WALL-MOUNTED REFRIGERATOR AND PELTIER EFFECT COOLING SYSTEM
20190257556 · 2019-08-22
Inventors
Cpc classification
F25D2700/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D2700/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B21/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D2317/062
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A47F3/001
HUMAN NECESSITIES
F25D2700/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D23/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A47F7/283
HUMAN NECESSITIES
F25D31/007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D25/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D17/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B2321/023
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D2317/0655
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25B21/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D31/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D25/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D23/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D17/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A refrigerator is wall-mounted. The refrigerator has a frame with an insulated compartment supporting a plurality of shelves, a front panel covering the frame and having at least one window for displaying refrigerated articles supported by the shelves, at least one door to access the articles supported by the shelves, a cooling unit, an air recirculation system having a warm air collector for collecting warm air and having a warm air channel for directing air through the cooling unit to provide cooled air, at least one fan, and a cold air channel for directing the cooled air back into the compartment and a mounting for anchoring the refrigerator with respect to a wall. The thermal efficiency of the refrigerator may be enhanced as described herein.
Claims
1. A wall-mounted refrigerator comprising: a frame having an insulated compartment comprising a plurality of shelves; a front panel covering said frame and having at least one window for displaying refrigerated articles supported by said shelves; at least one door to access said articles supported by said shelves; a cooling unit; an air recirculation system having a warm air collector for collecting warm air and having a warm air channel for directing air through said cooling unit to provide cooled air, at least one fan, and a cold air channel for directing said cooled air back into said compartment; a mounting for anchoring said refrigerator with respect to a wall; and wherein a thermal efficiency of said refrigerator is enhanced by at least one of: said shelves comprising staggered shelves having a bottle-support surface for supporting sides of horizontally disposed bottles, said shelves extending partly across said compartment leaving a central portion of said compartment free of any shelves so that in use necks of bottles can be nested within said compartment, said warm air collector being located at a central top portion of said compartment and said cold air channel comprising two channels located at the vertical lateral sides of said compartment, said two channels having openings for directing cold air inwardly towards said shelves for cooling bottles on said shelves; said at least one door being mounted at a side of said compartment to access said shelves from a side, said door incorporating an air channel; said window comprising at least two panes having an outer pane forming said front panel beyond said window; and said cooling unit comprising a thermoelectric cooling unit arranged above said compartment within said frame and having a lower cold air heat exchanger and an upper hot air heat exchanger discharging heated air above said refrigerator, said warm air collector being located at a top of said compartment in direct communication with said lower cold air heat exchanger.
2. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, wherein said staggered shelves have a conformed bottle-support surface for supporting sides of horizontally disposed bottles.
3. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, wherein said channels located at the vertical lateral sides of said compartment are joined to the rear of said frame.
4. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, wherein said channel incorporated into said side door is said cold air channel.
5. The refrigerator as defined in claim 4, wherein said openings of said cold air channel allow for more cold air to be released into said insulated compartment from said cold air channel closer to the middle of said cold air channel than closer to the extremities of said cold air channel.
6. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, wherein said shelves comprise staggered shelves having a conformed bottle-support surface for supporting sides of horizontally disposed bottles, said shelves extending partly across said compartment leaving a central portion of said compartment free of any shelves so that in use necks of bottles can be nested within said compartment, said warm air collector being located at a central top portion of said compartment and said cold air channel comprising two channels located at the vertical lateral sides of said compartment, said two channels having openings for directing cold air inwardly towards said shelves for cooling bottles on said shelves, and said at least one door comprises two side doors mounted at each side of said compartment to access said shelves from each side, said side doors incorporating said two channels.
7. The refrigerator as defined in claim 6, wherein said cooling unit comprises a thermoelectric cooling unit arranged above said compartment within said frame and having a lower cold air heat exchanger and an upper hot air heat exchanger discharging heated air above said refrigerator, said warm air collector being located at a top of said compartment in direct communication with said lower cold air heat exchanger, and said two channels having, at their top, a channel coupling to said lower cold air heat exchanger cooled air output.
8. The refrigerator as defined in claim 7, wherein said thermoelectric cooling unit comprises: a thermoelectric element having a lower cold side and an upper hot side; a heat sink coupled to said upper hot side, said heat sink including a sealed chamber with a working fluid for dissipating heat generated from said hot side of the thermoelectric element to heat discharge fins disposed above said upper hot side; an ambient air duct and fan arranged to blow ambient air across said heat discharge fins; a cooling plate shaped into at least one truncated pyramid coupled at a pyramid top side to said lower cold side of said thermoelectric element; and cooling fins extending downwardly from said cooling plate at a pyramid base bottom side.
9. The refrigerator as defined in claim 8, wherein said thermoelectric cooling unit comprises between 3 and 7 of said thermoelectric elements each associated with a corresponding said heat sink and said truncated pyramid.
10. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, wherein said window comprises a dual or triple pane window having an outer pane forming said front panel beyond said window.
11. The refrigerator as defined in claim 10, wherein said window is a triple pane single window with low emissivity glass, having a space between panes filled with an inert gas.
12. The refrigerator as defined in claim 11, wherein said gas is composed of one of krypton, argon and a combination thereof.
13. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, further comprising a light source in said compartment for illuminating articles supported by said shelves.
14. The refrigerator as defined in claim 13, further comprising a sensor for detecting presence of a person in front of said refrigerator to control a switch to turn on said light source.
15. The refrigeration as defined in claim 14, wherein said sensor for detecting presence of a person is a microwave sensor.
16. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, further comprising an insolation sensor for detecting an intensity of light incident into said compartment and a user warning and/or event logging module responsive to said insolation sensor.
17. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, further comprising an interior temperature sensor for detecting a temperature in said compartment and a user warning and/or event logging module responsive to said interior sensor for providing information about a temperature of said compartment over time.
18. The refrigerator as defined in claim 17, further comprising an exterior temperature sensor for detecting an ambient temperature, wherein said user warning and/or event logging module is further responsive to said exterior temperature sensor to provide an indication as to a cause for failure to maintain a temperature of said compartment due to an unacceptable rise in ambient temperature.
19. The refrigerator as defined in claim 1, further comprising a sheet neighboring at least a part of said cooling unit and configured to prevent water condensed due to said cooling unit's cooling effect from accumulating in said insulated compartment.
20. The refrigerator as defined in claim 19, wherein said sheet is a geotextile material.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0022] The invention will be better understood by way of the following detailed description of embodiments of the invention with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0040] A first aspect of the present embodiment relates to a wall-mounted or floor mounted refrigerator having a shallow depth and one or more display windows for displaying cooled items. The appearance of such a refrigerator is known from Registered Community Design number 002552570-0001 registered on Jul. 10, 2014 by OHIM. In a preferred embodiment, the refrigerator is a refrigerated wine cellar, but may also be a refrigeration unit for any kind of bottled or canned beverages, such as, for example, soft-drinks, sparkling wine and beer, or desserts, such as fruit, slices of pies, etc.
[0041] Reference is now made to the drawings.
[0042] The refrigerator 100 also comprises a cooling unit 140. In a preferred embodiment, the cooling unit 140 is located at the top of the refrigerator 100 to help with exhausting warm air, although the cooling unit 140 can be arranged at other locations within the refrigerator 100. The cooling unit 140 may be a Peltier effect cooling apparatus as further described below, a conventional compressor-based refrigeration unit, or a replaceable latent heat storage module.
[0043] The refrigerator 100 also comprises one or two side doors 120 on either side of the refrigerator 100. In
[0044] The depth 150 of the refrigerator 100 may be inferior to the width 151 of the refrigerator 100. The width 151 may be sufficiently large to contain bottled wine, for example when the bottles are lying on one side, where the head and the base of each bottle point either towards or away from each of the doors 120. In this example, the side doors 120 may be slender in order to match the depth 150 of the refrigerator 100. The slender side doors 120 allow for minimal cooled air to mix with the warmer ambient air when a side door 120 is opened in order to, for example, remove or add a refrigerated item.
