Burner provided with flame hole member having air holes

10151478 ยท 2018-12-11

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

An object of the present disclosure is to provide a pre-mixed burner capable of preventing a backfire, improving flame stability, and responding to various combustion loads. To attain the object, the present disclosure is implemented by including a flame hole member made of a foam body which is made from a plurality of metal alloys through a sintering process and in which an air hole being a space between struts configuring a framework is formed, and configured to form a flame by allowing a mixed gas of gas and air to be sprayed through the air hole, a flame hole member fixing plate configured to fixedly couple the flame hole member to a burner main body, and a distributing plate provided in front of the flame hole member and at which a plurality of distributing holes are formed so as to uniformly supply the mixed gas to the flame hole member.

Claims

1. A burner comprising: a flame hole member made of a foam body which is made from a plurality of metal alloys through a sintering process and in which an air hole being a space between struts configuring a framework is formed, and configured to form a flame by allowing a mixed gas of gas and air to be sprayed through the air hole; a flame hole member fixing plate configured to fixedly couple the flame hole member to a burner main body; and a distributing plate provided in front of the flame hole member and at which a plurality of distributing holes are formed so as to uniformly supply the mixed gas to the flame hole member, wherein the air hole is configured with multiple cells and multiple pores, each of the multiple cells being an inner space surrounded by the struts and each of the multiple pores being a space in which the cell is connected to a cell adjacent thereto, and an average size of the multiple cells being formed per unit volume of the flame hole member is equal to or less than 1200 m.

2. The burner of claim 1, wherein a plurality of compressed portions are concavely pressed and compressed to be formed at a one side surface of the flame hole member and to be spaced apart from each other at a regular interval, the plurality of compressed portions are formed to be thinner as compared to a thickness of a non-compressed portion and are surrounded by the non-compressed portion.

3. The burner of claim 1, wherein a size of the cell is defined by the following Equation,
D={square root over (ab)}[Equation] wherein D represents the size of the cell, a represents a major axis length of the cell, and b represents a minor axis length thereof.

4. The burner of claim 1, wherein an occupying ratio of the air hole per unit volume of the flame hole member is equal to or greater than 80%.

5. The burner of claim 1, wherein a plurality of compressed portions are concavely pressed and compressed to be formed at a surface of the flame hole member and to be spaced apart from each other at a regular interval.

6. The burner of claim 5, wherein a through hole is formed inside each of the plurality of compressed portions to pass through in a thickness direction of the flame hole member.

7. The burner of claim 5, wherein a through hole is formed between the plurality of compressed portions to pass through in a thickness direction thereof.

8. The burner of claim 5, wherein the compressed portion is configured with multiple first compressed portions spaced apart from each other at a regular interval, and each of multiple second compressed portions formed between the multiple first compressed portions to have a size smaller than that of each of the multiple first compressed portions.

9. The burner of claim 1, wherein a plurality of through holes are formed at the flame hole member to pass therethrough in a thickness direction thereof and to be spaced apart from each other at a regular interval.

10. The burner of claim 1, wherein the distributing plate is coupled to the flame hole member fixing plate via the flame hole member interposed between the distributing plate and the flame hole member fixing plate.

11. The burner of claim 10, wherein a protrusion is formed at the distributing plate to be come into contact with a rear surface of the flame hole member, thereby separating the distributing plate from the rear surface of the flame hole member.

12. The burner of claim 11, wherein the protrusion is formed at an outer circumference of a region at which the plurality of distributing holes are formed.

13. The burner of claim 10, further comprising: a gap plate configured to separate the distributing plate from the flame hole member, wherein the gap plate is formed to surround a region at which the distributing holes are formed.

14. The burner of claim 1, wherein the plurality of metal alloys include nickel (Ni), chrome (Cr), and aluminum (Al).

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present disclosure will become more apparent to those skilled in the art by describing in detail exemplary embodiments thereof with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

(2) FIG. 1 is a perspective view illustrating a state in which a flame hole member, a flame hole member fixing plate, and a distributing plate are coupled to each other in a burner of the present disclosure;

(3) FIG. 2 is a perspective view illustrating a state in which components of the burner shown in FIG. 1 are decoupled from each other;

(4) FIG. 3 is a plan view of the burner shown in FIG. 1;

(5) FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken along line A-A of FIG. 3;

(6) FIG. 5 is a diagram enlarging a portion B of FIG. 4;

(7) FIG. 6 is a diagram enlarging an inner side of a flame hole member according to the present disclosure;

(8) FIG. 7 is a diagram modeling a cell shape of the flame hole member according to the present disclosure;

(9) FIG. 8 is a perspective view of a flame hole member according to a first embodiment of the present disclosure;

(10) FIG. 9 is a cross-sectional view of the flame hole member shown in FIG. 8;

(11) FIG. 10 is a perspective view of a flame hole member according to a second embodiment of the present disclosure;

(12) FIG. 11 is a cross-sectional view of the flame hole member shown in FIG. 10;

(13) FIG. 12 is a perspective view of a flame hole member according to a third embodiment of the present disclosure; and

(14) FIG. 13 is a perspective view of a flame hole member according to a fourth embodiment of the present disclosure.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

(15) Hereinafter, the configuration and action with respect to a preferred embodiment of the present disclosure will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings as follows.

(16) FIG. 1 is a perspective view illustrating a state in which a flame hole member, a flame hole member fixing plate, and a distributing plate are coupled to each other in a burner of the present disclosure, FIG. 2 is a perspective view illustrating a state in which components of the burner shown in FIG. 1 are decoupled from each other, FIG. 3 is a plan view of the burner shown in FIG. 1, FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken along line A-A of FIG. 3, and FIG. 5 is a diagram enlarging a portion B of FIG. 4.

(17) Hereinafter, based on a position of a flame hole member 100, a front means a position before mixed gas passes through the flame hole member 100, whereas a rear means a position after the mixed gas passed therethrough.

(18) A burner 1 of the present disclosure is configured with a flame hole member 100 in which mixed gas is sprayed through an air hole formed thereinside to form a flame, a flame hole member fixing plate 200 for fixedly coupling the flame hole member 100 to a burner main body (not shown), and a distributing plate 300 provided in front of the flame hole member 100 to uniformly supply the mixed gas to the flame hole member 100.

(19) The flame hole member fixing plate 200 is configured with a body portion 210 formed in a flat plate shape and coupled to the burner main body by a coupling means (not shown), an opening portion 220 formed by which a central portion of the body portion 210 is opened, and a coupling portion 230 formed by which an inward edge portion of the body portion 210 surrounding peripheries of the opening portion 220 protrudes in a rear direction and coupled to the flame hole member 100.

(20) The coupling portion 230 is configured with a flame hole member coupling portion 231 formed in a quadrangular frame shape so as to surround the peripheries of the opening portion 220, and a distributing plate coupling portion 232 formed in a quadrangular frame shape so as to surround an outward side of the flame hole member coupling portion 231 and formed to be stepped therefrom.

(21) In a state in which an edge 110 of one side surface of the flame hole member 100 is located to come into contact with an inward surface of the flame hole member coupling portion 231 and an edge 330 of one side surface of the distributing plate 300 is located to come into contact with an inward surface of the distributing plate coupling portion 232, when the edge 330 of the distributing plate 300 is coupled to the inward surface of the distributing plate coupling portion 232, the flame hole member 100, the distributing plate 300, and the flame hole member fixing plate 200 are integrally coupled to each other.

(22) A plurality of distributing holes 310 are formed at the distributing plate 300 to be spaced apart from each other at a regular interval so as to uniformly supply mixed gas of air and gas, which is supplied from a ventilator (not shown), to an entire area of the flame hole member 100.

(23) Each of the distributing holes 310 may be preferably formed in a slit shape, but is not limited thereto, and any shape capable of uniformly supplying the mixed gas may be applicable without such limitation.

(24) A protrusion 320, which protrudes in a front direction so as to come into contact with a rear surface of the flame hole member 100 to thereby separate between the rear surface thereof and the distributing plate 300, is formed at the distributing plate 300 between a region at which the distributing holes 310 are formed and the edge 330.

(25) The protrusion 320 is configured with a first protrusion 320a and a second protrusion 320b, which are horizontally formed at upper and lower sides of the distributing plate 300, respectively, in a long band shape, and a third protrusion 320c and a fourth protrusion 320d, which are vertically formed at left and right sides of the distributing plate 300, respectively, in a long band shape, so as to surround the region at which the distributing holes 310 are formed from an outside.

(26) With such a configuration, because a front surface of the distributing plate 300 and the rear surface of the flame hole member 100 are spaced apart from each other by a constant distance, the mixed gas passing through the distributing holes 310 of the distributing plate 300 may be uniformly supplied to the flame hole member 100, and delivering high temperature heat from the flame hole member 100 to the distributing plate 300 upon combustion may be blocked, thereby preventing the distributing plate 300 from being overheated.

