Bacteria preventive water holding tank construction for electric water heaters
10775051 ยท 2020-09-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24D2200/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H1/201
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H1/181
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24D3/082
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24D17/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24D3/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24H1/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A water holding tank for electric water heaters is described and particularly an improvement to the bottom end construction of the tank to prevent bacteria proliferation and the elimination of the cavitated circumferential area where sediments deposit to form a culture bed for bacteria to proliferate. Instead of modifying the shape of the bottom wall the improvement is a simple solution in that a filler material is set in at least a lowermost portion, and preferably a major portion, of the cavitated circumferential area to isolate that area from the interior of the water holding tank and form smooth flat surface areas which are planar to cause sediments to disperse and not form beds for bacteria to proliferate.
Claims
1. An electric water heater comprising a water holding tank having a cylindrical side wall, a top wall and a dome-shaped bottom wall; a hot water conduit for extracting hot water from an upper portion of said tank, a cold water inlet for releasing water under pressure in a lower portion of said tank, two or more resistive heating elements secured to said cylindrical side wall to heat water in said upper and said lower portion of said tank, temperature sensing and control means to operate said resistive heating elements to heat water within said tank portions to a pre-set desired temperature, a cavitated circumferential area defined between a lower end section of said tank cylindrical side wall and said dome-shaped bottom wall, and a filler material in said cavitated circumferential area, said filler material being of a predetermined volume to fill and isolate more than 50% of the depth of said cavitated circumferential area as measured from its lowermost narrow point to an apex of a top surface of said dome-shaped bottom wall to form a bottom upper surface in said cavitated circumferential area which is flat and smooth and on which sediments will disperse and not form said sedimentary bed in which bacteria can proliferate, said bottom upper surface also providing a substantially planar surface which is closer to a bottom one of said two or more resistive heating elements over which the temperature of water within said tank is at or above 135 degrees Fahrenheit and substantially constant.
2. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 1 wherein a drain outlet is disposed in said cylindrical side wall slightly above an upper surface of said filler material, said drain outlet having a closure means.
3. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 1 wherein said filler material is one of a polymer and a cement hard settable material.
4. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 3 wherein said polymer material is an epoxy resin material.
5. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 4 wherein said epoxy resin has thermally conductive properties, and an electrical heating element held captive in said epoxy resin to heat said resin to at least a temperature of 135 degrees F.
6. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 5 wherein said heating element is a heating wire removably retained in a thermally conductive conduit set in said epoxy resin.
7. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 5 wherein heat conductive particles are mixed with said epoxy resin to improve the thermal conductivity thereof.
8. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 3 wherein said cement material is a low viscosity cement having a body strength capable of resisting to decomposition, retraction, cracking or becoming disconnected when exposed to water at various temperatures including water temperatures of up to about 190 degrees F.
9. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 8 wherein said cement material includes in its cementitious mixture one of an anti-microbial agent, aluminum particles, copper particles and zinc particles and combinations thereof.
10. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 1 wherein said filler material has thermally conductive properties, and electric heating means interposed between an insulating support base disposed under said dome-shaped bottom wall and an outer surface of said dome-shaped bottom wall to heat said filler material to said temperature at or above 135 degrees Fahrenheit and sufficient to sanitize said tank lower region immediately above a bottom upper surface of said tank.
11. The electric water heater as claimed in claim 1 wherein there is further provided recirculation means connected to said hot water conduit exteriorly of said tank and to a conduit means having an opening in said lower region of said tank and disposed above said bottom upper surface to cause a gentle hot water flow to sanitize water in said tank at said bottom upper surface and prevent bacteria proliferation in said tank lower region.
12. A water holding tank for an electric water heater, said tank comprising a cylindrical side wall, a top wall and a dome-shaped bottom wall; a cavitated circumferential area defined between a lower end section of said cylindrical side wall and said dome-shaped bottom wall, and a filler material set in at least a lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area to fill and isolate said at least lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area from an interior of said water holding tank to isolate at least a lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area to prevent the formation of a sedimentary bed in which bacteria can proliferate, said filler material being of a predetermined quantity to fill said at least a major portion of said cavitated circumferential area to form a water holding tank inner bottom wall surface which is substantially planar or having substantially planar portions.
