The present invention generally relates to liquid heating appliances, such as water heaters, and, in a preferred embodiment thereof, more particularly relates to protective apparatus used to prevent temperature and pressure-created bursting of tanks in which pressurized liquid is stored and heated.
There are many types of water heating appliances including gas, electric and oil fired water heaters, instantaneous water heaters, boilers, swimming pool heaters and the like, as well as various other types of liquid heating appliances. Such liquid heating appliances typically have a tank for holding liquid to be heated, and a heating system for heating the liquid to and maintaining it at a predetermined first heated temperature. With such liquid heating appliances the possibility exists of going into a heating “run-away” condition, if controls or safety devices fail, in which the temperature and pressure within the tank uncontrollably increase. If such temperature and pressure increases are not stopped, the tank can explode.
For this reason, liquid heating appliances of this general type are typically provided with a temperature and pressure relief valve which senses these increases and automatically opens to create a pressure relief passage, extending from the tank interior through the opened valve, that relieves the increasing pressure within the tank to prevent it from bursting. A temperature and pressure relief valve is normally based on opening a spring-loaded valve portion operated by a bimetal or equivalent rod activated by sensed temperature and/or pressure. The problem with these conventional types of temperature and pressure relief devices is that they are subject to failure due to scale build-up, corrosion, being plugged, leaking, being removed or not installed at all, etc. Failure of this conventional type of tank protective device for any reason leaves the tank susceptible to internal overpressurization and explosion. Accordingly, a need exists for liquid heating appliance overpressurization apparatus which eliminates or at least substantially reduces these problems associated with conventional temperature and pressure relief valves.
In carrying out principles of the present invention, in accordance with a preferred embodiment thereof, a liquid heating appliance, representatively a water heater, is provided with specially designed protective temperature and pressure relief apparatus. The liquid heating appliance comprises a tank, having a burst pressure, for holding a liquid to be heated, and a heating system operative to heat the liquid in the tank to a predetermined first heated temperature. The tank may be a metal tank, a plastic tank, a filament wound plastic tank, or a tank made from a variety of other suitable materials, and the heating system may be an electrical heating system, a fuel-fired heating system, or another suitable type of heating system.
The protective apparatus is operative to prevent rupture of the tank caused by heated liquid-created overpressurization of the tank, and may be utilized in place of or in addition to a conventional temperature and pressure relief valve operatively connected to the tank. In a preferred embodiment thereof the protective apparatus includes a barrier structure exposed to the interior of the tank and, during use of the liquid heating apparatus, forming a barrier to liquid outflow from the tank.
The barrier structure is representatively of a thermoplastic material, preferably polybutylene, and is heat-softenable, by pressurized tank liquid, at a second heated temperature greater than the first heated temperature, the heat-softened barrier structure being burstable, at a heat-reduced burst pressure less than the burst pressure of the tank, to thereby create a pressure outlet passage through the barrier structure that relieves internal tank liquid pressure before it reaches the burst pressure of the tank. In an illustrated water heater embodiment of the liquid heating appliance, the second heated temperature is approximately 300° F., and the burst pressure of the barrier structure at 300° F. is approximately 50 psi.
Representatively, the barrier structure is a length of thermoplastic tubing, preferably polybutylene tubing, and is provided with a mounting portion configured and operative to support the tubing in a manner such that its interior is exposed to the interior of the tank and forms a pressure rupturable barrier to liquid outflow therefrom. In one illustrative embodiment of the protective apparatus, the mounting portion is operative to install the tubing length in-line in a heated liquid supply pipe connected to the tank. In other illustrative embodiments of the protective apparatus, the mounting portion is operative to install the tubing length directly on the tank, either in a capped-off configuration or for connection to an inner end of the supply pipe. The tubing length, or a barrier structure of another configuration, may be provided with a shield structure positioned outwardly adjacent the barrier structure and having at least one fluid discharge opening therein which fluid exiting the pressure outlet passage through the barrier structure may outwardly pass. Such shield structure may comprise an outer tubular structure into which tubing length is telescoped, and the at least one fluid discharge opening may be defined by an open end of the outer tubular structure or by one or more perforations in its sidewall portion.
