DISPOSABLE GRILL AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURING A DISPOSABLE GRILL
20210228025 · 2021-07-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02E50/10
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
Y02E50/30
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
Y02A40/928
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 disposable grill including a base tray as an outer grill cover made in a flammable material, a fuel shaped in a combustible biomass material, and an insert structure made in a heat insulating material for holding the fuel and being partly or fully covered by the base tray, wherein at least one wall thickness of at least one location in the insert structure being defined by one or more characteristics of the fuel and the base tray.
Claims
1. A disposable grill comprising a base tray delimiting an outer grill cover and made in a flammable material, a fuel comprised of in a combustible biomass material, and an insert structure made of a heat insulating material for holding said fuel and being partly or fully covered by said base tray, wherein at least one wall thickness of at least one location in said insert structure being defined by one or more characteristics of said fuel and said base tray and wherein said at least one wall thickness of said insert structure being defined by one or more desired work temperature on the outer surfaces of said base tray.
2. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said fuel is plate shaped with at least substantially even upper and lower surfaces.
3. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein the characteristic includes a length and a width of said shaped fuel being substantially larger than a thickness of said fuel, said thickness between 12 and 15 millimeters in relation to a width and length larger than 100 millimeters of said fuel, where the width range is 150 to 180 millimeters.
4. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein one of said characteristics includes size, shape and/or number of elements in said fuel.
5. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said fuel is charcoals.
6. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said fuel is one or more briquettes shaped in compressed coal or biofuel powder.
7. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said insert structure is shaped as a tray with sidewalls and a bottom part in a heat insulating material.
8. The disposable grill of claim 7, wherein said fuel being held or clamped in said tray of the insert structure by selection of the lengths and widths of said tray and fuel.
9. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said wall thickness being the same for at least one location in each sidewall or the same for at least one location in each sidewall and bottom part of said insert structure.
10. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein the wall thickness is larger in said bottom part than the wall thickness in any sidewall of said insert structure.
11. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein the wall thickness of the side walls is in the range of 15 to 40 millimetres.
12. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said base tray is made in a cardboard material with one of said characteristics including an autoignition temperature above approx. 218° C.
13. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein one of said characteristics includes a predefined weight of said fuel a weight between 200 and 1500 grams.
14. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said insert structure is made in a perlite material.
15. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said insert structure is an insert made in a moulded heat insulating material or made in an otherwise fixated heat insulating material comprising loose material fixed with a binder or cover material to maintain a position.
16. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said desired work temperature on the outer surfaces of said base tray is between 40 and 80° C. for an outer side wall surface of the base tray and/or between 80 and 170° C. for an outer bottom surface of said base tray.
17. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein said at least one characteristic includes the radiated heat content of said predefined amount of combustible biomass material.
18. The disposable grill of claim 17, wherein said radiated heat content is in a range of 5,000 to 9,000 calorie/gram.
19. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein the bottom part of said insert structure has a wall thickness between 20 and 70 millimetres.
20. The disposable grill of claim 1, wherein at least one layer of loose heat insulating material is positioned between said insert structure and base tray below the bottom part of said insert structure.
21. The disposable grill of claim 20, wherein said at least one layer of loose heat insulating material has a wall thickness between 10 and 40 millimetres and said insert structure has a wall thickness between 10 and 40 millimeters.
22. A method of manufacturing a disposable grill comprising a base tray as an outer grill cover made in a flammable material and at least one insert structure in a heat insulating material, said method comprising the steps of: selecting a fuel shaped in a combustible biomass material to be located in said insert structure, defining at least one wall thickness of at least one location in said insert structure by using one or more characteristics of said fuel and said base tray, positioning said fuel in the insert structure, and covering said insert structure including the positioned fuel with said base tray.
Description
FIGURES
[0045] The invention will be described in the following with reference to the figures in which
[0046]
[0047]
[0048]
[0049]
[0050]
[0051]
[0052]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0053]
[0054] The charcoal lumps are carried in the grill by a container 2 shaped as a tray. The container 2 is positioned on a lower support structure 4 which is adapted to lift the container 2 off the underlying ground during use of the grill.
[0055] The container 2 is made from a flammable material such as wood chips and sawdust with a substantially fireproof surface coating such as hardened clay. The different materials are all disposable in an environmentally friendly way after use of the grill.
[0056] A normal grill in a standard size usually has the length and width dimensions of 320 and 250 millimetres with 400 to 600 gram charcoals. A normal grill in a king size usually has the length and width dimensions of 480 and 320 millimetres with 800 to 1200 gram charcoals.
