There are two main types of direct electrical heater, as compared to indirect heaters using, for example, infra-red. The first type is a linear heater where a resistance wire is laid in a meander pattern over an insulating carrier. The second type of electrical heater is a planar heater, where the element is essentially two dimensional. Applications of linear heaters are widespread, such as in electric fires or electric bed warmers. Applications of planar heaters include electric surgical blankets, heated garments, visor heaters, glove heaters, equipment heaters, engine heaters, rebreather counterlung heaters, heated rebreather hoses, heated rebreather flapper valve structures, heated diving suits, heated motorcycle garments and ski boot heaters. This patent is concerned primarily with planar heaters, but the invention also has some application to linear heaters having sufficient parallel conductors to form a plane, such as a device using a woven polymer or woven mesh as a heating element.
Planar heaters have been available for decades, first using wire mesh woven from high resistance metal compounds such as nichrome and stainless steel, then more recently, conductive polymers in sheet, woven or moulded form. In some cases the planar heating element can take three dimensions, if a sheet or fabric is sewn into a garment form or if the conductive polymer resin is moulded directly into a three dimensional form. In these three dimensional structures, the flow of electrical current is still from one linear bus bar or contact area region to another, so the material heating element itself remains essentially planar, or multi-planar when multiple electrical terminals are used.
Planar heating elements can be fabricated out of any of many different materials, including but not limited to fine stainless steel wire mesh, nichrome wire mesh, conductive polymer films or sheet, injection moulded conductive forms, conductive polymer textiles, mats or felts of chopped conductive fibre, conductive organic molecular pastes, carbonised organic woven textiles, and using almost any of the other techniques known for creating synthetic yarns, textiles and garments. For simplicity, the word ‘fabric’ will be used to describe all such planar conductive heating elements and references to conductive fabric are references to the conductive heating element, regardless of whether the heating element is strongly conductive or weakly conductive, or semi-conductive, and regardless in which form the element takes.
The resistance of conductive polymers tends to be much higher than that of wire meshes: typically 14 Ohms per square for the polymer compared to 3 Ohms per square for an ultra fine stainless steel mesh. The conductivity of the polymer can be controlled easily at the time it is fabricated by adjusting the amount of carbon or conductive material that is added to the polymer, or by cutting slots into the fabric to reduce the cross section of the heater, improve flexibility and reduce current sharing between power rails.
Power is normally supplied to the heater using a highly conductive bus bar, such as a plated copper braid, that is moulded into the element, or attached to the element by stitching, crimping or clamping. To apply power to the conductive fabric, electrodes such as tin or gold plated copper braid are usually stitched or clamped to the edges of the conductive fabric, though it is generally more desirable to embed the conductor into the polymer at the time the polymer is fabricated into the desired form. Metal threads or highly conductive polymers can be included in a weave with fewer conductive polymers, so that electrical power is distributed within the garment by a widely distributed bus bar.
Heating elements fabricated by loading a polymer with carbon seem to have first appeared as products that were produced and sold in Russia around 1980. These were fabricated by adding a dentritic form of carbon black to a chemically-setting (vulcanizing) polymer, such as two-pack silicone, or to a low-temperature thermoplastic, such as polyurethane or polyethylene, when the plastic is in a molten state. Up to 18% carbon can usually be added to a plastic before it becomes too friable, but if the carbon is highly dentritic, just a few percent is generally sufficient to achieve the desired bulk conductivity. A dentritic shape is a tree-like shape. When the dentritic carbon is added to polymers, the polymer becomes conductive or semi-conductive, and offers a degree of thermal self-stabilisation when a current is applied, because as the temperature increases the “branches” of these “trees” move apart due to thermal expansion, and as their “branches” become less interwined the electrical resistance increases. The self-stabilisation effect is sufficiently pronounced for a fixed voltage to be applied, and in a dry environment the material will reach a self limiting temperature that can be independent of the thermal load placed on the pad, that is, how much it is cooled.
