A laundry treating appliance, such as a clothes dryer, typically has a configuration based on a rotating drum that defines a treating chamber in which laundry items are placed for treatment. The clothes dryer may have a controller that implements a number of pre-programmed cycles of operation to remove moisture from the laundry items by the application of heat, typically through a heated airflow.
The invention relates to a laundry treating appliance for treating laundry in accordance with an automatic cycle of operation and a method of operating the appliance. The appliance includes a treating chamber, a variable-area air inlet fluidly coupled with the treating chamber, an air outlet fluidly coupled with the treating chamber, with the air inlet and air outlet defining an air flow path through the treating chamber, and an air mover fluidly coupled with at least one of the air inlet and air outlet to effect the movement of air along the air flow path.
In the drawings:
The laundry treating appliance 10 may include a cabinet 12 having a controller 14 for controlling the operation of the laundry treating appliance 10 to complete a cycle of operation. A rotatable drum 28 may be located within the cabinet 12 to define a treating chamber 34 for receiving laundry to be treated during a cycle of operation.
The drum 28 may be rotated by any suitable drive mechanism, such as an indirect drive, which is illustrated as a motor 36 and a coupled belt 38. Some non-limiting examples of indirect drives are: three-phase induction motor drives, various types of single phase induction motors such as a permanent split capacitor (PSC), a shaded pole and a split-phase motor. Alternately, the motor 36 may be a direct drive motor, as is known in the art. Some non-limiting examples of an applicable direct drive motor are a brushless permanent magnet (BPM or BLDC) motor and an induction motor. The motor 36 may be operably coupled with the controller 14 to control the rotation of the drum 28 to complete a cycle of operation.
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The air flow system may further include an outflow portion 50 that may be formed in part by an air outlet 51, an exhaust conduit 52, and an exhaust channel 54, all of which may be fluidly coupled by an air mover or blower 56. Thus, the air inlet 45 and air outlet 51 define a portion of an air flow path in the laundry treating appliance 10 as illustrated by arrows 57, and the blower 56 may be fluidly coupled with the air flow path and operates to effect the movement of air along the air flow path. More specifically, operation of the blower 56 both draws air into the treating chamber 34 through the air inlet 45 and exhausts air from the treating chamber 34 to the outside of the laundry treating appliance 10 through the air outlet 51. The blower 56 may be operably coupled with and controlled by the controller 14. The outflow portion 51 may further include an outflow temperature sensor 58 to sense the temperature of the air exhausted from the treating chamber 34. The outflow temperature sensor 58 may be located anywhere in the outflow portion 51 and may be operably coupled with the controller 14.
The laundry treating appliance 10 may also have an adjustable air flow restrictor 60 fluidly coupled with the air inlet 45 and operable to vary the effective area of the air inlet 45. For example, the adjustable air flow restrictor 60 may selectively close off a portion of the air inlet 45 to vary the effective area of the air inlet 45. The air flow restrictor 60 may be operably coupled with the controller 14 to selectively vary the effective area of the air inlet 45.
The laundry treating appliance 10 may also include an imaging system 70 such as an optical sensor or camera to capture one or more images of the treating chamber 34. The imaging system 70 may be operably coupled with the controller 14, such that the imaging system 70 outputs to the controller 14 information that may directly or indirectly indicate the size and/or composition of the laundry load. Optionally, multiple imaging devices may be spaced about the drum 28 to sense the size and/or composition of the laundry load.
The clothes dryer 100 may include a cabinet 112 in which may be provided a controller 114 that may receive input from a user through a user interface 116 for selecting a cycle of operation and controlling the operation of the clothes dryer 100 to implement the selected cycle of operation. The cabinet 112 may be defined by a front wall 118, a rear wall 120, and a pair of side walls 122 supporting a top wall 124. A door 126 may be hingedly mounted to the front wall 118 and may be selectively moveable between opened and closed positions to close an opening in the front wall 118, which provides access to the interior of the cabinet 112.
A rotatable drum 128 may be disposed within the interior of the cabinet 112 and may partially define a treating chamber 134 for treating laundry. The drum 128 may be disposed between opposing stationary rear and front walls or bulkheads 130 and 132, which with the drum 128 collectively define the treating chamber 134. The treating chamber 134 may have an open face that may be selectively closed by the door 126. Non-limiting examples of laundry include, but are not limited to, a hat, a scarf, a glove, a sweater, a blouse, a shirt, a pair of shorts, a dress, a sock, a pair of pants, a shoe, an undergarment, and a jacket. Furthermore, textile fabrics in other products, such as draperies, sheets, towels, pillows, and stuffed fabric articles (e.g., toys), may be dried in the clothes dryer 100.