[0057]
[0058]
[0059] The disposable grill 10 is illustrated with an insert structure 11 made in a heat insulating material. The insert structure 11 comprises four side walls 18a-18b protruding upwards from a bottom part 17 of the insert structure to form a tray 14 with an opening at top. The tray contains a fuel 12 shaped in a combustible biomass material such as charcoals or compressed coal or biofuel powder.
[0060] The disposable grill 10 also comprises a base tray 13 as an outer grill cover made in a flammable material. The base tray 13 may fully cover the insert structure 11 and the fuel 12 before use of the disposable grill 10 e.g. as a transport protective cover. An upper part of cover is removed for the grill to be ready for use. The base tray 13—as the remaining grill cover—covers most of the four side walls 18a-18b of the insert structure and the bottom part 17 during use. The uppermost section of the side walls 18a-18b is not covered by the base tray 13—as illustrated in the figure.
[0061] The fuel is illustrated with even upper and lower surfaces 15, 16 and has through going holes 19. The through going holes 19 ensure that the fuel 12 will burn uniformly in the tray 14 of the insert structure 11.
[0062] The insert structure 11 is to be understood as any kind of device, means, arrangement or other made from a thermal insulating material capable of significantly lowering the thermal conductivity. Such insulating material may include any kind of material having a low thermal conductivity i.e. typically below 0.5 watts per meter kelvin (W.Math.m−1.Math.K−1) such as perlite, mineral wool or foam, ceramic insulation tiles, glass foam, polyurethane foam, paper, expanded polystyrene, expanded clay, amorphous volcanic glass, slag or other or any combination thereof. However, to also be fireproof some of the listed materials would have to be coated or otherwise treated with one or more fire-retardants' or be mixed or coated with other materials ensuring the fireproof quality of the insert structure.
[0063] The insert structure 11 and the base tray 13 are made in a perlite material and cardboard, respectively, in a preferred embodiment of the invention.
[0064]
[0065] The tray 14 of the insert structure 11 with the four side walls 18a-18d is illustrated as enclosing the fuel 12 firmly in the length and width directions. A pattern of the through going holes 19 in the fuel 12 is also illustrated in the upper surface 15 of the fuel 12. The upper edge of the base tray 13 enclosing the insert structure 11 and the four side walls 18a-18d is also visible.
[0066] The length L.sub.F and width W.sub.F of the fuel 12 are also included in the figure.
[0067]
[0068] The fuel 12 has a depth/thickness D.sub.F which is many times smaller than the length and width of the fuel 12 as illustrated in
[0069] The fuel may include other through going hole patterns than the suggested holes in order for the fuel to burn uniformly.
[0070] The fuel illustrated in
[0071]
[0072]
[0073] However, the fuel 12 is illustrated in
[0074] The fuel 12 comprising the circular shaped fuel elements 20 in the tray of the insert structure still maintain a substantially plate shaped form.
[0075]
[0076] The figure illustrates the wall thicknesses X, Y of the insert structure 11 as being of similar size but especially the wall thickness Y of the bottom part 17 may also be larger than the wall thicknesses X of the side walls to cope with the larger heat content being radiated downwards.
[0077] The wall thickness X, Y is preferably defined at locations in the sidewalls and bottom part wherein the thickness is naturally disposed to be at a minimum and where the base tray 13 is located on the other side of the locations.
[0078] The insert structure 11 is preferably designed accordingly by minimising at least one wall thickness of the insert structure 11 in relation to the one or more above-mentioned characteristics of the fuel 12 and base tray 13.
[0079]
[0080] The disposable grill 10 is provided with a layer of loose heat insulating material 21 positioned between the insert structure 11 and base tray 13. The layer of loose heat insulating material 21 is preferably positioned just beneath the insert structure 11 and held in place by the base tray 13 as illustrated in the figure.
[0081] The layer of loose heat insulating material 21 has in a preferred embodiment of the invention a wall thickness Y.sub.2 between 10 and 40 millimetres such as 15 millimetres together with a wall thickness Y.sub.1 of the insert structure 11 between 10 and 40 millimetres such as 15 millimetres.