[0045] Reference is now made to
[0046] Reference is now made to
[0047] The refrigerator 100 may also have air filters to prevent the accumulation of particulates on different components of the refrigerator 100, such as the cooling fins 143 and heat dissipation fins. The air filters may provide a barrier at different air passage ways, such as positioned somewhere along the air intake located at the back of the refrigerator 100 for taking in ambient air, at the ambient air import before the ambient air is fanned through the heat dissipating fins, and/or between the refrigeration compartment and the cooling unit 140, such as with the positioning of air filter 137.
[0048] Reference is made to
[0049] In an alternative embodiment, the cooling of the warmed air of the refrigerator may be performed by a cooling liquid or refrigerant, such as water, where the heat dissipation from the cooling liquid or refrigerant may be conducted by an external cooling system, the heat sink located outside of the refrigerator. In this embodiment, the cooling liquid absorbs the heat from the warmed air and dissipates the heat externally. There may be a channel, such as a tube or cable, running between the refrigerator and the cooling system for carrying the warmed cooling liquid or refrigerant to the cooling system and returning the now cooled liquid or refrigerant back to the refrigerator. In some embodiments, but not limited to these, when the cooling is performed by compression refrigeration, the refrigerant may undergo phase shifts as it absorbs (from liquid to gas) and then dissipates (from gas back to liquid) the heat. The cooling system may have a compressor for compressing the heated gas into, for example, a superheated vapor. The cooling system may also include a condenser for condensing the superheated vapor or heated gas back into a liquid. In such examples, the condenser may include a coil for passing the superheated vapor or heated gas and running, for example, cold water on the coils for dissipating the heat. Such a cooling unit may be compacted into a small casing. In some examples, where the cooling system is connected to a power source, the refrigerator may not be connected to a power source.
[0050]
[0051] In an alternative embodiment of another exemplary set of steps 300b depicting the flow of air to cool a refrigerator 100 as shown in
[0052] Reference is now made to
[0053] A second aspect of the invention is a Peltier effect thermoelectric cooling apparatus. Reference is now made to
[0054] In another embodiment, the thermoelectric element 146 may be one continuous element instead of a plurality of thermoelectric chips.
[0055] The thermoelectric cooling apparatus 200 also has a heat sink 148 for trapping and dissipating excess heat produced by the hot side of the thermoelectric element 146. The thermoelectric element 146 may be coupled to the heat sink 148. The heat sink 148 may comprise tubes 142 or a sealed chamber containing a refrigerant. In one example, the refrigerant may be a Freon gas. The refrigerant absorbs the heat of the hot side of the thermoelectric plate 146, evaporates and rises up the tubes 142. The heat sink 148 may also include a fan system 141. The fan system 141, such as a refrigerator air duct fan, directs air to heat discharge fins in contact with the tubes 142 where the air is at ambient or slightly above ambient temperature, cooling off the heated tubes 142 and the evaporated refrigerant contained within. Heat is thus transferred from the refrigerant to the ambient air, the now warmer ambient air evacuated from the Peltier cooling device 200. The refrigerator air duct and fan 141 are arranged to blow air from a refrigerator interior compartment warm air port across the cooling fins to a cold air port. As the refrigerant is cooled down, it undergoes another phase shift, condensing as it is cooled, the liquid refrigerant trickling down inside the tube 142 and, now cooled, may then absorb more heat from the hot side of the thermoelectric element 146 and repeat the process. The person having ordinary skill in the air will readily recognize that other forms of heat sinks may be used, where, for example, the heat sink does not use a refrigerant but simply heat discharge fins and a fan.
