Embodiments of the disclosure relate to a thermostat assembly for controlling a flow of a fluid through an aperture.
A thermostat is often defined as a device for regulating the temperature of a system and maintaining it within a desired range. Commonly, the thermostat achieves this by switching heating or cooling devices on or off, or regulating the flow of a coolant fluid.
Thermostats commonly serve as control units for heating or cooling systems, components of air conditioner and the like. Thermostats may be constructed in many ways and may use a variety of sensors or temperature-sensitive materials to measure the temperature or act upon it.
Mechanical thermostats are widely used in the internal combustion engine cooling mechanisms. These thermostats often use a temperature sensitive valve to control the opening of the thermostat's aperture and maintain the core temperature of the engine at its optimum by regulating the flow of a coolant fluid to an external heat sink, usually a radiator.
While the thermostat is closed, there is no flow of coolant in the loop allowing the combustion chambers to warm up rapidly. The thermostat stays closed until the coolant temperature reaches the nominal thermostat opening temperature. The thermostat then progressively opens as the coolant temperature increases to the optimum operating temperature, increasing the coolant flow to the radiator. Once the optimum operating temperature is reached, the thermostat progressively increases or decreases its opening in response to temperature changes, dynamically balancing the coolant recirculation flow and coolant flow to the radiator to maintain the engine temperature in the optimum range as engine heat output, vehicle speed, and outside ambient temperature change.
The following embodiments and aspects thereof are described and illustrated in conjunction with systems, tools and methods which are meant to be exemplary and illustrative, not limiting in scope.
An aspect of some embodiments relates to a thermostat assembly comprising an advantageous locking element.
Generally, the thermostat assembly includes a displaceable valve for controlling the opening and closing of an aperture of the thermostat assembly, respective to the surrounding temperature. The displaceable valve may be secured in place using an upper bridge and a lower bridge. A flexible member, such as a spring, may be located between the lower bridge and the displaceable valve to keep the aperture of the thermostat assembly normally closed.
Advantageously, the lower bridge includes an integrally formed locking element, shaped as one or more teeth bent inwards.
The valve is displaceable along a certain range, which may be divided into a normal working range and a high-risk range. In the high-risk range, there is an increased risk of damage to one or more of the valve's inner components, which may cause inappropriate opening and/or closure of the aperture. The ultimate risk is that, as a result of damage to the valve, it will fail to open the aperture sufficiently, and therefore prevent sufficient flow of cooling liquid. This may then lead to damage to the system being cooled. Therefore, the locking element is configured such that it locks the valve in an open position when it exceeds the working range and enters the high-risk range, so that the situation where the valve fails and does not allow sufficient flow is prevented.
The advantageous locking element, which is integrally formed with the lower bridge, adds an important feature to the thermostat assembly without adding more parts which may move, become damaged or the like during assembly or operation.
An additional issue is the need for one-direction flexibility of the locking element; the locking element has to be flexible when it lets the displaceable valve pass it and enter the high-risk range, but inflexible when it blocks the displaceable valve from retracting back to its working range.
There is provided, in accordance with an embodiment, a thermostat assembly for controlling a flow of a fluid through an aperture, the thermostat assembly comprising: a displaceable valve for controlling the opening and closing of the aperture; a flange and a lower bridge, both configured for securing said displaceable valve in place; a flexible member positioned between said lower bridge and said displaceable valve; wherein said lower bridge comprises a locking mechanism integrally formed therein and configured to lock said displaceable valve in a position where said aperture is open.
In some embodiments, said locking element comprises at least one leaf bent inwards.
In some embodiments, said displaceable valve comprises a disc configured for physically closing said aperture.
In some embodiments, said displaceable valve comprising a thermal sensitive material.
In some embodiments, said displaceable valve comprising a displaceable pin.
In some embodiments, said displaceable valve is configured to extend according to the surrounding temperature.
In some embodiments, said flange further comprises a jog pin configured for providing pressure relief of said thermostat assembly.
