Electric heater crushable cores and compacted unitary heater devices and method for making such devices
11304266 ยท 2022-04-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
H05B2203/014
ELECTRICITY
Y10T29/49096
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H01C17/02
ELECTRICITY
Y10T29/49089
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T29/49083
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A crushable ceramic heater core for an electric heater device which has a cylinder-like body of crushable ceramic material and grooves along the periphery of the body, the grooves being key shaped and adapted to receive a conductive pin in a groove. The invention also includes an electric heater device where such a core has been wound with heater wire and the conductive pin has been inserted in a core groove in contact with the wire, and the wire wound core has been installed in a sheath which has been filled with electoral insulating material. The sheath and its contents are swaged to create a compacted unitary heater assembly. The invention also includes the process for making the wire wound grooved core having a conductive pin therein in contact with the wire winding, and a method for making a heating device having such a core and which has been compacted to a theoretical density. The heater assembly and the method may also include installation of temperature sensing devices.
Claims
1. A method for making a crushable electric heater core comprising the steps of providing a cylinder-like body of crushable ceramic material; forming longitudinal grooves, each of said grooves having a first end and a second end and an entry, along a periphery of said body, forming slots in said body communicating with said grooves, wherein said longitudinal grooves and said slots when considered in cross-section are key hole like that when considered in cross-section are rectangular or oblong or pillow shaped of greater width than said entry of said key hole like longitudinal grooves, winding electrical heating wire around said body in a direction substantially perpendicular to said grooves; threading the ends of said wire one end into one of said slots and one end into another of each of said slots; and installing conductive pins in said rectangular or oblong or pillow shaped longitudinal grooves said conductive pin being approximately rectangular, one pin in contact with one of said ends and another pin in contact with another of said ends.
2. In the method recited in claim 1, wherein said grooves are narrower at the periphery of said body and enlarged interiorly of said periphery.
3. In the method recited in claim 1, wherein said pins have across section about slightly smaller than said grooves.
4. In the method recited in claim 1, wherein a temperature sensing device is installed in one of said grooves.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(23) With reference to the accompanying drawing and particularly to
(24) Heater resistance wire 20 is wound around the outer or exterior circumference 12 of the core 10 in any selective arrangement depending upon the use and electrical requirements of the heater, which may be constructed to provide constant wattage, distributed wattage, sectional heating, and with or without cold sections. One end 21 of the heater wire 20 is threaded into one of the slots or grooves 17 communicating with a core key slot 14 and the other end 22 of the heater wire 20 is threaded into another slot communicating with another core key slot. If the heat provided by a finished heater is to be varied, other pairs of grooves 17 may be slotted and other ends of the heater wire for the varied arrangements may be inserted into other key slots 14 to achieve the selected heating arrangements desired.
(25) A conductive pin 25, preferably having a substantially rectangular cross section but a bit smaller than the enlarged section 16 of a key slot 14 is threaded into each of the preferably oblong or enlarged sections 16 of a selected key slot in alignment and communicating with the end 21 or 22 on a winding of heater wire 20. This conductive pin 25 may be as long as the key slot 14 or of a different length, depending upon the end use of the finished heater. The pin 25 must be long enough to communicate with electrical leads 26 exterior to the heater, of a length depending upon the end use of the finished heater device.
(26) An inner tube-like or solid sheath 30 is slipped into the central inside circumferential wall of the wire wound core 10 with its pins 25 in place, and an outer sheath 29 is slipped over the outer circumferential wall 12 of the wire would core 10. These sheaths 29 and 30 may have relatively heavy walls and are preferably constructed of tool steel, stainless steel or similar heat transmitting material, and are substantially at least as long as the wire wound heater core 10.
(27) At this point magnesium oxide insulation powder of fine sand-like consistency or similar insulating material is poured into all voids within the assembly. The open area of the key slots 14 also function as fill channels for the insulating material. The assembly is vibrated to pack the insulating material within the sheaths 29 and 30 and assembly of the core 10, key slots 14, pins 25 and winding of heater wire 20 substantially as much as possible.
(28) Following this packing and vibrating step, a round shaft (not shown) longer than the sheaths enclosing the wire wound core assembly is fit into or over the inner sheath. The assembly is swaged until a predetermined diameter for the assembly has been reached. Upon swaging, the core is crushed, the core and insulation are compacted to a near theoretical density, the pin and wire connection is secured, the key slot entry is collapsed, compacting the ceramic powder between the pins and inner sheath, fixing the pins in position, and the entire swaged assembly is unitized into a single mass.
(29) If the swaged heater assembly is to have heater material pass through the central opening in its inner sheath, the space between the sheaths is sealed, leaving the central opening open. Such sealing can be accomplished with a glue sealant or the like. If the swaged heater assembly is to be a heated melt pot, a sprue bushing, a molding machine nozzle, or in some other form, a suitable ring or disc end 33 in the direction of flow may be welded onto the exit of the assembly, with an appropriate gate or other exit arrangement, if desired. Appropriate leads 26, exterior to the assembly, may be secured to the free ends of the pins. The assembly may also be formed on a lathe or with other components joined as appropriate. Conventional connections to power may be attached to the completed assembly, as desired. The leads 26 can exit at either end of the assembly or at any point on its outer or inner diameter.
(30) The novel open key slot 14 embodying the present invention, distinguished from conventional holes of various shapes used to form a swaged contact, allows extrusion tooling to have a slot portion of the tooling as part of the male portion of an extrusion die, which enables the manufacture of very thin sections while holding precise dimensions and location of the swaged contacts and pins 25. Further this core key slot 14 allows complete filling of all voids between the core 10 and sheaths 29 and 30, even with high dielectric strength powders such as boron nitride to form a portion of the insulation between the pins 25, core 10 and sheaths 29 and 30. This open key slot 14 also permits fixtures equipped with blades to be used in the winding process for expeditiously rotating the core 10.
(31) With referenced to
(32) The inner and outer diameter of the finished compacted swaged heater assembly can be machined to precision tolerances, examples of which are shown in
(33) Some, but not all, available lead connection arrangements are illustrated in
(34) With reference to
(35) The intimate association of the heating and heat transfer parts, compacted to a near theoretical density, permits the construction of an effective heated material delivery system with exceptional control, For example, a heated device is shown in the following photograph, having in orange-colored high temperature heated section of the part and in red and in varying red shades in other sections of lesser temperature, all of which can be well controlled by use of the novel devices and method taught in this application.
(36) While this invention has been shown and discussed in considerable detail, it is to be understood that the invention should not be limited to the exact constructions disclosed as many variations are possible and can be made without affecting the nature and scope of the invention