The present disclosure relates to gas burners, for example gas burners that fully pre-mix liquid propane gas and air for combustion. The present disclosure further relates to systems and methods for operating such fully pre-mix gas burners.
The following US patents and patent publication are incorporated herein by reference.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,075,304 discloses a power burner system for use with a heating appliance. The power burner system includes a burner tube, a gas valve for providing gas to the burner tube, and a variable-speed combustion air blower for mixing air with the gas provided to the burner tube. The burner system further includes a controller in communication with the gas valve and the combustion air blower. The controller may also be in communication with various other devices of an appliance, such as a variable-speed air-circulating fan, a variable-speed exhaust fan, or various sensors associated with the heating appliance. The controller modulates the gas valve and the combustion air blower to maintain substantially stoichiometric conditions of the gas and air provided to the burner tube and as a function of signals from at least one of the devices. In one embodiment, the burner system may be used in a conveyor oven.
U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2016/0047547 discloses a water heating device, comprising a burner and a flame current measuring device for measuring a flame current. The measuring device comprises two electrodes and a voltage source. Each of the poles of the voltage source is connected to one of the electrodes. The water heating device further comprises a heat exchanger which is electrically insulated relative to the burner. The burner and the heat exchanger form the electrodes of the flame current measuring device. The heat exchanger functioning as electrode can be earthed. The measured flame current can be used to determine the excess air factor of the combustion. The water heating device can further comprise an air/fuel controller for controlling the air/fuel ratio, wherein the air/fuel controller uses the determined excess air factor to control the air/fuel ratio.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,984,664 discloses an apparatus that provides an air/fuel mixture to a fully premixed burner and a fuel line that provides fuel to the burner. A fan supplies air at a variable flow rate to the fuel to form the mixture. A sensor senses aeration of the fuel combustion products. A controller controls the air flow rate in dependence upon the aeration sensed and in such a way that the air flow rate is sufficient to maintain the aeration at or close to a predetermined value. The controller maintains the air flow rate at one of a number of differing predetermined values which are in the form of a geometric series characterized by a constant value of the ratio between successive values.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,712,996 discloses a gas burner control system for controlling operation of a furnace. A blower is fluidically connected to the combustion chamber of the furnace. The system utilizes a mass flow sensor for preventing or discontinuing burner operation in the event of a blower failure or a predetermined degree of blockage in the fluid flow path controlled by the blower. The mass flow sensor includes a circuit which enables use of unmatched sensors, enables establishing of a desired value of temperature difference between sensors, enables establishing a temperature difference that is not constant so as to compensate for different ambient air densities, and enables compensating for voltage variations at different ambient air temperatures.
This Summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts that are further described herein below in the Detailed Description. This Summary is not intended to identify key or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in limiting scope of the claimed subject matter.
A gas burner system according to the present disclosure has a gas burner with a conduit through which an air-gas mixture is conducted; a variable-speed forced-air device that forces air through the conduit; a control valve that controls a supply of gas for mixture with the air to thereby form the air-gas mixture; and an electrode configured to ignite the air-gas mixture so as to produce a flame. The electrode is further configured to measure a flame ionization current associated with the flame. A controller is configured to actively control (e.g. vary the speed of) the variable-speed forced-air device based on the flame ionization current measured by the electrode in a manner that automatically avoids a flame harmonic mode of the gas burner. Corresponding methods are herein disclosed.
Typical premix liquid gas propane (LPG) burners have five modes of combustion including (1) harmonic, (2) rich instability, (3) lean instability, (4) silent and (5) pulsating. In the harmonic mode, the gas burner tends to produce sound having a frequency of 1400-1800 hertz and amplitude of greater than 55 decibels. The present inventors have found that this sound, sometimes referred to as “whistling”, can be a significant problem, for example in the vehicle heating market, because the user often operates the gas burner in the middle of the night when the sound is particularly disturbing. Based on this realization, the present inventors conducted research and development and invented the presently disclosed systems and methods, which are configured to operate the gas burner in a way that advantageously avoids the above-described harmonic mode.
A metal burner skin 28 is located in the flame tube 14 and is attached to the inside surface of the burner deck 18 so that the burner skin 28 covers the plurality of aeration holes 20. In the illustrated example, the burner skin 28 is made of woven metal matting, however the type and configuration of burner skin 28 can vary from what is shown. As shown in
An ignition and flame sensing electrode 30 is disposed in the flame tube 14, proximate to the burner skin 28. The electrode 30 extends through a through-bore 32 in the burner deck 18 and is fastened to the burner deck 18 via a connecting flange 34. The type of electrode 30 and the manner in which the electrode 30 is coupled to the gas burner 10 can vary from what is shown. The electrode 30 can be a conventional item, for example a Rauschert Electrode, Part No. P-17-0044-05. The electrode 30 has a ceramic body 35 and an electrode tip 37 that is oriented towards the burner skin 28. The electrode 30 is configured to ignite the air-gas mixture in a conventional manner, as the air-gas mixture passes through the conduit 16 via the plurality of aeration holes 20. The resulting burner flame 29 is thereafter maintained as the air-gas mixture flows through the burner skin 28.
The electrode 30 is further configured to measure the flame ionization current associated with the burner flame 29. Specifically, the electrode tip 37 is placed at the location of the burner flame 29 with a distance of 2.5+/−0.5 mm between the electrode tip 37 and the burner skin 28. A voltage of 275+/−15V is applied across the electrode 30 and burner skin 28, with the electrode 30 being positive and the burner skin 28 being negative. The chemical reactions that occur during combustion create charged particles, which are proportional to the air/fuel ratio of a given fuel. The potential difference across the gas burner 10 can be used to measure and quantify this. The electrode 30 is configured to measure the differential and, based on the differential, determine the flame ionization current, as is conventional and known in the art. The flame ionization current is proportional the actual fuel-to-air equivalence ratio for a given mixture.
