration appliance in a fixed manner. The line 12 extends from the stop valve 10 through an insulation material layer 13 of the body 1 into the storage chamber 3 and ends above the tray 5. A majority of the line 12 runs outside the insulation material layer 13 protected from frost and is formed in this case by a rigid pipe 14, which cannot expand due to the pressure prevailing in the building's water line if the pressure acts in the pipe 14.
As
The cross section of the pipeline 15, at least in a section 17 which extends through the insulation material layer 13 and in a section 18 protruding into the storage chamber 3, amounts to only a few millimeters, in order to minimize an inflow of ambient heat to the storage chamber 3 through the pipeline 15. This results in water regularly remaining in the pipeline 15 after the filling of the tray 5. The water freezes in the section 18 and there forms an ice plug 20 which blocks the pipeline 15 over the entire cross-section.
A rigid, non-expandable sleeve 21 surrounds a section of the pipeline 15 which lies outside the insulation material layer 13 and extends into the insulation material layer 13. The sleeve 21 has a close fit around the pipeline 15 and does not permit any significant expansion of the pipeline 15 under pressure.
In one part of the section 17 adjacent the storage chamber 3, the pipeline 15 is not surrounded by the sleeve 21. If the stop valve 10 is opened in order to let fresh water into the tray 5, but at the same time the pipeline 15 is blocked by the ice plug 20, the pressure of the domestic water line acts in the pipeline 15 and expands the pipeline 15 at a point 22, as shown in
The pipeline 15 and the sleeve 24 are connected through webs 26 over their entire length. The webs 26 are thin-walled like the pipeline 15 and are able to yield to an expansion of the pipeline 15. The webs 26 can extend in a straight line in the axial direction of the extruded profile 25, but they can also run in a spiral manner around the pipeline 15. In the latter case, a single web 26 can be sufficient to hold the pipeline 15 centered in the sleeve 21.
The diameter of the sleeve 24 is expediently dimensioned in this case in such a way that the sleeve 24 inhibits an expansion of the pipeline 15 beyond its resiliency limit. A local overstraining of the pipeline 15, which over time would lead to the pipeline 15 bursting, can also be reliably prevented with a low wall thickness of the pipeline 15.
As in the first embodiment, the pipeline 15 is connected to the stop valve 10 through a rigid pipe 14. The rigid pipe 14 is inserted into the pipeline 15 at an end of the extruded profile 25 protruding from the body 1. The diameter of the rigid pipe 14 is chosen in such a way that the pipeline 15 is pressed onto the sleeve 24 from inside. An intermediate space 27 between the pipeline 15 and the sleeve 24 is thus tightly sealed off from the outside, and an inflow of warm ambient air through the intermediate space 27 into the storage chamber 3 is prohibited. If the webs 26 run in a spiral manner around the pipeline 15, as described above, the transport of heat by air circulation between a warm and a cold end of the intermediate space 27 can also be effectively prevented thereby.
The operation of this embodiment corresponds to that described with reference to
The embodiment of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2015 222 731.6 | Nov 2015 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of patent application Ser. No. 15/353,010, filed Nov. 16, 2016; which also claims the priority, under 35 U.S.C. § 119, of German patent application No. DE 10 2015 222 731.6, filed Nov. 18, 2015; the prior applications are herewith incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190301782 A1 | Oct 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15353010 | Nov 2016 | US |
Child | 16445794 | US |