This application claims the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 2002-37607 filed on Jun. 29, 2002, in the Korean Industrial Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a wall-mounted type microwave oven, and more particularly, to a wall-mounted type microwave oven which selectively discharges air in a cooking chamber to the outside or to a kitchen space.
2. Description of the Related Art
Generally, a wall-mounted type microwave oven is mounted on a kitchen wall over an oven range, and is designed to carry out a cooking operation and exhaust gas and fumes generated from the oven range disposed therebelow to the outside.
The electric component compartment 3 is provided therein with a cooling fan 6 which cools electrical components mounted therein. The electric component compartment 3 includes a front air inlet 7 at its front and upper portion, which causes outside air to be introduced into the electric component compartment 3 therethrough. The partition plate 8 is disposed between the cooking chamber 2 and the electric component compartment 3, and is formed with a plurality of vent holes 9 to allow the air introduced into the electric component compartment 3 to flow into the cooking chamber 2, thereby ventilating the cooking chamber 2. An upper surface of the cooking chamber 2 is also formed with a plurality of second vent holes 10 at a position opposite to the partition plate 8 to allow the air in the cooking chamber 2 to be exhausted therefrom. The cooking chamber 2 includes a front air outlet 11 at its front and upper portion, which allows the air exhausted from the second vent holes 10 to be exhausted to a kitchen room space therethrough.
However, since the conventional wall-mounted type microwave oven is designed to discharge air, which is circulated in the cooking chamber 2 and then exhausted therefrom, to the kitchen room space, odors and gas generated in the cooking chamber 2 diffuse into the kitchen room space, thereby polluting kitchen room air.
Accordingly, it is an aspect of the present invention to provide a wall-mounted type microwave oven which selectively changes a discharging direction of air exhausted from a cooking chamber to the outside of a room, and to the inside of the room, according to a user's need.
Additional aspects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention.
To achieve the above and other aspects of the present invention, there is provided a wall-mounted type microwave oven comprising an oven body for mounting in a cooking area and which includes a cooking chamber and an electrical component compartment which are isolated from each other, an exhaust flow path which communicates between a lower portion of the oven body and an upper portion of the oven body to exhaust air existing under the oven body to the outside of the cooking area, a ventilation flow path which communicates between an inside of the cooking chamber and a front air outlet of the oven body to ventilate the cooking chamber, a communicating flow path which is provided in the oven body and communicates between the exhaust flow path and the ventilation flow path, and a path-converting device which is provided in the communicating flow path and selectively discharges air exhausted from the cooking chamber toward either the front air outlet or the exhaust flow path.
The ventilation flow path may include one or more through-holes formed at an upper surface of the cooking chamber, which communicate with the front air outlet. The communicating flow path may be provided over the cooking chamber and allows the front air outlet, the one or more through-holes and the exhaust flow path to communicate with one another.
The path-converting device may comprise a path-converting member which is rotatably provided in the communicating flow path, positioned over the one or more through-holes and has a path-blocking sectional area corresponding to a sectional area of the communicating flow path, and a drive motor which rotates the path-converting member in both forward and reverse directions.
The path-converting member may comprise a path-blocking curved plate having a longitudinal length corresponding to a width of the communicating flow path, and a pair of support portions which extend from corresponding opposite ends of the path-blocking plate toward a rotating axis thereof, so as to have free ends of the support portions be rotatably supported to portions defining the communicating flow path.
A radius of a circle depicted by the path-blocking curved plate may correspond to a height of the communicating flow path.
The one or more through-holes of the cooking chamber may be positioned at an area corresponding to a diameter of the circle depicted by the path-blocking plate.
The drive motor may be installed outside of the communicating flow path, and the path-converting device may further comprise a sector gear coupled to a rotating shaft of the path-converting member, and a pinion coupled to a shaft of the drive motor and which engages with the sector gear to reduce a rotational speed of the drive motor and transmit a rotating force of the drive motor to the path-converting member.
These and other aspects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to the like elements throughout. The embodiments are described below in order to explain the present invention by referring to the figures.
The cooking chamber 21 is provided at its front with a door 23, which is hingedly coupled thereto to be opened and closed. The electric component compartment 22 is isolated from the cooking chamber 21 by a partition plate 24. The electric component compartment 22 is provided therein with the electrical components, including a magnetron 25 which supplies high-frequency electromagnetic waves into the cooking chamber 21, a high voltage transformer 26 which applies a high voltage to the magnetron 25, and a cooling fan 27 which cools the electric component compartment 22. The magnetron 25 is mounted on an upper portion of a wall defining the electric component compartment 22, and the high voltage transformer 26 is mounted on a bottom surface of the electric component compartment 22. A waveguide 28 is disposed on a top of both the cooking chamber 21 and the electric component compartment, and guides the high frequency electromagnetic waves supplied from the magnetron 25 into the cooking chamber 21. The electric component compartment 22 is provided at its front face with a control panel 29 which includes a plurality of buttons to control various functions of the microwave oven, and a display which displays operational conditions of the microwave oven.
A ventilation flow path of the microwave oven allows outside air to be introduced into the electric component compartment 22 and the cooking chamber 21, and then be discharged to the outside, for example, a kitchen room space, to ventilate the electric component compartment 22 and the cooking chamber 21. The ventilation flow path includes a front air inlet 30 which is disposed over the control panel 29 of the oven body 20 and communicates with the electric component compartment 22 to allow outside air to be introduced into the electric component compartment 22 therethrough, and a plurality of vent holes 31 which are formed at the partition plate 24 and allow the air introduced into the electric component compartment 22 through the front air inlet 30 to be introduced into the cooking chamber 21 while cooling the electric component compartment 22. The ventilation flow path further includes a plurality of vent holes 32 formed at an upper surface of the cooking chamber 21, and a front air outlet 33 which is disposed at an upper portion of a front face of the cooking chamber 21 and allows the air in the cooking chamber 21 to be discharged to the kitchen room space therethrough.
Through the ventilation flow path, in response to an operation of the cooling fan 27, outside air is introduced into the electric component compartment 22 through the front air inlet 30 to cool the electric component compartment 22, and then introduced into the cooking chamber 21 through the vent holes 31 of the partition plate 24 to ventilate the cooking chamber 21. Subsequently, the air in the cooking chamber 21 is discharged to the kitchen room space through the vent holes 32 and the front air outlet 33.
An exhaust flow path of the microwave oven, which is constructed to be isolated from the cooking chamber 21 and the electric component compartment 22, allows gas and fumes generated by an oven range (not shown) disposed below the oven body 20 to be exhausted to the outside. That is, the oven body 20 is provided at its upper and rear portion with an exhaust fan assembly 34 which discharges the gas and fumes, introduced into the exhaust flow path, to the outside, for example, the outside of the kitchen room space.
The exhaust flow path comprises intake ports 36 formed at a bottom panel 35 of the oven body 20, a lower path section 38 defined between bottom plates 37 of the cooking chamber 21 and the electric component compartment 22 and a bottom panel 35 of the oven body 20, two rising path sections 39 and 40 vertically disposed beside the cooking chamber 21 and behind the electric component compartment 22 to communicate with the lower path section 38, and two upper path sections 41 and 42 disposed at an upper portion of the oven body 20 to guide gas and fumes, which are introduced through the rising path sections 39 and 40, to the exhaust fan 34. Accordingly, as the exhaust fan 34 is operated, gas and fumes, which are introduced into the oven body 20 through the intake ports 36, are exhausted to the outside of the kitchen room space after flowing through the lower path section 38, the two rising path sections, and the two upper path sections 41 and 42.
The wall-mounted type microwave oven further includes a communicating flow path 50 which directs air discharged from the cooking chamber 21, through the ventilation flow path, to the front air outlet 33 or to the upper path section 41 disposed at a rear portion of the oven body 20. The communicating flow path 50 is provided with a path-converting device 60.
The communicating flow path 50 is disposed between a top panel of the cooking chamber 21 and an outer case (not shown) of the oven body 20. The communicating flow path 50 is isolated from the other space between the top panel of the cooking chamber 21 and the outer case by two parallel guide plates 51 and 52 which extend back and forth along a width of the microwave oven. The communicating flow path 50 is opened at its front and rear ends, so as to have the both ends communicate with the front air outlet 33 and the upper path section 41, respectively. The vent holes 32 of the cooking chamber 21 are formed at an area defined by the parallel guide plates 51 and 52 to communicate with the communicating flow path 50.
The path-converting member 61 includes a path-blocking curved plate 61a having a radius corresponding to a height “h” of the communicating flow path 50 and a longitudinal length corresponding to a width of the communicating flow path 50. The path-blocking curved plate 61a has the same sectional area as that of the communicating flow path 50, when viewed from the front. The path-converting member 61 also includes a pair of sector-shaped support plates 61b which extend from corresponding opposite ends of the path-blocking plate 61a. The support plates 61b are provided with shafts 63a and 63b, so that the path-converting member 61 is rotatably supported to the guide plates 51 and 52.
In the instant embodiment, a radius of a circle depicted by the path-blocking plate 61a corresponds to the height “h” of the communicating flow path 50, and the vent holes 32 of the cooking chamber 21 are positioned at an area corresponding to a diameter of the circle depicted by the path-blocking plate 61a. Therefore, all of the vent holes 32 of the cooking chamber 21 communicate with the front air outlet 33 or the upper path section 41, depending on a rotated position of the path-converting member 61.
As shown in
To discharge air in the cooking chamber 21 to the front air outlet 33 during a cooking operation, the vent holes 32 of the cooking chamber 21 is allowed to communicate with the front air outlet 33 by pushing the path-converting switch 70 on the control panel 29.
That is, since the path-converting member 61 is rotated in a direction of arrow “A” by an operation of the drive motor 62, as shown in
To discharge odors and gas generated in the cooking chamber 21 to the upper path section 41, the vent holes 32 of the cooking chamber 21 are allowed to communicate with the upper path section 41 by an operation of the path-converting device 60 while the exhaust fan 34 is operated. Accordingly, a ventilation operation through the exhaust flow path is obtained.
That is, since the path-converting member 61 is rotated in a direction of arrow “B” by an operation of the drive motor 62, as shown in
As described above, the present invention provides a wall-mounted type microwave oven which selectively converts a discharging direction of air in a cooking chamber to one of a front ventilation flow path and a rear exhaust flow path, thereby preventing pollution of room air due to odors and gas generated from food in the cooking chamber.
Although a few embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in these embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined in the appended claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2002-37607 | Jun 2002 | KR | national |
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4786774 | Kaminaka | Nov 1988 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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2001-004151 | Jan 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040000547 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |