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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. An air-conditioning device for external mounting, particularly on the
roof of factory halls or similar large-area buildings for drawing off
spent air and supplying tempered fresh air, comprising
a common housing case defining an interior,
a heat exchanger disposed in the interior of said housing case adapted to
pass fresh air and spent air therethrough comprising a plurality of spaced
panel-shaped heat exchanger walls made of aluminium foil defining
non-communicating adjacent alternating fresh-air passages and spent-air
passages, respectively,
a fresh-air blower means in the interior of said housing case communicating
with said fresh-air passages of said heat exchanger, and a spent-air
blower means in the interior of said housing case communicating with said
spent-air passages of said heat exchanger,
partition means disposed in the interior of said housing case cooperating
with said heat exchanger for dividing the interior of said housing case
into a fresh-air passageway leading through said heat exchanger and
including said fresh-air passages thereof and a spent-air passageway
leading through said heat exchanger and including said spent-air passages
thereof,
said partition means include a controllable by-pass damper means for
directly connecting a spent-air inlet side to a spent-air outlet side of
said heat exchanger, and a controllable recirculated-air damper means for
directly connecting said spent-air inlet side to a fresh-air outlet side
of said heat exchanger,
a closeable fresh-air inlet means for admitting fresh air into said housing
case and a closeable exhaust-air outlet means for exiting of spent air
from said housing case, and
a base means disposed on a lower side of said housing case for being
mounted sealingly on an aperture in a roof, said base means jointly is
formed with a spent-air inlet of said base means communicating with said
spent-air inlet side of said heat exchanger as well as a fresh-air outlet
of said base means communicating with said fresh-air outlet side of said
heat exchanger, said fresh-air outlet of said base means includes a
projection nozzle adapted to concentrate a stream of fresh blown-out air.
2. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, further comprising
a spent-air filter disposed in said spent-air inlet in said base means,
said spent-air filter and said projection nozzle are closely adjacent to
one another and together are adapted to be inserted through a single
aperture in a roof, and
said projection nozzle defines a mouth located lower than said spent-air
inlet and said spent-air filter.
3. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, further comprising
an air heater communicating with said projection nozzle disposed in said
base means between said fresh-air outlet of said base means and said
projection nozzle.
4. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, further comprising
an air cooler communicating with said projection nozzle disposed in said
base means between said fresh-air outlet of said base means and said
projection nozzle.
5. The air conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, further comprising
an air heater and an air cooler communicating with said projection nozzle
disposed in said base means between said fresh-air outlet of said base
means and said projection nozzle.
6. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, wherein
said projection nozzle includes an adjustable set of swirl vane means for
varying a stream angle of air leaving said projection nozzle.
7. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, wherein
said fresh-air blower means is connected at an intake side thereof to said
fresh-air outlet side of said heat exchanger, and said spent-air blower
means is connected at its intake side to said spent-air outlet side of
said heat exchanger,
said closeable exhaust-air outlet means of said housing case comprises a
first louver means for automatically closing air flow therethrough counter
to the direction of blowing-out of the spent air,
a controllable second louver means for closing said closeable fresh-air
inlet means from admitting fresh air into said housing case.
8. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, further comprising
a condensate-collecting trough communicating with said spent-air passages
of said heat exchanger at a lowest point thereof,
a drain pipe containing a siphon is connected to said trough and extends
out of said housing case into the open air.
9. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, wherein
said heat exchanger of aluminum foil comprises two rectangular stacks of
said heat exchanger walls, said rectangular stacks are disposed obliquely
standing respectively on one respective lower corner thereof in said
housing case and are spaced apart defining inner spaced faces disposed
opposite one another, and said stacks include outer faces sealingly
adjoining tightly onto said housing case, said two stacks are connected
sealingly tight to said housing case at laterally positioned front and
rear corners thereof,
said partition means include,
two fixed vertically planarly aligned vertical housing partitions sealingly
connected to said housing case and connected to upper corners and said
lower corners, respectively, of said stacks,
an oblique fixed partition extends from the upper corners of said stacks to
the rear corner of said stacks sealingly connected to said two stacks
closing the space between said stacks,
a fixed horizontal dividing partition extends from the front corners of
said stacks and said housing case adjacent thereto sealingly against said
housing case and said stacks extending therebetween in the space between
said two stacks to a position of an imaginary plane defined by said two
vertical housing partitions, and
said controllable by-pass damper means and said controllable
recirculated-air damper means constitute vertical shut-off dampers
disposed, respectively, above and below said fixed horizontal dividing
partition and said vertical housing partitions, pivotally mounted,
said spent-air blower means for drawing spent air through said spent-air
passages of said two stacks is disposed above said horizontal dividing
partition, and
said fresh-air blower means for drawing fresh air through said fresh-air
passages of said two stacks is disposed below said horizontal dividing
partition.
10. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, wherein
both of said blower means suck air through said heat exchanger.
11. The air-conditioning device as set forth in claim 1, wherein
both of said blower means press air through said heat exchanger. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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The invention relates to an air-conditioning or climate device for external
mounting, particularly on the roof of factory buildings or similar
large-area buildings, for the removal of used air and for the supply of
tempered fresh air.
Central roof air-conditioning plants for external mounting on the flat
roofs of buildings are known which serve to supply and remove air and
which contain a radiator which can be operated with pumped hot water or
with gas firing or even electrically, for the heating, and/or a
refrigeration machine for the cooling. These devices concern a central
system for the air-conditioning of a building, from which with connecting
air-distribution ducts, the fresh air is brought to the various points,
for example to various points of a workshop, and the used air is conveyed
back thereto from the various points through further ducts. Thus the
central roof air-conditioning systems designed for the central
air-conditioning of a plurality of rooms of a building or parts of a
building require the installation of separate and costly fresh-air ducts
and spent-air ducts. It is difficult or impossible to convert these duct
installations when a change is required in for example the fresh-air
distribution or in the drawing off of spent air.
Also, with existing buildings, often it is no longer possible, or would
involve very high costs, to lay the ducts necessary for such a central
system. Moreover, because of their size and weight, these known central
air-conditioning systems often cannot be used for erection on
comparatively weak factory roofs, for example on shed-type or north-light
roofs. Furthermore, the conventional, known roof central air-conditioning
systems are constructed such that during heating operation, a portion of
the warm spent air again can be mixed with the fresh air in order thus to
utilize the heat in the spent air, the latter used as recirculated air.
The rest of the spent air is blown out directly as exhaust air. This has
the disadvantage that not only during operation with partially
recirculated air, but also particularly when no recirculated air operation
is desired or can be effected and 100% of the spent air is blown out as
exhaust air and operated with 100% new fresh air, the heat in the spent
air is wasted and the heat necessary for heating the fresh air must be
supplied anew entirely in the form of costly heating energy via the
radiator. It is true that plate-type heat exchangers are known per se for
the recovery of heat from the spent air, but these are heavy built-on or
mounted units of large volume for central air-conditioning plants which
are erected and installed in closed rooms inside of buildings.
Because of the above-mentioned installation difficulties and special
application possibilities of the known roof central air-conditioning
systems, large areas, such as production shops, warehouses, workshops or
the like are often, and to a wide extent, still air-conditioned in a
manner such that ventilators are provided at various places on the roof of
the building, for example, at every second or third saw-tooth or shed, of
the shed-type north-light roof of a factory, and that the heating of the
areas is effected with separate air-circulating heaters or wall heating
devices with the supply of fresh air. It is true that a plurality of
desired or appropriate locations in space can have air removed, aerated
and be heated in a flexible manner with these devices. These devices and
systems, respectively, have the disadvantages however that warm spent air
is discharged into the atmosphere, often in large quantities, without any
recovery of heat and consequently a great deal of expensive heating energy
which has been supplied is wasted, that also waste heat from machines or
from technical processes or from illumination and the like is surrendered
to the atmosphere without being used, that separate, duplicate
installations are necessary for the heating and ventilation, and that roof
ventilators which only remove spent air may lead to uncontrolled streams
of air and hence draft phenomena through doors and the like.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an air-conditioning
device with which the disadvantages of the above-mentioned large-scale
space ventilation and large-scale space heating systems by means of
separate, duplicated installations can be avoided, as well as the
disadvantages of the mentioned central systems with central roof
air-conditioning devices, which can be erected, in the form of a plurality
of pieces, as compact and complete individual devices with low
installation costs, on any desired position on the roofs of factory halls
or similar large-area buildings, and which makes possible the
decentralized supply and removal of air at a plurality of selected points
with the economical use of energy and which, as a result, for example, is
also suitable for the reorganization of old factory buildings with
particular advantage, where a subsequent use of conventional roof central
air-conditioning systems is not possible.
