LABORATORY FUME HOOD HAVING WALL JETS
20190351465 · 2019-11-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
B08B15/023
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F24F3/163
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to a fume cupboard 1 for a laboratory, which fume cupboard has a housing 60 in which a work area is located, delimited in the front by a front sash 30, at the bottom by a bottom plate 34 and on each side by a side wall 36. The fume cupboard 1 further comprises a first hollow profile 10, 10 disposed on a frontal end face of each side wall 36, wherein each first hollow profile 10, 10 contains a first pressure chamber 10b, 10b which is in fluid communication with a multiplicity of first openings 10d, 10d, from which air jets in the form of wall jets 100 consisting of compressed air may be output into the work area along the respective side wall 36. The fume cupboard is characterized in that the size of the first openings 10d, 10d and the air pressure that prevails in the first pressure chamber 10b, 10b during proper user of the fume cupboard are selected such that the first pressure chamber 10b, 10b can be connected fluidically to a compressed air system 74 installed in the building without causing airflow delamination of the wall jets 100 from the side wall 36 in a region extending from a front side of the work area at least as far as 25% of the depth of the work area.
The present invention further relates to a fume cupboard in which a hollow profile 20, 20 of such kind is disposed on a front frontal end face of the bottom plate 34.
Claims
1-20. (canceled)
21. A fume cupboard for a laboratory, the fume cupboard comprising a housing in which a work area is located, delimited in the front by a front sash, at the bottom by a bottom plate and on each side by a side wall, and having a first hollow profile disposed on a front frontal end face of each side wall, wherein each first hollow profile contains a first pressure chamber which is in fluid communication with a multiplicity of first openings, from which air jets in the form of wall jets consisting of compressed air can be output into the work area along the respective side wall, wherein the size of the first openings and the air pressure that prevails in the first pressure chamber during proper use of the fume cupboard are selected such that the first pressure chamber can be connected fluidically to a compressed air system installed in the building without airflow delamination of the wall jets from the side wall in a region extending from a front side of the work area at least as far as 25% of the depth of the work area.
22. A fume cupboard according to claim 21 having a second hollow profile disposed on a front frontal end face of the bottom plate, wherein the second hollow profile contains a second pressure chamber which is in fluid communication with a multiplicity of second openings, from which air jets in the form of bottom jets consisting of compressed air may be output into the work area along the bottom plate, wherein the size of the second openings and the air pressure that prevails in the second pressure chamber during proper use of the fume cupboard are selected such that the second pressure chamber can be connected fluidically to a compressed air system installed in the building without airflow delamination of the wall jets from the bottom plate in a region extending from a front side of the work area at least as far as 25% of the depth of the work area.
23. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, wherein no airflow delamination of wall jets from the side wall or of the bottom jets from the bottom plate occurs in a region extending from the front side of the work area at least as far as 50% of the depth of the work area.
24. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, wherein no airflow delamination of the wall jets from the side wall or of the bottom jets from the bottom plate occurs in a region extending from the front side of the work area at least as far as 75% of the depth of the work area.
25. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, further comprising a first and/or a second pressure transducer which is/are fluidically connected to the first and/or the second pressure chamber.
26. A fume cupboard according to claim 25, wherein the first and/or the second pressure transducer comprises a first and/or a second pressure transducer line, which is/are routed in such manner that an end of the first and/or second pressure transducer line closest to the pressure chamber terminates flush with an inner surface of the first and/or the second pressure chamber.
27. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, further comprising a control device which during proper operation of the fume cupboard sets the pressure of the first and/or second pressure chamber in a range from 50 Pa to 500 Pa.
28. A fume cupboard according to claim 27, further comprising a first and/or a second pressure which is/are fluidically connected to the first and/or the second pressure chamber, the control device being connected electrically to the first and/or the second pressure transducer.
29. A fume cupboard according to claim 27, wherein the control device is a pressure reducer or a mass flow controller, which is arranged upstream of the first and/or second pressure chamber.
30. A fume cupboard according to claim 29, wherein the pressure reducer or the mass flow controller is arranged inside the housing.
31. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, wherein, when viewed at right angles to the direction of flow, a cross-sectional area of at least one of the first and/or second openings is in a range from 1 mm.sup.2 to 4 mm.sup.2.
32. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, wherein, when viewed at right angles to the direction of flow, a cross-sectional area of at least one of the first and/or second openings is in a range from 1.8 mm.sup.2 to 3 mm.sup.2.
33. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, wherein at least one of the first and/or the second openings is/are configured in such manner that the compressed air jet exiting the first and/or second opening is discharged into the work area as a periodically oscillating wall jet and/or as a periodically oscillating bottom jet.
34. A fume cupboard according to claim 33, wherein the periodicity is in a range from 1 Hz to 100 kHz.
35. A fume cupboard according to claim 33, wherein the periodic oscillation of the wall jets and/or the bottom jet is formed exclusively by non-moving parts of the first and/or second hollow profile.
36. A fume cupboard according to claim 33, characterized in that the periodic oscillation of the wall jets and/or the bottom jet is generated by self-excitation.
37. A fume cupboard according to claim 33, further comprising a first and/or a second fluidic oscillator which is/are furnished with the first and/or the second opening and which generate(s) the periodic oscillation of the one or more wall jets and/or the periodic oscillation of the one or more bottom jets.
38. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, wherein the first and/or second openings have a circular, round, oval, rectangular or polygonal shape.
39. A fume cupboard according to claim 21, wherein at least a first and/or a second opening is/are fluidically connected to the first and/or the second pressure chamber via a first and/or a second elongated duct, and that the first and/or second duct has a length L at least 3 times greater than the hydraulic diameter of a cross-sectional surface of the associated opening when viewed at right angles to the direction of flow.
40. A fume cupboard for a laboratory, the fume cupboard comprising a housing in which a work are is located, delimited in the front by a front sash, at the bottom by a bottom plate and on each side by a side wall, and having a second hollow profile disposed on a front frontal end face of the bottom plate, wherein the second hollow profile contains a second pressure chamber which is in fluid communication with a multiplicity of second openings, from which air jets in the form of bottom jets consisting of compressed air may be output into the work area along the bottom plate, characterized in that the size of the second openings and the air pressure that prevails in the second pressure chamber during proper user of the fume cupboard are selected such that the second pressure chamber can be connected fluidically to a compressed air system installed in the building without airflow delamination of the wall jets from the bottom plate in a region extending from a front side of the work area at least as far as 25% of the depth of the work area.
Description
[0030] The invention will now be explained purely for exemplary purposes with reference to the accompanying drawing. In the drawing:
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041] The perspective view of a fume cupboard 1 shown in
[0042] The basic layout of the fume cupboard according to the invention is largely similar to that of the fume cupboard 1 represented in
[0043] The fume cupboard 1 shown in
[0044] Front sash 30 is preferably of multipart construction such that when front sash 30 is opened and closed several vertically displaceable window elements slide behind one another telescopically. The front edge of the window element which is at the bottom when front sash 30 is in the closed position preferably has an aerodynamically optimized wing-like profile 32 (
[0045] At this point, it should be noted that front sash 30 may also be embodied as a two-part sliding window, both parts of which can be moved vertically in opposite directions. In this case, the parts moving in opposite directions are coupled to weights which counterbalance the mass of the front sash via cables or belts and pulleys.
[0046] A duct 63 is preferably located between baffle wall 40 and back wall 62 (
[0047] Hollow profiles 10 are provided on the frontal end faces of the side walls 36 of fume cupboard 1the side walls are conventionally also called side columns. A hollow profile 20 is also provided on the frontal face of bottom plate 34.
[0048] When the phrase on the frontal end face is used in this document, the term is not be understood literally. Instead, it also refers to structures which are only provided or attached in the region of the frontal end face.
[0049] Similarly to the aerodynamically optimized wing profile 32 on the underside of the bottom front sash element 30, the wing-shaped leading edge 10a of the hollow profile 10 or the side column profile 10 (
[0050] Hollow profiles 10, 20 serve to introduce, stabilizer jetscompressed air jets 100, 200 consisting of compressed airare introduced into the interior of the fume cupboard along side walls 36 and bottom plate 34. These compressed air jets are conventionally generated by a fan 70 (
[0051] The fume cupboard 1 represented in
[0052] If reference is made to a standard in this description and these claims, the reference is always to the currently valid version of the standard. This is stated explicitly because it is known that the regulations set forth in the standards are becoming steadily more stringent, so that a fume cupboard which satisfies the current standard will also satisfy the regulations of an earlier standard.