The production of an item from conductive polymers and fibres can be very simple. For example, to make a conductive boot liner, a dentritic carbon black such as Cabot Vulcan XC72, can be added to two-pack chemically-setting silicone, mixing well, until the desired conductance is achieved. The mixture can then be poured to form a film that is later glued into the desired shape, or injection moulded under either pressure or vacuum, or pushed through a nozzle to form a fibre which is later woven, or chopped and pressed to form a mat that is stitched together. Often the conductive polymer is cast or woven or moulded around a nylon or other polymer mesh to impart mechanical strength to what can otherwise be a weak material, such as silicone. Conductors can be stitched to the resulting form, current applied, and the form will then heat up.
In Europe, companies such as EXO2 Ltd in Scotland have produced heated panels and garments since the late 1990s, using conductive polymers produced by these methods of adding carbon to a polymer resin. Interest in conductive polymers and conductive molecules has accelerated, and now is the basis of many types of heated garments and 3D forms available commercially in Asia, the USA and Europe, as well as in Russia where they started.
Many different production processes to produce planar conductive sheets, fabrics or forms have been developed, from those described above, where carbon or metals are added to a polymer, to those that carbonize or reduce the outer layer of an organic, or that treat a fabric to deposit a carbon-loaded film onto an insulating fibre. A good summary of the state of the art in conductive polymers is provided by the four-volume “Handbook of Organic Conductive Molecules and Polymers”, edited by H. S. Nalwa and published by J. Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-96595-2.
The garments normally operate with very low voltages (almost always under 24V, and usually 3V to 6V), to avoid the wearer receiving an electrical shock. In some environments, such as marine use, there are requirements to screen the heating element, such as in IMCA AODC guidelines.
There are several fault modes where the electrically heated fabrics can present a safety hazard. The inclusion of carbon means the user is wearing a fuel, and use of silicones and other plastics often means there is a large amount of free oxygen available to cause a runaway exothermic reaction once one part of the fabric overheats. Temperatures of 1000° C. or more can be generated in these reactions, and they have been reported even in atmospheres where very little oxygen is available, such as in helium.
It is known that a safety hazard exists, even when a one dimensional heater is incorporated into a garment. A good example is nichrome wire heaters for diver thermal balance. When these were tested in the North Sea in the 1970s and early 1980s, some divers suffered burns down to the bone, and there are reports of a fatal accident from these heaters. Thermal runaway of a heater destroys the nerve endings that stimulate pain, and heat underwater is difficult to distinguish from acute cold. The nichrome heater does not contain the fuel and excess oxygen that are a feature of the more modern materials. The more modern conductive polymers can therefore be considered to represent an even greater hazard than the earlier nichrome heaters.
Overheating of the fabric heater can be initiated through any of several mechanisms:
1. Reduction in conductor contact. Over time the conductive braid that is generally used to make contact with the conductive fabric, suffers wear and corrosion. This can reduce the contact area. As the contact area reduces, the temperature around the remaining contact points can increase substantially. The reduction in conductor cross section may occur in the cable to the heater pad, as well as on the pad itself.
2. Electrolytic action occurs in environments were there is a conducting liquid, usually salts dissolved in water. Most liquid environments are very mildly electrolytic, but when the liquid penetrates into the heater element, the liquid tends to evaporate due to the heat, leaving behind salts, which with subsequent liquid ingress results in a more conductive solution around the heater. These cycles can repeat until the electrolyte has a sufficiently high conductivity to cause local overheating of the heater element.
3. The presence of gases or liquids that conduct heat well can form local hot spots. The most acute case seems to be the presence of helium under pressure. In one incident, where a fabric heater was used as the heating element in the inhale counterlung of a rebreather, to heat the recirculated gas, the heater caught fire after 16 minutes, even though the partial pressure of oxygen was very low. These results were published on www.rebreatherrworld.com. The fire required temperatures of over 400° C. to initiate, but the self stabilizing temperature of the fabric heater in air was just 70° C.
In many environments where heated fabrics are used, such as a heater for a diver, or a heater for surgical use on an anesthetized patient, the local overheating can result in severe burns or death.
Attempts have been made to mitigate these risks by sealing the heater from the liquid, but sooner or later the seal breaks and a hazardous situation is created.
