Heater
11168924 · 2021-11-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24H9/1872
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A45D20/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A45D2200/155
HUMAN NECESSITIES
H05B3/50
ELECTRICITY
International classification
A45D20/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
H05B3/50
ELECTRICITY
F24H3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A heater comprising a ceramic heater element and at least two fins for dissipating heat from the ceramic heater element, wherein the ceramic heater element extends along a plane in one dimension and the at least two fins extend away from the plane, and wherein the at least two fins are connected to the ceramic heater element via discrete connecting portions.
Claims
1. A heater comprising a ceramic heater element that comprises a ceramic substrate and at least two fins for dissipating heat from the ceramic heater element, wherein the ceramic substrate extends along a plane in one dimension and the at least two fins extend away from the plane, and wherein each fin of the at least two fins is connected to the ceramic substrate along a length of the fin via discrete connecting portions of the fin such that the fin is not connected to the ceramic substrate along an entire length of the fin, wherein the discrete connecting portions are a plurality of uniform areas of contact between the ceramic substrate and the at least two fins.
2. The heater of claim 1, wherein the discrete connecting portions are each separated by a gap.
3. The heater of claim 2, wherein the fin has a thickness and the gap is between 0.8 and 1.2 times the fin thickness.
4. The heater of claim 1, wherein the at least two fins are disposed on each side of the ceramic heater element.
5. The heater of claim 1, wherein the heater comprises a plurality of fins extending from both sides of the ceramic heater element.
6. The heater of claim 5, wherein the plurality of fins vary in height from a first edge to a second edge of the plurality of fins.
7. A method of attaching a metal fin to a ceramic heater element, the method comprising: (a) applying a filler material to a ceramic surface of the ceramic heater element; (b) positioning a metal fin over the filler material to produce a heater template; and (c) brazing the heater template in a furnace at a temperature of between 750° C. and 900° C. to melt the filler and cause the filler and the ceramic surface of the ceramic heater element to react together.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the fin is made from one of copper, stainless steel, and kovar.
9. The method of claim 7, further comprising: (i) coating the ceramic surface of the ceramic heater element with a metallisation paste; (ii) sintering the coated ceramic heater element; (iii) electroless plating of a nickel layer on the sintered coated ceramic heater element to produce a primary metallised surface; and (iv) applying a flux to the primary metallised surface, wherein steps (i) to (iv) are carried out prior to step (a) and wherein step (c) additionally melts the flux located between the metal fin and the primary metallised surface and is carried out at a temperature of around 600° C.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the metallisation paste is a mixture of the ceramic material used to form the ceramic heater element and a refractory material.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the metallisation paste is applied to the ceramic heater element at a thickness of 10 to 12 microns.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(30) According to some embodiments, a method includes a first step of making an HTCC heater element. Three exemplary materials for the element include aluminium oxide, aluminium nitride and silicon nitride. Commercially available materials may be used. For example, materials commercially available from Precision Ceramics (e.g., with the grade of alumina being 99.6% alumina, product description AT 79, the grade of aluminium nitride available in 2015, and the silicon nitride, product description SL 200 BG). The ceramic heater elements may be formed initially from a rectangular substrate which when sintered forms 70 mm×30 mm×0.5 mm coupons. A first layer of the green state ceramic may have a tungsten track screen printed onto a surface. The tungsten may be formed into a slurry with material of the same composition as the ceramic used to form the heater element and then a second layer of the green state ceramic may be applied. This may be sintered at over 1000° C., for example, around 1800° C. The resulting embedded tungsten track may have a thickness of 18-20 microns.
(31) Table 1 shows different exemplary combinations of ceramic and metal that were evaluated.
(32) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Copper C103 Stainless Steel S430 Kovar Single Single Multi- Single Multi- Ceramic sheet sheet section sheet section Al.sub.2O.sub.3 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons Al.sub.3N.sub.4 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons Si.sub.3N.sub.4 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons 5 coupons
(33) The brazing process was carried out on coupons (rectangular portions) of 70 mm×30 mm×0.5 mm of the ceramic heater element 10 in a vacuum furnace at 850° C. using a braze filler 20. The braze filler was 0.05 mm thick foil of AgCuTi active brazing, the metal 30 was only applied to one side of the ceramic which resulted in post brazing warpage and could account for some of the failures. Table 2 details the post brazing survival rate for the different combinations.
(34) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Copper C103 Stainless Steel S430 Kovar Single Single Multi- Single Multi- Ceramic sheet sheet section sheet section Al.sub.2O.sub.3 100% (5/5) 0% (0/5) 0% (0/5) 100% (5/5) 80% (4/5) Al.sub.3N.sub.4 100% (5/5) 0% (0/5) 0% (0/5) 0% (0/5) 20% (1/5) Si.sub.3N.sub.4 100% (5/5) 0% (0/5) 0% (0/5) 60% (3/5) 40% (2/5)
(35) Without being bound by any theory, it is thought that the stainless steel samples failed as a result of the brazing process being below the temperature of plastic deformation for this alloy thus, the metal side of the joint can only deform elastically which introduces stress into the joint. Conversely, copper can yield to reduce the build-up of stresses.
(36) A further investigation used heat dissipating fins. The fins 44, 54 are planar sheets which extend orthogonally away from a base portion 42, 56 respectively. In
(37) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Copper C103 Kovar Ceramic Straight Curved Straight Al.sub.2O.sub.3 0% (0/3) 0% (0/1) 67% (2/3) Al.sub.3N.sub.4 67% (2/3) 100% (1/1) 33% (1/3)
(38) The surviving samples were tested by thermally cycling them but all failed by cracking at the metal ceramic joint due to a build-up of stress. For the copper samples this is believed to be via cold working which increases the strength of the copper over time along with a mismatch ion the coefficient of thermal expansion.
(39) A third trial was carried out using an aluminium heat dispersing fin 60 (
(40) Referring now to
(41) For straight fins, the metal sheet profiles were cut with EDM wire (
(42) Having individual fins 60 may require a fixture to keep all fins in place during brazing; the material chosen was graphite due to the temperatures of the brazing process and as it would not react. A fixture was designed and is shown in
(43) As the fins are aluminium, active brazing was not used (the temperature is too high).
(44) The process was carried out as follows. First the surfaces of the ceramic heater element 10 were first cleaned thoroughly then coated with a primary metallizing layer 100. This is a 10-12 micron tungsten layer which is screen printed onto each side of the ceramic heater element. The tungsten is applied as an element in a metallisation paste and then coated part is sintered. The same ceramic material is used as a component in the tungsten paste so the same sintering conditions are used.
(45) The secondary layer 110, on top of the tungsten, is a 3-5 micron electroless nickel coating. For this trial the nickel alloy used was Ni-11P coating (near the eutectic). The process is also known as an ‘electrolytic’ or ‘autocatalytic’ process. This nickel layer prevents surface oxidation of the tungsten layer in air and improves wetting of the braze filler. A heat treatment at approximately 800° C. in a reducing atmosphere is used to diffuse this layer into the tungsten primary layer.
(46) As an alternative to using electroless plating, other forms of electroplating can be used, for example brush electroplating or dip electroplating.
(47) A flux material is applied to each electroplated surface. One example of a flux is Harris Al braze-1070 flux which was applied using a brush applicator. On each side of the metallised ceramic heater element 100, 110 initially 0.082+/−0.003 g was used. In a further test 0.0808+/−0.002 g was added per side. The flux material contains both aluminium and silicon and melts during the brazing process, removing oxides and improving the wetting of the surfaces. The addition of silicon as an alloying element in the filler lowers the melting point and the viscosity of the molten metal, which improves the alloy's gap-filling capability. The eutectic composition allows the lowest melting point of the binary alloy, and lowest viscosity (a transition from a single solid phase to a single liquid phase).
(48) Finally, a braze filler material 120 is applied over the flux material. An example of a filler material is Prince and Izant Al-718. This is provided as a foil which is 590 microns thick. In a first example a single sheet of the foil was used providing 0.271+/−0.004 g of filler material per side. A second example used 0.527+/−0.006 g of filler material per side (two 50 micron foil layers per side).
(49) Another example of a suitable material is NOCOLOK® Sil Flux” from Solvay. This combines filler and flux in one paste so removes the need for two step application.