[0053]
[0054] As is shown in
[0055] Although not illustrated in
[0056] A multiplicity of column retainers 44 are preferably provided on baffle wall 40 and may be affixed loosely in the rods to serve as holders for test setups in the interior of the fume cupboard.
[0057] As is shown in
[0058] The compressed air generated by fan 70 is first fed into hollow profile 20 disposed in the region of the front frontal end face of bottom plate 34. The compressed air generated by the fan is preferably fed into hollow profile 20 at a point approximately in the middle of the lengthwise extension of the laterally aligned hollow profile 20. In this way, it is ensured that the pressure drop in hollow profile 20 is approximately symmetrical relative to this point.
[0059]
[0060] One might initially think that the energy consumption of fan 70 would worsen rather than improve the total energy balance of the fume cupboard, but in the Applicant's conventional Secuflow fume cupboard the positive effect of the stabilizer jets 100, 200 made it possible to reduce the minimum exhaust air volumetric flow necessary to maintain the standard-specified escape prevention capability, i.e. the minimum volumetric flow that still satisfies the legal requirements regarding the escape prevention capability of the fume cupboard and which the exhaust air system installed in the building and connected to exhaust air collecting duct 50 must be able to generate. In this way, it was possible to lower the energy consumption of the fume cupboard by a greater amount than the energy consumption of the fan, which in turn has a positive effect on the total energy balance of the fume cupboard.
[0061]
[0062] The multiplicity of spatially separate outlet openings 10d, 20d are positioned in hollow profile 10, 20 in accordance with the intended purpose of the respective fume cupboard 1. They may be spread irregularly over the length of hollow profile 10, 20 or they may follow a specific pattern, or they may even be arranged equidistantly and regularly relative to each other.
[0063] The hollow profiles 10, 20 may preferably be constructed integrally with the respective side wall 36 and/or bottom plate 34, e.g., as an extruded aluminium profile. It is also conceivable to attach and affix or otherwise fasten hollow profiles 10, 20 to the frontal end face of the respective side wall 36 and/or bottom plate 34.
[0064] The multiplicity of outlet openings 10d, 20dwith or without outlet duct 10c, 20cmay also be inserted in the respective hollow profile 10, 20 in the form of a profile strip or constructed integrally therewith.
[0065] The geometry shown in
[0066] In order to be able to compare the fluid dynamic characteristics of different ducts with different cross-sectional shapes through which a fluid flows, the hydraulic diameter is used. The term hydraulic diameter is well known to persons skilled in this field and serves as an operand which stands for that diameter of a flow duct having any cross section which manifests the same pressure loss for the same length and the same average flow velocity as a flow pipe with a circular cross section and the same diameter.
[0067] In the Applicant's conventional Secuflow fume cupboard, the lengthwise dimension of outlet openings 10d, 20d, i.e. the extension of outlet openings 10d, 20d in the lengthwise direction of hollow profiles 10, 20 is equal to 30 mm, and the transverse dimension at right angles thereto is equal to 2 mm. For a rectangular outlet opening, the hydraulic diameter is calculated according to the formula d.sub.h=2ab/(a+b). If a=30 mm and b=2 mm, the hydraulic diameter of each outlet opening 10d, 20d in the conventional Secuflow fume cupboard is equal to 3.75 mm and the surface area is 60 mm.sup.2.
[0068] In contrast to this, according to a preferred embodiment of the invention the surface area of the hollow profiles 10, 20 shown in
[0069] The lengthwise extension of the almost rectangular outlet openings 10d, 20d is preferably 3 mm, and the transverse dimension at right angles thereto is preferably 1 mm. This results in a hydraulic diameter of 1.5 mm. A hollow profile 10, 20 with outlet openings 10d, 20d of such designs was also used in the measurement series conducted as part of this invention. In the following text, these hollow profiles 10, 20 will also be referred to as jet nozzles.
