Wall-mounted suction ventilator
11248813 · 2022-02-15
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24F7/013
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B60H1/243
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F24F13/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F2007/0025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A natural ventilator is herein disclosed that is free of moving parts, wind-activated, rain-proof, and free of dust or smog infiltration. It is not only suitable to be a standalone natural ventilator, but is also advantageous to be used as an enhanced exhaust exit in a forced-air ventilation system, for such enclosed spaces or objects as buildings and vehicles needing air relief. The ventilator assembly has rainwater-proof shapes or fixtures that serve to defend the vent system, and the interior space being vented, against rainwater invasion, even if raindrop trajectory becomes highly oblique from vertical as driven by strong winds. It also includes shapes or fixtures to prevent fume condensation from drifting outward and staining the exterior of a building or vehicle, or the like, that is being vented.
Claims
1. A ventilation device to be capable of being mounted onto a vertical exterior surface of an enclosed object to be vented, comprising: a base plate having at least one aperture; a tube connected to said base plate in fluid communication with said aperture to allow for free movement of gases through connected assembly of said tube and said base plate, said assembly of tube and said base plate having geometry and/or fixture forming at least one of a first mechanism stopping rainwater from drifting inwards and a second mechanism stopping fume condensation from drifting outwards; a raised body having a convex face towards said aperture of said base plate, and supported and secured on said base plate with a plurality of elongated members, forming a free space between said convex face and said base plate; wherein said free space being narrower near said aperture than away from said aperture, forming a first contracting and then expanding path for external wind flow approaching from any direction and passing through said free space between said convex face and said base plate, whereby to create a low air pressure or a venturi suction effect at said aperture, said suction effect being communicated to an interior space of said enclosed object to be vented through said aperture and said tube; wherein at least one tubular liner attached onto internal surface of said tube, said tubular liner being shorter than said tube, configured to be recessed from both ends of said tube and concealed within said tube, whereby as said first mechanism to stop rainwater from drifting inwards and as said second mechanism to stop fume condensation from drifting outwards along said internal surface of said tube.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein said tubular liner having an upper portion wider in said tube's axial direction than a lower portion, therein as double drip edges to ensure rainwater droplets to fall to an outer portion of said tube and fume droplets to fall to an inner portion of said tube, said outer portion and said inner portion of said tube being separated by said lower portion of said tubular liner.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein said upper portion of said tubular liner having an inner wall surface curving downwardly in opposite directions toward said inner portion and said outer portion of said tube, forming lowest points at inner and outer edges therein, whereby to enhance functionality as double drip edges.
4. A ventilation device to be capable of being mounted onto a vertical exterior surface of an enclosed object to be vented, comprising: a base plate having at least one aperture; a tube connected to said base plate in fluid communication with said aperture to allow for free movement of gases through connected assembly of said tube and said base plate, said assembly of tube and said base plate having geometry and/or fixture forming at least one of a first mechanism stopping rainwater from drifting inwards and a second mechanism stopping fume condensation from drifting outwards; a raised body having a convex face towards said aperture of said base plate, and supported and secured on said base plate with a plurality of elongated members, forming a free space between said convex face and said base plate; wherein said free space being narrower near said aperture than away from said aperture, forming a first contracting and then expanding path for external wind flow approaching from any direction and passing through said free space between said convex face and said base plate, whereby to create a low air pressure or a venturi suction effect at said aperture, said suction effect being communicated to an interior space of said enclosed object to be vented through said aperture and said tube; wherein an outer portion of said tube expanding outwardly, and an inner portion of said tube expanding inwardly, a juncture of said inner and said outer portions forming at least one narrow section of said tube, an upper portion of said narrow section being configured to have at least one drip edge and a lower portion of said narrow section being configured to have at least one dividing ridge, at least one said drip edge being positioned away from said dividing ridge in said tube's axial direction, therein as said first mechanism to stop rainwater from drifting inwards or as said second mechanism to stop fume condensation from drifting outwards, wherein said dividing ridge dividing said tube into said inner and said outer portions.
5. The device of claim 4, wherein said drip edge being positioned to the outer side of said dividing ridge, whereby to function as said first mechanism by preventing drifting rainwater from falling onto said inner portion of said tube.
6. The device of claim 4, wherein said drip edge being positioned to the inner side of said dividing ridge, whereby to function as said second mechanism by preventing drifting fume condensation from falling onto said outer portion of said tube.
7. The device of claim 4, wherein said at least one narrow section comprises a first narrow section and a second narrow section wherein said first narrow section and said second narrow section meet at said dividing ridge.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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(3) FIG lb shows a partial view of the device in FIG. la, to present an enlarged detail view of a tubular liner inside a conduit.
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
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(14) An optional ring-like liner 105 can be fitted or mounted into the tube/tunnel 150 as shown in
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(24) The specific shapes shown in the previous figures for the raised body and other elements of the suction ventilator are merely used as examples to assist in illustrating the general conception. Variations are allowable for their shapes, such as modifications to the ratio of height to width, or aspect ratio, of the raised body. Specific choices of cross-sectional shape, length and diameter of the tunnel, as well as those of the elongated supports for the raised body, are also allowable according to the situation of application as desired and appropriate according to the spirit described herein.
(25) For example, configurations primarily comprising plane surface are acceptable.
(26) Other aesthetically pleasing or appealing modifications to the shape of the raised body are allowable in principle as long as such modifications will not jeopardize or significantly compromise its aerodynamic functionality, for which its general shape that has a convex surface facing the tunnel exit should be substantially maintained. Non-smooth surface, for example, roughened, corrugated or ribbed, can be utilized for the raised body, for whatever purposes—architectural, aerodynamic such as for flow separation control or airflow guide etc., or any others, as long as such local additions do not significantly alter the general shape of a convex surface facing the tunnel exit.
(27) Optional removable or fixed screens may be installed on any suitable location in the tunnel, for example the tunnel 850 in
(28) Installation and Operation
(29) In principle, the suction ventilator described herein is functional anywhere on a vertical or near-vertical exterior surface of the building or vehicle where there are relative air movements, such as those caused by wind or by a moving vehicle, although there are optimal locations where installed suction ventilators will function most effectively. Generally, these locations are near edges and corners, where airflow velocity is normally the highest and local ambient air pressure is lowest most of the time.
(30) Suction ventilators described in this application are passive, flow-activated devices.
(31) Once installed properly, they stay operating and functioning as wind blows, and require no active intervention. The stronger the wind blows, the more effective the suction ventilator is. Since there is no moving part involved in the entire system, minimal or no maintenance is required. Routine cleaning may be needed in situations with heavy fume condensation, mostly for the portions of the system reachable from inside a building or vehicle without the need for specialty cleaning equipment.
(32) Conclusion, Ramifications, and Scope
(33) It is apparent that suction ventilators of this invention provide an air or gas exhaust system that is aerodynamically advantageous, energy conserving, rainwater-proof and fume condensation reducing, and is still among the simplest, most inexpensive to manufacture and convenient to install. Unlike other ventilation options, such as exhaust fans or turbine vents, it involves no moving part or mechanism, so that it also possesses many additional qualities desired of a ventilator, including extremely low maintenance, essentially unlimited life expectancy, noise-free operation, and so on.
(34) Although the description above contains many specifications, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention. Various changes, modifications, variations can be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, the outer perimeter edge of the raised body can be a sharp edge, instead of being a blunt edge as shown for all the above given examples. The suction ventilators can be made of any reasonably durable material with any appropriate means of fabrication as long as a configuration according to the spirit of this invention is accomplished to support the described working mechanism and to provide the associated functionality. Various surface portions of a suction ventilator may also be roughened or bear such surface details as corrugation or ribs of adequate sizes, as opposed to perfectly smooth surfaces. Any appropriate conventional or new surface-mounting method can be used to secure a suction ventilator to a vertical or near-vertical surface without departing from the spirit of this invention. Thus the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.