Refrigeration – Using electrical or magnetic effect – Thermoelectric; e.g. – peltier effect
Reexamination Certificate
2000-03-16
2001-10-30
Doerrler, William (Department: 3744)
Refrigeration
Using electrical or magnetic effect
Thermoelectric; e.g., peltier effect
C062S003200, C062S457900, C136S203000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06308519
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to the field of thermoelectric devices and more particularly to the thermoelectric cooling system with improved performance and/or efficiency characteristics. The present invention is designed to have many applications including use in a bread box, as part of a wine rack, or in any other application requiring the cooling of a load.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Thermoelectric cooling systems are analogous to conventional refrigeration cooling systems. For example, a conventional cooling system includes an evaporator, a compressor, and a condenser. In the evaporator or cold section, pressurized refrigerant is allowed to expand, boil, and evaporate. During the change of state from a liquid to a gas, energy in the form of heat is absorbed. In the next step, the compressor recompresses the gas into a liquid. Further, the condenser expels the heat absorbed at the evaporate and the extra heat added by the compressor to the ambient environment.
A thermoelectric cooling system has similar subassemblies. However, thermoelectric cooling is specifically the abstraction of heat from electronic components by Peltier effect, greatly improved and made practicable with solid-state thermoelectric materials, e.g., Bi
2
Te
3
. Devices using this effect, e.g. frigistors, are used for automatic temperature control, and the like and are energized by direct current (“d.c.”) thermoelectric materials, that is, any set of materials (metals) which constitute a thermoelectric system. Some examples include: “binary” systems (bismuth and tellurium), ternary systems (silver, antimony and tellurium), and “quaternary” systems (bismuth, tellurium, selenium and antimony, called “Neelium”). The Peltier effect is a phenomenon whereby heat is liberated or absorbed at a junction when current passes from one metal to another. In this application, a cold junction (the place where the heat source or load is located) is defined as the assembly where energy in the form of heat is absorbed when current passes from one metal to another. A hot junction (the place where the heat sink is located) is the assembly which thermally communicates with a heat exchanger and through which the heat that is liberated, when current passes from one metal to another, is transferred to the ambient environment.
Major differences exist between thermoelectric cooling systems and conventional refrigeration systems, however. For example, conventional refrigeration systems must maintain a dosed environment isolated from the ambient. Further, conventional refrigeration systems have a large amount of insulation and cannot be ventilated without loss of cooling effect. Thus, conventional cooling systems may contain odors of the articles placed within and such odors may be transferred to other articles placed within the cooling system, with obviously undesirable results. Further, conventional cooling systems produce humidity which may adversely affect the physical characteristics of the product being cooled, such as texture, taste, shelf life, and the like, of certain food articles which may be placed therein. For example, fresh baked bread may, if humidity and temperature are not carefully controlled, become soggy on at least one side during the cooling process.
Thermoelectric cooling systems, by contrast, provide a measure of advantage to the several shortcomings noted above. However, thermoelectric cooling systems of the prior art lack efficiency in certain respects because, upon interruption of the power supply, the current reverses flow such that what was a heat source becomes the heat sink, and what was the heat sink now becomes the heat source.
It is an objective of the present invention to provide a thermoelectric cooling circuit that substantially prevents reversal of the heat source and heat sink when power is substantially interrupted upon a predetermined temperature range being reached at the heat source. It is an additional objective of the present invention to provide a bread box and a wine cooling rack using the thermoelectric cooling circuit of the present invention.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention may be generally described as a thermoelectric cooling system having an electric circuit comprising a direct current (“d.c.”) power source for providing direct current throughout the electric circuit, a thermoelectric module having at least one heat sink and at least one heat source capable of being cooled to a predetermined temperature range, and a control assembly. The d.c. power source, the control assembly, and the thermoelectric module are connected to each other in series. The control assembly comprises a thermostat control switch mechanism and a resistive element connected to each other in parallel. The thermostat control switch mechanism has a sensor coupled to or thermally associated with the heat source of the thermoelectric module so that the temperature of the heat source can be monitored. The thermostat control switch mechanism is normally open in the predetermined temperature range detected by the sensor. The resistive element having a predetermined resistance sufficient for a level of voltage to be provided to the thermoelectric module, when the thermostat control switch mechanism is open, sufficient to substantially prevent reversal of the heat source and the heat sink
More particularly, the circuit of the present invention may be used in a thermoelectric bread box or a thermoelectric wine bottle cooling rack. The thermoelectric bread box is ventilated to maintain freshness and at the same time keep wrapped bread at a reduced temperature to prevent spoilage by mold growth. The device is almost devoid of insulation except to prevent condensation inside the thermoelectric element. The device functions with a thermostatic control that is shunted by an 800-10,000 ohm resistor to maintain voltage to the thermoelectric device but not enough amperage to activate the thermoelectric element when the thermostat is electrically open. (The type of resistor depends upon the voltage or current necessary to be maintained.) This unique condition of maintaining the voltage prevents the heat energy that was transferred to the heat sink from returning to the cooled side, due to the reversing action of the Peltier junctions, when the thermostat opens. Another unusual feature is the conforming cooling plate that is placed around the bread in the shape of a substantially U-shaped absorber to remove the heat. From test data it appears that when a conforming cooling plate is used objects cool faster. When conformal cooling plates or heat absorbers are employed on a bottle or container of liquid, e.g., wine, stratification is prevented and circulation is promoted inside the bottle which aids cooling. An explanation for this effect on liquids or wrapped bread may be that long wave radiation frequencies of 2 microns or greater, coming from wrapped bread, glass bottles, or other containers are absorbed by a conformal aluminum or copper plate (or plate having similar characteristics) if it surrounds a substantial portion, at least 75%, of the object to be cooled. An alternative explanation may be that substantially all the surface area of the body being cooled is associated with the conformal cooling surface. This method cools a bottle of water faster than a refrigerator using circulated cold air. This can be accomplished without insulating the entire box.
Alternatively, it has recently been found that effective cooling of liquids, like wine, in containers, like bottles, may be accomplished with a conformal cooling plate (first body) in cooling association with less than 75% of the object to be cooled, provided, a portion of the conformal cooling plate is in cooling contact or association with at least a portion of one side of the container or object to be cooled (the load). Liquids cooled by such a structure, or such a process, avoid stratification and substantially unequal cooling. Accordingly, uniform cooling of a liquid and maintenance of such uniform cooling may be accomplished by
Anderson & Morishita
Doerrler William
Jiang Chen-Wen
Morishita Robert Ryan
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