In some embodiments, said lower bridge further comprising one or more connectors and said upper bridge further comprising one or more sockets matching said one or more connectors.
There is further provided, in accordance with an embodiment, an integrated lock-support mechanism for a thermostat, the mechanism comprising a body having a base and at least two lateral arms, said base comprising an aperture configured to accommodate a displaceable valve of the thermostat, and said lateral arms each comprising a locking leaf configured to lock the thermostat in a locked position upon exceeding a predetermined displacement range.
In some embodiments, each of said lateral arms further comprises an additional locking leaf for enhancing the locking.
In some embodiments, each of said locking leaves is bent inwards.
In some embodiments, each of said locking leaves is configured to bend outwards responsive to displacement of the displaceable valve.
In some embodiments, each of said lateral arms further comprises one or more connectors configured to match one or more sockets of a flange of the thermostat.
In some embodiments, said integrated lock-support mechanism, further comprising: a displaceable valve for controlling the opening and closing of a fluid aperture of the thermostat; a flange configured, together with the integrated lock-support mechanism, for supporting said displaceable valve in place; and a flexible member positioned between said base and the displaceable valve.
In some embodiments, each of said locking leaves is bent inwards.
In some embodiments, said displaceable valve comprises a disc configured for physically closing said fluid aperture.
In some embodiments, said displaceable valve comprises a thermal sensitive material for causing said displaceable valve to extend according to the surrounding temperature.
In some embodiments, said displaceable valve further comprises a displaceable pin.
In some embodiments, each of said lateral arms further comprises one or more connectors, and said flange comprises one or more sockets matching said one or more connectors.
Exemplary embodiments are illustrated in referenced figures. Dimensions of components and features shown in the figures are generally chosen for convenience and clarity of presentation and are not necessarily shown to scale. The figures are listed below.
An aspect of some embodiments relates to a thermostat assembly comprising an advantageous locking mechanism, which is integrally formed with a lower bridge of the assembly.
Reference is now made to
Thermostat assembly 100 may be adapted to operate in a fluid environment; the thermostat is configured to respond to temperature variations and to control the fluid flow by closing and opening an aperture 112 accordingly.
As schematically shown, thermostat assembly 100 may include a displaceable valve 144 as well as a flange 102 and a lower bridge 120, the latter two being configured to provide the valve with structural support; while the flange delimits the valve from the top, the lower bridge defines the valve's motion track from the bottom, optionally with the assistance of a flexible member such as a spring 154.
Flange 102 may include a flange disk 104 having at least two flange sockets 114. Flange disk 104 surrounds an optionaly flange ring 106 which is generally disposed perpendicular to it, forming a substantially circular aperture 112.
Flange 102 may further include an upper bridge 108, formed as an arc optionally having a pin niche 110 suitable for accommodating a valve pin, which is further discussed below. Upper bridge 108 may be connected to, attached to or integrally formed with flange ring 106 at its edges and may optionally have a convex cross-section.
Reference is now made to
Two arm bases 138, shaped, for example, as bent panels, may be perpendicularly adjacent, with their longer edge, to lower bridge rounded edges 128.
Two arms 132 may be shaped as elongated plates extending from arm bases 138, and optionally having a narrow arm lower end 134 and a wide arm upper end 136. Arms 132 may be bent outwards and form obtuse angles with base 122.
Lower bridge 120 may further include, at each of wide arm upper ends 136, one or more connectors 140 which are formed as localized extensions of the upper ends, and being matching to one or more flange sockets 114 of
Reference is now made to
Displaceable valve 144 may be located between flange 102 and lower bridge 120, and being displaceable along a main axis 118. Displaceable valve 144 may have a cylindrical valve body 146 accommodating a valve pin 148 and containing a thermal sensitive material.
The displaceable valve 144 further includes a valve disk 150 connected to, attached to or integrally formed with valve body 146, and used for physically closing aperture 112 of
Valve pin 148 is at least partially located within valve body 146, having one of its ends laid within the thermal sensitive material and the other end protruding, at least in operation, from valve body 146 and pushing against upper bridge 108 and/or pin niche 110 of the upper bridge. Valve pin 148 may or may not be secured to pin niche 110.