The air-conditioning device according to the invention in the first place
is characterised in that in a common housing case of the device there are
provided a heat exchanger through which used air and fresh air can flow
formed with plate-shaped heat-exchange walls which are made of aluminum
foil, as well as a fresh-air blower and a spent-air blower. Furthermore
the interior of the housing case is divided into a fresh-air passage
leading through the heat exchanger and a spent-air passage leading through
the heat exchanger by the stack of foils or foil packet of the heat
exchanger together with internal partitions in the interior of the
housing; the housing partitions comprise a controllable by-pass flap or
valve through which the spent-air entry side of the heat exchanger can be
connected directly to its spent-air outlet side, and comprise a
controllable recirculated-air valve through which the spent-air entry side
of the heat exchanger can be connected directly to its fresh-air outlet
side, the fresh-air inlet and the exhaust-air outlet of the housing case
being constructed so as to be able to shut off. Furthermore the lower side
of the housing case consists of a base which can be sealingly placed on a
roof aperture and which jointly possesses an inlet to the spent-air
passage and an outlet to the fresh-air outlet comprising a projection
nozzle which concentrates the stream of fresh air which is blown out.
This air-conditioning device combines the blowers necessary for the air
extraction and the air supply occurring at the same point of the roof, as
well as the aluminum-foil heat exchanger, the latter making possible a
recovery of spent-air heat in an economical manner from the energy point
of view, into a single compact device which can be decentrally mounted on
roofs, that is at a plurality of points, and particularly where it is
desired to blow-in air and which therefore does not require any
installation of ducts. This decentralized supply and removal of air with
the air-conditioning device according to the invention is considerably
more flexible than the central system with the conventional central roof
air-conditioning device. Because of the use of the aluminum-foil heat
exchanger, which is distinguished by an exceptionally large heat-exchange
area in a small space and with a very low weight, the heat from the spent
air can be recovered to a large extent and it is therefore possible to
operate with 100% spent air and with 100% fresh air in a particularly
economical manner from the point of view of energy, as is necessary in
numerous cases. Not only can the heating energy, but also the heat
produced by machines, technical processes or even by illumination, be
usefully recovered from the spent air. Furthermore, despite the integrated
recovery of heat from the spent air, the air-conditioning device has a low
weight so that it can easily be erected on the roofs of factory halls,
north-light shed roofs and the like, and the air-conditioning device with
the built-in aluminum-foil heat exchanger also takes up considerably less
space and is therefore cheaper than previous devices. Only a single roof
aperture or passage, respectively, through a roof is needed for the
erection of the air-conditioning device. The fresh air is blown directly
from above into the occupied or working region, respectively, of the hall
or of the large space by means of the projection nozzle, and surrounding
air in the room is drawn in by the concentrated or bundled stream of fresh
air emerging from the projection nozzle so that the moving volume of the
stream increases. As a result a greater exchange of air is produced and a
more fundamental removal of spent air from the occupied and working
region, respectively, back to the spent-air suck-in intake point of the
air-conditioning device is effected. The projection nozzle may
advantageously be provided with an adjustable set of swirl vanes by means
of which the angle of the stream and thus also the projection range can be
varied within wide limits. In summer, for example, when heating of the
fresh air is not necessary, the spent air can be exhausted by means of the
by-pass flap valve damper, by-passing the aluminum-foil heat exchanger, so
that substantially no spent air flows through the heat exchanger and no
heating of the fresh air occurs in the heat exchanger. On factory rest
days, for example, the spent air can be blown in again directly as
recirculated air by means of the recirculated-air flap valve damper,
by-passing the heat exchanger, so as, for example, during a heating
operation, to save expenses for the heating of the fresh air.
In a particularly advantageous form of embodiment of the invention, an air
heater and/or an air cooler which is connected to the projection nozzle
may be disposed between the fresh-air outlet of the base and the
projection nozzle. In this manner, the air-conditioning device has an
integrated component, in a compact form of construction, in order to be
able to serve simultaneously for the heating, that is in order to heat the
fresh air which is preheated by the heat recovery from the spent air to
the fresh-air temperature necessary for the space or room heating, or in
order to cool the fresh air additionally to a temperature below the
outside temperature when the outside temperature is high and the by-pass
damper is open.
A spent-air filter may advantageously be disposed at the spent-air inlet of
the base, as a further integrated component of the complete air
conditioning device, which together with the projection nozzle, can be
guided through a single passage or opening in the roof, so that the use of
a spent-air filter does not require any additional installation expense.
When a spent-air filter is disposed on the base of the case of the device,
the mouth of the projection nozzle preferrably is located at a greater
distance from the base than the inlet of the spent-air filter.