An attempt was made to embed distributed heater monitoring into the conductive fabric, using a flexible polyimide circuit board with gold-coated copper conductors, part of which was covered with an insulating solder screen, as shown in
Another attempt was made to provide a degree of safety for a polymer-film type of planar heater by monitoring the voltage on a conductor or electrode placed on the polymer at the midway position between the two power electrodes. However, the inherent two-dimensional aspect of the fabric heater resulted in the central conductor failing to detect failure of the supply conductor or of some electrolytic conditions, while at the same time being prone to false alarms, triggering a power trip when no hazard existed because of uneven cooling loading on the heater pad. This attempt has not been disclosed publicly but is presented here by the present inventor as background to the understanding of this invention.
It is an object of the present invention to enable a heater to operate safely, including in environments where electrolytes may be present.
It is a further object of the present invention to improve the safety of heaters to enable them to be used in safety critical environments.
It is a further object of the present invention to monitor the safety integrity of the cables carrying current to the heater element, to ensure that a reduction in cable cross section does not cause a local hot spot in the cable.
It is a further object of the present invention to enable the heater to be applied as an intrinsically safe heater for those environments where an explosive or reactive gas may be present.
The present invention relates to an electrical heater comprising a heating element and one or more conductive sense wires connected to the said heating element in a predetermined position between the points at which power is applied to the element, wherein the said one or more sense wires is further connected to a voltage detector for comparing that voltage with a predetermined value or fraction and triggering a safety indicator or safety trip if the voltage is outside the predetermined range or tolerance.
In an embodiment of the invention, an electrical heating element comprises a plurality of said sense wires to provide a plurality of sense signals.
In an embodiment of the invention, the said heating element is a planar heating element.
In an embodiment of the invention, the heating element is a conductive or semi-conductive sheet, mesh or fabric. In another embodiment, the said heating element is a three dimensional moulded form.
In still another embodiment of the invention, one or more conductive sense wires is placed in a predetermined position on a conductive fabric, preferably close to the power or ground supply conductors, to detect the change in voltage of that sense wire to trigger a trip or cut-out of the power supply to the heater.
In another aspect of the invention, an electrical heating system is provided comprising an electrical heater having a heating element and one or more conductive sense wires connected to the said heating element in a predetermined position between the points at which power is applied to the element, wherein the said one or more sense wires is connected to a voltage detector for comparing that voltage with a predetermined value or fraction and activating a power regulator that reduces or cuts off the power to the heating element if the voltage is outside the predetermined range or tolerance.
In an embodiment of an electrical heating system according to the present invention, the sense signal or trip signal is masked periodically, allowing the signal to settle, before it is enabled for use as a safety trip.
In an embodiment, an electrical heating system further incorporates a second trip circuit for over-current protection. In a further embodiment, an electrical heating system further incorporates a third trip circuit that triggers when the screen voltage is non-zero.
In an embodiment of the invention, an electrical heating system further incorporates a temperature sensor indicating the temperature of the heating pad, using a voltage across the resistance of the pad.
In an embodiment of the invention, an electrical heating system is provided, where the safety function driven by the voltage sensed on the heating element is combined with a heater power controller to regulate the heat output of a heater.
In an embodiment of the heating system according to the invention, the power regulator combines a power switch used for trip purposes with a variable pulse width signal or variable amplitude signal pulse width modulation.
The invention will now be described by way of example, without limitation to the generality of the invention, and with reference to the following figures:
The operation of the invention will be described, by reference to example embodiments without limit to the generality of the invention. For brevity, the examples will assume the user is a diver and the application is a heater for use inside a diver's dry suit while being worn underwater. Other environments that behave in a similar manner are patient heaters during surgery, where body wastes or blood plasma form the electrolyte, or in the counterlung of a rebreather where condensate contaminated with salts from the scrubber, cleaning solution or bacteria forms the electrolyte.