The drum 128 may include at least one lifter 146. In most dryers, there are multiple lifters 146. The lifters 146 may be located along the inner surface of the drum 128 defining an interior circumference of the drum 128. The lifters 146 may facilitate movement of the laundry within the drum 128 as the drum 128 rotates.
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The type of illumination source 174 may vary. In one configuration, the illumination source 174 may be a typical incandescent dryer light which is commonly used to illuminate the treating chamber 134. Alternatively, one or more LED lights may be used in place of an incandescent bulb. The illumination source 174 may be located on the rear bulkhead 130 of the drum 128. The illumination source 174 may alternately be located behind the rear bulkhead 130 such that the light shines through perforations 149 (
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The clothes dryer 100 may also include an air flow path controller 165 that is fluidly coupled with the air flow path and operable to control the direction of the air flow path between the air inlet 145 and the air outlet 151. The air flow path controller 165 is illustrated as a louver, but may be any device capable of controlling the direction of the air flow path. Thus, although illustrated as a louver, the air flow path controller 165 may include, for example, a baffle, an iris, or an adjustable mask. Further, although illustrated as being located directly over the air inlet 145, the air flow path controller 165 may be arranged in any location within the drum 128. Moreover, although the air flow path controller 165 has been illustrated as being located on the inside of the rear bulkhead 130 it has been contemplated that the air flow path controller 165 may also be located on the outside of the rear bulkhead 130 and still be capable of varying the direction of the air flow path through the treating chamber 134.
In the example of the air flow path controller 165 being a louver, the louver may control the direction of the air flow path by angling the air flow path in different directions within the treating chamber 134. Alternatively, the air flow path controller 165 may control the direction of the air flow path by varying the location of the air inlet 145 relative to the treating chamber 134. This is because the blower 156 pulls the air towards the air outlet 151 located in the lower portion of the front bulkhead 132 (
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During an exemplary drying cycle, the motor 136 rotates the drum 128 via the belt 138. The blower 156 draws air through the inlet conduit 142 and then circulates past the heating element 147 to heat the air. The heated air may then be propelled through the plurality of perforations 149 forming the effective area of the air inlet 145 and into the treating chamber 134. Air may be vented through the air outlet 151 and exhaust duct 157 to remove moisture from the treating chamber 134. This cycle continues according the selected parameters. The motor 136, blower 156, and heating element 147 may operate independently during the cycle of operation.
The speed of rotation may be constant or varied for the entire drying cycle. A typical rotational speed may be at a rate where the laundry will tumble within the treating chamber 134. That is, the speed may be less than a satellizing speed where the laundry items are held against the interior surface of the drum 128 by centrifugal force throughout a complete rotation. For the illustrated embodiment, the speed of rotation to tumble the laundry items may be about 48 RPM. However, this speed will vary from machine to machine and is dependent on the physical characteristics of the drum 128 as well as other design features and desired results.
While the drum 128 may be controlled to rotate at a predetermined speed, in reality, the actual drum speed may deviate from the predetermined speed due to a variety of factors, including the size of the drum 128, inertia due to load size, and eccentricities due to load unbalances. However, as shown in
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The air flow restrictor 160 may also affect the direction of the air flow path between the air inlet 145 and the air outlet 151 by changing the location of the air inlet 145. Thus, the air flow restrictor 160 may form the air flow path controller 165. It has also been contemplated that the air flow path controller 165 may form the air flow restrictor 160 as the air flow path controller 165 may act to close off portions of the air inlet 145.
Once the air flow path interacts with the laundry, the air flows through the rest of the treating chamber 134 where it may then be pulled through the air outlet 151 located in the lower portion of the front bulkhead 132 by the blower 156 (
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The controller 114 may be communicably and/or operably coupled with one or more components of the clothes dryer 100 for communicating with and controlling the operation of the component to complete a cycle of operation. For example, the controller 114 may be coupled with the heating element 147, the inflow temperature sensor 148, the outflow temperature 158, the blower 156 controlling the temperature and flow rate of air through the treating chamber 134; the motor 136 for controlling the direction and speed of rotation of the drum 128; the imaging system 170 for capturing one or more images of the treating chamber 134; the air flow restrictor 160 for changing the area of the inlet airflow; and the air flow path controller 165 for changing the direction of the air flow within the treating chamber 134. The controller 114 may also be coupled with the user interface 116 for receiving user selected inputs and communicating information to the user.
The controller 114 may also receive input from various sensors 184, which are known in the art and not shown for simplicity. Non-limiting examples of sensors 184 that may be communicably coupled with the controller 114 include: a moisture sensor, an air flow rate sensor, a weight sensor, and a motor torque sensor. The sensor 184 may also be a infrared temperature sensor, as is disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/641,519, filed Dec. 18, 2009 and titled “Method for Determining Load Size in a Clothes Dryer Using an Infrared Sensor,” which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
One difference between the second embodiment and the third embodiment is that the clothes dryer 200 includes an end wall 230 from which extends a peripheral wall 231 to partially define the treating chamber 234 and wherein the end wall 230 has a plurality of perforations 249 defining an air inlet 245. A rotatable drum 228, like the drum 128 described above in the second embodiment, may form the peripheral wall 231.
As the rotatable disk segments 263 alter the location of the air inlet 245 they may also form an air flow path controller that controls the direction of the air flow path between the air inlet 245 and the air outlet 251. Alternatively, the clothes dryer 200 may also include an air flow path controller fluidly coupled with the air flow path to control the direction of the air flow path between the air inlet 245 and the air outlet 251. Although not illustrated, the air flow path controller may include a louver, a baffle, an iris, an adjustable mask, or any combination thereof.
The previously described laundry treating appliances 10, 100, and 200 may be used to implement one or more embodiments of a method of the invention. An embodiment of the method will now be described in terms of the operation of the clothes dryer 100 shown in
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The method 300 starts under the assumption that the user has loaded the clothes dryer 100 with one or more articles to form the laundry load and closed the door 126. The user may also initially set at least one parameter of a cycle of operation including a rotational speed of the drum 128, a direction of rotation of the drum 128, a temperature in the treating chamber 134, an air flow through the treating chamber 134, an amount of laundry in the treating chamber 134, a start or end of cycle condition, and a start or end cycle step condition.
Setting a start or end of cycle condition may include determining when to start or end a cycle of operation. This may include signaling the controller 114 to immediately start or end a cycle of operation or setting a time at which to start or end a cycle of operation. Setting a start or end of cycle step condition may include determining when to start a step or phase within a given operating cycle or when to end a step within a given operating cycle. This may include signaling the controller 114 to immediately transition from one cycle step to another or setting a time at which to transition from one step to another within a given operating cycle. Examples of cycle steps include rotation with heated air, rotation without heated air, treatment dispensing, a wrinkle guard step and cool down step.
The method 300 may be initiated at the start of a user-selected operating cycle or at some predetermined time after the start of the user selected operating cycle at 302. At 304, a cycle parameter or characteristic of the laundry load may be determined. As illustrated, the determination at 304 may be part of the drying cycle or it may alternatively be a separate cycle completed prior to the start of the drying cycle. A non-limiting example of a cycle parameter, which may be determined in step 304, is the determination of whether a treatment dispensing step is part of the operating cycle.
One example of a characteristic of the laundry load, which may be determined in step 304, is the tumble path of the laundry load. The path of the laundry load may be determined by any suitable method. For example, the path of the laundry may be determined based upon the speed of rotation of the drum, such as described in U.S. Patent Application No. 61/077,511, filed Jul. 2, 2008 and titled “A Method For Removing Chemistry Buildup in a Dispensing Dryer,” which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The specific manner in which the tumble path of the load is determined is not germane to the invention and therefore it is within the scope of the invention for any suitable method to be used to determine the tumble path of the load.
Another example of a characteristic of the laundry load that may be determined is the moisture content of the laundry load. The moisture content of the laundry may be estimated using any suitable method. For example, the moisture content of the laundry may be based on the readings of one or more moisture sensors in the form of conductivity strips, such as is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,446,357 to Woerdehoff et al. The specific manner in which the moisture content of the load is determined is not germane to the invention and therefore it is within the scope of the invention for any suitable method to be used to determine the moisture content of the load.