[0082] The insert structure is to be understood as any kind of device, means, arrangement or other made from a thermal insulating material capable of significantly lowering the thermal conductivity. Such insulating material may include any kind of material having a low thermal conductivity i.e. typically below 0.5 watts per meter kelvin (W.Math.m−1.Math.K−1) such as perlite, mineral wool or foam, ceramic insulation tiles, glass foam, polyurethane foam, paper, expanded polystyrene, expanded clay, amorphous volcanic glass, slag or other or any combination thereof. However, to also be fireproof some of the listed materials would have to be coated or otherwise treated with one or more fire-retardants' or be mixed or coated with other materials ensuring the fireproof quality of the insert structure.
[0083] The loose heat insulating material 21 and the insert structure 11 are preferably made in the same material such as perlite.
[0084]
[0085]
[0086] The largest arrow illustrates schematically the heat content Q.sub.up radiated up toward the food to be grilled.
[0087] The smaller arrows illustrate schematically the heat content Q.sub.l, Q.sub.r radiated toward the side walls of the base tray 13 and the heat content Q.sub.down radiated down toward the bottom part of the base tray 13, respectively. The radiated heat contents Q.sub.l, Q.sub.r and Q.sub.down provide via the insert structure 11 the corresponding temperatures T.sub.l, T.sub.r and T.sub.down on the outer surfaces of the base tray 13.
[0088] The wall thicknesses of the insert structure 11 may be defined by one or more desired work temperature on the outer surfaces of said base tray 13 in an embodiment of invention. A desired work temperature T.sub.l, T.sub.r for the outer side wall surfaces of the base tray 13 is chosen to be between 40 and 80° C. such as between 45 and 60° C. e.g. approx. 50° C. in order for a user to be able comfortably to handle the burning disposable grill at the side walls without using gloves or similar heat protective means. A desired temperature T.sub.down for the outer bottom surface of the base tray 13 is chosen to be between 80 and 170° C. such as between 100 and 140° C. e.g. approx. 120° C. in order for the burning disposable grill to be able to stand on a wooden table or similar furniture without risk of damaging the furniture surface.
[0089] The desired work temperatures may be achieved by using the above mentioned wall thicknesses and fuel weights such as a side wall thickness of approx. 25 millimetres, a wall thickness at the bottom part of between 20 and 70 millimetres such as approx. 30 millimetres and a shaped fuel weight of approx. 300 grams in establishing a disposable grill of a standard size.
[0090] The insert structure 11 is preferably designed accordingly by minimising at least one wall thickness of the insert structure 11 in relation to the one or more above-mentioned characteristics of the fuel 12 and base tray 13.
[0091] The above figures do not illustrate any grate means in connection with a disposable grill but the grill will normally be provided with some kind of grid, mesh, grille, lattice, screen or any other kind of grate suitable for placing over the heat source of the disposable grill while carrying the food to be grilled.
[0092] The grate means could be formed as a number of mutually connected individual parts, as a single part, as a number of single parts or any combination thereof.
[0093]
[0094] The disclosed method includes the following steps:
[0095] a1) Select a fuel shaped in a combustible biomass material.
[0096] a2) Obtain one or more characteristics of the fuel and base tray.
[0097] a3) Define at least one wall thickness of at least one location in the insert structure.
[0098] a4) Control that the defined wall thickness of the disposable grill is suitable e.g. in relation to the base tray.
[0099] The subject matter behind method steps a1-a4) has already been described above e.g. in relation to
[0100] a5) Manufacture a disposable grill with the at least one defined wall thickness if the result of the above control is positive.
[0101] The manufacturing process of disposable grill 10 may include the steps of forming or molding of the insert structure 11 with the defined wall thicknesses and shaping of the fuel 12. The fuel 12 is positioned in the tray 14 of the insert structure 11 before grate means, paper with user instructions or the like are added e.g. on top of the insert structure and fuel. Finally, the base tray 13 is provided as an outer cover for the disposable grill 10.
[0102] The manufacturing process of disposable grill 10 may include the alternative steps of using an insert structure in a loose material which is located and fixed in the base tray for example by using a binder or cover material. The cover material may for example be cardboard with a profile shaping the loose insert material to form the upper part of the side walls and the tray in the insert structure before the shaped fuel is added in the cardboard covered tray in the manufacturing process. The cover will assist in maintaining the shape of the insert structure and especially keep the loose insert material in place during transportation of the disposable grill. The cover will quickly burn away when the grill is ignited and the loose material will maintain the shape of the insert structure by the material characteristics of the loose material e.g. being a perlite material.
[0103] The invention has been exemplified above with reference to specific examples of disposable grills 10 including insert structure 11, fuel 12 and base tray 13. However, it should be understood that the invention is not limited to the particular examples described above but may be designed and altered in a multitude of varieties within the scope of the invention as specified in the claims.