[0056] In an alternative embodiment, a heat conductive plate similar to the cooling plate 144 may be joined, directly or indirectly, to the hot side of the thermoelectric element 146, adapted, for example, to the small size of the thermoelectric element 146, allowing for a better heat transfer to the heat discharge fins and fans. In some embodiments, this heat conductive plate may be used instead of the heat sink 148.
[0057] The Peltier cooling apparatus 200 may also have cooling fins 143 on the cold side. The fins 143 may be grouped in sets of fins 149. In one embodiment, these sets of fins 149 may be evenly spaced. In another embodiment, these sets of fins 149 may be irregularly spaced or not spaced, consisting of one uniform body of fins 143 evenly interspersed throughout. In one example, the sets of fins 149 may be placed in a symmetrical arrangement. In another embodiment, there may be one single set of fins 149 running along the whole of the Peltier cooling apparatus 200. In a preferred embodiment, the number of sets of fins 149 is equal to the number of thermoelectric elements 146, where each of the set of fins 149 may be aligned with the thermoelectric element 146.
[0058] In order to increase the efficiency of the cooling process by increasing the air exposed to a cold surface area, the Peltier cooling apparatus 200 may include a metal plate 145 that may be joined, directly or indirectly, to the thermoelectric element 146. Such a metal plate 146 may be made out of aluminum or any other heat conducting metal, such as copper. The Peltier cooling device 200 may also include a cooling plate 144 with a truncated pyramidal shape joined to the thermoelectric element 146 and to the set of fins 149. This cooling plate 144 may be made out of a good heat conductor, such as, for example, aluminium or copper. The cooling plate 144 increases the cooling effect by increasing the surface area of the cold surface and the amount of air coming into contact with the cold surface. The pyramid shape of the cooling shape 144 is truncated so as to allow at least one thermoelectric element 146 to rest on its top surface, the truncated face. In the example where the thermoelectric element 146 is a plurality of thermoelectric chips, these chips may have a small surface area (e.g. not more than a few square centimeters). Thus, when the thermoelectric element 146 is joined to the cooling plate 144, the cold side of the thermoelectric element 146 in turn cools down the cooling plate 144. The cooling plate 144 increases the cooling power of the thermoelectric element 146 by increasing the heat transfer between the cooling plate 144 and the cold side of the thermoelectric element 146 by increasing the surface area of the cold surface for better heat transference from the warmed air. The cooling plate 144 distances the cooled surfaces from the hot side of the thermoelectric element 146 in order to minimize undesired heat transfer between the refrigerated compartment, the cooled air and the portion of the refrigerator 100 involved in dissipating heat (including, for example, the hot side of the thermoelectric element 146 and the heat sink 148)
[0059] In an exemplary embodiment of the cooling plate 144 as shown in
[0060] In an alternative embodiment, a heat sink, similar to the heat sink 148, may be used to gather the heat from the warmed air rising from the refrigerator's compartment and dissipate it through the thermoelectric element 146. In this alternative embodiment, the heat sink is coupled to the cold side of the thermoelectric element 146 and may include a sealed chamber, such as a set of tubes or a heat pipe, filled with a working fluid or refrigerant as understood by a person skilled in the art to work for small temperature differentials. The working fluid would receive the heat transferred from the warmed air, evaporate, transfer the heat to the cold side of the thermoelectric element 146, condense then flow back down to repeat the process. The heat sink would also have cooling fins for cooling the warmed air. The heat sink would include a fan for blowing the warmed air across the cooling fins to a cooled air port to be recirculated in the refrigerated compartment.
[0061] A third aspect of the present invention is that of a display for a refrigerator 100 located on one of the refrigerator's panels. Reference is now made to
[0062] A fourth aspect of the present invention is a lighting system. The exemplary refrigerator 100 may also have a lighting system 116, as shown in
[0063] In alternative embodiments, the motion sensing system may be overridden by a light switch. Once the light switch is turned on or off, the lighting system will be permanently turned on/off, independent of the readings coming from the motion sensing system. A door switch can also be provided to activate the lighting 116.
