This invention relates, in general, to a return temperature stabilizer assembly, and deals more particularly with a modular return temperature stabilizer assembly or metering means for a boiler unit.
Boilers, either commercial or residential, are typically utilized in order to bring a circulating fluid to a desired temperature. The employed fluid is typically water, and the heated water may be provided for cooking or washing, as well as being circulated to provide radiant heat to an enclosure, such as a house or commercial building.
Boilers may be either top-fired, or bottom-fired, in dependence upon whether the burner unit is disposed in the upper or lower portions, respectively, of the boiler housing. Regardless of the orientation of the burner, it is often the case that the water within the boiler chamber will have certain temperature striations therein.
These temperature striations are often caused by the inlet flow of fluid into the boiler chamber, where the inlet flow is typically much lower in temperature by the time it is circulated and returned to the boiler.
It is of course preferable to have the water within the boiler be as uniform in temperature as possible, both for purposes of energy efficiency, as well as to prevent any thermal shock to the boiler itself.
With the forgoing problems and concerns in mind, it is the general object of the present invention to provide a boiler having a return temperature stabilizer assembly, for facilitating the mixing of inlet return water, with heated water within the boiler chamber.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a return temperature stabilizer assembly.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a return temperature stabilizer assembly or metering means for a boiler.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a return temperature stabilizer assembly or metering means for a boiler that facilitates the mixing of cooler, inlet return water with the heated water within the boiler chamber.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a return temperature stabilizer assembly or metering means for a boiler in which the temperature striations within the boiler chamber are reduced or eliminated.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a return temperature stabilizer assembly or metering means for a boiler, which is modular in design, and therefore capable of easily accommodating boilers of differing sizes.
These and other objectives of the present invention, and their preferred embodiments, shall become clear by consideration of the specification, claims and drawings taken as a whole.
A burner element 17 is disposed beneath the body of the boiler chamber 14 and is operated in a known fashion in order to provide heat to the fluid (water) within the boiler chamber 14. Drain ports 18 may be selectively utilized to enable the draining of the boiler chamber 14, or the like.
As will be appreciated, boiler fluid (i.e., water) is provided to and disposed within the boiler chamber 14 and is heated by the activity of the burner element, 17 as is well known. The burner element typically heats the water within the boiler chamber 14 until a predetermined water temperature is obtained. During this heating process, the water typically circulates about and around the boiler chamber 14 through natural convection, with the warmer water raising to the upper portion 20 of the boiler chamber 14.
It is therefore an important aspect of the present invention that cooler, return inlet water is directed to the ob-long inlet return port 16, which is in fluid communication with the boiler chamber 14. In doing so, the present invention seeks to provide the time and turbulence needed to mix the warmer water within the upper portion 20, with the cooler, return inlet water, as will be described in more detail shortly.
As can be seen from
A plurality of mixing apertures 28 are formed in a tube portion 30 of the return temperature stabilizer assembly 22. While two mixing apertures 28 are shown in
Returning now to
It will therefore be readily appreciated that the return temperature stabilizer assembly 22 may utilize the pass-through 34 and the hub 36 to properly position the flange 24, and indeed the entire return temperature stabilizer assembly 22, within the ob-long return port 16. It will further be appreciated that the return temperature stabilizer assembly 22 may be fixed within the ob-long return port 16 via another means, apart from having a flattened portion 32 or utilizing the pass-through 34 and hub 36, without departing from the broader aspects of the present invention.
As shown in
As will be appreciated, the boiler 10 shown in
In operation, the present invention directs cooler, return water back to the boiler 10, via the return temperature stabilizer assembly 22. Thus, instead of delivering the cooler, return water to the bottom of the boiler chamber 14, the return water is directed to the upper portion 20 via the return port 16, which is in fluid communication with the upper portion 20 and, therefore, the boiler chamber 14 as a whole.
It is therefore an important aspect of the present invention that directing the cooler, return water to the upper portion 20 of the boiler 10 will cause a more complete mixing of this cooler water with the heated water that has migrated to the upper portion 20 of the boiler chamber 14. Thus, temperature striations within the boiler chamber 14 can be advantageously reduced.
It is another important aspect of the present invention that the cooler, return water is not simply dumped into the return port 16 in an unregulated manner, but is instead metered into the return port 16 via the mixing holes 28 formed in the tube portion 30. That is, by forming the mixing apertures 28 in the tube portion 30, the present invention ensures that the cooler, return water within the return temperature stabilizer assembly 22 is more carefully presented to the surrounding warmer water of the return port 16. In this fashion, the cooler, return water will not ‘overwhelm’ the warmer water circulating between the return port 16 and the upper portion 20 of the boiler chamber 14, thus preventing the creation of any new temperature striations therein.
The mixing apertures 28, as well as the ob-long profile of the return port 16, provide yet another attribute to the present invention. That is, the cooler, return water coursing through the return temperature stabilizer 22 must exit the tube portion 30 via the spaced-apart mixing apertures 28, and will therefore do so as orthogonal-moving jets of higher pressure and velocity. As these jets exit the tube portion 30 and impact the walls of the ob-long return port 16, the turbulence created thereby increases the rate and extent of the mixing within the return port 16, and therefore increases the ability of the present invention to harmonize the temperature striations within the boiler chamber 14 as a whole.
Thus, by the time the burner element of the boiler 10 ‘sees’ the cooler, return water, the return water has already mixed at the upper portion 20 of the boiler chamber 14. Such a regimen, when coupled with the inherent convection of the boiler, substantially eliminates temperature striations throughout the boiler chamber, while also protecting the boiler from thermal shock.
While the present invention has been described in connection with a bottom-fired boiler, it will be readily appreciated that a similar return temperature stabilizer 22 may also be utilized in a top-fired boiler, taking into account the different structure thereof, without departing from the broader aspects of the present invention.
While the invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various obvious changes may be made, and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof, without departing from the essential scope of the present invention. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed, but that the invention includes all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/951,487, filed on Jul. 24, 2007, herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60951487 | Jul 2007 | US |