The invention concerns a supply air unit in accordance with the preamble to claim 1.
Supply air units or air-conditioning beams usually comprise a supply air chamber, a mixing chamber and a heat exchanger. A flow of fresh air is brought from the supply air chamber into the mixing chamber, in which the flow of fresh air is mixed together with a circulated airflow, whereupon the combined airflow is conducted into a room space. The circulated airflow is conducted into the mixing chamber through a heat exchanger, in which the circulated airflow can be either heated or cooled. The flow of fresh air induces the circulated airflow to flow from the room through the heat exchanger into the mixing chamber.
Patent application FI 20060035 presents a supply air unit and a method for controlling the airflow rate. The supply air unit comprises a supply air chamber, a heat exchanger and a mixing chamber. From the supply air chamber the flow of fresh air is conducted through nozzles into the mixing chamber, in which the supply airflow induces a circulated airflow to flow from the room through the heat exchanger into the mixing chamber. In the mixing chamber, the combined fresh airflow and circulated airflow are conducted from the mixing chamber's outlet opening into the air-conditioned room space. The supply air unit also comprises a separate additional air opening, which is equipped with a controller, which can be used for controlling the rate of fresh airflow supplied from the supply air chamber past the nozzles and into the room space. The additional air opening may lead from the supply air chamber either directly into the air-conditioned room space or into the mixing chamber.
Patent application FI 20075213 presents a supply and exhaust air unit, which comprises a supply air chamber and a mixing chamber. In this solution the supply and exhaust air unit also comprises a separate additional air opening, which is equipped with a controller and which can be used for controlling the rate of fresh airflow supplied from the supply air chamber past the nozzles and into the room space. The supply and exhaust air unit also comprises an exhaust air opening, which is equipped with a controller and which can be used for controlling the rate of air exhausted from the room space.
Patents FI 117682 B, 118236 B present supply air units, which comprise a supply air chamber, a heat exchanger and a mixing chamber. A fresh airflow is conducted from the supply air chamber through nozzles into the mixing chamber, in which the supply airflow induces a circulated airflow to flow from the room through the heat exchanger and into the mixing chamber. In the mixing chamber, the combined fresh airflow and circulated airflow are conducted from the mixing chamber's outlet opening into the air-conditioned room space. The publications present various systems for controlling the induction ratio and for controlling either the rate of fresh airflow supplied into the mixing chamber or the rate of circulated airflow conducted from the air-conditioned room space into the mixing chamber.
Patent EP 0 365 586 B1 presents a ventilation device, which comprises an elongated supply air chamber, which is located in connection with the ceiling surface in the air-conditioned room space, and located beside it an elongated panel. The panel is heated or cooled by tubes, which are fitted in connection with the panel's top surface and in which a heat carrier flows. In the supply air chamber there is a supply air passage, from which air is blown in the horizontal direction along the horizontal bottom surface of said panel, whereby the airflow blown inside is in thermal interaction with the panel. On the panel's top surface there is a heat-insulating material, which also covers the tubes transporting the heat carrier. Thus, the aim here is to boost the transfer of heat from the radiating surface into the air-conditioned room space by using forced convection, which is brought about by blowing the supply airflow along the panel's bottom surface, that is, the radiating surface. This again raises the temperature of the radiating surface and in this way reduces the radiation. The increase in efficiency achieved by blowing is considerably smaller than the increase in efficiency achieved by heat exchangers.
In the air-conditioned room space the air is stratified in such a way that the lighter warm air rises up towards the room's ceiling surface, whereas the heavier cool air sinks down towards the room's floor surface. In the heat transfer taking place by convection only, heating and cooling take place through the air moving through the heat exchanger. Efficient heat transfer would thus require that the air circulates at a high velocity in the room space, but a high velocity again will cause draught. In the heat transfer taking place by radiation only, heating and cooling take place as radiation between the heat transferring surface and the room surfaces. A person will feel both the temperature of the room surfaces and the temperature of the air in the room.
The supply air unit according to the invention is characterised by the features presented in the characterising part of claim 1.
The supply air unit comprises a supply air chamber, at least one mixing chamber, which opens into the air-conditioned room space, nozzles or a nozzle gap, through which a fresh airflow is conducted from the supply air chamber into said at least one mixing chamber, a first heat transfer unit, which is formed by at least one heat exchanger, through which a circulated airflow is conducted from the air-conditioned room space into said at least one mixing chamber, and in which the circulated airflow is cooled or heated. The combined airflow formed from said at least one mixing chamber by the fresh airflow and the circulated airflow is conducted into the air-conditioned room space. The supply air unit also comprises a second heat transfer unit, which is located in its lower part and which is formed by at least one radiating element, which has a radiating surface, to which heat is transferred from the air-conditioned room space for cooling or from which heat is transferred into the air-conditioned room space for heating. The radiating surface also comprises a perforation, which makes it sound-absorbing. The perforation reduces the reflection of sound taking place in the radiating surface, whereby the acoustic characteristics of the room space are improved.
The supply air unit has a first heat transfer unit transferring heat by convection and a second heat transfer unit transferring heat by radiation. In the first heat transfer unit, heat is transferred from a heat-carrying liquid travelling in tubing to the heat exchanger's heat transfer surfaces and further from these into a circulated airflow travelling between the heat transfer surfaces. In the second heat transfer unit, heat is transferred from a heat-carrying liquid travelling in tubing to the radiating surface and further from this as radiation to the room surfaces.
The tubes of the heat exchangers and the radiating element can be dimensioned in such a way that the flow characteristics in the tubes are different. When only a low cooling power is required in the air-conditioned room space, the flow is kept turbulent in the radiating element's tubing and laminar in the heat exchanger s' tubes. A high turbulence of the flow in the radiating element's tubing leads to a high heat transfer coefficient between the heat-carrying liquid and the tube, whereby the heat transfer from the heat-carrying liquid to the tube becomes more efficient. A laminar flow in the heat exchangers' tubes will for its part produce a low heat-transfer coefficient and thus lower heat transfer from the heat-carrying liquid to the tube. A major part of the cooling power is thus obtained from the radiating element, whereby the sense of draught caused by the cool moving airflow can be minimized.
When more cooling is needed, the flow velocity of the heat-carrying liquid is increased, so that the flow will become turbulent also in the heat exchangers, whereby the cooling power of the heat exchangers increases. In this state, a larger part of the need for cooling in the room space is transferred through the moving air.
With the solution according to the invention, cooling capacity is delivered in a cooling situation into the air-conditioned room space both by convection and by radiation, whereby the thermal comfort can be improved in the room space as a result of reduced movement of air. Thanks to the radiation, the supply air unit also in a shorter time will affect the sense of warmth of a person staying in the air-conditioned room space.
The invention will be described in the following by referring to some advantageous embodiments of the invention, which are shown in the figures of the appended drawings, but there is no intention to restrict the invention to these alone.
The supply air unit 100 comprises a supply air chamber 10, whose cross-section is essentially rectangular comprising in its lower part triangular bracket sections 10a, 10b. In the roof surface of the left-hand bracket section 10a there is a first row of nozzles 60a or a nozzle gap. In the roof surface of the right-hand bracket section 10b there is a second row of nozzles 60b or a nozzle gap. At a distance from the supply air chamber's 10 left-hand vertical side wall 11a there is a first heat exchanger 30a with a rectangular cross-sectional shape. At a distance from the supply air chamber's 10 right-hand vertical side wall 11b there is a second heat exchanger 30b with a rectangular cross-sectional shape. A first mixing chamber 20a is formed in a space between the supply air chamber's 10 left-hand vertical side wall 11a and the first heat exchanger 30a. A second mixing chamber 20b is formed in a space between the supply air chamber's 10 right-hand vertical side wall 11b and the second heat exchanger 30b.
In the first mixing chamber's 20a top part a first outlet opening 25a is formed, and in the second mixing chamber's 20b top part a second outlet opening 25b is formed. Both outlet openings 25a, 25b are formed in such a way that the airflow LA leaving the supply air unit 100 is guided from the mixing chamber 20a, 20b in the air-conditioned room space to the side essentially in the direction of the room's ceiling surface K.
A first suction chamber 40a is formed outside the outer surface of the first heat exchanger 30a, and a second suction chamber 40b is formed outside the outer surface of the second heat exchanger. The bottom surface of each suction chamber 40a, 40b has openings 41a, 41b, from which the circulated air L2 taken from the room space can enter the suction chamber 40a, 40b. Suction chambers 40a, 40b are not needed for the supply air unit's 100 operation, so they can also be omitted. Their function is mostly aesthetic. In a supply air unit 100 without suction chambers 40a, 40b, the circulated airflow L2 arrives directly at the outer side surface of the heat exchangers 30a, 30b.
A fresh supply airflow L1 is conducted by a blowing fan into the supply air chamber 10, for example, by way of a tube fitting (not shown in the figure) located in its end surface, and further through the supply air chamber's 10 first row of nozzles 60a into the first mixing chamber 20a and through the second row of nozzles 60b into the second mixing chamber 20b. In the mixing chambers 20a, 20b a fresh airflow L1, which is directed vertically upwards, induces the circulated airflow L2 from the air-conditioned room space to travel through the suction chambers 40a, 40b and the heat exchanger 30a, 30b into the mixing chambers 20a, 20b. The circulated airflow L2 can be cooled or heated in the heat exchangers 30a, 30b. In the mixing chambers 20a, 20b, the fresh airflow L1 directed upwards travels tangentially in relation to the heat exchanger's 30a, 30b surface, which opens into the mixing chamber 20a, 20b.
The combined airflow LA formed of the fresh airflow L1 and the circulated airflow L2 in the first mixing chamber 20a is conducted from the first outlet opening 25a along ceiling surface K to the left in the figure, and the combined airflow LA formed in the second mixing chamber 20b is conducted from the second outlet opening 25b along ceiling surface K to the right in the figure.
