The invention relates to a refrigerator and a method for controlling a temperature in a utility chamber of a refrigerator.
In so-called no-frost appliances a cold air flow is fed to the utility chamber. The feeding in of cold air results in condensing surfaces with reduced surface temperatures in the utility chamber, on which condensate and/or ice may form. To prevent such condensate and/or ice formation, defrost heating elements may be provided in the utility chamber.
A generic refrigerator is known from EP 1 878 986 A1, in which the cold air flow can be introduced into the utility chamber by means of a control device when a cooling signal is present. The defrost heating element for preventing the formation of condensate and/or ice caused by the cold air flow is switched on or off by means of the control device. The defrost heating element is elaborately controlled by means of signals in accordance with the utility chamber temperature. As soon as the temperature in the utility chamber exceeds an upper temperature threshold, the heating element is switched on. When the temperature falls below a lower threshold, the heating element is switched off.
A further refrigerator with a defrost heating element is known from WO 2008/004441 A1. A compressor is switched on at the start of a cooling operation. When the compressor is switched on, the heating element operation is simultaneously interrupted and resumed following expiry of a time interval. Power consumption by the heating element is interrupted during a start-up phase of the compressor, whereby a stable compressor operation can be established following a brief start-up phase.
A further refrigerator with a defrost heating element is known from JP 2001174119A. The utility chamber in the refrigerator is force-ventilated with cold air. When a target cooled temperature is reached in the cooling chamber, the defrost heating element is switched off for the forced ventilation. As soon as the utility chamber temperature falls below the target temperature, the heating element is switched off with a time delay.
The object of the invention consists in providing a cooling device and a method for temperature control in a refrigerator, with which the energy consumption of the refrigerator can be reduced.
According to the characterizing clause of claim 1, a timing element, with which the heating element remains out of operation for a predefined time interval after generation of the cooling signal, is associated with the heating element. The timing element thus delays the forwarding of the cooling signal to the heating element for the predetermined time interval. In this way, a delayed activation of the heating element after generation of the cooling signal can be achieved easily by means of both signals and controls.
The invention uses the fact that condensate and/or ice does not begin to form on the surfaces of the utility chamber immediately after generation of a cooling signal or the commencement of the cold air flow associated therewith. Instead, it is only after the cold air has been flowing in for a certain period that cold condensing surfaces form in the utility chamber, on which condensate can precipitate. According to the invention the heating element is not switched on until after such a cooling interval has expired. The time interval predetermined by means of the timing element corresponds approximately to the aforementioned cooling interval which may be set empirically in a series of tests. Temperature sensors for measuring a surface temperature on condensing surfaces within the utility chamber can thereby be avoided.
After expiry of the time interval predetermined by the timing element, the heating element can be activated provided the cooling signal is still present. If the cooling signal is no longer present after expiry of the time interval, the heating element can remain out of operation. If external ambient temperatures are low, in which case only a reduced cold air supply is required, the following set of circumstances arises: the low ambient temperatures result in a low cooling requirement in the utility chamber. The time intervals in which the control device generates the cooling signal are correspondingly short. The signal interval may therefore end before the time interval predetermined by the timing element expires, so that the heating element remains switched off.
Conversely, the cooling signal duration can be prolonged accordingly if ambient temperatures are high or if the appliance door is frequently opened. In this case, however, the proportional impact of the delayed activation of the heating element would only be very slight. Tests have revealed that the length of the time interval predetermined by the timing element may be between 2 and 6 minutes.
In a design variant the heating element may be subjected to varying power levels depending on the ambient temperatures of the refrigerator, in particular with lower power being supplied at lower ambient temperatures than at higher ambient temperatures. In addition and/or alternately to this, the heating element may also be operated for varying lengths of time depending on the number of door openings per time unit, and in particular may be operated for longer with an increasing number of door openings. In particular, the activation duration of the heating element may also be increased when the ambient temperature for the refrigerator increases.
The cold air flow may be fed to the utility chamber by means of a cold air channel. A valve element may preferably be used for generation of the cold air flow in the cold air channel. The valve element opens the cold air channel when the cooling signal is present and closes it when the cooling signal is not present. In addition, a fan that blows the cold air through the cold air channel may be provided for generation of the cold air flow.
By means of signaling, it is easy to achieve a situation in which the heating element does not have a direct signal connection to the control device, i.e. is not directly controlled by the control device, whereby the power consumption of the control device can be reduced. In these circumstances the aforementioned valve element may have an opening sensor assigned to it, which has an direct signal connection to the heating element. The opening sensor can generate an opening signal when the valve element is opened, on the basis of which the heating element can be switched on. In this case the valve element has a direct signal connection to the control device, i.e. the control device opens and closes the valve element. The control device, however, does not directly control the heating element.
The heating element can preferably be provided in a channel wall of the cold air flow that faces the utility chamber. Air outlets are provided in the channel wall, through which the cold air can flow into the utility chamber compartments. The outside of the channel wall facing the utility chamber is therefore particularly susceptible to the formation of condensate and/or ice.
Two exemplary embodiments of the invention are described below with the aid of the enclosed figures, wherein:
An evaporator 9 is provided in the normal way for cooling the freezer chamber 1, said evaporator here being thermally connected to the rear wall of the freezer chamber 1 by way of example. The evaporator 9 forms part of a refrigerant circuit 11 that is known per se. A compressor 13 and an expansion valve 15 are also connected in the refrigerant circuit shown.
According to
The cold air channel 17 is separated from the cooling chamber 3 by means of a cold air channel cover panel 21. Air outlets 23 can be seen in the cover panel 21, though which horizontally directed cold air may flow into the individual refrigerator compartments 6 of the cooling chamber 3.
A fan 25 is arranged in the vicinity of the air inlet 19 of the cold air channel 17. A flap 29 operated electrically by means of an actuator 27 is provided in the flow direction downstream of the fan 25. The flap 29 is shown in
Chamber sensors 31, 33 are provided in each of the freezer and refrigerator chambers 1, 3, which record the respective actual temperatures in the refrigerator and freezer chambers 1, 3 and forward them to a control device 35. If the actual temperature in the freezer chamber 1 that is recorded by the freezer chamber sensor 31 exceeds a target temperature predefined by the user, the control device 35 generates a cooling signal with which the compressor 13 is activated via the signal cable 38. This causes a corresponding cooling capacity to be introduced into the freezer chamber 1 via the evaporator 9. In contrast, the compressor 13 is deactivated by the control device 35 as soon as the actual temperature recorded by the freezer chamber sensor 31 falls below the predefined target temperature.
Similarly to the temperature control in the freezer chamber 1, the actual temperature in the cooling chamber 3 is recorded by the cooling chamber sensor 33 and forwarded to the control device 35. The actual temperature recorded by the cooling chamber sensor 33 is compared to a target temperature. If the target temperature is exceeded the control device 35 generates a cooling signal SK, as illustrated by
According to
However, in contrast to the signal cables 36, 37, 38 leading to the flap actuator 27, the fan 25 and the compressor 13, a timing element 43 is connected in the signal cable 41. This timing element 43 is used to forward the cooling signal SK to the defrost heating element 39 and therefore to delay activation of the defrost heating element 39. The defrost heating element 39 therefore remains out of operation for a predefined time interval ΔtV despite being activated with the cooling signal SK, as shown from the time diagram in
In the time diagram in
Similarly, according to
Unlike in the first exemplary embodiment the defrost heating element 39 is not connected to the control device 35 via the signal cable 41. The defrost heating element 39 therefore does not have the cooling signal Sk applied to it directly by the control device 35. Instead, according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 054 934 | Dec 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/065745 | 11/24/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/3/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/078997 | 7/15/2010 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110225994 A1 | Sep 2011 | US |