While the liquid heating appliance is representatively illustrated and described herein as being a water heater, those of skill in this particular art will readily appreciate that it could be a variety of other types of liquid heating appliances such as, for example, instantaneous water heaters, boilers, swimming pool heaters and the like. Additionally, while the protective apparatus barrier structure has been representatively illustrated and described herein as being of a tubular shape, it will be similarly be appreciated by those of skill in this particular art that it could have a variety of alternative configurations if desired without departing from principles of the present invention.
Schematically depicted in
Water heater 10 has a tank 12 adapted to hold a quantity of pressurized water 14 to be heated, the tank 12 having a burst pressure. Tank 12 may be a metal tank, a plastic tank, a filament wound plastic tank, or a tank formed of another suitable impermeable material of sufficient strength for the intended liquid heating application. Water heater 10 is also provided with a heating system 16 operable to heat the tank-stored water 14 to and maintain the water at a predetermined first heated temperature. Illustratively, the heating system 16 is an electrical heating system including an immersible electric resistance type heating element 18 extending into the interior of the tank 12 and controlled by a water temperature-sensing thermostat 20.
An alternate embodiment 10a of the water heater 10, as schematically shown in
Each of the water heaters 10,10a is provided with a cold water inlet line 36 for flowing pressurized cold water, from a suitable source thereof, into the tank interior, and a hot water outlet line 38 for providing an on-demand outflow of heated water to one or more plumbing fixtures (not shown) to which it is operatively connected. Illustratively, the inlet and outlet lines 36,38 are connected to the top end of the tank 12 in both of the water heater embodiments 10 and 10a. Also representatively connected to an upper end portion of the tank 12 of each of the water heater embodiments 10,10a is a conventional temperature and pressure (T&P) relief valve 40 operative to automatically open, and discharge tank water through an associated outlet pipe portion 42, if either the pressure or the temperature of the tank water exceeds a maximum predetermined set value thereof.
According to a key feature of the present invention, the water heater 10 (as well as the water heater 10a) is provided with specially designed protective apparatus 44 for preventing rupture of the tank 12 caused by excess heat-created overpressurization of the water 14 in the tank 12 created, for example, by a “run-away” condition of the heating system 16 or 16a causing the water temperature to climb far above its set point temperature. The protective apparatus 44 may be utilized in addition to or in place of the depicted temperature and pressure relief valve 40, and is of a unique no-moving-parts construction which will be subsequently described herein. Representatively, as shown in
Turning now to
The protective apparatus 44 also has a mounting portion configured and operative to support the thermoplastic barrier portion 46 relative to the tank 12 in a manner such the barrier portion 46 is exposed to the interior of the tank 12 and forms a pressure rupturable barrier to liquid outflow therefrom. As representatively shown in
The length of polybutylene tubing 46 is selected such that, during normal operation of the water heater 10 or 10a, its burst strength is substantially above the operating pressure within the water heater tank 12. However, the tubing length 46 is representatively selected (as to, for example, wall thickness and thermoplastic characteristics) to be heat-softenable at approximately 300° to a heat-reduced burst pressure of approximately 50 psi—a burst pressure corresponding to the elevated 300° F. tank water temperature and well below the burst pressure of the tank 12.
Thus, in the event that a temperature “run-away” condition occurs, the tank water temperature reaches 300° F., and the temperature and pressure relief valve 40 fails for some reason, the length of thermoplastic tubing 46 splits (as at split area 60 in
Schematically depicted in
Turning now to
In addition to protecting their associated liquid heating tank from overpressurization as previously described herein, each of representatively depicted protective structures 44,44a also provides another desirable advantage. Specifically, the protective apparatus, in any of its depicted forms and mounting locations can be simply replaced if it is ever activated and the tank put back into service (after the necessary repairs to the controls, etc. that caused the run-away heating condition that activated the protective apparatus). On the other hand, a tank whose conventional temperature and pressure relief apparatus failed during a heating run-away condition would burst, requiring that the entire water heater structure be scrapped.
The foregoing detailed description is to be clearly understood as being given by way of illustration and example only, the spirit and scope of the present invention being limited solely by the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080115742 A1 | May 2008 | US |