13. The water holding tank as claimed in claim 12 wherein said filler material is one of a polymer filler material and a cement material.
14. The water holding tank as claimed in claim 13 wherein said polymer material is an epoxy material having one of an anti-microbial agent, aluminum particles, copper particles and zinc particles and combinations thereof mixed therewith.
15. The water holding tank as claimed in claim 12 wherein said filler material has thermally conductive properties and wherein electrical heating means is provided to heat said filler material to at least a temperature of 135 degrees F. or deposited on an upper surface thereof.
16. A method of constructing a water holding tank for an electric water heater, said method comprising the steps of: (i) securing a dome-shaped bottom wall to a cylindrical side wall as part of said water holding tank, said dome-shaped bottom wall and a lower end section of said cylindrical side wall forming an internal cavitated circumferential area, and (ii) inserting a predetermined quantity of a settable fluid filler material in at least a lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area and distributed substantially uniformly thereabout to fill and isolate said at least lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area from an interior of said water holding tank to isolate at least a lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area by forming a holding tank inner bottom wall surface which is mostly smooth and planar-like and free of any crevices and cavities in which sediments can accumulate to prevent the formation of a sedimentary bed in which bacteria can proliferate.
17. A method of constructing a water holding tank for an electric water heater, said method comprising the steps of: (i) securing a dome-shaped bottom wall to a cylindrical side wall as part of said water holding tank, said dome-shaped bottom wall and a lower end section of said cylindrical side wall forming an internal cavitated circumferential area, and (ii) inserting a predetermined quantity of a settable fluid filler material in at least a lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area and distributed substantially uniformly thereabout to fill and isolate said at least lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area from an interior of said water holding tank to isolate at least a lowermost portion of said cavitated circumferential area to prevent the formation of a sedimentary bed in which bacteria can proliferate, and wherein in said step (ii) comprises vibrating said water holding tank on a vibrating platform with said cylindrical side wall extending vertically to cause said fluid filler material to evenly distribute about said cavitated circumferential area and rid itself of air pockets and form a smooth top upper surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A preferred embodiment of the present invention and modifications thereof will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(8) Referring to the drawings and more specifically to
(9) With further reference to
(10) In order to prevent the formation of such sedimentary culture bed 26 the present invention is a simple solution which is simply to isolate the cavitated circumferential area 22 from the bottom end of the tank 10 by introducing therein a suitable filler material 30 to isolate, at least the lowermost portion 31 of the cavitated circumferential area 22 from the lowermost region 18 of the tank. By doing so, the bottom surface of the tank presents a smooth planar surface section 32 in the cavitated circumferential area 22 without crevices or cavities in which sediments can stack-up. Also, the dome shaped area 32 is now reduced to a very shallow dome shape form. Accordingly, sediment deposits 26 will disperse on such surfaces and become free moving thereon and because the bottom surface section 32, in the cavitated area is now closer to the bottom heating element 20, the water temperature at this surface section will be higher and above 135 degrees Fahrenheit at which the Legionella bacteria cannot survive.
(11) In our co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/731,021, filed Apr. 10, 2017 there is described the use of a water pump to introduce hot water from the upper portion 15 of the tank into the lower portion 18 and above the cavitated circumferential area 22 whereby to bring the water temperature in the cavitated area 22 to a temperature sufficiently high, about 140 degrees Fahrenheit, to kill any bacteria that may live in the cavitated area. Such is illustrated in
(12) The filler material 30 may consist of various suitable materials such as an epoxy resin or a cement material. As shown in
(13)
(14) The method for constructing the tank 10 is relatively simple as is the proposed solution of eliminating the cavitated circumferential area to prevent the formation of a culture bed in which bacteria can proliferate. The method comprises, after the dome-shaped bottom wall 12 is welded to the cylindrical side wall 11, of inserting a predetermined quantity of the filler material 30 in a substantially fluid state in the cavitated circumferential area 22 from the inside of the cylindrical side wall and distributed about the cavitated area 22 to fill and isolate at least the lowermost portion of the cavitated area, as shown in
(15) It is within the ambit of the present invention to cover all obvious modifications of the preferred embodiment described herein provided such modifications fall within the scope of the appended claims.