With the above and other objects and advantages in view, the present
invention will become more clearly understood in connection with the
following detailed description of a preferred embodiment, when considered
with the accompanying drawings, of which:
FIG. 1 is a side view of the air-conditioning device of the present
invention, partially in vertical section;
FIG. 2 is a vertical section taken along the line II--II in FIG. 1; and
FIG. 3 is a horizontal section taken along the line III--III in FIG. 1.
Referring now to the drawings, the air-conditioning device has a housing
case 2, which is suitable for external mounting on a roof 1 and in which
there are disposed two blowers 3 and 4 and a heat exchanger 5, the
heat-exchange walls of which are made of aluminum foil and which is
divided into two packets or stacks 5 which are spaced apart from one
another (FIG. 2) and which are disposed in the housing case standing on
one corner (FIG. 1). At their respective outermost sides, the two stacks
bear sealingly air-tight against the housing case 2. Above and below,
housing partitions 6 are provided which form an air-tight closure between
the two heat-exchanger stacks and the housing case 2. Secured to and
between the two stacks there is provided an oblique housing partition 7
which forms an air-tight closure between the upper housing partition 6 and
the housing case 2, which cooperatively form the fresh air intake chamber
at the upper left-hand corner of FIG. 1 from which the fresh air can only
pass diagonally down through the heat-exchanger stacks to the lower
right-hand chamber. Also situated between the two stacks is a horizontal
housing partition 8 which extends from the housing case 2 to the middle of
the free space between the two stacks. Above this horizontal housing
partition 8, a vertical by-pass valve flap damper 9 forms a termination or
closure to the upper housing partition 6; below the housing partition 8, a
vertical recirculated-air valve flap damper 10 forms a termination or
closure to the lower housing partition 6.
The horizontal wall 8 in cooperation with the lower damper 10 and the lower
partition 6 closes off the lower-right hand fresh air outlet chamber; the
horizontal wall 8 in cooperation with the upper damper 9 and the upper
partition 6 closes off the upper right-hand spent air exhaust chamber
(FIG. 2). The lower left-hand spent air inlet chamber is isolated by the
lower partition 6, the lower and upper dampers 10 and 9 and the oblique
fixed partition 7. The heat-exchange packets, between the plates form
alternating fresh air and spent air passages only communicating
therethrough, the upper left-hand fresh air intake chamber with the
lower-right hand fresh air outlet chamber on the one hand, and
communicating the lower spent-air intake chamber with the upper-right hand
spent air outlet chamber. The respective air flows through the
heat-exchange packets in FIG. 1 are diagonally cross-flow. The stacks or
packets 5 are preferably square in shape.
In this manner, two passageways for fresh air and spent air, respectively,
leading through the heat exchanger, are divided off in the interior of the
housing. The fresh air or intake air entering through the fresh-air inlet
11 of the housing case 2 enters into the upper left fresh air intake
chamber and the two heat-exchanger stacks 5 at both lateral sides of the
oblique housing partition 7 and is drawn through the heat exchanger 5
obliquely from the top downwards by the blower 4 into the lower right
fresh air outlet chamber and is conveyed further through an outlet 12 of
the fresh-air passage which is divided-off in the interior of the housing.
The spent air after use enters through an inlet 13 of the spent-air
passage the lower left-hand spent air intake chamber and is then drawn
through the two heat-exchanger stacks obliquely from the bottom upwardly
by the blower 3 when the dampers 9 and 10 are closed, into the upper right
spent air outlet chamber and is blown out into the atmosphere through an
exhaust-air outlet 14 in the housing case.
The lower side of the housing case 2 comprises a base 15 which has the
fresh-air outlet 12 and the spent-air inlet 13 formed therein, and with
which the housing case is mounted, in a sealing manner, on an aperture in
the roof 1, only one of which has to be provided for the installation of
the air-conditioning device of the invention. At the spent-air inlet 13,
the base 15 has a spent-air filter 16 which can be inserted through the
aperture in the roof when the air-conditioning device is mounted. Fitted
or joined-on at the fresh-air outlet 12 of the base 15 is an extention 17
which can likewise be inserted through the aperture in the roof and the
lower end thereof, which extends lower down than does the spent-air filter
inlet, comprises a projection nozzle 18 which concentrates the stream of
blown out fresh air and which is provided with an adjustable set of swirl
vanes 19 or the like by means of which the stream angle and thus also the
projection range of the projection nozzle 18 can be varied.