The supply air unit 100 is symmetrical in relation to the vertical central axis Y-Y and it is preferably formed by an elongated body. The supply air unit 100 is suspended at the supply air chamber's 10 roof wall 11d with suitable suspension fasteners to the ceiling K of the air-conditioned room space in such a way that the supply air chamber's 10 roof wall 11d remains at a distance from the ceiling surface K.
The heat exchangers 30a, 30b here form a first heat-transfer unit A, in which heat is transferred by convection into the circulated airflow L2 flowing through the heat exchangers 30a, 30b.
To the supply air chamber's 10 bottom wall 11c is supported a radiating element 50, which comprises a horizontal, planar radiating surface 51, tubes 52, which are located above radiating surface 51 in connection with it and in which a heat carrier circulates, and a heat insulation 53, which prevents the heating or cooling effect of the heat carrier flowing in tubes 52 from being transferred upwards from the radiating element 50 to the supply air chamber's 10 bottom wall 11c.
The radiating element 50 forms a second heat-transfer unit B, in which heat is transferred from the planar radiating surface 51 as radiation to the planar surfaces of the room space.
With the solutions shown in
The radiating element's 50 heat-transfer tubing 52 and the heat exchangers' 30a, 30b heat-transfer tubes 32a, 32b can be dimensioned so that the flow characteristics in the heat-transfer tubes 52, 32a, 32b are different. When only a low cooling power is needed in the air-conditioned room space, the flow in the radiating element's 50 heat-transfer tubing 52 is turbulent, while in the heat exchangers' 30a, 30b heat-transfer tubes 32a, 32b the flow is laminar. A high turbulence in the flow in the radiating element's 50 heat-transfer tubes 52 leads to a high heat-transfer coefficient between the heat-carrying liquid and the tube, whereby the heat transfer from the heat-carrying liquid to the tube becomes more efficient. On the other hand, a laminar flow in the heat exchanger's 30a, 30b heat-transfer tubes 32a, 32b produces a low heat-transfer coefficient and thus a lower heat transfer from the heat-carrying liquid to the tube. A major part of the cooling power is hereby obtained from the radiating element 50. When more cooling is required, the flow velocity of the heat-carrying liquid is increased, so that the flow becomes turbulent also in the heat exchangers 30a, 30b, whereby the cooling power of the heat exchangers 30a, 30b will increase.
Different turbulence in the radiating element's 50 tubing 52 and in the heat exchangers' 30a, 30b heat-transfer tubes 32a, 32b can be achieved, for example, by the choice of tube dimensions or by distributing the flow of the heat-carrying liquid into one or more circuits after the radiating element 50. When the heat-carrying liquid is conducted into a tube having a larger flow cross-section area, its flow velocity will drop, and the other way round. When the heat-carrying liquid's flow is branched off from the first heat-transfer tube into two heat-transfer tubes, its flow velocity will drop, if the totalled flow cross-section area of these two heat-transfer tubes exceeds the flow cross-section area of the first heat-transfer tube.
The circuit shown in
In the embodiments shown in the figure, the second heat-transfer unit B is formed by one radiating element 50, but when required the supply air unit 100 may of course comprise several radiating elements 50. The supply air unit 100 could, for example, comprise two or more parallel radiating elements 50.
The radiating surface 51 of the radiating element 50 shown in the figures may be formed by a metal sheet, which has openings and which is made, for example, of aluminium or steel. The cross-section of the openings in radiating surface 51 can be, for example, round, rectangular, polygonal, elliptic, oval, etc. The radiating element's 50 heat insulation 53 may for its part be formed by mineral wool, glass wool, expanded polystyrene, polyurethane or by some other such material which insulates heat. By forming the radiating surface 51 from a perforated sheet the structure is made sound-absorbing. Sound will travel from the radiating surface's 51 openings into the heat insulation 53 located above radiating surface 51 and it will be absorbed there. The radiating element 50 can also be constructed in such a way that radiating surface 51, heat-transfer tubes 52 and heat insulation 53 are cast together to form a whole. Radiating surface 51 and heat-transfer tubes 52 are located in a mould and then, for example, fluid ceramics are poured on them. When the ceramics solidifies, a radiating element 50 will result which forms a whole.
The invention is not limited to the cross-sectional forms shown in the figure. The cross-sectional forms of supply air chamber 10, mixing chambers 20a, 20b and heat exchangers 30a, 30b may be rectangular but also, for example, triangular, polygonal, key-stone shapes or their combinations.
In the embodiments shown in the figures, radiating element 50 is the supply air unit's lowest component, and no supply air flow L1 is directed against the radiating element's 50 radiating surface 51. Thus, radiating surface 51 functions as a pure radiator, from which a cooling or heating effect is transferred to surfaces in the room space. Thus, the air in between radiating surface 51 and the surfaces in the room space will hardly be cooled or heated at all by the radiating element's 50 effect.
The above was only a presentation of some advantageous embodiments of the invention, and it is obvious to a person skilled in the art that numerous modifications can be made to these within the scope defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20096350 | Dec 2009 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI10/51040 | 12/16/2010 | WO | 00 | 8/14/2012 |