Background of the invention
Field of the invention
[0001] The present invention relates to cooking apparatuses for cooking or baking foods,
of the type having a cooking chamber, like cooking ovens, both for domestic and for
professional use. Within this general scope, the present invention relates to improvements
in respect of the treatment of vapors produced in the cooking chamber while cooking
food. In the rest of the description, with "cooking" it will be intended any kind
of preparation of foods by heat, including baking.
Overview of the relevant known art related to the invention
[0002] Cooking apparatuses comprise a cooking chamber in which food is cooked. During the
cooking process, vapors forms in the cooking chamber of the cooking apparatus. Vapors
are predominantly in the form of steam and consist of water vapor for the most part;
in addition, they also contain oils and fats, which are present in the form of aerosols
or else in liquid form. Other components may also be contained therein.
[0003] Vapors are created during the cooking process through the vaporization of water that
is naturally contained in the foods being cooked; in addition, however, vapor that
is deliberately fed into the cooking chamber of the apparatus (either by way of an
external steam generator or else by direct vaporization of water inside of the hot
cooking chamber) for some types of cooking also contributes to the creation of vapors.
This water vapor is intentional and is important for certain aspects of the cooking
process.
[0004] When fat-containing foods or fat-containing cooking products are cooked at high temperatures,
the aforementioned oil and fat aerosols are additionally created.
[0005] Vapors in excess must be exhausted to the outside, otherwise an undesired vapor pressure
would build up within the cooking chamber. Some conventional cooking apparatuses have
an exhaust air opening from which steam or vapors can escape into the room air, but
this can lead to a strong accumulation of moisture and heat in the room air in the
surroundings of the cooking apparatus and in the entire kitchen premises; moreover,
the room is also dirtied by the oil and fat aerosols contained in the escaped vapors.
All this is totally unsatisfying.
[0006] US 2011/072983 discloses a cooking apparatus having a cooking chamber, wherein the vapors created
in the cooking chamber are removed with a vapor outlet channel. A vapor condensation
device brings the vapors into contact with a cooling liquid. The vapor condensation
device has a container, in which a liquid bath is located. The vapor outlet channel
carries the vapors out of the cooking chamber into the container of the vapor condensation
device. There, the vapors are brought into contact with the liquid from the liquid
bath and thereby partially condensed. Furthermore, a device drain is provided. The
container of the vapor condensation device has a vapor guide element, that guides
the vapors through one or more channels in the container; the vapor guide element
is configured such that one wall of the wall surfaces of the channel or channels is
formed by the surface of the liquid bath in the container.
[0007] EP 691513 discloses an oven having a cooking interior enclosed by a door and casing. There
is a heater and floor drain removing condensate. Above the oven, an extraction hood
removes water vapor, via a fan. Preferably, a suction duct connects the extraction
hood to drain. A hood intake is immediately above the door opening and leads to a
condenser integral with the hood; this has vertical baffle surfaces defining a steam
channel. The base surfaces slant toward the extraction duct connection.
Summary of the invention
[0008] The Applicant has tackled the problem of devising a solution for providing an oven
with an improved treatment of vapors produced in the cooking chamber while cooking
or baking food.
[0009] According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided an oven comprising
an oven chamber for the cooking of foods, heating means for heating the oven chamber,
and a vapor exhaust system for treating vapors produced in the oven chamber during
a food cooking process.
[0010] The vapor exhaust system comprises:
a first region in fluid communication with the oven chamber so as to receive vapors
exiting the oven chamber and wherein the vapors are de-moisturized and cooled down;
and
a second region downstream the first region and wherein the de-moisturized and cooled
down vapors exiting the first region are mixed to hot dry air before being exhausted
to the outside ambient.
[0011] Therefore, the oven has, associated with the first region, means for demoisturize
and cool down vapors received from the oven chamber, and, associated with the second
region, means for mixing hot dry air to the vapors exiting the first region.
[0012] Preferably, said first region extends vertically.
[0013] Advantageously, in the first region a tortuous path for the vapors is formed. Said
tortuous path may be a duct comprising a plurality of baffles.
[0014] In an embodiment, at least one of said baffles is hollow and is run through a heat-exchange
fluid.
[0015] Advantageously, a coolant liquid feeding device may be associated with said first
region, arranged for feeding a coolant liquid into the first region for cooling down
the vapors.
[0016] Said coolant liquid feeding device may comprise at least one liquid feeding nozzle
adapted to spray coolant liquid into said first region in a nebulized form.
[0017] Said coolant liquid feeding device may for example be arranged to cause the coolant
liquid to enter into the first region proximate to a top side thereof.
[0018] Said coolant liquid feeding device is preferably connected to an activator adapted
to selectively activate said coolant liquid feeding device for selectively feeding
the coolant liquid.
[0019] Preferably, at least a temperature sensor is associated with the first region, arranged
for sensing the temperature of the vapors entering into the vapors exhaust system.
[0020] Said coolant liquid feeding device may be selectively activated based on a sensed
temperature of the vapors sensed by said temperature sensor.
[0021] The oven may comprise at least an air propeller associated with said vapor exhaust
system and configured for promoting the exit of vapors from the oven chamber and their
flow through the vapor exhaust system.
[0022] Said air propeller may comprise an axial or radial fan arranged at the exit of the
second region.
[0023] Said air propeller may be selectively activatable.
[0024] Advantageously, said hot dry air comprises air exploited to cool down at least one
among a door of the oven and/or air exploited to cool down internal oven parts subjected
to heat up during the oven operation.
Brief description of the drawings
[0025] The following detailed description of exemplary and non-limitative embodiments of
the present invention will help to render the above as well as other features and
advantages of the present invention clearer. For its better intelligibility, the following
description should be read while referring to the attached drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1 schematically shows an oven according to an embodiment of the present invention,
in cross-section according to a vertical plane orthogonal to a front of the oven;
FIG. 2 schematically shows the oven of FIG. 1 in cross section according to a plane parallel to the front of the oven, indicated
in FIG. 1 as II-II;
FIG. 3 schematically shows the oven of FIG. 1 and FIG. 2 in cross section according to a horizontal plane, indicated in FIG. 2 as III-III;
Fig. 4 is a schematization of a vapor exhaust tower of the oven of FIG. 1 to FIG. 3, with indicated different vapor control regions;
FIG. 5 is a schematization similar to FIG. 4, with notations used in a mathematical analysis of the different vapor control regions;
FIG. 6 is a simplified Carrier diagram or psychrometric chart (specific humidity in ordinate
versus temperature in abscissa), of the humid air for a first control region of the vapor
exhaust tower;
FIG. 7 is a complete Carrier diagram of the humid air for a first control region of the
vapor exhaust tower;
FIG. 8 is a complete Carrier diagram of the humid air for a second control region of the
vapor exhaust tower;
FIG. 9 is a schematic flowchart of an exemplary way of operation of the oven according to
an embodiment of the present invention, and
FIG. 10 shows, in a schematical view similar to that of FIG. 5, a vapor exhaust tower according to another embodiment of the present invention.
Description of exemplary embodiments of the invention
[0026] Referring to
FIG. 1, FIG. 2 and
FIG. 3, an oven according to an embodiment of the present invention is schematically depicted,
in three cross-sectional views (as explained in the Brief description of the drawings).
[0027] The oven, denoted as a whole
100, comprises an oven chamber
105 (cooking chamber) wherein the foods to be cooked/backed are to be introduced for
being cooked.
[0028] The oven chamber
105 is a delimited region of space within an oven cabinet
110 having a front opening
115 for inserting/removing the foods, which is selectively closable by an oven door
120, hinged to the oven cabinet
110 so as to be movable by an oven user between a closed position (the one depicted in
FIG. 1) adapted to close the front opening
115, and an open position (not depicted in the drawings) in which the oven chamber
105 is accessible through the front opening
115.
[0029] Inside the oven chamber
105, heating elements
125, for example one or more resistive heaters, are provided, energizable for heating
up the oven chamber environment.
[0030] Preferably, an air propeller
130 is also provided inside the oven chamber
105, operable (possibly in a selective way, depending on a food cooking program selected
by the oven user) to cause air circulation within the oven chamber
105 so as to better distribute the air heated up by the heating elements
125 and achieve a more uniform temperature inside the oven chamber
105.
[0031] It is pointed out that although in
FIG. 1 the heating elements
125 are depicted as arranged at the periphery of the air propeller
130, this is merely an example; the heating elements might be arranged in different locations,
and/or additional heating elements might be arranged in different locations of the
oven chamber
105, e.g. at the top and/or at the bottom thereof.
[0032] The oven door
120 is designed so to have an air gap
135 formed therein, for the passage of cooling air
140 having the function of cooling the external panel
145 (usually of glass or other transparent material) of the oven door
120, in order to keep such external panel at a temperature sufficiently low not to be
harmful for the oven user. The oven door cooling air
140 is for example taken in from the outside ambient,
e.g. through an opening formed at the bottom of the door
120.
[0033] In a space formed between the oven chamber
105 and the walls of the oven cabinet
110, thermally-insulating material
150 is preferably provided, in order to avoid heat dissipation from inside the oven chamber
105 to the outside ambient, and at the same time reducing the temperature of the cabinet
walls when the oven
100 is operating.
[0034] Albeit not shown, it is intended that the oven
100 may comprise several other components, like for example a steam and/or microwaves
generator(s) to be supplied to the oven chamber
105 for performing some particular kinds of cooking processes.
[0035] According to the present invention, the oven
100 is equipped with a system for exhausting vapors that are produced within the oven
chamber 105 when foods are cooked. Advantageously, the vapor exhaust system is integrated,
embedded in the structure of the oven
100.
[0036] In the exemplary embodiment of the present invention here presented, the vapor exhaust
system comprises a vapor exhaust tower
155 which is accommodated at the rear of the oven
100, e.g. approximately at the center or more or less proximate to a corner of the oven cabinet
110, like the rear-left corner (looking the oven
100 frontally), as shown in the drawings (it is intended that the position of the vapor
exhaust tower
155 is not at all limitative for the present invention).
[0037] The vapor exhaust tower
155 according to an embodiment of the present invention will be hereafter described with
the help of the principle schematic of
FIG. 4.
[0038] The concept at the basis of the vapor exhaust tower
155 according to the present invention is the (selective) superposition of three physical
phenomena: a dehumidification, de-hydration, moisture condensation of the vapors coming
from the oven chamber
105 (phenomenon
A); a cooling of the vapors (phenomenon
B), and an adiabatic intermixing of the vapors with relatively hot and dry air (phenomenon
C).
[0039] In an embodiment of the present invention, phenomena
A and
B may take place concurrently, as depicted in the schema of
FIG. 4, in a bottom section
405 of the exhaust tower
155; phenomenon
C takes place in a top section
410 of the exhaust tower
155.
[0040] Referring back to
FIG. 1 and
FIG. 2, the exhaust tower
155 is, at a bottom thereof (i.e., at a bottom of the bottom section
405), fluidly connected to a vapor discharge duct
160 that, having an inlet
165 preferably at the bottom of the oven chamber
105 (
e.g., approximately in the central position), runs, preferably declining, towards an
outlet
170 opening approximately at the bottom of the exhaust tower bottom section
405.
[0041] The bottom of the exhaust tower bottom section
405 is also fluidly connected to a liquid drainage
175 (only part of which is shown), which, when the oven is installed in a kitchen, is
connected to a kitchen water drainage spigot.
[0042] In the exhaust tower bottom section
405, a tortuous, sinuous, serpentine, labyrinthic path is formed, for example, as in the
example depicted in the drawings, by means of properly offset baffles
177.
[0043] In a vertical position along the exhaust tower bottom section
405, vertical position that in the shown embodiment is approximately at the top of the
exhaust tower bottom section
405, an inlet
415 for a cooling liquid is advantageously present, which for example may comprise a
nozzle for spraying cooling water that is selectively fed, for example under control
of a valve
420, e.g. an electrovalve, controlled by an oven control unit (shown only schematically in
FIG. 4 and denoted
423). The nozzle preferably is adapted to spray water in a nebulized form,
i.e. as very small droplets. The cooling water is for example fed via a piping that,
when the oven is installed, is coupled to a water outlet spigot of the kitchen.
[0044] Preferably, a temperature sensor
425 may be provided in a vertical position along the exhaust tower bottom section
405, for example approximately at the bottom of the exhaust tower bottom section
405, proximate to the outlet of the vapor discharge duct
160. When present, the temperature sensor
425 is in signal connection with the oven control unit
423 to communicate thereto the readings about the temperature of the vapors exiting the
oven chamber
105. The oven control unit
423 may for example be programmed so as to activate the electrovalve
420 when the temperature of the vapors exiting the oven chamber
105 (and entering the vapor exhaust tower
155) reaches a pre-set temperature, which may also depend on the specific cooking programme
selected by the oven user.
[0045] At a top thereof, the exhaust tower bottom section
405 has an opening
430 leading into the exhaust tower top section
410, which is for example more or less vertically aligned to the underlying bottom section
405. The exhaust tower top section
410 has one or more inlets for relatively hot and dry air, which is introduced so as
to be intermixed to the de-moisturized vapor that, after exiting the oven chamber
105, has passed through the exhaust tower bottom section
405. The exhaust tower top section
410 may include a first hot air inlet
433, in the shown example located more or less midway the exhaust tower top section
410, for admitting hot air that has been taken in from the outside ambient for cooling
oven parts like the motor for the air propeller
130, among which there may be the exhaust tower bottom section
405, and a second hot air inlet
435, in the shown example located more or less at the top of the exhaust tower top section
