The subject matter disclosed herein relates to monitoring an appliance to prevent overheating of the appliance.
Appliances such as cooking ranges and wall ovens are widely utilized in homes and restaurants. A cooking range typically includes an oven with a front-opening access door, and at least one heating element for heating up the inside of the oven cavity. Wall ovens have a similar configuration. As is known in the art, when energized, the heating element can heat up the inside of the oven cavity to a relatively high temperature. Also as is known in the art, such a cooking appliance often has a cooling fan which can be used to draw cooling air into the interior of the appliance to cool a structural component of the appliance, such as the front-opening access door, or a heat sensitive component such as an electronic control.
In cooking appliance such as cooking ranges equipped with cooling fans, the cooling fan must be monitored in order to prevent overheating in the event that the cooling fan fails. Prior solutions for cooling fan monitors include, for example, temperature sensors, sail switches and Hall effect sensors. Temperature sensors are calibrated such that they can detect the temperature rise associated with the cooling fan and indicate to a controller that the cooling fan has failed. Disadvantages of this method include the amount of development time required to tune sensors to the system as well as the reliance on the control software to shutdown the heating elements. Sail switches utilize a sheet metal to activate a micro-switch when moved by the airflow of the cooling fan. Disadvantages of this approach include the delicate nature of the sail switch, which can be easily bent or moved out of position and the reliance on the control software to shutdown the heating elements. A Hall effect sensor can be an effective method to determine the speed of the cooling fan speed but typically must be coupled with control software to shutdown the heating elements.
As described herein, the preferred embodiments of the present invention overcome one or more of the above or other disadvantages known in the art.
One aspect of the present invention relates to a system for monitoring a cooling fan having a rotary member and utilized in an appliance having a heating element. The system generally includes an electric switch actuated by a magnetic field of a magnet mounted on the rotary member. The electric switch is located proximate to the path of the magnet such that the magnetic field of the magnet actuates the electric switch with each rotation of the magnet past the switch, thereby causing the electric switch to switch at a switching frequency proportional to the rate of rotation of the rotary member. The system further includes a circuit responsive to an electrical signal from the electric switch. The circuit generates a signal indicative of a status of the cooling fan, based on the switching frequency of the electric switch.
Another aspect of the present invention relates to a system for monitoring a cooling fan having one or more fan blades and utilized in an appliance having a heating element. Such a system generally can include an electric switch actuated by a magnetic field of a magnet mounted on a fan blade of the cooling fan. The electric switch can be located proximate to the magnet, such that the magnet rotates past the electric switch to actuate the electric switch via the magnetic field at a switching frequency determined by the rotational speed of the fan blade. Such a system can include a circuit responsive to the switching of the electric switch. The circuit can generate a signal indicative of the status of the cooling fan, based on the switching frequency of the electric switch. Such a system can be configured to further include a controller for controlling the appliance, such that the controller can be responsive to the signal output from the circuit in order to permit the controller to directly interface with the power circuit of the appliance to disable the heating element of the appliance in the event of the failure of the cooling fan.
Yet another aspect of the present invention relates to a system for monitoring a cooling fan having one or more fan blades and utilized in an appliance having a heating element. Such a system can include a reed switch actuated by a magnetic field of a magnet mounted on the fan blade of the cooling fan. The reed switch can be located proximate to the magnet, wherein the magnet rotates past the reed switch to actuate the reed switch via the magnetic field at a switching frequency with each rotation of the fan blade. Such a system can further include a watchdog circuit responsive to the switching of the reed switch, wherein the watchdog circuit can generate a signal indicative of the status of the cooling fan, based on the switching frequency of the electric switch.
These and other aspects and advantages of the preferred embodiments of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed solely for purposes of illustration and not as a definition of the limits of the invention, for which reference should be made to the appended claims. Moreover, the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale and that, unless otherwise indicated, they are merely intended to conceptually illustrate the structures and procedures described herein.
The accompanying figures, in which like reference numerals refer to identical or functionally-similar elements throughout the separate views and which are incorporated in and form a part of the specification, further illustrate the present invention and, together with the detailed description of the invention, serve to explain the principles of the present invention.
The particular values and configurations discussed in these non-limiting examples can be varied and are cited merely to illustrate at least one of the disclosed embodiments and are not intended to limit the scope thereof.
An exemplary appliance incorporating a cooling fan arrangement is generally designated by reference numeral 100 in
The appliance 100 depicted in
By this arrangement only one of these heating elements can be connected to L1 at a time, thereby limiting the maximum power load of the appliance. Switches 58-62 may be manually controlled electromechanical switches, or electrically controlled by an electronic controller in response to manual inputs or timer inputs. Each of elements 52-56 are electrically connected to power supply line L2 through relay device 42 comprising relay switch 66 and relay coil 68. Each of the heating elements is connected to the common contact of switch 66. The normally closed contacts of switch 66 provide the open state for switch 66.
