This is a national phase entry under 35 U.S.C. ยง371 of International Application No. PCT/EP2006/008290 filed Aug. 23, 2006, published in German, which claims the benefit of the filing date of German Patent Application No. 10 2005 039 838.3 filed Aug. 23, 2005, the entire disclosures of each application are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to a window glazing comprising at least two panes with a ventilated gap, wherein the inside of at least one of the panes is provided with a layer with a controllable transmission.
An internally ventilated glazing for airplanes is known from GB 640,554. This glazing consists of two panes consisting of glass or plastic, and mounted spaced apart. The resultant gap is flushed with dried air, so that the dual pane remains transparent under all temperature conditions encountered during operation.
Known from EP 0 338 876 B1 is an electrochrome glazing with variable transparency, which consists of two glass panes coated on the inside with a layer of electrochrome material. However, the glazing does no have a ventilated gap.
Electrochrome coatings for glass panes have been known for quite some time. One example would be the layer on a glass pane described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,350,414. However, no other indications are made with respect to generating a glazing with at least two panes that can be controlled with respect to transmission.
The object of the invention is to use simple means to expand the generation of flushing gas for the gap between two glass panes of a glazing in such a way as to achieve the composition of flushing gas necessary for operating the controllable transmission layer.
This object is achieved in a simple manner by linking the gap with a feed line for flushing gas, which is also connected with a mixing device, which can be used to adjust the composition of the flushing gas as needed. The flushing gas here consists of at least two components.
One of these components is air, to which portions of hydrogen or oxygen or portions of hydrogen together with oxygen are added. It is here especially advantageous if the required portions of hydrogen and oxygen are generated by an arrangement that makes up part of the device to which the glazing is applied. The device is usually a motor vehicle or airplane that has its own oxygen-generating system.
An electrolyte cell is especially well suited as a corresponding oxygen-generating system. The release of at least one of the two gaseous components, hydrogen and oxygen, generated by the electrolyte cell can here advantageously be controlled.
It is especially functional to arrange a device for drying the gas mixture either in the air feed line to the mixing device or feed line to the gap of the glazing. It is further advantageous to build a gas stream regulator in the air feed line to the mixing device.
In an alternative solution, an arrangement can be provided for supplying a plurality of similar window glazings with flushing gas, in which the feeding air and another gas are relayed via separate lines until reaching the area of the respective window glazing. Situated there is a regulator, which can be used to set both the mixing ratio of the two gaseous components of the flushing gas, as well as the quantity of flushing gas introduced into the respective window glazing. The further configuration of this model corresponds to the configuration of the first model already described above.
It is especially advantageous to use a window glazing described above in an airplane or motor vehicle.
The special advantage to the device according to the invention lies in the fact that the process of flushing the gap of multiple glazings with gas that is required during operation can be performed using simple means that are generally already present on board the motor vehicle or airplane anyway in such a way that the hydrogen required for operating the controllable transmission change of the glazing can also be easily provided and added to the flushing gas. Corresponding means can also be retrofitted with a justifiable outlay. In the case of an airplane, an onboard oxygen-generating system can be used, or the required hydrogen can alternatively also be generated with an electrolyte cell, for example.
The generation of hydrogen and/or its addition to the flushing gas is advantageously controlled by means of valves or other means that act in a similar way. At least one of the possible installation sites best has an arrangement for drying the flushing gas or the cabin air diverted for this purpose. It is also advantageous to incorporate a regulator for the gas stream in the feed line to the mixing device, in which the portion of air in the flushing gas is mixed with the hydrogen portion and/or the oxygen portion.
The application of window glazing according to the invention in an airplane or motor vehicle is viewed as particularly advantageous, since it enables a significant reduction in weight while using facilities already present on board, in particular those for oxygen generation.
Preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention with additional configuration detail are depicted in the drawing in a schematically simplified manner, and will be described in greater detail below with reference to the drawings. Shown on:
Window glazing of this kind is used in motor vehicles and airplanes subject to special climatic conditions during operation. This type of window glazing, which exhibits two or more panes, has become known in particular in airplanes. The panes in such window glazing can be provided on the sides facing the gap 2 with a transparent coating, whose degree of transmission can be altered by varying electrical or electrochemical parameters. Know in particular are coatings whose transmission changes as a function of the hydrogen content of the atmosphere tangent to the coating.
For a dual pane with ventilated gap 2, this means that the flushing gas 5 for the gap 2 must have an adjustable content of hydrogen.
As a rule, a portion of the prepared feeding air 8 is used as a basis for the flushing gas 5, which is linked by a line system 6 with the openings 3 for feeding the flushing gas into the gap 2.
At the entry end, the line system 6 is connected with a mixing device 10. The mixing device exhibits two entries, one for the feeding air 8, and another for the gas (H2) to be added, e.g., hydrogen. The latter is best connected via a regulator 10 with the gas-generating device 9. The regulator 10 enables the metered admixing of hydrogen gas as a function of the feeding air B relayed into the mixing device 7. The line system 6 is further used to supply other window glazing of the same type with the identical flushing gas 5.
Various designs have become known for the hydrogen gas generating devices. For example, the system already present on board for generating oxygen for the cabin air can be used for this purpose on an airplane (referred to as OBOGS, onboard oxygen generating system). Hydrogen gas is here generated as the waste product of the oxygen generation, so to speak. However, other oxygen systems for cabin air can also be used for this purpose, since OBOGS is only an optional system.
One special way for generating hydrogen gas is to use an electrolyte cell 11 shown in
As an alternative, the device 17 for drying the gas mixture can also be incorporated in the line section from the mixing device 7 to the gap 2.
Another advantageous embodiment of the invention is shown on
Finally,
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 039 838 | Aug 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/008290 | 8/23/2006 | WO | 00 | 3/10/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/022972 | 3/1/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4350414 | Takahashi et al. | Sep 1982 | A |
20030169476 | Yoshimura | Sep 2003 | A1 |
20040206024 | Graf et al. | Oct 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1079800 | Apr 1960 | DE |
4440572 | May 1996 | DE |
19631420 | Feb 1998 | DE |
10141897 | Apr 2003 | DE |
0338876 | Oct 1989 | EP |
640554 | Jul 1950 | GB |
580186 | Nov 1977 | SU |
729147 | Apr 1980 | SU |
1219545 | Mar 1986 | SU |
03021344 | Mar 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090303567 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |