The present invention relates to auxiliary supply circuits for safety valves supplied by a thermocouple.
Safety valves supplied by thermocouples for their use in gas burners, for example, are known. The thermocouple keeps the safety valve open while there is a flame. In the event that the flame disappears the safety valve closes, thereby cutting the gas supply. The safety unit formed by the safety valve and the thermocouple creates an intrinsically safe device, as any type of fault in said safety unit causes the closure of the safety valve and cuts, therefore, the supply of gas.
These safety valves have the drawback that when the gas burner is ignited, a certain amount of time elapses until the thermocouple is capable of keeping the safety valve open by itself. A first solution to this drawback involves making the user, on operating the gas burner control in order to ignite it, keep said control pressed and thereby keep the safety valve open for enough time to allow the thermocouple to reach the minimum temperature necessary to enable it to keep the safety valve open while there is a flame.
A second solution involves adding an auxiliary supply circuit that provides the safety valve with the energy necessary for it to remain open when the gas burner is activated.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,505,253 discloses a water heater with a control circuit comprising a supply capacitor and a discharging circuit for said supply capacitor having a solenoid which operates a safety valve, also connected directly to a thermocouple. Said supply capacitor is used to temporarily feed said solenoid to temporarily supply said safety valve with the discharging energy of said supply capacitor, until the thermocouple is heat enough to activate itself the safety valve.
Said U.S. Pat. No. 4,505,253 also discloses a supply changeover switch which connects the supply capacitor to a D. C. voltage source in its rest position, said supply capacitor supplying the safety valve when said supply changeover switch is acted on. Said supply changeover switch has to remain activated until the thermocouple is capable of supplying the safety valve by itself, and a claw member is needed to maintain said supply changeover switch activated. Therefore, the safety circuit comprises an intermediate position for activating said supply changeover switch and a final position for activating the gas burner.
The supply capacitor disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,505,253 is directly connected to the solenoid of the safety valve through a resistor, a supply capacitor with a very high capacity being necessary, with its inherent drawbacks (size, energy losses, . . . ).
It is an object of the invention to provide a supply circuit for a safety valve for the ignition of a gas burner that safeguards its own failures, that overcomes the refers drawbacks.
The supply circuit of the invention is used with safety valves that are supplied by a flame-detecting thermocouple. Said supply circuit comprises a supply capacitor that is charged from an alternating mains voltage, obtaining from the energy accumulated in said supply capacitor, due to said charging, an input voltage signal that is used to temporarily supply said safety valve in order to maintain it open. Said charging of the supply capacitor is carried out by momentarily activating a supply switch to temporarily connect the supply capacitor to said alternating mains voltage.
In its rest position, said supply switch is connected to said supply capacitor, so it is unnecessary to maintain said supply switch activated until the safety valve is kept in its valve open condition by the electric current from a thermocouple.
The activation of the supply switch occurs concurrently with the activation of the gas burner, so an intermediate position for activating said supply switch and a final position for activating the gas burner are unnecessary.
The supply circuit of the invention also comprises conditioning means for converting the input voltage signal into an output voltage signal that is directly applied to said safety valve to supply it, and so maintain it open. This avoids the drawback of needing a supply capacitor with a very high capacity.
These and other advantages and characteristics of the invention will be made evident in the light of the drawings and the detailed description thereof.
Referring to
The supply capacitor 3 charges at the moment the gas burner is ignited. The supply circuit 1 comprises a supply switch 4 that connects said supply capacitor 3 with an alternating mains voltage Vr at the moment the user ignites the burner and disconnects it immediately after. More specifically, to activate the burner, the user presses a pushbutton (not shown in figures), using the supply switch 4 to connect said supply capacitor 3 to the alternating mains voltage Vr for the instant that the pushbutton remains pressed. In addition, supply circuit 1 comprises a spark generator (not shown in figures) that is also activated by said supply switch 4.
A rectifier and limiter block 30 is disposed between the supply capacitor 3 and the alternating mains voltage Vr, and it is used to charge said supply capacitor 3. With said block 30, said supply capacitor 3 is charged until a predetermined voltage.
The supply circuit 1 also comprises control means 20, preferably supplied from the rectifier and limiter block 30 with a DC voltage Vcc, which act on the conditioning means 10 for controlling the output voltage signal Vs, in order to obtain a substantially constant supply energy for the safety valve 9, when said safety valve 9 is supplied by the supply capacitor 3. With reference to
The conditioning means 10 comprise a transformer 11, the input voltage signal Ve being the input signal of said transformer 11, and the output voltage signal Vs being obtained from the output signal of said transformer 11. When the control switch 21 is opened, during time intervals Toff, the circulation of a forward current I through the primary of said transformer 11 is prevented and the output voltage signal Vs becomes substantially null. Thus, as the charge of the supply capacitor 3 is decreasing and then said input voltage signal Ve is decreasing too, it is possible by means of said operating signal to operate on said control switch 21 to open or close it, in order to maintain a substantially constant supply energy for the safety valve 9.
The control means 20 also comprise detection means 23 which can detect the forward current I through the primary of the transformer 11, said control means 20 causing the opening of the control switch 21, by means of the operating signal M, when said detection means 23 determines that said forward current I has reached a specific value. As the charge of the supply capacitor 3 is decreasing and then the input voltage signal Ve is decreasing, the time at which the forward current I reaches its specific value is longer, so that the time that said control switch 21 remains open is longer too, being possible to maintain a substantially constant supply energy for the flame-detecting thermocouple 2.
A resistor 24 is disposed in series with the primary of the transformer 11. When there is a determined voltage between the terminals of said resistor 24, a current, substantially equal to the forward current I through said primary, of a specific value flows through said resistor 24. If the value of said resistor 24 is modified, said specific value of current changes, said specific value depending on the value of said resistor 24.
Preferably, the operating signal M is a squared signal as shown in
The operating signal M is generated by a signal generator 25 (for example, a timing circuit TLC555 from Texas Instruments), shown in
An embodiment of the supply circuit 1 is shown in
Thanks to a temperature compensating block 32, the positive pulse P+ is always finished when the forward current I through the primary of the transformer 11 is equal to the specific value in spite of the temperature of the supply circuit 1. For that purpose, said block 32 comprises a compensating resistor 24′, said compensating resistor 24′ having to be equal to the resistor 24.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080070170 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |