HEATING UNIT FOR AN APPLIANCE FOR HEATING AND/OR FROTHING MILK

20170238755 · 2017-08-24

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

An appliance for heating and/or frothing milk, in which steam or a mixture of steam and air acting as a heat carrier is injected into the milk, with the heating unit including an inner steam channel and an outer annular channel for the milk. The outer annular channel coaxially surrounds the inner steam channel, with hot steam or a mixture of steam and air being supplied at an upstream end of the steam channel and with milk being supplied at an upstream end of the annular channel. To improve the heat output and the energy efficiency of the heating unit and to reduce the maintenance requirement, the steam channel and the annular channel are separated from one another, with their downstream ends opening out into an outlet channel for discharging the heated and/or frothed milk.

Claims

1. A heating unit for an appliance device for heating and/or frothing milk in which steam or a mixture of steam and air acting as a heat carrier is injected into the milk, with the heating unit comprising an inner heat channel and an outer annular channel for the milk, where the outer annular channel coaxially surrounds the inner steam channel, with hot steam or a mixture of steam and air being introduced at an upstream end of the steam channel and with milk being introduced at an upstream end of the annular channel, wherein the downstream ends of both the steam channel and the annular channel open out into an outlet channel for discharging the heated and/or frothed milk.

2. The heating unit of claim 1, wherein the steam channel, the annular channel and the outlet channel are formed through a reactor block made of a plastic material.

3. The heating unit of claim 2, wherein the steam channel extends in an axial direction in the reactor block, with the upstream end of the steam channel being connectable to a steam line and with the steam introduced via the steam line or the mixture of steam and air introduced via the steam line flowing in the steam channel vertically against gravity from the bottom to the top toward the downstream end of the steam channel.

4. The heating unit of claim 2, wherein the reactor block is at least for the most part configured in the form of a cylinder having a longitudinal center axis, with the steam channel and the outlet channel extending over the longitudinal center axis of the reactor block, with the annular channel being disposed coaxially relative to the longitudinal center axis of the reactor block and with the upstream end of the steam channel being formed by a front-end opening in the reactor block.

5. The heating unit of claim 1, wherein at the upstream end, the annular channel is connected to a radial bore extending at a right or an oblique angle to the longitudinal axis of the annular channel in the reactor block, with the radial bore being connectable to a milk line.

6. The heating unit of claim 5, wherein the radial bore opens out tangentially into the annular channel.

7. The heating unit of claim 1, wherein at the downstream end, the annular channel comprises a conical section which opens out into an outlet channel.

8. The heating unit of claim 7, wherein the conical section of the annular channel in the downstream direction merges into the tubularly configured outlet channel.

9. The heating unit of claim 2, further comprising a front-end opening at the upper end of the reactor block, which opening forms an outlet for discharging the heated and/or frothed milk from the outlet channel.

10. The heating unit of claim 1, wherein, except in the area of their downstream ends, the steam channel and the annular channel are separated from one another.

11. The heating unit of claim 1, wherein a temperature sensor for measuring the temperature of the heated and/or frothed milk is disposed in the outlet channel.

12. The heating unit of claim 1, wherein, over an entire length of the outer annular channel, the outer annular channel coaxially surrounds the inner steam channel.

13. An appliance for heating and/or frothing milk comprising the heating unit of claim 1, with the upstream end of the steam channel being connected to a steam inlet line, and with the upstream end of the annular channel being connected to a milk line so as to be able to introduce a mixture of steam and air via the stem inlet line into the steam channel of the heating unit and milk via the milk line into the annular channel.

14. The appliance of claim 13, further comprising a device for generating a mixture of steam and air, which device comprises a steam generator and a compressed gas source, each being connected to the steam inlet line, with the steam generator charging the steam inlet line with steam and with the compressed gas source generating pressure pulses and injecting them into the steam inlet line.

15. The appliance of claim 14, wherein the compressed gas source is activated by pulse width modulation and/or emits the pressure pulses at an adjustable pulse frequency.

16. A method of heating and/or frothing milk by the heating unit of claim 1, with hot steam or a mixture of steam and air being supplied to the upstream end of the steam channel and with milk being supplied to the upstream end of the annular channel, and with the steam or the mixture of steam and air flowing through the steam channel and from there into the outlet channel, and with the milk flowing through the outer annular channel and from there also into the outlet channel and therein being mixed with the steam or the mixture of steam and air, which causes the milk to be heated and/or frothed.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0019] These and additional advantages and features of the present invention follow from the embodiment example described in greater detail below with reference to the appended drawings. The drawings show:

[0020] FIG. 1: A longitudinal section through a heating unit according to the present invention;

[0021] FIG. 2: A cross section through the heating unit of FIG. 1 along the plane B-B;

[0022] FIG. 3: A longitudinal section through the heating unit of FIG. 1 along the plane A-A;

[0023] FIG. 4: A diagrammatic representation of an appliance for heating and/or frothing milk using a heating unit according to the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

[0024] The heating unit according to the present invention shown in FIGS. 1-3 comprises a reactor block 4 made of a plastic material, specifically, PEEK, PSU or PEI, which essentially has the form of a cylinder with a longitudinal center axis A. An inner steam channel 1, an outer annular channel 2, which coaxially surrounds the inner steam channel 1, and an outlet channel 3, which is coaxially disposed relative to the steam channel 1, are formed through the reactor block 4. The steam channel 1 has an upstream end 1a, which is formed by a front-end opening 4a in the reactor block 4. In addition, the inner steam channel 1 has a downstream end 1b, which opens out into the outlet channel 3, which in the downstream direction is coaxially contiguous with the steam channel 1. The outlet channel 3 ends in a front-end opening 4b in the reactor block 4. The diameter of the outlet channel 3 is larger than the diameter of the steam channel 1, for example, twice as large. Over its entire length (i.e., its extent in the axial direction), the outer annular channel 2 is arranged coaxially to the inner steam channel, as indicated in FIGS. 1 and 3, with the inner steam channel 1 in the illustrated embodiment example being slightly longer than the annular channel 2 coaxially surrounding the inner steam channel. However, it is also possible to configure the inner steam channel 1 and the annular channel 2 to have the same length

[0025] A connecting nozzle 13 is disposed in the steam channel 1 in the area of the upstream end 1a. Via this connecting nozzle 13, the inner steam channel 1 can be connected to a steam inlet channel line, which is not shown in FIGS. 1-3, by means of which hot steam or a mixture of steam and air can be introduced. At the downstream end of the outlet channel 3, an additional connecting nozzle 14 is provided so as to be able to connect an outlet line 15.

[0026] The outer annular channel 2 which coaxially surrounds the inner steam channel 1 also has an upstream end 2a and a downstream end 2b. At the upstream end 2a of the outer annular channel 2, this channel is connected to a radial bore 5 in the reactor block 4 (as shown in FIG. 2). As FIG. 2 indicates, the radial bore 5 at the upstream end 2a of the outer annular channel tangentially opens out into the annular channel 2. An additional connecting nozzle 16 is disposed in the radial bore 5. Via this connecting nozzle 16, the radial bore 5 can be connected to a milk line (not shown in FIGS. 1-3). Via this milk line, (cold) milk can be introduced into the radial bore 5 and from there into the outer annular channel 2.

[0027] As FIGS. 1 and 3 show, in the area of its downstream end 2b, the outer annular channel 2 comprises a conical section 2c. In this conical section 2c, the outer diameter of the annular channel 2 decreases in a conical or tapered form, with the channel diameter remaining the same, to the diameter D of the outlet channel 3. The [sic; At the] downstream end 2b of the outer annular channel 2, at which the conical section 2c has an outer diameter that conforms to the diameter D of the outlet channel 3, the annular channel 2 opens out into the outlet channel 3. In the area in which both the inner steam channel 1 and the outer annular channel 2 open out into the outlet channel 3, the steam or the mixture of steam and air supplied by the steam channel 1 is mixed with the milk supplied by the outer annular channel 2. In the course of mixing the hot steam or the mixture of steam and air with the milk, the milk is heated and, if the mixture of steam and air is used, frothed to produce a milk foam.

[0028] To measure the temperature of the heated or frothed milk, a temperature sensor 6 is preferably provided in the downstream area of the outlet channel 3. The temperature sensor 6 is disposed in a radial bore 17 which opens out into the outlet channel 3.

[0029] FIG. 4 shows a diagrammatic representation of an appliance for heating and frothing milk using a heating unit 10 according to the present invention. In this diagram, the upstream end la of the steam channel 1 is connected with a steam inlet line 12. The steam inlet line 12, in which a check valve 12a is disposed, connects the heating unit 10 to a device 20 for generating a mixture of steam and air. The device 20 for generating a mixture of steam and air comprises a steam generator 18 and a compressed gas source 19. The steam generator 18 is connected to the steam inlet line 12 via a steam line 18a, and the compressed gas source 19 is connected to the steam inlet line 12 via a compressed gas line 19a. In the compressed gas line 19a, an electrically controlled switching valve (for example, a solenoid valve) 19b, a check valve 19c and a controllable throttle valve 19d are disposed. In the steam line 18a, an electrically controlled switching valve (for example, a solenoid valve) 18b is disposed as well.

[0030] In the appliance shown in FIG. 4, the upstream end 2a of the annular channel 2 of the heating unit 10 according to the present invention is connected to a milk line 11. One free end of the milk line 11 is configured in the form of an immersion tube and is immersed in a tank 22 containing cold milk. In the milk line 11, a check valve 11a, a pump 21 and a controllable throttle valve 11b are disposed. By means of the pump 21, cold milk can be drawn via an immersion tube from the tank 22 into the milk line 11 and from there can be delivered into the annular channel 2 of the heating unit 10. To measure the temperature of the drawn-in milk, a temperature sensor 23 is preferably disposed in the milk line 11.

[0031] An outlet line 15 is connected to the downstream end of the outlet channel 3 of the heating unit 10. One free end of the outlet line 15 opens out into a cup 24. The product produced in the heating unit 10, which in the embodiment example illustrated in FIG. 4 is milk foam, is delivered into the cup 24 via the outlet line 15.

[0032] A control unit 25 is provided for the purpose of controlling the appliance. The control unit 25 is linked with the temperature sensors 6 and 23 which measure the temperature of the cold milk and the product produced (heated milk and milk foam, respectively). In addition, the control unit 25 is arranged to control the opening and closing of the valves 18b and 19b respectively located in the steam line 18a and the compressed gas line 19a. The control unit 25 also serves to control the pump 21 in the milk line 11.

[0033] According to a preferred embodiment example of the appliance shown in FIG. 4, the compressed gas source 19 generates pressure pulses of compressed gas. For this purpose, the compressed gas source 19 comprises a compressor which compresses a gas, specifically, air, to produce a compressed gas (compressed air). The compressed gas source 19 is preferably configured in such a manner that it is able to inject, at a predefinable frequency, periodic pressure pulses of the compressed gas via the compressed gas line 19a into the steam inlet line 12. The compressed gas source 19 can preferably be actuated by pulse width modulation. The actuation is performed by the control unit 25.

[0034] The pressure pulses of the compressed gas source 19 are preferably periodically injected at an adjustable frequency via the compressed gas line 19a through the controllable throttle valve 19d into the steam inlet line 12. In the steam inlet line 12, the pulses of the compressed gas (specifically, compressed air) are mixed with the hot steam delivered by the steam source 19 [sic] via the steam line 18a into the steam inlet line 12 and generate a pulsed mixture of steam and air in the steam inlet line 12. The pulsed mixture of steam and air is introduced via the steam inlet line 12 into the inner steam channel 1 of the heating unit 10 and from there flows into outlet channel 3. In the outlet channel 3, the pulses of the mixture of steam and air are mixed with the cold milk, which was introduced via the outer annular channel 2 into the heating unit 10, which causes the milk to be heated and frothed to produce a milk foam. The product produced in this manner (milk foam) is delivered via the outlet channel 3 into outlet line 15 and from there into the cup 24.

[0035] By adjusting the parameters of the pressure pulses generated by the compressed gas source 19, for example, their frequency and amplitude, it is possible to influence and adjust the composition of the milk foam produced in the heating unit 10. To be able to adjust the frequency and amplitude of the pressure pulses to the desired values, the control unit 25 comprises adjustment means, for example, a control dial or buttons, by means of which the frequency and/or the amplitude of the pressure pulses can preferably be infinitely adjusted between a minimum value and a maximum value. The amplitude of the pressure pulses can be controlled, for example, by adjusting the output of the compressor of the compressed gas source 19 or the position of the controllable throttle valve 19d.

[0036] Thus, the consistency of the milk foam produced, specifically, the ratio of foam to liquid, as well as other parameters of the foam, for example, its creaminess, porosity, foam density and the foam stability (drainage), can be influenced by selecting suitable parameters of the pressure pulses. An operator of the appliance can thereby influence the properties of the foam by changing the parameters of the pressure pulses prior to and even during the frothing process. Thus, for example, the pulse repetition rate (pulse frequency) of the pressure pulses periodically injected into the steam inlet line 12 can still be changed even during the frothing process. In this manner, it is, for example, possible by means of a control dial disposed on the appliance to adjust the pulse frequency infinitely between a minimum value and a maximum value and thereby select the consistency of the foam produced within predefined limits between fine and coarse.