[0064] In an alternative embodiment as shown in
[0065]
[0066] A fifth aspect of the present invention is a fault detection system such as exemplary fault detection system 150 of a refrigerator 100, a schematic block diagram of which is illustrated in
[0067] The fault detection device 150 first includes a temperature monitor 153 for reading the temperature within the refrigerator. This temperature monitor 153 may allow for the controlling of the air cooling system 140 and circulation fan 152 depending on if the refrigerator 100 has reached or is near a target temperature. The fault detection device 150 also has a set of additional sensors. These sensors are for monitoring certain physical properties over time. For example, one sensor 156 may be a photovoltaic light sensor (insolation sensor) for measuring the intensity of the solar light hitting the display 110 of the refrigerator 100. This may be to tell if the refrigerator 100 is exposed to too much sunlight (i.e. direct sunlight at an angle able to provide over about 100 W/m.sup.2) such as if it is placed in direct sunlight, next to a window for instance. In another example, one sensor may be a temperature sensor 154 for measuring the temperature of the ambient air in the room in which the refrigerator 100 is placed. This may indicate that the temperature in the room in which the refrigerator is located is too hot and the refrigerator's cooling system is therefore not able to reach the desired cooling temperature (e.g. as a result of a drop in power of the thermoelectric elements of the Peltier effect cooling apparatus). This sensor 154 may be particularly useful when the refrigerator's 100 cooling system is a Peltier effect system, where the lowest temperature achieved by the system is a function of the ambient temperature (the temperature of the air outside of the refrigerator). A given Peltier effect cooling system, depending on the properties of the thermoelectric element, may cool down to a given temperature difference (Temperature), the temperature difference equal to the ambient temperature minus the cooled temperature, T a constant for a given Peltier effect cooling system. For example, the Peltier effect cooling apparatus may be able to achieve efficiently an internal refrigeration temperature of ten degrees lower than the external temperature. In this example, if the ambient temperature is 20 C., then the minimum temperature that can be obtained in the refrigerator is 10 C. Therefore, it may be preferable to measure the ambient temperature outside of the refrigerator 100 to insure that the Peltier effect cooling apparatus may be able to efficiently the desired internal temperature.
[0068] One of the sensors of the fault detection device 150 may also be a sensor for identifying if one of the side doors 120 of the refrigerator 100 has been left open for a given period. For example, the door sensor 118 would allow for the identification of instances during which the side doors 120 where accidently left open, letting cooled air escape and, for instance, severing the air cycle within the refrigerator such as in the exemplary embodiment where the channel 130 is incorporated to the side door 120 that has been accidently left open.
[0069] A controller or processor 151 uses control logic to process the sensor data, control the cooler 140 and fan, issue any user warnings via the user interface 155 (including any audible signals desired), control any lighting, etc. The fault detection device 150 may also include a memory module 158 for storing the readings from the temperature monitor and/or the sensors and record any faults or events for future reference. The memory module 158 may also store readings from the user interface 155 (such as a keypad or a wired or wireless interface for control via a computer or smartphone) for allowing a user to input, for example, a desired internal temperature for the refrigerator 100. The fault detection device 150 may also comprise (not shown) a communications module where the communications module communicates to, for example, a remote user. The remote user may be, for example, a manufacturer, an owner of the refrigerator or a distributor. The communications module may communicate data stored in the memory module to the remote user. Such data may be useful in instances, when, for example, the manufacturer receives a complaint from the owner of the refrigerator that the refrigerator cannot maintain a desired temperature. The manufacturer may then access the data in memory 158 produced by the temperature monitor and/or sensors and determine the probable cause, such as if the refrigerator was exposed for a prolonged period to direct sunlight. In another example, the fault detection device may also include an alarm signal, where said signal goes off if, for example, the refrigerator is overexposed to sunlight, if one of the refrigerator's side doors is open or if the refrigerator is placed in a room where the temperature is too hot.