[0070] According to another aspect of the invention, at least one outlet opening 10d, 20d, and preferably all outlet openings 10d, 20d provided in hollow profile 10, 20 communicate fluidically with pressure chamber 10b, 20b via a duct 10c, 20c which has a length L (
[0071] In the hollow profile 10a, 20a shown in
[0072] The measurement series conducted as part of the present invention suggest that the duct 10c, 20c communicating fluidically with preferably each outlet opening 10d, 20d should have a length L which is at least 3 times, preferably 4 times to 11 times the value of the hydraulic diameter of outlet opening 10d, 20d. Only with a duct length L that satisfies this condition is it possible to introduce compressed air jets into the interior of the fume cupboard for which a direction can be specified that is significantly more pronounce than for air jets which must only pass through a shorter duct. As a consequence, the opening angle of the compressed air jets 100, 200 spreading in the interior of the fume cupboard becomes smaller. In other words, at the time they emerge from outlet openings 10d, 20d, compressed air jets 100, 200 are already directed strongly enough to ensure that they remain as close as possible along side walls 36 and bottom plate 34.
[0073] Unlike this situation, the extruded aluminium hollow profiles 10, 20 used in the conventional Secuflow fume cupboard have a thickness of 2 mm, i.e., the duct had a length L of just 2 mm before the outlet opening. The ratio of the length L to the hydraulic diameter (3.75 mm) was this considerably less than 1.
[0074] Angle (
[0075] According to a further preferred embodiment of invention, instead of a duct 10c, 20c running in a straight line from pressure chamber 10b, 20b to outlet opening 10d, 20d (
[0076] In this context, it should be noted that the section shown in
[0077] The periodic oscillation is preferably generated by self-excitation and preferably with the aid of non-moving parts, which are preferably constructed integrally with hollow profile 10, 20. For this purpose measurements were taken in the course of the present invention with the aid of fluidic oscillators.
[0078] A distinctive feature of fluidic oscillators is that they generate a self-excited oscillation in the fluid passing through them. This oscillation results from the division of the fluid stream into a main stream and a substream. Whereas the main stream flows through the main duct 10c, 20c, the substream flows alternatingly through one of the two secondary ducts 10f, 20f (
[0079] With the nozzle geometry of
[0080] As an alternative to the OsciJet nozzle geometry, nozzle geometries are conceivable which generate a non-periodic compressed air jet. In other words, such nozzle geometries produce a compressed air jet which sweeps back and forth with a stochastic motion. To produce non-periodic compressed air jets of such kind, reflux free fluidic components may be used, unlike those used in fluidic oscillators.
[0081]
[0082]
[0083] The PIV measurements of the flow field thus show very clearly that airflow delaminations can be prevented very effectively with both the Jet nozzle (
[0084] A series of PIV measurements were conducted with different control voltages of fan 70 (
[0085] After experimentally determining the control voltage of fan 70 at which a practically turbulence-free flow route without significant backflow areas was observed, the inventors turned to the question of what minimum volumetric flow rate would be needed to enable a turbulence-free flow field to be reproduced.
[0086] Given the small dimensions of the Jet and OsciJet nozzle outlet openings 10d, 20d and 10d, 20d, a measurement of the air outlet velocity using a hot-wire anemometer is not able to return reproducible results. In the case of the OsciJet nozzles, the hot-wire anemometer even oscillates together with the periodically oscillating stabilizer jets.
[0087] According to a further aspect of the invention, a method was then developed for determining the minimum volumetric flow rates. The associated test setup is represented in
[0088] In this context, the volumetric flow rate of the wall jets is determined in two steps. As shown in
[0089] In a second measurement step, as shown in
[0090]
[0091] The volumetric flow rates derived therefrom are shown in
[0092] According to a further aspect of the invention, the inventors have concluded that given the substantially reduced volumetric flows it may now be possible to run a fully functional fume cupboard, i.e. a fume cupboard that fulfills the requirements of the DIN EN 14175 standard series, in compliance with the regulations using a compressed air system which is typically present in buildings. The person skilled in the art is aware that such compressed air systems installed in buildings are usually able to supply an air pressure in a range from 0 to 7 bar. Accordingly, an electrically powered fan may be dispensed with.
[0093] According to the invention, not all outlet openings 10d, 10d of side column profile 10, 10 and not all outlet openings 20d, 20d of bottom plate profile 20, 20 which are intended for the output of wall jets 100 or bottom jets 200 in the respective hollow profile 10, 20 have to have the nozzle geometry represented in