This invention refers to the field of insecticide or similar air-freshening apparatus, where a volatile product, of a nature appropriate for the objective sought in each case, is evaporated by means of the input of heat using one or more heating resistors, within a wick on which said resistors act, and that absorbs the product by capillary action from the corresponding container.
The object of the invention is to attain deliberate regulation, on the part of the user, of the intensity of evaporation of the product in question at all times.
Evaporators of volatile substances are well-known. These are generally used as air-fresheners or insecticide elements that have a recipient container for the product in question. This product rises by capillary action through a wick that conveys the product in the direction of a heating resistor, in such a manner that the heat generated by the latter determines the evaporation product that is being used.
In order to adapt the use of these apparatus to different circumstances of use or the needs of the user, it is necessary for the rate of evaporation of the substances to be regulated, supplying the surrounding atmosphere with a greater or lesser quantity of evaporated product per unit of time.
In this respect the application for the Spanish Invention Patent ES-2.137.111 is well-known. This features one of these apparatus, in which the evaporation regulation rate is undertaken by varying the relative position between the wick and the heating element. The electro-heating resistors in this apparatus are maintained static. It is the container, along with the wick that is moved in an axial manner caused by the effect of a coil, in order to vary the degree of availability of the wick in the area of influence of the heating resistors.
Another solution is provided by our Spanish Invention Patent ES-2.163.956, in which the regulation of the degree of evaporation is carried out by means of a chimney effect, rather than by modifying the relative position between the wick and the heating resistors. By using an air current, this chimney effect causes the vaporised product to be dragged upwards, reinforcing the evaporation. To this end, use is made of a sleeve that is moved manually along a sliding guide bar on a sloping rail. The result is that said sleeve is made to take on the position of different heights. This in turn gives rise to different degrees of intensity in the said chimney effect, and accordingly to different rates of intensity in the evaporation of the product in question.
The evaporating apparatus with regulation of the intensity of evaporation that is proposed with the invention is based on the chimney effect that apparatus such as the one mentioned above feature. However, the apparatus proposed is based on a basic structure which makes correct operation possible, but that does not incorporate means for regulating the intensity of the evaporation. In order to achieve said evaporation intensity regulation, it is only necessary for a complementary part to be incorporated that converts said apparatus into one capable of controlling said regulation. On the other hand, if the function of acting on the evaporation intensity of the apparatus is not required, it will be sufficient not to attach said complementary part, or to remove it if it has already been placed in position. In this way, the apparatus will function normally and will not carry out any class of regulation on said evaporation intensity of the substance.
This means a drastic simplification from the manufacturing viewpoint. This is because while it is conventionally necessary to manufacture two completely different types of mechanisms or apparatus, one without the regulation function and the other with evaporation intensity regulation, with the system of this invention one single basic apparatus can be manufactured, that is equally valid in both the case in which regulation exists and if the aim is for there to be no regulation. When the objective is to obtain an apparatus that regulates evaporation intensity, it will be simply sufficient to attach the complementary part to said base apparatus.
In practice this is achieved by means of attaching a complementary part with coplanar slots or openings to the upper part of the casing of the apparatus. These can, to a greater or lesser extent, be set in opposition to the fixed slots or openings that appear in the upper part of the casing. This also limits the passage of the vapours through it, to a greater or lesser extent as appropriate. In this manner, the passage of the vapours from the inside of the casing to the outside can be regulated by means of a reduction or increase in the section through which said vapours gain access to the outside. As has been stated, this section is defined by the greater or lesser opposition of the coplanar slots of the complementary part and of the openings that are set in the casing.
Another possible form is the one in which the invention functions involving the casing incorporating a series of spurred indentations that surround the central opening through which the vapours rise, rather than the openings set in the upper part. In this other case, the complementary part has a cylindrical ring and axial, another series of spurred indentations that can to a greater or lesser extent be set in opposition to those of the casing. This complementary part can be joined by means of pressure to the upper base of the casing using strain-bearing teeth for instance, that will regulate the evaporation intensity on the basis of the angular position that it adopts with respect to the latter. This angular position will, to a greater or lesser extent, determine the degree of opposition between the fixed spurred slots and the moving spurred slots. In this way the variation or regulation of the chimney effect produced can be determined.
The apparatus can optionally incorporate the two types of slots, or slots with another configuration or disposition simultaneously.
In order to complement the description that is being made, and for the purpose of assisting greater understanding of the features of the invention, a series of drawings is attached as an integral part of said description so as to show the preferred example of the practical form of the same. These drawings have been represented in the following way, on an illustrative and non-limiting basis.
FIG. 1.—shows, from a perspective viewpoint, the casing corresponding to an air-freshening apparatus that is capable of including the evaporation intensity regulation system that constitutes the object of this invention.
FIG. 2.—shows a variation on the form of the same casing from a similar perspective to that of the previous illustration.
FIG. 3.—shows the apparatus from
FIG. 4.—shows a similar representation to that in
In light of the figures described it is possible to observe how an airfreshening apparatus similar to the one that is applicable to the invention consists of a casing (1) which is extended by a connecting pin (2), in order to attach it to the plug base and the subsequent power supply of the electro-heating resistors set up inside the casing (1). This leads to the heating of the product which, being powered from a recipient that is not shown in the drawings that can be attached to the inner part of the casing (1), exits by capillary action along the typical wick on which the electro-heating resistors function.
Hence, from this basic and conventional structuring and following the illustration of
Said casing (1) is complemented by an auxiliary or complementary part (7), the one shown in
On an optional basis, and as shown in
As has also been mentioned above, there is the possibility of combining the two aforesaid solutions in such a way that the apparatus incorporates both vertical slots and openings (6′-9′) and coplanar slots and openings (6-9).
In any event a situation is attained in which the apparatus can function as a conventional apparatus without the means of regulation, in the position of
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/ES01/00018 | 1/29/2001 | WO | 00 | 9/2/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/060494 | 8/8/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
472133 | Merrill | Apr 1892 | A |
2383960 | Dupuy | Sep 1945 | A |
2765194 | Will | Oct 1956 | A |
3848803 | Levey | Nov 1974 | A |
3872280 | Van Dalen | Mar 1975 | A |
4327056 | Gaiser | Apr 1982 | A |
4759501 | Silvenis et al. | Jul 1988 | A |
4968487 | Yamamoto et al. | Nov 1990 | A |
5788931 | Munoz Quintana | Aug 1998 | A |
6254248 | McAuley et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
529718 | Jan 1985 | ES |
2043621 | Jan 1994 | ES |
2137111 | Dec 1999 | ES |
WO200076292 | Dec 2000 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040067173 A1 | Apr 2004 | US |