(27) Also, the protrusion 320 formed in the long band shape is configured to surround the region at which the distributing holes 310 are formed so that it may be prevented that the mixed gas sprayed through the distributing holes 310 disperses to the outside of the region at which the distributing holes 310 are formed.

(28) A plurality of air holes are formed at the flame hole member 100 by forming a plurality of metal alloys into a foaming body through a sintering process, and the mixed gas of gas and air is sprayed through the air holes to form a flame.

(29) Hereinafter, the flame hole member 100 of the present disclosure will be described in detail with reference to FIGS. 6 and 7.

(30) FIG. 6 is a diagram enlarging an inner side of a flame hole member according to the present disclosure, and FIG. 7 is a diagram modeling a cell shape of the flame hole member according to the present disclosure.

(31) As disclosed in Korean Registered Patent No. 1212786, the flame hole member 100 is manufactured using a plurality of metal alloy powders through a sintering process.

(32) The metal alloy may be an iron-based alloy containing chrome (Cr) and aluminum (Al). The chrome is contained in the iron-based alloy to improve corrosion resistance and high temperature oxidation resistance, and the aluminum (Al) enables an aluminum oxide and the like to be formed on a surface of the iron-based alloy under a circumstance being exposed to high temperature.

(33) Also, the metal alloy may be a nickel-based alloy containing chrome (Cr) and aluminum (Al). When a turndown ratio (TDR) meaning a combustion load range of a burner is improved, combustion takes place on a surface of the burner when a load is low. In other words, because a spraying speed of the mixed gas is low when a load is low, a flame is formed in the vicinity of a surface of the flame hole member 100 and thus red heat is generated on the surface thereof to degrade durability of the burner, whereas, if the nickel-based alloy is employed as described above, the durability may be improved at high temperature.

(34) The flame hole member 100 of the present disclosure is referred to as a metal foam. The metal foam means an open-cell structure, that is, a structure in which cells and pores constituting an air hole 160 are spatially connected to each other.

(35) As shown in FIG. 6, the flame hole member 100 includes struts 150 which configure a framework of the metal foam and are three-dimensionally intertwined with each other as like as a mesh, and, if an inner space surrounded by the struts 150 is defined as a cell and a space connected to the cell is defined as a pore, the air hole 160 is configured with the cells and the pores.

(36) The mixed gas passes through the air hole 160 and is sprayed therethrough formed on the surface of the flame hole member 100 so that a flame is formed.

(37) When the flame hole member 100 is formed in a structure in which the air holes 160 are connected to each other, an air layer existing in each of the air holes 160 may induce an effect of cooling the surface of the flame hole member 100 to improve the durability of the burner.

(38) Also, when a burning speed of the flame is greater than a spraying speed of the mixed gas that is sprayed through the surface of the flame hole member 100, a backfire in which combustion takes place inside the flame hole member 100 occurs, and such a backfire may occur when a size of the cell is excessively large.

(39) Therefore, it may be preferable that an average size of a plurality of cells formed inside a unit volume of the flame hole member 100 is equal to or less than 1200 m.

(40) In this case, a size of a cell may be defined by Equation 1 as follows.
D={square root over (ab)}[Equation 1]

(41) Here, D is the size of the cell, a is a major axis length of the cell, and b is a minor axis length thereof.

(42) FIG. 7 is a diagram modeling a cell shape, and the cell shape has a shape of a dodecahedron, each surface of which is made of a regular pentagon. A cross section taken along line B-B at the middle of the dodecahedron becomes a regular pentagon, and this regular pentagon corresponds to a pentagonal shape that is defined as the cell in FIG. 6.

(43) In this case, a for defining a size of each cell means a major axis length that is a longest diameter among diameters inside the pentagon defining each cell, and b means a minor axis length that is a shortest diameter among the diameters thereinside.

(44) In actuality, the size of each cell of the flame hole member 100 is irregular so that the size thereof is defined by the value D that is obtained by geometrically averaging the major axis length a and the minor axis length b.

(45) Meanwhile, because a load of the ventilator (not shown) is increased when a porosity is small, the porosity being an occupying ratio of pores per unit volume of the flame hole member 100, it may be preferable to make the porosity have equal to or greater than 80%. Here, the porosity is defined as an occupying radio of pores in a unit volume, which are an empty space except the struts 150 remaining in the unit volume.

