METHOD AND EQUIPMENT FOR CONTROLLING SAUNA STOVE

20200016030 · 2020-01-16

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A sauna stove has a thermal cutoff formed with two parallel temperature sensors, with which heating of the stove is controlled and overheating is recognized from that that the temperature measured with the thermal cutoff exceeds a set limit value.

    Claims

    1. A control equipment of a sauna, steam sauna or stove, wherein: the control equipment comprises a thermal cutoff; the thermal cutoff comprises a temperature sensor and a parallel temperature sensor for control of heating of the stove; the control equipment is arranged to recognize an overheating situation from that a temperature measured by the thermal cutoff exceeds a pre-set limit value.

    2. The control equipment according to claim 1, characterized in that wherein the control equipment is arranged to receive from a user said limit value, that is at most a maximum set for the sauna.

    3. The control equipment according to claim 1, wherein the control equipment is arranged to compare deviation between the temperature sensor that controls the heating of the stove and the parallel temperature sensor and to detect a failure situation when the deviation exceeds a given deviation limit.

    4. The control equipment according to claim 3, wherein the control equipment is arranged to cause terminating of the heating of the stove responsive to the detecting of said failure situation.

    5. The control equipment according to claim 1, wherein the control equipment is arranged to measure relative humidity of the sauna air and to compare the sauna temperature and relative humidity to each other and to control the operation of the stove or alarm functionality based on both temperature and humidity.

    6. The control equipment according to claim 5, wherein the temperature sensor that controls the heating of the stove and the parallel temperature sensor reside in one measurement unit.

    7. The control equipment according to claim 6, wherein a sensor measuring relative humidity also resides in the measurement unit.

    8. The control equipment according to claim 1, wherein the control equipment comprises an infrared sensor configured to measure and monitor a temperature of a surface in the sauna preferably indicatively of potential fire risk.

    9. The control equipment according to claim 8, wherein the parallel temperature sensor comprises the infrared sensor.

    10. A sauna stove, wherein the stove comprises a control equipment according to claim 1.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0021] Some example embodiments of the present disclosure will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

    [0022] FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of a control equipment of a sauna, steam sauna or stove.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION

    [0023] In the following description, like reference signs denote like elements or steps. It should be noticed that the drawings are not entirely in scale and serve solely the purpose of demonstrating embodiments of the present disclosure.

    [0024] FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of a system 100 to which belong a control equipment of a sauna, steam sauna or stove, the sauna bath room or in short sauna 110, stove opening button 140 that comprises two temperature sensors 142 and in this embodiment further a humidity sensor 144. The system 100 further comprises a stove 120 and inside the stove: a first processor 122, first digital data transfer means 124 and first analog inputs 126 for at least one temperature sensor 142 and humidity sensor 144. The system 100 comprises outside the sauna bath room a control center 130, that has a second processor 132, second digital data transfer means 134 and second analog inputs 136 for temperature sensors 142 and for a humidity sensor 144.

    [0025] In FIG. 1, there connections are drawn with dashed line between the control center and the accessories positioned in the sauna bath room outside of the stove. In some embodiments, the control center has one or more connections and an analog input for receiving measurement information of sensors 142, 144 positioned in the sauna bath room and/or state information of the lid opening button 150. These analog connections can be avoided, if the stove digitizes analog data it receives and relays them digitally to the control center.

    [0026] FIG. 1 data transfer connection between the control center 130 and the stove 120 is implementable with a data transfer cable or without separate cabling by means of powerline communications, PLC. Alternatively, wireless data transfer can be used such as using a short range radio link or links (WLAN or Bluetooth, for example).

    [0027] According to one embodiment, the control equipment protecting the stove against over heating comprises a thermal cutoff 140 and the control center 130. The control equipment is configured to identify an overheating situation from that that the temperature measured with the thermal cutoff exceeds a set limit value. The control equipment may also comprise a control unit (e.g. a first processor 122, first digital data transfer means 124) positioned in the stove.

    [0028] With the control equipment of FIG. 1, the temperature of the sauna and/or the stove is/are measured with two mutually independent electric temperature sensors. One sensor measures the control temperature based on which the heating and other functions are controlled. The other sensor measures overheating temperature, the exceeding of which shuts down the stove and triggers other necessary actions. Alternatively, the control temperature measurement can be implemented using both sensors. For example, the measurements of both sensors can be performed separately and averaged, or the connection of the sensors can be alternated such that the sensors are at one moment connected in series or in parallel and produce one signal (e.g. a voltage or current signal) and at another moment, the outputs of the sensors are separately read for their comparison. As yet another alternative, the temperature can be measured alternatingly from different sensors with short intervals (e.g. 1 second or 10 seconds) and used as such or e.g. as a sliding average for the control temperature. With this alternative it is possible to simply multiplex one analog/digital converter for two or more sensors, for example also for a humidity sensor. The difference between different temperature sensors can be observed based on stored values without need for simultaneous input from different temperature sensors.

    [0029] Commonly used sauna thermal cutoffs go off at a temperature of 110 C.-120 C. This temperature is all too high, if the temperature set for the sauna is, for example, 80 C. A lower overheating temperature spares in a failure situation the structures of the sauna from drying and also saves electricity, when the sauna in not heated in vain.

    [0030] The user may set herself the desired overheating temperature programmatically below a set maximum temperature.

    [0031] In an embodiment of the present disclosure, the stove is so controlled that the sauna temperature is set to 80 C. and the overheating temperature is set to 90 C. exceeding which heating is stopped. The overheating temperature can also be set based on the set temperature of the sauna. The overheating temperature may be higher by a given overheating tolerance, such as 10 C., than the set temperature. When the sauna temperature setting is decreased the overheating temperature can be decreased at a slowness suited for the cooling of the sauna so that if the sauna temperature setting is decreased with a drop greater than the overheating tolerance, the thermal cutoff would not go off.

    [0032] With FIG. 1 control equipment it may be attempted to minimize cabling to improve failure resilience and/or facilitate installation. The cabling can be reduced using digital data transfer between the stove and the control center. This may be implemented using a data transfer cable or powerline communication.

    [0033] In an embodiment, the control equipment comprises two processors, first of which is in the stove and the second outside the sauna. For data transfer, the control equipment may comprise for data transfer between the first and second processors via stove power supply e.g. powerline communication by modulating digital information into the power supply. The modulating is used herein as a generic term that contains all different ways to convey in same connector or connectors electric power for heating the stove and digital information between the processors. The digital transfer via power supply entirely removes the need for data transfer cabling between the stove and the control center.

    [0034] Temperature measurement with two parallel temperature sensors prevents failure situations, because the measurement results can be measured in real time and compared all the time. If the measurement results too much deviate from each other, the heating can be stopped or a failure alarm be issued. This is more reliable that the use of a mechanical thermal cutoff. A mechanical thermal cutoff may be damaged and inoperative not known by anyone.

    [0035] The failure situation can be identified also from that, if the temperature sensors' measurement deviates too much from ordinary. In this way, also a situation can be indicated in which a cabling of both temperature sensors has become cut or short-circuited.

    [0036] Into the thermal protection can be connected measurement of humidity. Then, for example, in the same thermal cutoff unit is added one or more humidity sensors.

    [0037] The humidity sensor can be used for control of automatic throwing of water on the stove or control of a steam sauna. In one embodiment the humidity sensor is positioned in nexus with the thermal cutoffs whereby the humidity data travel along same cable or at least same route to the control center.

    [0038] In one embodiment, the temperature and humidity data are programmatically combined and conclusions are made of the operation of the sauna or steam sauna based on a combination of the temperature and humidity information. For example, if the relative humidity of the air in a sauna in nearly 100 degrees exceeds 30%-40%, the conditions in the sauna are life-threatening and the risk for scalds is great.

    [0039] Storing of temperature and humidity data and displaying time series and modifying combined data out of combinations of temperature and humidity data further belongs to one embodiment. The control in question may have a separate display or the control may employ a display of another data mean, such as a computer.

    [0040] With the arrangement of the present disclosure, replacing or resetting of a thermal cutoff in a hot sauna is avoided.

    [0041] In an embodiment, the control equipment is configured to enable local or distributed fire detection system. For example, an infrared temperature measurement may be provided with a wireless sensor. The sensor is mounted e.g. at 1.5 meters height that measures approximately the temperature in which the people in sauna would usually sit. The infrared sensor is directed e.g. to a surface of a ceiling, wall or other structure of or in the sauna above the infrared sensor to monitor temperature of said surface.

    [0042] The infrared sensor can be connected to the stove with same cabling or dedicated cable. Alternatively, the infrared sensor can be connected to the control center.

    [0043] The infrared sensor can be used for detection of overheating so an overheating situation is indicated by either the parallel temperature measurement or the infrared sensor reading exceeding a respective upper limit. Alternatively or additionally, the overheating situation can be detected using the parallel temperature measurement so that a correlation between the infrared sensor reading and the parallel temperature measurement is determined. Then the temperature of the surface measured by the infrared sensor is evaluated based on the parallel temperature measurement and the determined correlation and the overheating is determined to happen if the evaluated temperature exceeds a predetermined upper limit,

    [0044] In an embodiment, the parallel temperature sensor comprises the infrared sensor. The determined correlation can then be used to evaluate from the infrared measurement a probable temperature at the temperature sensor. In this case, the two temperature sensors are of different types (e.g. one being a thermistor and one an infrared sensor). In result, the difference between the two measurements may depend on factors such as changes in ventilation, and steam emission of the sauna stove, for example. On analyzing the deviation between the two temperature measurements for thermal cutoff, this mechanism may be accounted for by varying the limit for the deviation by temperature, for example.

    [0045] In an embodiment, the control center is configured to send an alarm message to a predefined address if the infrared sensor measurement indicates a risk that the sauna might catch fire. Such an alarm may be issued already much earlier than any smoke begins to form and thus before significant damage is caused to the sauna.

    [0046] The foregoing description has provided by way of non-limiting examples of particular embodiments. It is clear to a person skilled in the art that the present disclosure is not restricted to details presented in the foregoing, but that the invention can be implemented in other equivalent ways.

    [0047] Some of the features of the afore-disclosed embodiments of the present disclosure may be used to advantage without the corresponding use of other features. As such, the foregoing description shall be considered as merely illustrative of the principles of the present disclosure, and not in limitation thereof. Hence, the scope of the present disclosure is only restricted by the appended patent claims.