The present invention is directed to an attenuator that can be used in a variable air volume terminal unit, a terminal unit incorporating the attenuator, and clips for fastening the attenuator.
Discharge and radiated sound is of concern with variable air volume (VAV) terminal units, such as may be used in heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems. In a VAV system, one or more central air supply systems are sized to meet the peak cooling (and/or heating) conditions for the building. Several terminal units are located in respective zones or offices throughout the building, each connected via ducts to the central air supply. In such a terminal unit, the volume of air urged through a diffuser over a given length of time is controlled. Some terminal units have a fan or pump driven by a motor to move the air from the central air supply through the diffuser associated with the terminal unit. VAV terminal units permit “personalizing” the temperature of a particular room or group of rooms as desired by the occupants.
While there may be several sources of objectionable sound in a HVAC system, at least every component of rotating machinery, e.g., the blower of an air handling unit, generates sound waves which propagate along the duct through the air flowing in the duct. And certain types of VAV terminal units include integral motor-driven fans. Unless attenuated to acceptable levels, the propagated sound waves may be evident to persons in the rooms served by the HVAC system. Conventional attenuators for this sound are external to the terminal unit and are either supplied and installed by the factory or are installed to the terminal unit in the field.
An attenuator described in the present disclosure has at least one open side and is internal to the terminal unit and is positionable between at least two positions relative to the casing of the unit. Also described is a terminal unit having an attenuator that is positionable between at least a first position and second position. A kit is also described for fitting a terminal unit with a repositionable attenuator. Also described are clips suitable for use with the repositionable attenuator to allow for repositioning of the attenuator.
In the accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, embodiments of the invention are illustrated, which, together with a general description of the invention given above, and the detailed description given below, serve to exemplify the principles of this invention, wherein:
The present invention is described by exemplary embodiments herein, but is limited only by the claims appended hereto. The invention is capable of many embodiments, depending on the specific circumstances of each desired implementation. Departures from the embodiments described herein may be made by those of ordinary skill in the art without undue experimentation to accommodate a variety of specific implementations without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The attenuator 14 is capable of being positioned, such as by sliding, relative to the casing 12 between a first, or “out,” position illustrated in
Attenuator clips 16 cooperate with appropriate slots 18, 20 on the top of the attenuator 14 to retain the attenuator 14 in the “out” or “in” position. The attenuator 14 may also be secured in any position intermediate to the “in” or the “out” positions. Slots 18, 20 may be situated at any location on the attenuator 14 to facilitate securing the attenuator 14 in any position between fully removed from the casing 12 and completely inserted within the casing 12.
In one embodiment, the attenuator clips 16 are attached to the casing 12, such as via holes 30 illustrated in
In one embodiment, the attenuator clips 16 are removably fastened to the casing 12, such as by removable fasteners 32. In another embodiment, the attenuator clips 16 are secured to the casing 12 without fasteners 32, such as with an adhesive, glue, resin, or the like. In another embodiment, fasteners 32 are integral with the casing 12, such as integral protrusions over which the holes 30 snap into place.
Attenuator clips 16 may also be provided to cooperate with slots 18, 20 located on the bottom or the sides of attenuator 14, as illustrated in
The attenuator 14 illustrated in
The relative location of the attenuator 14 within the terminal unit 10 is generally dependent on the geometry and locations of the components within the terminal unit 10, and may be selected without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
When the attenuator 14 is in the “out” position, a flow path is enabled from outside the terminal unit 10, through the second side 24, into the attenuator 14, through the first side 22, and into the interior of the terminal unit 10. For example, if the terminal unit is placed in an HVAC system, the ambient air outside of the terminal unit 10 may be forced into the terminal unit 10 through the described flow path. The ambient air then mixes with chilled air provided to the interior of the terminal unit 10, such as through a primary air inlet 40 that is in communication with a chiller system. Then a fan 50 forces the mixed ambient and chilled air through an outlet 60 into a room, conduit, etc. in communication with the outlet 60.
