The invention relates to a refrigerating device as claimed in the preamble to claim 1.
In order to cool the interior of a refrigerating device, a refrigeration circuit is usually provided in which a refrigerant circulates. The refrigeration circuit incorporates, on the outside of the refrigerating device, a condenser via which the heat absorbed inside the refrigerating device by the refrigerant is rejected to the ambient air. In order to be able to ensure the necessary heat exchange, the condenser must have a particular size which, especially in the case of built-in appliances, is at the expense of the size of the cooled interior.
The condenser must basically be designed such that the amount of heat that is produced during the operating time of the compressor can also be removed during the operating time of the compressor. During the idle times of the compressor, virtually no heat is produced. Consequently, at these times no heat transfer from the condenser to the ambient air is necessary either. The condenser must therefore be designed such that the amount of heat to be removed is rejected to the ambient air only at the times when the compressor is running.
It has also already been attempted, in the case of a smaller condenser, to increase the performance by means of a blower. Once again, however, as the blower must be activated during the operating time of the compressor, a noise level is produced that is perceived as annoying.
The object of the invention is to design a condenser such that its size can be reduced, thereby enabling the available space to be better utilized by enlarging the cooled interior.
This object is achieved according to the invention by a refrigerating device having the features set forth in claim 1. By means of the heat storage mass it is achieved that, during operation of the compressor, more heat can be extracted from the refrigerant than is dissipated to the ambient air by the condenser. This heat is temporarily stored in the heat storage mass. At the times when the compressor is not operating and normally no heat is being released to the ambient air by the condenser either, the heat previously absorbed by the heat storage mass is now released again. This means that heat is released by the condenser over a much longer period. The condenser can therefore be of smaller design and the available space better used.
In order to enable the heat absorbed in the heat storage mass to be dissipated more effectively to the ambient air, a device is provided which, in particular, makes the radiating surface larger. In a specific exemplary embodiment, a wide metal tape is placed in meander-shaped loops and the resulting loop assembly is connected to the heat store. The nature of the connection must be such that good heat transfer between the heat storage mass and the metal tape is guaranteed.
To increase the heat dissipation capacity still further, a blower can be additionally provided. Said blower should be disposed so as to boost the flow of air through the cavities of the loop assembly. This means that a large surface of the metal tape is swept by the air passed through and a large amount of heat is removed.
Advantageously, the running time of the blower is not limited to the running time of the compressor. As the temporarily stored heat can be dissipated even during the idle times of the compressor, it is advisable to operate the blower at these times also. The blower only needs to be turned off when the heat storage mass falls below a particular temperature and the compressor has not yet become active again. Should this threshold temperature of the heat storage mass not be attained, the blower is operated continuously. As the blower must not only dissipate the heat during the running time of the compressor, but also use the idle times of the compressor for heat dissipation, the blower need not have a very high output. A blower having the output required here does not produce a high sound intensity, nor does it therefore have a disturbing effect.
According to the invention, the heat storage mass has a liquid-filled container. Such a container is inexpensive to produce and shape so that it optimally utilizes the available space.
In order that the container is not required to be leak-proof, the liquid is accommodated in a plastic bag. Nor is the shape of the plastic bag critical, as the liquid-filled plastic bag complies very well to the shape of the container.
A liquid with high heat storage capacity should be used which, however, must not incur high costs. Water meets these requirements and is therefore best suited for this purpose.
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 accompanying drawings in which:
a shows an exploded view of the condenser of a refrigerating device according to the invention, and
b shows the condenser from
a shows a new condenser with its serpentine coils 9 which are fixed to the outside of a container 8, a plastic bag 11 filled with a heat storage medium 10, a cooler 12 with cooling loops 13 and cavities 14, and a blower 15 with its nozzle 16. The container 8, shown as a rectangular box in this figure, can be adapted to suit the mounting requirements inside the refrigerating device and therefore varied in respect of its shape.
The serpentine condenser coils 9 run along the outside of the container 8 to which they are fixedly connected. The connection provides good heat transfer between the serpentine condenser coils 9 and the container 8. Likewise, the materials used for the container 8 and the serpentine condenser coils 9 have good thermal conductivity. The refrigerant is condensed in the serpentine condenser coils 9.
The plastic bag 11 filled with the liquid heat storage medium 10 is inserted in the container 8. The distinctive feature of this solution is that, because a plastic bag 11 is used, the container 8 is not required to be leak-proof. In fact, the hermetically sealed plastic bag 11 filled with the heat storage medium 10 is capable of assuming virtually any internal shape of the container 8 and of making large-area contact with the inside of the container 8.
Located on the top of the container 8 is the cooler 12 with its cooling loops 13. The cooler 12 is fixedly connected to the container 8 (see
The nozzle 16 is located on the pressure side of the blower 15, is flanged onto one of the end faces of the cooler 12 and covers the end face of the cooler 12 with its outlet surface. The blower 15 is preferably implemented as a radial or tangential blower in order, on the one hand, to minimize noise emission and, on the other, to produce an air flow that is as uniform as possible across the cooler 12. The design of said blower in itself is sufficient to eliminate a “dead spot” of the kind that can only be avoided with significant complexity when using axial blowers. The air flow is directed through cavities 14 formed by the cooler loops 13 and removes a large amount of heat.
The gaseous refrigerant 7 heated up by the compression process dissipates its heat to the highly thermo-conductive serpentine condenser coils 9. The condenser coils 9 in turn dissipate part of the heat to the ambient air, but another part to the container 8. As the container 8 likewise consists of a highly thermo-conductive material, it conducts the heat into the heat storage medium 10 contained in the plastic bag 11. Said plastic bag 11 and associated heat storage medium 10 is located in the internal space formed by the container 8 and has large-area contact with the container walls. The serpentine condenser coils 9 are dimensioned such that, during the running times of the compressor 1, they can dissipate the excess heat to the ambient air and to the heat storage medium 10.
In order to enable the heat stored in the heat storage medium 10 to be dissipated likewise as quickly as possible to the ambient air, a cooler 12 is provided on the top of the container 8. In the cavities 14 formed by the cooling loops 13 of the cooler 12, there is generated by means of the blower 15 a forced convection which is capable of removing a large amount of heat from the cooler 12.
Through the use of the heat storage medium 10 it is possible to temporarily store the heat produced by the compressor 1 and to dissipate this heat to the ambient air even during the idle times of the compressor 1. Ideally the blower is therefore operated during the running times but also during the idle times of the compressor. In this way heat dissipation takes place not only during the running time and it becomes possible to make the condenser much smaller than hitherto.
The heat storage medium 10 shall have a high thermal capacity, but must not incur high costs, so that the manufacturing costs of the condenser are not excessively increased. Water preeminently meets these requirements.
As the container 8 is not required to be leak-proof, no complicated manufacturing processes are required either. Thus it is always possible to adapt the container 8 to the mounting requirements in the refrigerating device. Less space is therefore required by the new condenser in each case than for the previous technical solutions.
As the blower 15 operates independently of the on-time of the compressor 1, it does not need to be particularly powerful. An inexpensive blower, which nevertheless operates very quietly, can therefore be used.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 042 020.9 | Sep 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/058558 | 8/17/2007 | WO | 00 | 2/24/2009 |