Referring now to
The gas burner system 12 also includes a computer controller 50. As explained herein below, the controller 50 is specially programmed to actively control the speed of the forced-air device 40 based on the flame ionization current measured by the electrode 30. According to the programming structure and methods of the present invention, the controller 50 is programmed to avoid the flame harmonic mode of the gas burner 10. The controller 50 includes a computer processor 52, computer software, a memory 56 (i.e. computer storage), and one or more conventional computer input/output (interface) devices 58. The processor 52 loads and executes the software from the memory 56. Executing the software controls operation of the system 12 as described in further detail herein below. The processor 52 can include a microprocessor and/or other circuitry that receives and executes software from memory 56. The processor 52 can be implemented within a single device, but it can alternately be distributed across multiple processing devices and/or subsystems that cooperate in executing program instructions. Examples include general purpose central processing units, application specific processors, and logic devices, as well as any other processing device, combinations of processing devices, and/or variations thereof. The controller 50 can be located anywhere with respect to the gas burner 10 and can communicate with various components of the gas burner system 12 via the wired and/or wireless links shown schematically in the drawings. The memory 56 can include any storage media that is readable by the processor 52 and capable of storing the software. The memory 56 can include volatile and/or nonvolatile, removable and/or non-removable media implemented in any method or technology for storage of information, such as computer readable instructions, data structures, program modules, or other data. The memory 56 can be implemented as a single storage device but may also be implemented across multiple storage devices or subsystems.
The computer input/output device 58 can include any one of a variety of conventional computer input/output interfaces for receiving electrical signals for input to the processor 52 and for sending electrical signals from the processor 52 to various components of the gas burner system 12. The controller 50, via the noted input/output device 58, communicates with the electrode 30, forced-air device 40 and control valve 44 to control operation of the gas burner system 12. As explained further herein below, the controller 50 is capable of monitoring and controlling operational characteristics of the gas burner system 12 by sending and/or receiving control signals via one or more of the links. Although the links are each shown as a single link, the term “link” can encompass one or a plurality of links that are each connected to one or more of the components of the gas burner system 12. As mentioned herein above, these can be wired or wireless links.
The gas burner system 12 further includes one or more operator input device 60 for inputting operator commands to the controller 50. The operator input device 60 can include a power setting selector, which can include for example a push button, switch, touch screen, or other device for inputting an instruction signal to the controller 50 from the operator of the of system 12. Such operator input devices for inputting operator commands to a controller are well known in the art and therefore for brevity are not further herein described.
The gas burner system 12 further includes one or more indicator devices 62, which can include a visual display screen, a light, an audio speaker, or any other device for providing feedback to the operator of the system.
The supply of gas 46 is controlled by the control valve 44, and as such the burner system 12 has discrete settings for heat input. An example of a suitable control valve 44 is shown in
The control valve 44 facilitates four discrete power settings, see Table 213 in
In a non-limiting example, the forced-air device 40 is a fan and the following discrete power settings are available. Each power setting has a minimum fan speed saved in the memory 56 of the controller 50.
Through research and experimentation, the present inventors have determined that to avoid the harmonic mode, it is necessary for each discrete power setting to maintain certain minimum air-gas mixture velocities produced by the forced-air device 40. With the illustrated burner configuration, the present inventors have determined, through experimentation, that it is necessary to maintain a Reynolds number greater than 1000 and an equivalence ratio of greater than about 1.2 to avoid the above-described harmonic mode. As described above, the equivalence ratio can be determined by the controller 50 based on the flame ionization current. For this example, the following flame strength set points are stored in the memory 56 of the controller 50 during setup of the gas burner system 12:
Referring now to
At step 107, the controller operates the forced-air device 40 at the minimum speed for the selected power setting. At step 108, controller 50 determines the actual flame ionization current via the electric current applied to the electrode 30 and burner skin 28 (as described above). As step 110, the controller 50 compares the measured flame ionization current to the target flame ionization current for the selected particular power setting, which is saved in the memory 56. Based on this comparison, at step 112, the controller 50 determines whether an increase or decrease in speed of the forced-air device 40 is needed to make the actual flame ionization current equal to the target flame ionization current. If a reduction in speed of the forced-air device 40 is required, at step 114, the controller 50 first ensures the reduced speed is not below the minimum speed for that particular power setting. If it is not, at step 116, the controller 50 modifies the speed of the forced-air device 40, accordingly. If it is, at step 118, then instead of reducing the speed, the controller 50 controls the indicator device 62 to alert the operator that the system 12 has a malfunction.
Thus, by characterizing the system in a way that bounds (limits) the minimum speed of the forced-air device 40, the controller 50 advantageously will automatically operate the gas burner system 12 in a way that avoids flame harmonics. This advantageously results in a significant reduction or total avoidance of undesirable noise that would otherwise occur in the harmonic mode. The exemplary embodiment disclosed herein also advantageously balances emission compliance and optimizes noise considerations with the use of a single electrode. This is contrasted with conventional systems, which simply focus on reducing emissions by using multiple electrodes.
Referring to
Referring to
In the present description, certain terms have been used for brevity, clearness and understanding. No unnecessary limitations are to be implied therefrom beyond the requirement of the prior art because such terms are used for descriptive purposes only and are intended to be broadly construed. The different systems, methods and apparatuses described herein may be used alone or in combination with other systems, methods and apparatuses. Various equivalents, alternatives and modifications are possible within the scope of the appended claims.
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