FOOD COOKING STOVE
20230073784 · 2023-03-09
Inventors
- Evsey Avrumovich KORDIT (Samara, RU)
- Petr Evseevich KORDIT (Samara, RU)
- Aleksandr Petrovich KORDIT (Samara, RU)
Cpc classification
F24C15/32
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24C15/001
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24C3/008
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24C3/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24C15/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24C3/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A food cooking stove, comprising a burner, a stovetop and a casing divided by a partition into a liquid transfer medium compartment and a combustion product compartment arranged under the stovetop and above the heat transfer medium compartment. The casing has provided in it a duct extending inside the heat transfer medium compartment through a partition between the compartments and the heat transfer medium compartment outer wall. The burner is coupled to a pipe arranged in the duct with a clearance to the duct walls and extending into the combustion product compartment. Combustion products are withdrawn from the compartment under the stovetop via a pipe extending inside the heat transfer medium compartment and tapped into the partition between the compartments and the wall of the heat transfer medium compartment.
Claims
1. A food cooking stove, comprising: a burner, a stovetop and a casing, wherein the casing comprises a heat transfer medium compartment, a combustion product compartment arranged under the stovetop and above the heat transfer medium compartment and a duct extending from the combustion product compartment, through a partition between the compartments, inside the heat transfer medium compartment and through the heat transfer medium compartment outer wall, the burner being coupled to a pipe arranged in the duct with a clearance to the duct walls and extending into the combustion product compartment, the combustion products being withdrawn from the compartment under the stovetop via at least one pipe also extending through the heat transfer medium compartment.
2. The stove of claim 1, wherein it is provided with a cylinder-shaped casing, a disk-shaped stovetop, and the duct being comprised of a vertical and a pitched stub pipes tapped into the partition between the compartments and the heat transfer medium compartment outer cylindrical wall, respectively.
3. The stove of claim 2, wherein the pipe withdrawing combustion products from the compartment under the stovetop is tapped into the heat transfer medium compartment bottom.
4. The stove of claim 1, wherein the heat transfer medium compartment is provided with a heat transfer medium inlet and a heat transfer medium outlet at the compartment upper and lower portions, respectively, and is configured for the heat transfer medium circulation through the compartment.
5. A food cooking stove, comprising: a burner, a stovetop and a casing, wherein the casing comprises a heat transfer medium compartment, a combustion product compartment arranged under the stovetop and above the heat transfer medium compartment and a duct extending from the combustion product compartment, through a partition between the compartments, inside the heat transfer medium compartment, and through the heat transfer medium compartment outer wall, the burner being coupled to the combustion product compartment via a pipe arranged in the duct with a clearance between them for withdrawing the combustion products from the compartment under the stovetop.
6. The stove of claim 5, wherein it further includes, for withdrawing the combustion products from the compartment under the stovetop, at least one pipe extending through the partition between the compartments and the heat transfer medium compartment, the duct is comprised of a vertical section tapped into the partition between the compartments and a pitched section extended through an opening in the heat transfer medium compartment outer cylindrical wall, the vaporizing burner is mounted on a flange of the duct's pitched section outside the heat transfer medium compartment, the burner combustion chamber being fitted into the pipe for supplying combustion products to the compartment under the stovetop, and a stub pipe is tapped into the duct's pitched section wall between the casing cylindrical wall and the duct flange for withdrawing the combustion products from the compartment under the stovetop via the clearance between the duct walls and the pipe coupled to the burner.
7. The stove of claim 6, wherein the casing is cylinder-shaped, the stovetop is configured in the form of a disk, the supply and exhaust combustion product flows in the compartment under the stovetop are coupled via the clearance between the stovetop and a disk-shaped partition arranged under the stovetop with a clearance to the combustion product compartment wall \, and the pipe for supplying the combustion products to a region under the stovetop central portion is tapped into the disk-shaped partition for subsequent propagation of the combustion products between the stovetop and the disk-shaped partition into a region under the stovetop edge and withdrawal thereof from the compartment under the stovetop.