(50) The heat sink material chosen was Al1050-O grade which is a commercially pure grade that has undergone an annealing heat treatment process. The heat sink is a non-traditional ‘finned heat sink’ because the ‘heat sink base’ has been removed and only the fins are used. These fins are directly bonded to the heat generating surface using a ‘flanged tee’ joint.
(51) The fins 60 are created from rolled sheet through EDM wire cutting and bending processes. As part of the cutting process, small cuts are created at the bottom of the fins. This effectively produces a plurality of legs 64 and inbetween each adjacent pair of legs, parallel slots 66 that extend from one edge of the metal sheet towards the distal end. A second stage is to produce the discrete connecting portions; this is achieved by bending the metal sheet in a 90° V-press tool. This forms a plurality of “L-shaped” features having a leg 64 which forms part of the fin proper and a foot portion which forms the discrete connecting portion 62 for each leg.
(52) The brazing process is carried out in a furnace. Some samples were brazed in a vacuum furnace but this was found to be unnecessary and increased the dwell time required as only radiation was used to heat the sample. Further processes were carried out in a reducing atmosphere at approximately one atmosphere of pressure. The heater template is assembled within an enclosure 200, 210 and placed in the furnace at room temperature and then heated to around 610° C. in an atmosphere of 95% nitrogen and 5% hydrogen. The heating process took around an hour, in this case this was the highest for the furnace used and potentially higher rates could be used which would reduce the brazing time. The temperature was held for a pre-determined time and then cooled to room temperature. The pre-determined time was around 2 minutes, but this is dependent on the thermal mass of the enclosure 200, 210 and the heater so is subject to change dependent on these factors.
(53) After removal from the furnace, the heater was washed in an ultrasonic hot water bath at 40° C. to remove flux residue from between the discrete connecting portions.
(54) Theoretically, this joint should not work due to Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE) mismatch between the ceramic and the metal. Also, if the two materials were joined without fracture of the ceramic, the joint would not survive many thermal cycles.
(55) By using individual fins 60, there is a reduction in the contact area between the heat sink and the ceramic heating element 10 this limits the problems caused by the mismatch is thermal expansion coefficient in one orientation—across the width of the ceramic heater element. In addition, by having the discrete points of contact 62 along each individual fin 60, the problem caused by the mismatch is thermal expansion coefficient in another orientation—along the length of the ceramic heater element 10. The discrete connecting portions act as stress relief cuts.
(56) A few variations in the form of the ceramic heater will now be discussed. The fins 60 may be all of the same height as shown in
(57) As previously described,
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(59) As an alternative to the connectors being provided along an edge of the ceramic heater element 150,
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(63) Referring now to
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(65) The ceramic heater element herein described is designed to withstand 400° C. with a power input of 1500 W at a maximum fluid temperature at the outlet of 125° C. Table 4 shows a range of parameters that were achieved.
(66) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Max. exit Track 1 Track 2 Flow rate temp temp temp Power Heater_P 9 std l = s 76° C. 106° C. 124° C. 514 W 469 Pa 101° C. 161° C. 186° C. 766 W 506 Pa 124° C. 213° C. 244° C. 1003 W 541 Pa 11 std l = s 76° C. 110° C. 130° C. 584 W 617 Pa 101° C. 170° C. 198° C. 895 W 689 Pa 125° C. 229° C. 264° C. 1197 W 734 Pa 13.5 std l = s 75° C. 112° C. 132° C. 663 W 875 Pa 101° C. 178° C. 208° C. 1038 W 947 Pa 129° C. 260° C. 301° C. 1504 W 1050 Pa
(67) Within the hairdryer shown in
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(70) The invention has been described in detail with respect to a hairdryer and a hot styling device however, it is applicable to any appliance that draws in a fluid and directs the outflow of that fluid from the appliance.
(71) The appliance can be used with or without a heater; the action of the outflow of fluid at high velocity has a drying effect.
(72) The fluid that flows through the appliance is generally air, but may be a different combination of gases or gas and can include additives to improve performance of the appliance or the impact the appliance has on an object the output is directed at for example, hair and the styling of that hair.
(73) The invention is not limited to the detailed description given above. Variations will be apparent to the person skilled in the art.