The invention relates to a refrigeration appliance having a refrigeration zone and an ice maker disposed therein, as claimed in the preamble of claim 1.
It is known to arrange ice makers in the refrigeration zone of refrigeration appliances. In arrangements of this kind, on the one hand ice makers are used which are filled with water and cooled from outside, the water freezing from the outside inward and in the process ultimately producing an ice cube. In addition there are what are termed crystal ice makers, in which a plurality of refrigerating fingers are immersed in a water-filled container. By means of a refrigerant circulating inside the refrigerating fingers, the latter are cooled down to such an extent that a layer of ice grows on the refrigerating fingers immersed in the water. As soon as the layer of ice on the refrigerating fingers has attained a usable size, it is released from the refrigerating fingers. A crystal ice maker of said kind is described in DE 103 36 834 A1. Ice makers of this type are generally installed in the refrigeration compartment of a combined fridge-freezer.
Ice makers of said type are available in a multiplicity of embodiment variants. These include fully automatic embodiments which are connected to a fresh water line and which automatically pump the water remaining in the container on completion of ice-making into the drain water line. The advantage of said ice makers lies in their simplicity of use, in that crystal ice is produced at the touch of a button, as it were. A prerequisite of this type of embodiment, however, is that a mains water supply and drain water line are present at the site at which the refrigeration appliance is to be installed.
In order to be independent of the water supply, ice makers for refrigeration appliances have also been developed which are equipped with a fresh water reservoir which makes available the water required for making the ice.
Ice makers of said type are usually equipped with an ice tray in which the crystal ice produced is collected. The ice tray can be emptied e.g. into a glass placed thereunder. If the ice tray is located in the freezer compartment, the crystal ice produced can be kept for a practically unlimited length of time, since in this case temperatures below 0° C. prevail. However, there are also ice makers in which the ice tray is located in the refrigeration zone of the refrigeration appliance. As a result, the storage life of the crystal ice produced is limited. Here too, however, the melting process takes place only at a slow rate, since in this case temperatures are typically only a few degrees above zero, so the ice can likewise be removed at a later time.
What is problematic with this type of ice-maker ice collection trays which are disposed in the refrigeration zone is that the crystal ice in the ice tray becomes covered by melt water in the course of the melting process. As a result the rate at which the ice melts increases and in addition it can happen that the melt water refreezes at the surface of the crystal ice, causing unsightly surface structures to form.
The object underlying the invention is to equip a refrigeration appliance with an ice maker that is disposed in the refrigeration zone in such a way that the disadvantages that result due to the ice melting process are at least reduced.
The object is achieved according to the invention by means of a refrigeration appliance having the features of claim 1. According to the invention the container for receiving the prepared ice is designed in such a way that condensation water produced when the ice thaws can drain away. As a result the ice remains dry even during the thawing process and the remaining ice suffers no loss in quality whatsoever due to being adversely affected by the condensation water. Furthermore, the instant separation of ice and condensation water prevents water being removed as well when the ice is removed.
In an advantageous particularly simple embodiment, the condensation water remains in an area specially provided therefor in the ice container itself. It is therefore separated from the ice only by a support surface which drains off water. This means that no major conversion measures are necessary. In order to separate the ice from the water it is entirely sufficient, for example, to incorporate a raised floor in the ice container. While the ice sits on the raised floor, the condensation water can collect below the raised floor.
This embodiment variant can be realized particularly cost-effectively and simply by means of a raised floor through which the water can drain away directly. The raised floor can in this case be embodied for example as a grid, strainer or similar.
In a further particularly advantageous embodiment variant, said water-permeable raised floor is provided with a handle or similar which serves for removing the raised floor and thus for removing the ice. By means of a removable basket of this kind the ice can be removed particularly easily and hygienically, without the user coming into contact with the condensation water when removing the ice.
The area serving to receive the condensation water of the melted ice is preferably large enough to accommodate the melt water of an entire portion of prepared ice. This enables the remainder of the slowly thawing ice to be used still unaffected by the condensation water for as long as even just a small fraction of the ice remains.
In a further preferred embodiment variant, the condensation water collection area is dimensioned such that its collection volume is equivalent to roughly half the volume of the prepared ice. This ensures that at least a large proportion of the ice can be used unadulterated by the condensation water and that at the same time proper account is taken of the ever-paramount priority of space optimization in the refrigeration appliance. Although in this case it can no longer be guaranteed that even the last remnants of the thawing ice can still be used unaffected by melt water, the entire ice maker can in return be built significantly smaller.
In a preferred embodiment variant in which the ice maker does not need to be connected to a water line, but has its own fresh water reservoir, the volume of said fresh water reservoir is chosen as a reference parameter for forming the volume of the condensation water collection area. Depending on the desired space optimization in the refrigeration appliance, the condensation water collection area is therefore embodied such that its volume is in each case, corresponding to the above-described alternatives, either equivalent to the volume of the fresh water reservoir or takes up half of the same. In this case it is namely possible to convert the entire contents of the fresh water reservoir into ice and to use the ice for a long time unaffected by the condensation water, even though it is slowly melting in the refrigeration zone of the refrigeration appliance whose temperature lies above 0° C.
