Thermocouple heat application control mechanisms for the boiling of water and the heating of foodstuffs are ubiquitous. A simple and commonly encountered example is the use of a thermocouple switch for turn-down of electric heat in an electric coffee pot, or electric water-heating vessel. Other examples have turn down points short of boiling, and are adjustable such as in slow-cook devices, e.g. a crock pot.
The need for such thermocouple adjustment mechanisms are several; as to foodstuff fluids, desired cooking temperatures are obtained, over-cooking is avoided, and energy is saved. As to the common task of boiling water, the same examples persist; a thermocouple switch within the device typically in the base, is built so that when the ambient fluid temperature to which the thermocouple is exposed reaches a temperature consistent with the existence of a hard boil, the thermocouple switch bends out of contact, and the water is retained in the vessel in a heated state appropriate for hot beverage brewing, but loss of fluid by excessive boil is avoided and electrical energy is saved. However, during boiling of a homogenous liquid such as water, the temperature remains constant during the boiling process.
Through use of multiple thermocouples, a zone of preferred heat is easily obtained within a closed vessel; simply stated, if the “low,” thermocouple detects ambient fluid temperature below a certain level (by which time the “high temp” thermocouple will have for the same temperature reasons reclined to an “in contact” state) then a circuit is thereby closed in the “low” thermocouple switch, and heating begins in the electric coil, until the fluid reaches such a point, such as boiling at which point the “high temp.” thermocouple disengages, the circuit is broken; and heat application is suspended. Energy and fluid may be saved by this.
Attempts to apply a thermocouple switch to cooking with gas encounter many difficulties; and such devices are not commonly encountered, particularly as to stove based applications. Stove burners are by their nature manufactured to be multiple-purpose, each burner being capable of heating contents from any sort of fluid foodstuff or usable for the heating of beverages, or usable, in the most common application the “tea kettle,” for the heating of water, typically to the boiling point, for subsequent use in the composition of hot beverages such as coffee, instant coffee, or tea. The energy saving, and fluid conserving characteristics of a thermocouple-switch-actuated electric kettle for one example, are not available for use on gas fired kitchen stoves.
The result of the unavailability of a stove based thermocouple switch for gas fired tea kettle use is that water is wasted, heat is wasted, flammable gas is wasted, and damage has frequently resulted to kettles left too long upon the flame. The steam powered tea whistle was developed as a sonic warning to the end user of the fact that his or her water was boiling. However these whistles are far less commonly in use than once was the case. The very nature of the steam-containment necessary to the operation of the whistle requires that it be placed at the spout, a hot inconvenience and a burn hazard, and an additional part is required, which then must be tracked and in any event, there is time delay for several factors, before it is possible for the human operator to turn down the gas supply level to the burner involved. Such factors include first that the whistle does not operate at the immediate point of boil, but only when the steam pressure in the vessel has reached such a state as a result of boiling that the speed-of-volume produced and expelled reaches a point that resulting vibratory process in the involved metal reed causes sound, and secondly the person heating the water must come to the scene, often a matter of at least minutes of unnecessary full power flame status.
In the now more common non-whistle equipped scenario upon a gas stove, many is the end user who has educated his or her household with language of color upon encounter with a kettle, damaged by overheating after water evaporation. Those who have not experienced this likely will as some point if without the aid of the current disclosure.
The problems faced by the inventor seeking to apply a temperature cut off motif to the kettle in the gas stove situation are several including the various difficulties of attempting to use a thermocouple switch activation system, necessarily involving wires; of attaching such system to the vessel and that the outside vessel temperature is a best an indirect measure of the boil state of the semi-contained liquid within. An even greater challenge is with respect to the fact that during boiling of a homogenous liquid such as water, the temperature necessarily remains constant during the boiling process. It is equally known that boiling temperature is a function of ambient pressure, and given that the ambient pressure changes as a function of altitude the boiling temperature also varies across these different altitudes. Thus the temperature control and thermocouple device may be least suited to detect, much less regulate, boiling of a liquid.
However, the acoustic energy (sound) released by a liquid does change upon boiling and advantageously fluctuates as a function of the boiling intensity. Therefore it is an object of the disclosed subject matter in order to obviate the deficiencies in the prior art to present a novel system to detect and control the boiling of a liquid by detecting and quantifying the sound emitted from the boiling. A system includes an adjustable heat source, an acoustic sensor to providing a signal responsive to the acoustic energy and a processor that analyses the signal. The system further includes a controller which adjusts the heat source in compliance with a signal from the processor.
It is also an object of the disclosed subject matter to present a novel method of controlling the boiling rate of a liquid. The method includes setting a desired boiling rate, sensing the acoustic energy with a sensor; and producing a signal responsive to the sensed acoustic energy. The method further adjusts the output of a stove in response to the signal to thereby control the boiling rate of the liquid.
It is another object of the disclosed subject matter to present a novel method of determining the boiling rate of a liquid. The method includes monitoring the acoustic energy and producing a signal representative of the acoustic energy. The method then filters the signal for predetermined characteristics and compares the filtered signal to a threshold to thereby determine the presence and intensity of the boiling.