The thermal sensitive material in valve body 146 may be adapted to respond to temperature variations and displace valve pin 148 along main axis 118, so that it presses against upper bridge 108 and/or pin niche 110 of the upper bridge. The higher the temperature, the harder valve pin 148 presses.
Spring 154, which is shown as an example of a flexible member, may be located between valve disk 150 and lower bridge 120, and be configured to normally contract displaceable valve 144 and drive valve disk 150 along main axis 118 towards closing the aperture 112. These opposite forces applied on the valve pin 148 constantly aspire to reach equilibrium and consequently place the displaceable valve 144 in the right position and open or close the aperture 112 accordingly.
Reference is now made back to
Reference is now made back to
Once displaceable valve 144 is damaged, one or more malfunctions may occur. One possible malfunction may cause the thermal sensitive material not to apply the appropriate force to extract the desired portion of valve pin 148 out of valve body 146. The extraction force applied by the thermal sensitive material may not be sufficient to overcome the opposite force applied by spring 154. The valve pin will not be able push the valve disk away from aperture 112 and, consequently, the aperture will remain closed or at least not sufficiently open.
Therefore, using a conventional thermostat involves a risk of running into a “fail-closed” scenario in which the thermostat assembly 100 becomes damaged and the displaceable valve 144 is unable to open the aperture 112 and therefore does not enable the thermostat assembly 100 to dispose the hosting system's excessive heat, and consequently cause heavy damages to the hosting system.
Having a locking mechanism integrated into thermostat assembly 100 has the advantage of preventing thermostat assembly 100 from getting into such a “fail-close” scenario. Once displaceable valve 144 displaces beyond the working range and reaches the locking range, locking leaves 124 lock the displaceable valve in position and prevent it from retracting back into the working range. This, essentially, locks thermostat assembly 100 in an open position before thermostat assembly 100 becomes damaged.
As schematically shown in
Reference is now made back to
As schematically shown in
As the temperature exceeds Tw, the valve disk is further displaced, and then reaches the pre-determined locking distance DL at the pre-determined extreme temperature TL. The range between temperatures Tw and TL is an overheating buffer zone for the thermostat. While the temperatures in this zone exceed the normal working temperatures of the thermostat, they are not considered to be high enough that permanent damage is likely to occur to either the hosting system, or the thermostat assembly itself. At the pre-determined extreme temperature TL the thermostat is being subjected to extreme overheating and at this point there may be a risk of damage to the thermostat and to the hosting system. Further increases in temperature above the pre-determined temperature TL cause a further displacement of the valve disk up to a failure distance Df where a failure temperature Tf is reached. At this point, the internal components of the displaceable valve will probably fail. For conventional thermostats, failure typically occurs at temperature Tf. When the thermostat has failed, the valve pin may no longer act to force the valve disk axially away from the upper bridge and, consequently, the flexible member drives the valve disk towards closing the aperture. However, since the valve disk has been displaced beyond the pre-determined distance DL, the locking leaf prevents it from returning to the closed position. The pre-determined locking distance DL is thus set between the maximum normal working distance Dw and the failure distance Df. The overheating buffer zone is provided to account for minor, non-detrimental, temperature increases above the working zone. However, once DL has been reached, the locking leaf will engage the displaceable valve to prevent the valve disk from returning to the closed position.
While a number of exemplary aspects and embodiments have been discussed above, those of skill in the art will recognize certain modifications, permutations, additions and sub-combinations thereof. It is therefore intended that the following appended claims and claims hereafter introduced be interpreted to include all such modifications, permutations, additions and sub-combinations as are within their true spirit and scope.
In the claims description of the application, each of the words “comprise” “include” and “have”, and forms thereof, are not necessarily limited to members in a list with which the words may be associated.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/412,408, filed Nov. 11, 2010 and entitled “Thermostat Assembly”, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61412408 | Nov 2010 | US |