In a further advantageous embodiment variant, the support surface for the prepared ice is provided with a noise-absorbing surface. For that purpose the support surface, which can be embodied for example as a grid shelf or basket insert, can be manufactured from a material having a soft surface. Various plastic materials, for example, are suitable for this. As a result of said noise-absorbing surface the noise generated when the pieces of ice strike the support surface is largely absorbed.
In a further preferred embodiment variant of the invention, the support surface is provided with grooves or channels which take up the condensation water and channel it into a condensation water drain area. By this means, too, the condensation water is immediately separated from the prepared ice and can be channeled directly into a designated condensation water collection area. In particular, however, it is particularly easily possible with this embodiment variant to reroute the condensation water directly from the water drain area back to the fresh water reservoir. In this way the thawed water is available once again for further ice production.
This redirecting of the melted condensation water into the fresh water reservoir can, of course, just as well be used in the case of the embodiment variant in which the separation of ice and condensation water collection area is implemented by way of a water-permeable raised floor.
Further details and advantages of the invention will emerge from the dependent claims in conjunction with the description of an exemplary embodiment which is explained in detail with reference to the drawings, in which:
The ice maker 7 is divided into a central module, which in this case is embodied as a technical module 8 with switching contact 11 (see also
Using a known process, crystal ice is produced in the technical module 8 of the ice maker 7 by means of a plurality of refrigerating fingers and stored in the ice tray 9. The ice tray 9 explained in more detail in
The ice tray 9 has the shape of a tub that is open toward the top. The ice tray 9 is guided by means of the left-hand 14 and right-hand guide rail 15 of the technical module 8 in a groove 16 in each case. This is part of the left or, as the case may be, right sidewall of the ice tray 9 and is located at the edge of the tray 17.
Located at the rear of the technical module 8 is the switching contact 11. Said switching contact 11 is actuated only by a correctly inserted ice tray 9. Only when the switching contact 11 has been actuated can the technical module 8 start producing crystal ice.
The water required for producing the crystal ice is made available in the fresh water reservoir 10. The fresh water reservoir 10 is located next to the technical module 8 on the side located opposite the fixing plate of the technical module 8. As soon as the fresh water reservoir 10 has reached its end position next to the technical module 8, the connection between the fresh water reservoir 10 and the fresh water system of the technical module 8 is established by way of a coupling (not visible here). For this purpose the technical module 8 has an upper 18 and a lower L-shaped guide rail 19 on the sidewall opposite the fixing plate. One limb of the guide rail 18, 19 is fixedly connected to the sidewall of the technical module 8, while the other limbs, which run parallel to the sidewall of the technical module 8, point in the opposite direction. To achieve the watertight coupling of the fresh water reservoir 10 to the technical module 8, a pipe socket offset by 90° can be provided, for example, which projects from the sidewall in the rear section of the technical module 8. Provided as a matching element in the rear wall of the fresh water reservoir 10 is an opening which is enclosed by an O-ring. When the fresh water reservoir 10 is inserted, the pipe socket is pressed into the opening and is sealed by means of the O-ring.
The grooves (not shown here) required for guiding the fresh water container 10 which engage in the upper 18 and lower guide rail 19 are part of the fresh water container 10. When the fresh water container 10 is inserted, it abuts against the technical module in the upper part and the ice tray 9 in the lower part. The fresh water container 10 has a lid 20 which can be removed for filling purposes. In the refrigeration zone it prevents soiling or contamination of the fresh water.
Both the ice tray 9 and the fresh water container 10 are removed and introduced from the front.
As can be seen in
Because the ice maker 7 is disposed in the refrigeration zone 4 of the refrigeration appliance 1 whose temperature is above 0° C., the prepared ice begins to thaw immediately after it has been produced. In order to prevent the ice lying in the condensation water and thereby becoming poorly suited for use, the support surface for the ice is embodied as a water-permeable raised floor 21 disposed at a certain height. Because of the grid on which the ice sits, the condensation water can drain away directly into the volume 25 located thereunder, with the result that the remaining ice is always kept separate from condensation water and can be removed unaffected by condensation water. Furthermore, this instant separation of melt water and crystal ice enables the melting rate of the ice to be reduced substantially. In the case of the ice tray 9 shown in
In order to make it easier to remove the crystal ice, the raised floor 21 is embodied in a basket shape and has two extractor handles 22 and 23. In any case the user can always remove the ice by means of the basket without having to reach into the condensation water, even when only a small amount of residual ice remains and the collection volume 25 for the condensation water has been exceeded.
1 Refrigeration appliance
2 Door
3 Interior space
4 Refrigeration zone
5 Freezer compartment
6 Shelf
7 Ice maker
8 Technical module
9 Ice tray
10 Fresh water reservoir
11 Switching contact
12 Fixing eyelet
13 Cuboid
14 Left-hand guide rail
15 Right-hand guide rail
16 Groove
17 Tray edge
18 Top guide rail
19 Bottom guide rail
20 Lid
21 Raised floor
22 Handle
23 Handle
24 Base
25 Volume
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2006 061 102.0 | Dec 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/64061 | 12/17/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/11/2009 |