Disposed between the fresh-air outlet 12 of the base 15 and the projection
nozzle 18 is an air heater 20 in which the fresh air can be heated to the
required temperature, for example by means of finned tubes through which
hot water flows or by means of electrical heating. An air cooler may also
be provided instead of the air heater 20 or in combination with the air
heater 20 in order to cool the fresh air to be supplied if necessary.
The two valve flap dampers 9 and 10 are horizontally pivotable about
vertical axes and can be adjusted by means of control devices, not
illustrated. In summer, for example, when no heat exchange should occur
between the spent air and the fresh air in the heat exchanger 5, the
by-pass damper 9 is opened communicating the lower left spent-air intake
chamber directly with the upper right spent air outlet chamber, so that
the warm spent air does not flow through the heat exchanger 5 because of
its higher flow resistance, but is drawn in and blown out directly by the
blower 3, centrally between the two heat-exchanger stacks through the open
by-pass damper 9, by-passing the heat exchanger 5.
If no fresh air is to be introduced during factory rest periods, for
example on Sundays and holidays, but instead recirculated-air operation is
to be used, the recirculated-air damper 10 is opened, with the by-pass
damper 9 closed, so that the spent air entering the housing through the
spent-air inlet 13 into the lower left spent air intake chamber is
drawn-in by the blower 4 between the two heat-exchanger stacks through the
open recirculated-air damper 10, into the lower right outlet chamber
by-passing the heat exchanger and the spent-air is conveyed back into the
building space through the outlet 12. During recirculated-air operation,
the blower 3 is switched off. The exhaust-air outlet 14 of the housing
case includes a louver which closes automatically, and which is opened by
the stream of spent air when the blower 3 is running, and closes when the
blower 3 is switched off, so that no outside air can be drawn in through
the exhaust-air outlet 14 and the heat exchanger 5 by the blower 4.
The fresh-air inlet 11 of the housing case 2 is formed by a louver which
can be actuated by means of a control device (not illustrated), and which
is set in the open position during fresh-air/spent-air operation and is
closed during recirculated-air operation, so that no outside air can be
drawn in by the blower 4 through the fresh-air inlet 11 during
recirculated-air operation. In order to prevent freezing up of the heat
exchanger in its cross sections constituting the spent air passages
through which the spent air flows, during fresh-air/spent-air operation
with low outside temperatures and moist spent air, the recirculated-air
damper 10 may be partially opened, for example by means of an outside
thermostat, and at the same time the louver of the fresh-air inlet 11 may
be correspondingly partially closed, as a result of which the proportion
of spent air and fresh air flowing through the heat exchanger can be
changed so that the temperatures in the heat exchanger remain above the
freezing limit.
Disposed communicating with and below the lowest point of that portion of
the two heat-exchanger stacks through which the spent air flows, namely
the spent air passages thereof, as illustrated in FIG. 1, is a collecting
trough 22, to which there is connected a drain pipe 24 which is led out of
the housing case 2 and contains a siphon 23. With this device, any
condensate which may be present under the circumstances which appears at
the spent-air side of the heat exchanger can be conveyed directly or
immediately straight out of the housing case of the air-conditioning
device onto the roof without the necessity of having long outlet pipes
into a sewer or canal system.
The base 15 may be so constructed that the air-conditioning device can be
mounted on shed or north-light roofs, flat roofs or other roof forms which
occur. Because of its low weight, achieved by the use of the
aluminium-foil heat exchanger, the air-conditioning device can also be
mounted on the roofs of factory halls and, because of its compact form of
construction, it only requires the provision of a single, simple roof
opening for mounting. A plurality of air-conditioning devices can be
disposed on one roof, and this can be done conveniently at the points
where an intensive extraction of air and blowing in of fresh air at a
certain temperature is required, and, if necessary, it can be transferred
to another point on the roof with little expenditure of conversion. The
air-conditioning device according to the invention therefore has the great
advantage of a decentralized and extremely flexible ventilating system
which is particularly suitable both for new and for existing old factory
halls, workshops or similar large areas and so closes a gap, which has not
previously been filled by the known central roof air-conditioning plants,
in the requirements for a modern ventilating system which is economical
with regard to energy.
By the illustrated embodiment both blowers suck the air streams through the
heat exchanger, however it is also possible for the two blowers to press
the air streams through the heat exchanger.
While I have disclosed one embodiment it is to be understood that this
embodiment is given by example only and not in a limiting sense.
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Description  |
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