[0070] In an alternative embodiment, the refrigerator 100 may also have a humidity sensor (not shown) for measuring the humidity within the refrigerator 100. Such a humidity sensor may be useful to prevent the accumulation of excess condensation where said condensation may bead or fog up the display 100 or jeopardize the performance of, for instance, controller or processor 151. The refrigerator 100 may also optionally include a dehumidifying agent, such as, for example, a silica gel, placed in, for example, a designated compartment such as one located at the bottom of the refrigerator 100, where the dehumidifying agent may be replaced once the humidity sensor indicates an increase in humidity in the refrigerator 100, an indication that the dehumidifying agent may no longer be as effectively absorbing moisture of the air within the refrigerator 100.
[0071] The refrigerator 100 may be, in some embodiments, a refrigerated wine cellar, where the temperature of the wine is to be maintained constant. In one embodiment, the wine cellar may have two racks or plurality of shelves, side by side, for storing wine bottles or other bottled beverages. In this embodiment, the wine cellar may be dimensioned so that its width may be sufficient to contain two wine bottles, lying on their sides next to each other in a row. In this embodiment, the depth of the wine cellar is sufficient for it to receive a wine bottle, when the wine bottle is lying in such a way so its head and base are pointing to either of the side doors of the wine cellar, and so the depth may be just sufficiently larger than the diameter of the wine bottle at its largest point. The height of the wine cellar may vary depending on the number of rows contained in one plurality of shelves. For example, a wine cellar dimensioned to receive 30 bottles, so 15 bottles on each of the two pluralities of shelves, has a storage compartment that is at least tall enough to receive fifteen wine bottles lying on their sides as described above. In other embodiments of the wine cellar, the number of bottles stored may vary (e.g. 10, 18, 20) and so the dimensions of the wine cellar may vary accordingly. In these other embodiments, the wine cellar may still include two pluralities of shelves within its refrigerated compartment as described above, where the bottles would be evenly split between each plurality of shelves. In another embodiment, the wine cellar may have only one single plurality of shelve or one single row of bottles, where the bottles' heads and bases are aligned with the sides of the wine cellar. In some embodiments, the depth of the refrigerator may be sufficient to accommodate more than one bottle or container per shelf (e.g. two or more).
[0072] In an alternative embodiment, each of the two pluralities of shelves or shelves may be split and motorized. In such a way, when the side doors of the wine cellar open, the plurality of shelves may be deployed completely out of the refrigerator's encasing and extend outwardly from the side door cavity receiving the side door using, for example, a motorized drive. This may allow for the loading or unloading of bottles, now fully accessible. The triggering of the mechanism to move the wine rack of each of the plurality of shelves may be, for example, that of the opening of the door, the manual pushing of a button located on the wine cellar or the pushing of a button on, say, a remote control, sending a wireless signal (e.g. a Bluetooth signal) to the wine cellar, initiating the opening mechanism.
[0073] In the exemplary embodiment where the refrigerator is a wine cellar or a refrigeration unit for bottled beverages, the side doors 120 may offer an alignment mechanism. When each of the side doors 120 closes, said doors 120 may push misaligned bottles into place, aligning them vis--vis one another. This may be useful when the bottles have been loaded into the wine cellar but are not properly placed. As such, the bottles may be aligned without there being a need for manual adjustment of each bottle.
[0074] In another embodiment of the refrigerated wine cellar, the wine cellar may be dimensioned so it may be received in a wall cavity, where the wine cellar's outer display may be flush with the wall. This embodiment may include, for example, motors and ball-bearing glides to lift the wine cellar out sufficiently so the wine cellar has enough clearance to open its side doors. This mechanism may be initiated, for example, by sending a wireless signal once a user presses a button on a remote control, by triggering a motion sensor when a user walks into an open space or when the user pushes an activation button located on the refrigerated wine cellar.