Use of an attenuator 14 that is internal to and part of the terminal unit 10 may enable more accurate predictions for sound mitigation values because the attenuator 14 is a part of the terminal unit 10 and not an after-market addition that may or may not have been tested with the particular terminal unit 10. The attenuator 14 and the terminal unit 10 may occupy less space than a conventional unit because the attenuator 14 is internal to the terminal unit 10, possibly resulting in reduced costs for shipping, storage, etc. Also, there may be lower labor costs associated with installation of the attenuator and terminal unit of the present invention.
Conventional field-added attenuators can introduce undesirable performance characteristics into operation of a terminal unit, such as fan shift. This can result because the particular after-market, external attenuator may not have been tested with the specific terminal unit, and the operation of the existing terminal unit may have been optimized without the presence of an external attenuator. The terminal unit with repositionable attenuator of the present invention is unlikely to experience fan shift or other such undesirable performance characteristics, because any optimization of the terminal unit operation will be conducted with the attenuator as a part of the original manufacture of the terminal unit.
As best seen in
The attachment of the clip 16 to the casing 12 is such that the V-shaped section 70 is disposed to be capable of cooperation with slot 18, 20. When the slot 18, 20 and the V-shaped section 70 are aligned to cooperate, at least a portion of the V-shaped section 70 enters the slot 18, 20 to a sufficient depth to secure the attenuator 14. The tab 78 prevents insertion of the V-shaped section 70 to an undesired depth in the slot 18, 20 and enables sufficient structure of the clip 16 to be available to disengage the clip 16 to reposition the attenuator 14.
The bottom 72 of the V-shaped section 70 is offset from the plane of the flat section 74, for example, “below” the plane of the flat section 74, as illustrated in
For clips 16 and slots 18, 20 associated with the bottom surface 28 of the attenuator, the operation and cooperation are the same, but the directions are different. For example, the bottom 72 is disposed “above” the plane of the flat section 74.
When it is desired to reposition the attenuator 14, the V-shaped section 70 is disengaged from the slot 18, 20, allowing movement of the attenuator 14 to a different position. When the same or different slot 18, 20 is then aligned with the same or different V-shaped section 70, the V-shaped section 70 engages the slot 18, 20 to secure the attenuator 14 at the different position.
If there is more than one clip 16 and slot 18, 20, then all clips 16 must be disengaged before the attenuator 14 is moved to the different position. As illustrated in the Figures, for example, there are a plurality of clips 16 and slots 18, 20 to provide for a plurality of positions of the attenuator 14.
The clips also provide some support to the attenuator 14, particularly when it is in its “out” position. The cooperation between the slot 18, 20 and the clip 14 also provide some protection against unintentionally completely disengaging the attenuator 14 from the casing 12.
In one embodiment, the attenuator clip 16 is made from high carbon spring steel. The attenuator clip 16 may be made from any material without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The attenuator 14 and attenuator clips 16 of the present invention may also be used to retrofit existing terminal units, such as in a kit, depending on the geometry, component location, and other parameters of a particular existing terminal unit.
In one example of operation, the attenuator 14 is placed in the “in” position for shipping, storage, etc. When the terminal unit 10 is installed, or for testing, etc., the attenuator clips 16 engaging the slots 20 are disengaged and the attenuator 14 is repositioned to the “out” position. The attenuator clips 16 are then placed in engagement with the slots 18 to secure the attenuator 14 in the “out” position. If desired, the attenuator 14 may be completely removed from the casing 12 and the attenuator clips 16 not engaged with the slots 18, 20.
The attenuator 14 may be replaced in the “in” position by disengaging the attenuator clips 16 from the slots 18, repositioning the attenuator 14 to the “in” position, and engaging the attenuator clips 16 with slots 20.
While the present invention has been illustrated by the above description of embodiments, and while the embodiments have been described in some detail, it is not the intention of the Applicants to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the invention to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications will readily appear to those skilled in the art. For example, the attenuator 14 could be arranged to cooperate with the top or bottom of the casing 12 such that the attenuator 14 is repositionable vertically. Or the attenuator 14 could be arranged to cooperate with a side of the casing 12, instead of the rear of the casing 12, as illustrated and described. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details, representative apparatus and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departing from the spirit or scope of the Applicants' general or inventive concept.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application 60/567,119 filed Apr. 30, 2004, titled REPOSITIONABLE ATTENUATOR, which application is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60567119 | Apr 2004 | US |