Alternatively, in step 304 the amount of the laundry load may be determined. Determining the amount of the laundry load may include determining the mass, weight, volume, packing density and area of the laundry load and may be done in any suitable manner. For example, the load amount determination may be provided by a user via user interface 116 or via data indicative of the load amount received from one or more sensors related to the motor 136, the drum 128 or any other components of the clothes dryer 100. In another example, the drum 128 may be rotated to acquire one or more motor characteristics which may be used to derive the amount of the load. The characteristic of the motor 136 may be any data related to the operation of the motor 136, such as motor torque, motor speed, motor current and motor voltage.
The load amount may also be determined based on the readings from one or more temperature sensors. One method for determining the load amount is set forth in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/641,519, referenced above. An infrared temperature sensor, such as sensor 184, may be used to obtain multiple temperature readings inside the treating chamber 134 of the clothes dryer 100. The variation in the temperature readings may be used to determine the load amount.
In another example, the amount of the load may be determined based on the surface area of the load. The surface area of the load may be determined using any suitable method. One method for determining the surface area of the load is set forth in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/388,584, referenced above. According to the load surface area method of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/388,584, the imaging device 170 may be used to capture one or more images of a treating chamber. The captured images may be sent to the controller 114 for analysis using software associated with the controller to determine the surface area of the load within the treating chamber 134.
In another example, the amount of the load may be determined based on the packing density of the load. The packing density of the load may be determined using any suitable method. One method for determining the packing density of the load is set forth in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/538,473, filed Aug. 10, 2009 and titled “Laundry Treating Appliance with Tumble Pattern Control,” which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The method according to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/538,473 converts the motor torque signal while the drum 128 is rotating from the time domain to the frequency domain in order to estimate the packing density. The packing density may be characterized in terms of the free space within the treating chamber 134 not occupied by the load, the ratio of the volume of the laundry load to the total volume of the treating chamber 134 or the ratio of the free volume of the treating chamber 134 to the total volume of the treating chamber 134.
Once the characteristic of the laundry load or cycle parameter has been determined at 304, the drum 128 may be rotated at 306 to tumble the laundry and air may be supplied into the treating chamber 134 through the air inlet 145 at 308. At 310 the characteristic of the laundry load or cycle parameter determined at 304 may be used by software stored in the memory 180 of the controller 114 to determine what the effective area of the air inlet 145 should be based on the determine characteristic of the laundry load or cycle parameter. Accordingly, the air flow restrictor 160 may be controlled to adjust the effective area of the air inlet at 312. For example, the effective area of the air inlet 145 may be increased if the determined moisture content of the load is high. As another example, the effective area of the air inlet 145 may be increased for a larger load amount and decreased for a smaller load amount. As yet another example, if the determined cycle parameter indicates that a treating chemistry is to be sprayed into the treating chamber 34 during a treatment dispensing step the effective area of the air inlet 145 may be increased to help disperse the spray evenly in the treating chamber 34.
More specifically, the determined characteristic of the laundry load or cycle parameter may be used by the controller 114 to set the effective area of the air inlet 145 by moving the multiple movable panels 162 of the air flow restrictor 160 to achieve the desired effective area of the air inlet 145. The effective area of the air inlet 145 may be varied by the multiple moveable panels 162 blocking portions of the air inlet 145. This may reduce the area of the air inlet and may vary the direction of the air flow path through the treating chamber 134.
The direction of the air flow path through the treating chamber 134 may be varied because the location of the air inlet 145 may be moved depending on the portions of the air inlet 145 that are blocked by the multiple moveable panels 162. Thus, the method may include controlling the supplied air by varying the direction of the air flow path through the treating chamber 134. If the tumble path of the laundry load has been determined, the controller 114 may set the direction of the air flow path such that it may intersect with the determined tumble path. Once the effective area of the air inlet has been adjusted at 312, the controller 114 may operate at 314 to control the operation of the clothes dryer 100 to complete the cycle of operation.
Typical dryers do not provide satisfactory control of airflow based on load sizes and fabric types. The effective drying of laundry articles remains a persistent problem area as the application of excess heated airflow may be energy inefficient and the application of insufficient heated airflow may result in an operating cycle that is longer than necessary. The method 300 may be used to increase energy and time efficiency by maximizing the interaction of the air flow path with the laundry load and thus maximizing the removal of water during the drying process while minimizing the energy provided to the system. Avoiding wasted air flow saves both time and energy.
While the invention has been specifically described in connection with certain specific embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that this is by way of illustration and not of limitation. Reasonable variation and modification are possible within the scope of the forgoing disclosure and drawings without departing from the spirit of the invention which is defined in the appended claims.
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