[0075] Alternatively, an embodiment of the refrigerator in which the refrigerator is inset into a wall can have a portion projecting from the wall. For example, the room air inlet and outlet can have vents on a front surface (either at the bottom or at the top or both). The access to the contents of the wall-insert refrigerator can be by a hinged front door giving direct access to the contents on the shelves, or by having the front windowed panel mounted to the frame using slides to slide out to expose the side ends of the shelves. A handle can be provided if the sides of the front panel are not suitable to manually grip the front panel to open. The cold air supply channels 130 can be part of the fixed sides of the refrigerator in these embodiments.
[0076] In some embodiments, the refrigerator 100 may be mounted to a wall. A sixth embodiment of the present invention is a mounting support apparatus for mounting the refrigerator to the wall. This mounting support apparatus may be particularly useful when the refrigerator is small (containing, in some examples, a reduced load of bottles), such as one where its height is inferior to that of an average human, where the refrigerator may be mounted to the wall and off the ground, in some examples at eye level, to facilitate access to the refrigerator 100. In one exemplary embodiment of a mounting support apparatus for mounting the refrigerator 100 to a wall, the mounting support system may comprise at least one vertical track bracket, the bracket mounted to the wall using, for example, wall anchors. The track bracket prevents the refrigerator 100 from moving along two of three axes x, y and z (e.g. preventing the refrigerator from moving away from the wall or from side to side, but allowing the refrigerator to move freely vertically along the length of the wall). For example, the track bracket may be a set of rails mounted to a wall, configured to receive a second set of complementary rails attached to the back of the refrigerator 100. During installation, the refrigerator's rails may be aligned with those of the track bracket, and once both sets of rails slide into place, the refrigerator will only be able to move along the rails and therefore not away from the wall or from side to side.
[0077] The mounting support apparatus may further have a support with an adjustable height. The support may be, for example, shaped as a pedestal. The support may have a foot for resting on the ground and also a surface for receiving the refrigerator 100. Once the refrigerator is placed on the top of the pedestal or support, the support's height may be adjusted as desired, using, for example, an adjustable screw or sliding mechanism, and then locked. Once locked, the support no longer allows the refrigerator to move vertically and supports the full vertical weight of the refrigerator. The support with an adjustable height may have a hollow cavity for concealing, for example, a cable running from the refrigerator 100 to a socket in the wall.
[0078] A seventh aspect of the present invention are installation supports for installing a refrigerator 100 to a wall. Reference is now made to
[0079] As the refrigerator 100 may have a considerable weight, its manoeuvring and installation may prove to be difficult. During installation, the refrigerator may be transported lying on its back. On its back, the installation supports 190 may be installed to the base of the refrigerator 100. There may be two installation supports 190, one for each side of the refrigerator 100. The installation supports 190 may be, for example, joined to side portions of the refrigerator's base using, for example, two screws per support 190. The installation supports 190 may be joined, for example, at the center of each installation support 190. The refrigerator 100 is then lifted up so the bulk of its weight rests on the installation supports 190. Once positioned upright, the installation supports 190 prevent the refrigerator 100 from tilting forward or backwards. The installation supports 190 may be shaped as skates. As such, the installation supports 190 may allow the refrigerator 100 to glide around a space to be placed next to a wall for mounting and installation. The refrigerator 100 may then be moved next to a wall. The installation supports 190 may also act as rails, allowing the refrigerator 100 to glide along the rails, allowing for precise adjustments in the refrigerator's position along the glide despite its weight, so that the refrigerator 100 may be positioned near enough to a wall for mounting and installation by its sliding along the rail to the rear of the installation supports 190. The refrigerator 100 may then be mounted to the wall. Once mounted and/or installed, the installation supports 190 may be removed by, for example, removal of the fixation means and/or sliding them out from under the installed refrigerator 100.
[0080] The present description has been presented for purposes of illustration but is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the disclosed embodiments. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art.