Refrigeration device comprising a water tank
09879903 · 2018-01-30
Assignee
Inventors
- Martin Buchstab (Bopfingen, DE)
- Irene Dumkow (Sontheim, DE)
- Adolf Feinauer (Giengen, DE)
- Klaus Flinner (Zöschingen, DE)
- BERND HEGER (HAUNSHEIM, DE)
- Peter Nalbach (Kirchheim/Nabern, DE)
- Kasim Yazan (Ulm, DE)
Cpc classification
F25D17/062
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D23/028
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D23/126
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D2323/122
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D25/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D2317/062
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D2317/061
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D17/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25D23/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25D17/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B67D7/80
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A refrigeration device including a heat-insulated housing, which contains a storage compartment, a water tank, a fan for propelling a stream of cold air that passes through an evaporator and a distribution unit for the controlled distribution of the stream of cold air along at least two circulation paths, the first of which is in closer thermal contact with the water tank than the second.
Claims
1. A refrigeration appliance comprising: a heat-insulating housing; a storage compartment for refrigerated items, the storage compartment being located in the heat-insulating housing; a water reservoir; a blower for propelling a cold air stream sourced from an evaporator; and a distributor device, the distributor device being operable to distribute the cold air stream in a controlled manner between at least two circulation paths with a first circulation path of the circulation paths being in closer thermal contact with the water reservoir than a second circulation path of the circulation paths, wherein the water reservoir is disposed outside of the storage compartment and an upstream section of the first circulation path is a duct that runs via the water reservoir, and a downstream section of the first circulation path is configured to return the cold air stream to the evaporator without disbursing the cold air stream throughout the storage compartment.
2. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 1, wherein the second circulation path includes a plurality of apertures configured to distribute cooling air in the storage compartment.
3. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 1, wherein the duct is insulated from the storage compartment.
4. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 1, further comprising a carcass and a door, wherein a first portion of the duct runs through the carcass and a second portion of the duct runs through the door.
5. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 4, wherein the first portion and the second portion are sealingly engaged with one another when the door is in a closed position and disengaged when the door is in an open position.
6. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 1, wherein all of the first circulation path is insulated from the storage compartment.
7. A refrigeration appliance comprising: a heat-insulating housing including a carcass and a door; a storage compartment for refrigerated items, the storage compartment being located in the heat-insulating housing; a water reservoir; a blower for propelling a cold air stream sourced from an evaporator; and a distributor device, the distributor device being operable to distribute the cold air stream in a controlled manner between at least two circulation paths with a first circulation path of the circulation paths being in closer thermal contact with the water reservoir than a second circulation path of the circulation paths; wherein the water reservoir is disposed outside of the storage compartment; an upstream section of the first circulation path is a duct that runs via the water reservoir; a first portion of the duct runs through the carcass; a second portion of the duct runs through the door; and a portion of the second circulation path runs through the door.
8. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 7, wherein the second circulation path includes a plurality of apertures configured to distribute cooling air in the storage compartment.
9. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 7, wherein the duct is insulated from the storage compartment.
10. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 7, wherein the first portion and the second portion are sealingly engaged with one another when the door is in a closed position and disengaged when the door is in an open position.
11. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 7, wherein a downstream section of the first circulation path is configured to return the cold air stream to the evaporator without disbursing the cold air stream throughout the storage compartment.
12. A refrigeration appliance comprising: a heat-insulating housing; a storage compartment for refrigerated items, the storage compartment being located in the heat-insulating housing; a water reservoir; a blower for propelling a cold air stream sourced from an evaporator; and a distributor device, the distributor device being operable to distribute the cold air stream in a controlled manner between at least two circulation paths with a first circulation path of the circulation paths being in closer thermal contact with the water reservoir than a second circulation path of the circulation paths; wherein the water reservoir is disposed outside of the storage compartment, an upstream section of the first circulation path is a duct that runs via the water reservoir, and the second circulation path includes an entrance to the storage compartment on a first side of the storage compartment and an exit from the storage compartment on a second side opposite to the first side.
13. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 12, wherein the second circulation path includes a plurality of apertures configured to distribute cooling air in the storage compartment.
14. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 12, wherein the duct is insulated from the storage compartment.
15. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 12, further comprising a carcass and a door, wherein a first portion of the duct runs through the carcass and a second portion of the duct runs through the door.
16. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 15, wherein the first portion and the second portion are sealingly engaged with one another when the door is in a closed position and disengaged when the door is in an open position.
17. The refrigeration appliance according to claim 12, wherein all of the first circulation path is insulated from the storage compartment.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Further features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached figures, in which:
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8)
(9) An evaporator 6 and a blower 7 are contained in a chamber 5 separated from the storage compartment 2. An inlet aperture 17 is formed between the chamber 5 and the storage compartment 2 at an end of the chamber 5 facing the door 8. Since the inlet aperture lies outside the sectional plane of the figure, it is indicated in the latter as a dashed outline. Extending adjacent to the rear wall of the carcass 1 is a distributor channel 9 which communicates on the one side with the chamber 5 and on the other side with the storage compartment 2 via a plurality of vertically distributed apertures 10. Attached at the inlet of the distributor channel 9 is a flap 11 which in the position shown closes the distributor channel 9 and reveals an aperture 38 which leads into the storage compartment 2 adjacent to a water reservoir 12. The rear walls of the reservoir 12 and of the inner container 3 delimit a reservoir cooling duct 13 through which cold air flows after passing through the aperture 38 before it disperses in the storage compartment 2.
(10) A supply conduit 14 of the reservoir is provided for the purpose of being connected to a public drinking water network; a delivery conduit 15 is routed through a hinge of the door 8 to a drinking water dispenser 16 disposed centrally in the door 8. The supply conduit 14 can simultaneously serve to supply an ice maker, though this is not shown in the figure because it is not directly related to the invention.
(11) In the schematic of
(12) In a variation shown in
(13)
(14) In the schematic shown in
(15) Instead of the mounting of the reservoir 12 in the door 8 above the drinking water dispenser 16, as shown in
(16) In the embodiment shown in
(17)
(18) The opening 28 belongs to the reservoir cooling duct 13 that runs between the two distributor channels 20 and the outline of which, hidden in the figure, is likewise indicated in the drawing by a dashed line. The reservoir cooling duct 13 is delimited from the storage compartment 2 by a flat plastic shell 30 which extends from the opening 28 over essentially the full height of the door as far as an opening 40 at its bottom edge and in its upper region has a bulge 31 projecting into the storage compartment 2 and concealing both the reservoir 12 and the recess 22.
(19) As can be seen more precisely in the section shown in
(20) In order to intensify the heat exchange between the reservoir 12 and the air flowing in the cooling duct 13, the reservoir 12 can be provided with projecting cooling fins 37, as shown.
(21) Because of the arrangement of the reservoir 12 in one of the insulating walls of the refrigeration appliance housing between the cooled storage compartment 2 and the environment, the reservoir 12 takes on a temperature which lies between that of the storage compartment 2 and that of the environment, without the necessity for the cooling duct 13 to be impinged upon by cold air. Supplying the duct 13 with cold air is only necessary if a lower temperature of the water in the reservoir is desired than ensues automatically in the thermal equilibrium between storage compartment and environment, or if a fast cooling-down of the reservoir contents is desired. In order to ensure the latter, the temperature of the water in the reservoir can, as explained above, be measured with the aid of a temperature sensor (not shown) and the cooling duct 13 impinged upon by cold air if the measured temperature lies above a setpoint value; it is, however, also possible to detect that or register how much water is being drawn off at the drinking water dispenser 16 in order subsequently to feed a fixed amount of cold air or an amount proportional to the drawn-off water volume into the cooling duct 13 and so quickly cool down water that has flowed in to replenish the reservoir 12. Controlling the cooling of the reservoir 12 in such a manner can be implemented economically in particular in refrigeration appliances that are equipped with an integrated water filter and a measuring apparatus for recording the accumulated water throughput through the filter. A measuring apparatus of said kind traditionally serves for estimating, on the basis of the water consumption, when the filter is exhausted and has to be replaced; however, it can also be readily used for qualitatively or quantitatively estimating the cooling requirement at the water reservoir 12.