(46) Hereinafter, a surface shape of a flame hole member will be described with reference to FIGS. 8 to 12.

(47) FIG. 8 is a perspective view of a flame hole member according to a first embodiment of the present disclosure, and FIG. 9 is a cross-sectional view of the flame hole member shown in FIG. 8.

(48) A plurality of compressed portions 120-1, which are concavely pressed and compressed, are formed to be spaced apart from each other at a regular interval across an entire surface of a flame hole member 100-1 of the first embodiment.

(49) The compressed portion 120-1 is formed to be thinner as compared to a thickness of a non-compressed portion 130-1, thereby having a large density so that a length of a flame is short on a surface of the compressed portion 120-1, whereas the thickness of the non-compressed portion 130-1 is greater to have a low density so that a length of a flame is long.

(50) As described above, when the compressed portion 120-1 and the non-compressed portion 130-1 are formed to be adjacent to each other, even though a flame formed at the non-compressed portion 130-1 flies to cause a lifting phenomenon, a stable flame formed at the compressed portion 120-1 holds the flying flame of the non-compressed portion 130-1, thereby improving flame stability.

(51) FIG. 10 is a perspective view of a flame hole member according to a second embodiment of the present disclosure, and FIG. 11 is a cross-sectional view of the flame hole member shown in FIG. 10.

(52) A plurality of compressed portions 120-2, which are concavely pressed and compressed, are formed to be spaced apart from each other at a regular interval across an entire surface of a flame hole member 100-2 of the second embodiment.

(53) A through hole 121-2 is formed to pass through a center of each of the compressed portions 120-2 in a thickness direction thereof, and a through hole 140-2 is formed to pass through between the compressed portions 120-2, which are adjacent to each other, in a thickness direction of a non-compressed portion 130-2 of the flame hole member 100-2.

(54) As described above, the compressed portion 120-2 and the non-compressed portion 130-2 are arranged to be adjacent to each other so that the non-compressed portion 130-2 may prevent a lifting phenomenon of a flame, thereby improving flame stability.

(55) Also, when a combustion load of a burner is high, there may occur a case in which only a spraying of the mixed gas through air holes of the flame hole member 100-2 is not sufficient. Therefore, as described above, the though hole 140-2 is formed between the through hole 121-2 inside each of the plurality of compressed portions 120-2 and a plurality of adjacent compressed portions 120-2 so that this may possible to respond to a high combustion load.

(56) FIG. 12 is a perspective view of a flame hole member according to a third embodiment of the present disclosure.

(57) A plurality of through holes 140-3 are formed to be spaced apart from each other at a regular interval and to pass through in a thickness direction of a flame hole member 100-3 of the third embodiment across an entire surface thereof. Consequently, it may possible to respond to various combustion loads.

(58) FIG. 13 is a perspective view of a flame hole member according to a fourth embodiment of the present disclosure.

(59) A compressed portion, which is formed at a flame hole member 100-4 of the fourth embodiment, is configured with a plurality of first compressed portions 120-4, each of which is concavely pressed in a predetermined depth from a surface of the flame hole member 100-4, and a plurality of second compressed portions 125-4, each of which is formed between the plurality of first compressed portions 120-4 and is smaller in size than the first compressed portion 120-4.

(60) With such a configuration, a flame lifting from a non-compressed portion 130-4 may be stabilized by a flame formed by the compressed portion to improve flame stability, and sizes of the first compressed portion 120-4 and the second compressed portion 125-4 are different from each other so that it may be possible to respond to various combustion loads.

(61) As described above, the present disclosure is not limited to the described embodiment, and it should be construed that modifications can be apparently devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the technical spirit of this disclosure defined by the appended claims, and also such modifications will fall within the scope of this disclosure.

DESCRIPTION OF REFERENCE NUMERALS

(62) 1: Burner

(63) 100, 100-1, 100-2, 100-3, and 100-4: Flame hole member

(64) 110: Edge

(65) 120-1, 120-2, 120-4, and 125-4: Compressed Portion

(66) 130-1, 130-2, and 130-4: Non-compressed Portion

(67) 150: Strut

(68) 160: Air Hole

(69) 200: Flame hole member Fixing Plate

(70) 210: Body Portion

(71) 220: Opening Portion

(72) 230: Coupling Portion

(73) 231: Flame hole member Coupling Portion

(74) 232: Distributing Plate Coupling Portion

(75) 300: Distributing Plate

(76) 310: Distributing Hole

(77) 320: Protrusion

(78) 330: Edge