These and many other objects and advantages of the present subject matter will be readily apparent to one skilled in the art to which the invention pertains from a perusal of the claims, the appended drawings, and the following detailed description of preferred embodiments.
The disclosed method and device solves for the problem of establishing temperature based control of kettle or pot contents in the gas stove regime, as well as other heat sources. Other heat sources contemplated include natural gas, oil, wood, electrical radiant, electrical resistance, electromagnetic, microwave, induction, and convection stoves or burners.
An embodiment of the disclosed subject matter is shown in
In
The embodiments authenticated herein may be articulated in many differing configurations (including stacked with adjustable pin interface between the stacked elements for reversion to set temperature control) In the alternative to the use of belts as shown herein for simplicity of illustration, embodiments herein may in the alternative of the iteration shown in
Subject matter disclosed herein is illustrated with respect to embodiments for the detection of the boiling state of fluids on a gas range or stove via a tuned voice chip or similar tuned sound perception chip, and circuit closing and switch activation to stove mechanism as shown in the attached
The practical provision of power to the master element of the device is an implementation detail, and the most obvious application, given the fixed nature of the relationship between the motor housing and the stove top (as necessary to establish the pivot point for device actuation, in comparison to the dynamic nature of the valve control stem, as currently hand-actuated, is the insertion of wire from household current directly to the fixed aspect; or Master element of the device stack, most conveniently stacked on the bottom of the two devices. However, other means of the provision of power for the device are claimed here, including the integrated us of compact lithium ion batteries, or other batteries, in a removable modular regime, but it is also envisioned with an integrated charging plate, including electrified coil based systems, physically separate from the device, and underlying it, so that power may in said iteration be obtained to the device in said regime without direct wire connection.
Likewise a boil alarm function separate and apart from the controlling function may be advantageous in its own right for alerting user of states. Such an alarm may be composed of a microphone, a sound recognition chip, a switch, and a circuit which is governed by such switch, which upon recognition of the desired state of boil, or state of flame, and upon as a result from such recognition the closing of a switch, completes a circuit so as to electrically power the alarm.
In producing a signal, one or more characteristics of the acoustic energy may be analyzed. The sound frequencies of boiling may occur within given ranges and may change with respect to the intensity of boiling. Likewise the amplitude of certain frequencies, tones, beat, rhythm and patterns may also change with respect to the intensity of the boiling. Pulse counts and period cycles also may be reflective of the state of the liquid and thus may advantageously be considered in producing the signal. It may also be beneficial to consider the requirements, nature and response of the controller in producing the signal as well as damping functions.
In
One aspect of the disclosed subject matter is that it is unaffected by changes in altitude since it is the acoustic energy of the actual boiling not the pressure reliant boiling temperature that is detected.
Another aspect of the disclosed subject matter also involves consideration of the temperature of the liquid. Where a temperature sensor is incorporated in proximity to the liquid, the processing of the signal may be predicated upon the temperature range of the liquid. We the temperature lower than 90° C., the processor may use the signal from the acoustic sensor as an indication of ambient noise and configure any filters or weighting, since it would be very unlikely that water in this example would boil at the low temperature. In addition the trend of the temperature correlated to the acoustic sensor signal may serve as a secondary verification source. For example, during boiling of a homogenous liquid the temperature should remain flat regardless of the rate of boiling, therefore if boiling is detected by the acoustic sensor and the temperature does not remain flat, an alarm may be initiated. Thus a comparison of the temperature or temperature trend by be used advantageously.
Yet another aspect of the disclosed subject matter it the substitution of a spectrum sensor for the acoustic sensor. A spectrum sensor could be configure to determining shifts in reflected light waves or radio waves as a result of the boiling, such as surface turbulence or elemental structure shifting.
Still another aspect of the disclosed subject matter its applicability to microwave ovens where the direct visual or aural indications of the boiling of a liquid by the user are more difficult to obtain. The use of an acoustic sensor according to disclosed embodiment within the microwave compartment to control not only the boiling but the heating of the foodstuff would be especially advantageous.
Still yet another aspect of the disclosed subject matter is its industrial use in processing of all nature of liquid chemicals where state changes are required and need to be controlled.
A sound recognition chip and processor are discussed in this description, the sound recognition chip may be any hardware, chip, microprocessor, Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) or electronic device that meets the functional requirement of distinguishing the acoustic energy produced in boiling a liquid. In addition the processor may be any processor, microprocessor, computer, software, hardware or combination thereof meeting the functional requirements discussed above.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described, it is to be understood that the embodiments described are illustrative only and that the scope of the invention is to be defined solely by the appended claims when accorded a full range of equivalence, many variations and modifications naturally occurring to those of skill in the art from a perusal hereof
This application is a non-provisional application claiming priority of co-pending provisional Application No. 61/293,061 entitled SOUND RECOGNITION CHIP ACTIVATED SWITCH FOR SOUND BASED RE-SETTING OF FLAME STATUS AND FLUID TEMPERATURE CONTROL THROUGH RESULTING ADJUSTMENT OF GAS-FIRED DEVICE filed Jan. 7, 2010. The entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61293061 | Jan 2010 | US |