The functionality of the present invention should be apparent to a person skilled in electronics from
To avoid ambiguity, the circuit in
In
In
When the PWM stream applies power via M1 (74), the outputs of the voltage comparators will be in a state that may indicate the sense voltages from the sense conductors or traces (2), (4) are outside the permitted range, due to the time delay or inertia in the circuit from capacitance and inductances. This would tend to switch off the high-side switch (22), so to prevent this undesirable action, a latch with a delay function DL1 (62) is used to interface the comparator wire OR'd outputs to the high-side switch MOSFET M1 (74). An example embodiment of the circuitry of this interface is shown in
The example embodiment in
As both sense conductors in this example will generally show an abnormal reading under fault conditions, only one sense conductor need be used in some applications. In other applications multiple circuits may be required, supplied, for example, by connecting a plurality of the circuit shown in
The sense conductor or trace should not normally be equidistant between the 0V and +VE power conductors or bus bars (1), (5) because when a failure occurs, the two dimensional nature of the heater element (3) causes power to be shared across the fabric, resulting in a local hot spot near power supply rails, causing the voltage in that area to change, while the voltage in the centre of the pad tends not to change significantly from its usual value under the same fault conditions. This can be demonstrated by connecting the power to the fabric via a small bolt: that is, replacing the long finger strips that would form the power conductors (1) and (5) with bolts. When power is applied, the area immediately around the bolt will heat up considerably more than the centre of the pad, because the current density is highest near the power terminal. The voltage across the fabric will change from that where the power and ground, or 0V, terminals (1) and (5) are long strips of braid, especially very close to the terminals, but the voltage in the centre of the fabric will be unchanged in several of the fault modes for these planar heaters. The temperature of the bolts will rise, and with sufficient power will reach very high temperatures that can trigger ignition of a carbon-loaded silicone. The total current consumed by the heating element (3) may be within a normal range, but the extreme distortion of the power distribution and concentration of the voltage differential around the area of the terminals will cause local overheating. Due to these effects, it is generally preferable for the sense conductors or traces (2), (4) to be close to the power conductors or bus bars (1), (5).
When the circuit in
The outputs of U2 (46), U3 (48). U4 (50), U5 (52), U7 (56) and U1 (42) are wire OR'd together with positive logic. They can be implemented directly, or by application of De-Morgan's theorem, the following logic and inputs can be inverted to enable more common open-collector or open-drain-stage devices, such as LM339, to be used. In practice, the devices U8, U10, U11 may be implemented using discrete components, as integrated parts that can manage high voltages are not readily available. For example, the cross coupled flip-flop U10 (72) and U11 (66) can be implemented using two cross-coupled MOSFETs that tolerate higher voltages than common CMOS, such as EXM61NO3F devices.
The example circuitry forming the high side switch (22) in
The circuit in
A person skilled in the art will appreciate that some of these features can be omitted, within the present invention. For example, an embodiment has been described that uses only one high-side switch (22) and one low-side current sensor circuit (20): both these functions could be omitted completely within the present invention. The number of sense conductors or traces can be determined by the needs of the application: two is a preferred number, but any number of sense traces can be used, from one upwards, at the cost of additional circuitry.
Where there are large numbers of heating pads, the circuit shown in
In the circuit in
In the circuit in
Many different forms of conductor pattern are possible for the power conductors or bus bars (1), (5) and sense conductors or traces (2), (4). For example, a main bus bar can be stitched on one side of a sheet of conductive fabric, and interdigitating fingers can be stitched to the other side, with a wrap-around over the edge of the conductive fabric to provide a low resistance connection. Where the polymer has a very low conductivity, a conductive metal may be laminated to each side and the power applied to that. In this case the sense wires would be moulded or sandwiched into the body of the polymer. In another case, the power conductors can be crimped to the edge of the polymer, and folds made in the polymer sheet of fabric, onto which are crimped the sense conductors. In yet another embodiment, highly conductive fibres can be woven with less conductive fibres and connected to a highly conductive polymer bus bar using plastic welding methods.
Additional trips can be incorporated into circuits embodying the present invention, such as current imbalance trips, wet contacts and gas pressure trips, where the gas is the gas inside the water and gas tight sleeve containing the heater element.
The present invention can be applied to linear resistance heaters, but in general it is an inefficient safety solution for those heaters because simple monitoring of the current in the heater under known voltage supply conditions is enough to detail all main failure modes, unless there are many parallel conductors that form a plane, at which point it becomes a planar heater.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 (e) to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/056,647, entitled “SAFE PLANAR ELECTRICAL HEATER,” and filed May 28, 2008, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference as though set forth in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61056647 | May 2008 | US |