8. The stove of claim 5, wherein the heat transfer medium compartment is provided with a heat transfer medium inlet and a heat transfer medium outlet at the compartment upper and lower portions, respectively, and is configured for the heat transfer medium circulation through the compartment.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0022] High temperature of stove structure components providing liquid or gaseous fuel combustion is typical to food cooking stoves using hot combustion products and having capped rings. However, the amount of heat transferred into food cooking vessels does not exceed 30%-50% of the total heat generated by a burner, while a temperature required for food cooking at a rate comparable to the rate of cooking on open flame rings may be as high as 600° C. Such temperature and associated heating of the stove outer surfaces are unacceptable from a safety standpoint. However, it is the temperature providing an acceptable food cooking rate (bringing 1 Liter of water to boil within 10 to 12 minutes).
[0023] On the other hand, it is wise to use such stoves to heat a heat transfer medium for further using it for space heating or water heating. Where there is no need for space heating or cold water heating, the stove components may be cooled, for example, at a watercraft, with flowing cold water.
[0024] A food cooking stove, as shown in
[0025] The burner 1 having liquid fluid and air inlets is mounted on a flange of the duct's pitched pipe section 8. Herein, the burner 1 combustion chamber 9 is fitted into the pipe 10 also comprised of a vertical and a pitched portions arranged with a clearance to the walls of the respective vertical 7 and pitched 8 pipe sections of the duct and extending into the combustion product compartment 4. In the burner, a flammable mixture of liquid fuel and air fed thereto is produced and then ignited. The combustion chamber 9 is provided with a cylindrical wall, coupled to the pipe 10 inner surface, and a flame stabilizer 11.
[0026] The pipe 10, coupled to the burner and following the configuration of the duct's vertical 7 and pitched 8 pipe sections, is tapped into the disk-shaped partition 12 arranged under the stovetop 2 with a clearance to the combustion product compartment 4 walls for combustion product propagation between the stovetop 2 and the disk-shaped partition 12 into a region under the stovetop edge 2 and withdrawal thereof from the compartment 4 under the stovetop via the three pipes 13, 14 and 15 tapped into the partition 6 between the compartments 4 and 5, extending through the heat transfer medium compartment 5 and tapped into the compartment 5 bottom and an exhaust combustion product header 16 arranged under the heat transfer medium compartment 5 bottom for further removal from the stove. The clearance between the pipe 10 walls and the duct's pipe sections 7 and 8 is open in the compartment 4 under the stovetop 2 and filled with combustion products.
[0027] A flow swirler 17 is used to provide uniform heating of the stovetop 2 and is mounted in the combustion product compartment 4 between the stovetop 2 and the disk-shaped partition 12.
[0028] The heat transfer medium compartment 5 is provided with a heat transfer medium inlet and a heat transfer medium outlet in the compartment's upper and lower portions, respectively, and is connected to a pipeline comprising a dependent air heater 18 and a pump 19 for the heat transfer medium pumping.
[0029] A food cooking stove, as shown in
[0030] The duct is configured of a pitched pipe section 25 extending through an outer wall of the heat transfer medium compartment, which is the casing's cylindrical wall, and directing the combustion product flow vertically upward via a ring-shaped member 26 tapped into the partition 24 between the compartments.
[0031] A vaporizing burner, similar to that in
[0032] The structure shown in
[0033] As an alternative, combustion product withdrawal from the compartment 22 under the stovetop may be provided by arranging the stub pipe tapped into the duct's pipe 25 wall in the heat transfer medium compartment such that it respectively passes first through the heat transfer medium compartment and then is tapped into the exhaust combustion product header.
[0034] Furthermore, for withdrawing the combustion products from the compartment under the stovetop, use is also made, in the manner similar to that in the structure of
[0035] Advantages achieved by using the clearance between the duct walls and the pipe coupled to the burner to withdraw combustion products are not limited to a more compact structure or more intensive heating of the heat transfer medium. The exhaust combustion products are used also to cool the pipe coupled to the burner, thus extending its service life and the stove's operational life.