Normally open contacts of switch 66 are connected to L2 via thermal switch 65. The switching state of relay device 42 is controlled by watchdog circuit 10. As will be hereinafter described, when the fan 134 is operating normally, the output from circuit 10 energizes coil 68, which switches switch 66 to the closed state in which the oven heating elements are electrically connected to L2 via thermal switch 65, thereby enabling energization of the heating elements. When the fan 134 is not rotating at a sufficient speed, the output of circuit 10 de-energizes coil 68, which switches switch 66 to its open state de-coupling the heating elements from L2 thereby preventing energization of the heating elements.
The circuit 10 generally includes a damper capacitor 12, a damper reset circuit 14, and an enable circuit 16, which are electrically coupled to the output of a fan monitoring circuit comprising a magnetic reed switch 18. The enable circuit 16 comprises transistor 36, a biasing resistor 38 connected electrically between the emitter and the base of enable transistor 36 and resistor 40 connecting the base of transistor 36 to damper capacitor 12. The state of the charge on capacitor 12 which is connected between the base of transistor 36 and ground determines the state of transistor 36. The charging circuit for capacitor comprises power supply 28 and serially connected resistors 38 and 40. The discharge circuit comprises resistor 22 and transistor 32. The capacitor 12 is connected electrically to the resistor 22 and resistor 40 at node B. The coil 68 of relay device 42 is electrically serially connected between the collector of transistor 36 and ground.
The damper reset circuit 14 is shown in
Although damper reset transistor 32 and enable transistor 36 are illustrated and described herein as transistors, it will be understood that damper reset transistor 32 and enable transistor 36 are not limited to transistors. Rather, damper reset transistor 32 and enable transistor 36 can be any electronic switch that includes a first position that allows electrical current to flow through the switch and a second position that prevents electrical current from flowing through the switch.
The electric switch 18 is actuated by a magnetic field of the magnet 19, mounted on a blade of the cooling fan 134. The electric switch 18 is located proximate to the path of the magnet 19, such that when the magnet 19 rotates past the electric switch 18, the electric switch 18 is actuated. More specifically, in the illustrative embodiment, switch 18 is a magnetic reed switch which is biased open. As the magnet passes sufficiently close to the switch for the magnetic field to overcome the bias, the switch closes and remains closed until the magnet moves far enough away from the switch that the field no longer is sufficient to overcome the bias. That is, the electric switch 18 closes and opens with each rotation of the rotary member generating a pulse train having a switching frequency corresponding to the rate of rotation of the rotary member, cooling fan 134. By selecting the aforementioned predetermined switching rate, to correspond to the minimum acceptable rate of rotation of the cooling fan 134, circuit 10 is operative to denergized coil 68 thereby preventing energization of the oven heating elements 52, 54, and/or 56 in the event of a failure of the cooling fan 134 to rotate at a speed sufficient to perform its cooling function.
In the system 401, the controller 70 monitors the fan status and is programmed to prevent energization of the heating elements when the fan status signal signifies a malfunction of the fan. In this embodiment, circuit 10 is substantially the same as in
By this arrangement, when transistor 36 is in its ON state, the pulse train 80 is passed through to the fan status input 72, signifying to the controller that the fan is working properly. If transistor 36 is in its OFF state, the pulse train is not passed through to the fan status input 72, signifying to the controller that the fan is not rotating at a sufficient speed. The controller 70 is programmed to prevent energization of the heating elements when the pulse train is not present at input line 72. Note that the controller 70 can be, in some embodiments, an ERC (Electronic Ranger Controller) for controlling the appliance 100. Also, although the controller 70 can be depicted in
In general, when the switching frequency of the electric switch 18 exceeds an particular fixed threshold, an output of the circuit 10 can be enabled, and this output can be utilized to pass through a signal to indicate to a controller of the appliance 100 that the cooling fan 134 can be operating properly or enable a relay such as device 42 that can enable the heating elements 52, 54, and 56 directly. Note that the configuration depicted in
Thus, while there have shown and described and pointed out fundamental novel features of the invention as applied to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes in the form and details of the devices illustrated, and in their operation, may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, it is expressly intended that all combinations of those elements and/or method steps which perform substantially the same function in substantially the same way to achieve the same results are within the scope of the invention. Moreover, it should be recognized that structures and/or elements and/or method steps shown and/or described in connection with any disclosed form or embodiment of the invention may be incorporated in any other disclosed or described or suggested form or embodiment as a general matter of design choice. It is the intention, therefore, to be limited only as indicated by the scope of the claims appended hereto.