410, for admitting the oven door cooling air
140, that, after passing in the gap
135 formed in the oven door
120, passes in a gap between the oven chamber
105 and a top panel of the oven cabinet
110.
[0046] A fan
180 is advantageously provided at the top of the exhaust tower top section
410. The fan
180, that preferably is selectively activatable by the oven control unit
423, creates a depression inside the exhaust tower
155 and sucks the vapor and the cooling fluxes inside it. Downstream the fan
180, i.e. on top of it, the exhaust tower
155 opens into the external ambient or into a discharge duct.
[0047] For the sake of explanation of its principle of operation, the system for exhausting
vapor according to an embodiment of the present invention can advantageously be regarded
as made up by two so-called "control regions". A first control region is the exhaust
tower bottom section
405, where the phenomena
A and
B take place. A second control region is the exhaust tower top section
410, where the phenomenon
C takes place.
[0048] In the first control region
405, the labyrinthic path formed by the baffles
177 allows compactizing the vapor exhaust tower
155, thereby reducing its space occupation.
[0049] When the electrovalve
420 is open and the nozzle
415 sprays cooling water, thanks to the presence of the baffles
177 a sort of waterfall-type filter is formed, that at each fall condenses the vapors
exiting the oven chamber
105 and filters them by retaining the particles of fat transported by the vapors.
[0050] The baffles
177 allows the cooling water, sprayed by the nozzle
415, to have more time and surface area available for enhancing heat exchange between
the sprayed cooling water and the vapors coming from the oven chamber
105. In addition, the presence of the baffles
177 enables the sprayed cooling water to release at least part of the heat absorbed by
the vapors to the baffles
177 and the walls of the vapor exhaust tower
155 (this heat can then be dispersed outside the vapor exhaust tower
155, and may advantageously contribute to heating up the air that is then introduced into
the exhaust tower top section
410 through the first air inlet
433). Concurrently, the injected cooling water cools down the baffles
177, on which the moisture contained in the vapors can condensate.
[0051] The injection of the cooling water by the nozzle
415 in the form of nebulized droplets, creates a sort of fog inside the first control
region
405, that contributes to the increase of the thermal exchange area and at the same time
reduces the power and resources (water) consumption and the generated noise.
[0052] In the second control region
410, the heat released by the vapors passing through the first control region (exhaust
tower bottom section)
405 as well as by the operation of the oven (
e.g., the motor of the air propeller
130) is caused to be absorbed by the cooling air (that enters into the vapor exhaust
tower
155 through the first hot air inlet
433), thereby increasing the temperature thereof. This allows to reduce the relative
humidity of the cooling air (at constant specific humidity), thereby increasing the
capacity of the cooling air of absorbing the residual humidity of the vapors exiting
the first control region
405, when they are mixed with the cooling air: in fact, by increasing the temperature
of the cooling air, the specific humidity of the flow of intermixed vapors and cooling
air remains substantially the same, while the relative humidity decreases; the capability
of absorbing the humidity contained in the flow of vapors is thus increased.
[0053] FIG. 5 schematizes again the vapor exhaust system according to an embodiment of the present
invention, and should be referred to as an aid for the following analytical analysis
of the energy and mass balance. Hereafter, for the purpose of notation, it is assumed
that the normal to the control regions is directed as exiting the surface delimiting
the control regions. The mechanical work is regarded as positive if exiting the control
regions (
i.e., when directed as the normal to the control regions) whereas the heat is regarded
as positive if entering into the control regions (
i.e., when opposite to the normal). The energy and mass flows are regarded as positive
if directed as the normal to the control regions.
[0054] The vapor exhaust system according to an embodiment of the present invention can
be regarded as comprised of three "control volumes" or "control regions": the first
and second control regions
405 and
410 introduced in the foregoing, and a third control region made up by the union of the
first and second control regions
405 and
410.
[0055] For the purpose of notation, hereinafter the terms
ṁ denote mass flow rates of dry air; the subscript
"steam" denotes the flows containing a certain amount of vapor. In any case, the term
ṁ is to be intended as referred to the fraction of dry air present in a flow, whereas
the fraction of humid air present in a flow is denoted as
ṁ · x, with x denoting the specific humidity. The terms with subscript
"engine" or
"door" refer to the flux of cooling air of the engine of the air propeller
130 (entering into the vapor exhaust tower
155 through the inlet opening
433) and, respectively, of the flux
140 of the cooling air of the oven door (entering into the vapor exhaust tower
155 through the opening
435).
[0056] Let:
- r0 be the water vaporization heat (water vaporization enthalpy), and
- cp, cv constants.
[0057] Then:

where x denotes the specific humidity and φ denotes the relative humidity,
and where the mass flows rates
ṁsteam and
ṁsteam2 of dry air entering and exiting the first control region
405 (equal to each other, since as mentioned above the mass flow rates are referred to
the fraction of dry air) are defined as
ṁa:

[0058] The energy and mass balance equations for the first control region
405 are:

where the first equation (Eq. (1)) relates to energy (the suffix "-" for the heat
Q1 means that the heat exits the control region; the symbols
h denote the enthalpy), and the second equation (Eq. (2)) relates to the mass of water.
The term (
xsteam-
xsteam2) is due to the condensation of moisture.
[0059] In order to solve the first equation Eq. (1) for the energy, let
FIG. 6 be considered, showing a simplified Carrier diagram for humid air. The transformation
"1 → 2" marked on the diagram can be decomposed into the two transformations "1 →
3" (latent contribution) and "3 → 2" (sensible contribution).
[0060] Considering that:

where
hadenotes the enthalpy of a dry air flow and
hvdenotes the enthalpy of a flow of humid air, being:

it follows that Eq. (4) becomes:

and then, by derivation of Eq. (5):

[0061] The energy balance equation (Eq. (1)) can thus be developed as:

[0062] By defining:

and

the following developments are possible (introducing Eq, (2), Eq. (7) and Eq. (8)
in Eq. (6)):

where:

is the heat flow at the walls;

are the fractions of sensible and latent energies of the flow of humid air;
ṁH2O (
hH2Oout - hH2O) is the Energy fraction of the liquid;
ṁahH2Oout(
xsteam - xsteam2) is the Energy fraction of the condensed water.
[0063] FIG. 7 depicts the complete Carrier diagram of the humid air for the first control region
405. The point on the diagram indicated as 1 corresponds to the state of the flow of vapors
upon entering into the first control region; the point indicated as
2 corresponds to the state of the flow of vapors upon exiting the first control region.
As can be appreciated looking at the diagram, the state of the flow of vapors exiting
the first control region is rather close to the state indicated as s on the diagram,
corresponding to the saturation condition (with relative humidity φ equal to 100%):
thus, by spraying cooling water into the first control region, the temperature of
the vapors decreases, and the relative humidity φ increases, but the specific humidity
x decreases (because the flow of vapors exiting the first control region has a lower
content of humidity).
[0064] Coming to the second control region
410, FIG. 8 depicts the respective humid air Carrier diagram. The point
2 on the diagram represents the starting state of the flow of vapors upon entering
into the second control region (it corresponds to the point
2 on the Carrier diagram of
FIG. 7).
[0065] The balance equations are:

where Eq. (10) is the energy balance equation and Eq. (11) is the mass balance equation.
[0066] Dividing the two equations above for
ṁfinal it follows:

[0067] The state of the flow of vapors, in the second control region, moves from point
2 to point
4, which represents the state of the flow of vapors exiting the second control region.
Points
5 and
6 represent the states of the flows of hot and dry air entering into the second control
region and that are mixed with the flow of vapors: both are characterized by a low
relative humidity φ).
[0068] The third control region is the union of the first and second control regions
405 and
410. The energy and mass balance for the third control region can thus be obtained from
the above equations. The result is that the variables related to the common surfaces
to the first and second control regions are eliminated,
i.e. ṁsteam2hsteam2, and
ṁsteam2xsteam2 (
ṁsteam2 =
ṁa).
[0069] At the end, the flow of vapors exiting the second control region has a relatively
low content of humidity.
[0070] FIG. 9 is a simplified flowchart illustrating a possible way of operation of the oven
100 according to an embodiment of the present invention.
[0071] When the oven
100 is started, the oven control unit
423 reads the operation selected by the oven user (block
905). The oven control unit
423 then decides whether or not the oven user has selected and started a cooking operation
(decision block
910). If the oven user has not decided to start a cooking operation (exit branch N of
decision block
910), the operation flow jumps back to block
905. If instead the oven user has selected and started a cooking operation (exit branch
Y of decision block
910), the oven control unit
423 obtains information about the type of cooking selected by the oven user (block
915).
[0072] Then, depending on the type of cooking selected by the oven user, the oven control
unit
423 decides whether or not the air propeller
180 is to be activated (block
920). If yes, the air propeller
180 is activated, if not, the air propeller
180 is kept off.
[0073] Still based on the type of cooking selected by the oven user, the oven control unit
423 determines (block
921) at which pre-set temperature of the vapors entering the vapor exhaust tower
155, the electrovalve
420 is to be activated to enable the intake of cooling water; such determination made
by the control unit
423 may be carried out exploiting a database of parameters database, from which the oven
control units
423 picks at which pre-set temperature of the vapors entering the vapor exhaust tower
155. Then, by exploiting the readings of the temperature sensor
425, the oven control unit
423 monitors the temperature of the vapors leaving the oven chamber
105 (block
923). In particular, the oven control unit
423 checks if such temperature is over the pre-set intervention temperature (block
925).
[0074] Until the temperature of the vapors leaving the oven chamber
105 and entering into the vapor exhaust tower
155 remains below the pre-set intervention temperature (exit branch
N of decision block
925), the oven control unit
423 checks whether the cooking process is terminated (decision block
930): if the oven control unit
423 determines that the cooking process is terminated (exit branch
Y of decision block
930), the oven control unit
423 checks (decision block
931) if the electrovalve
420 is currently open: in the affirmative case (exit branch
Y of decision block
931) the electrovalve
420 is closed (block
933); after closing the electrovalve
420 (or leaving it closed, if it was already closed - exit branch
N of decision block
931), the oven control unit
423 checks (decision block
935) whether the fan
180 is running: in the affirmative case (exit branch
Y of decision block
935), the fan
180 is left running for a predetermined time after the end of the cooking process, whereas
if the fan
180 is not running (exit branch
N of decision block
935) the oven control unit
423 activates the fan
180 (block
940) for a predetermined time. The operation flow then jumps back to block
905. If the oven control unit
423 determines that the cooking process has not terminated yet (exit branch
N of decision block
930), the oven control unit
423 checks whether the electrovalve
420 is activated (decision block
943): in the negative case (exit branch
N of decision block
943), the operation flow returns to block
923, where the oven control unit
423 obtains a new reading of the temperature sensor
425; if instead the oven control unit
423 assesses that the electrovalve
420 is activated (exit branch
Y of decision block
943), the oven control unit
423 de-activates the electrovalve
420 (block
945) and then the operation flow returns to block
923.
[0075] Let now be supposed that the temperature of the vapors leaving the oven chamber exceeds
the pre-set temperature (decision block
925, exit branch
Y): the oven control unit
423 activates the electrovalve
420 (block
950); cooling water thus starts to be sprayed by the nozzle
415 into the exhaust tower bottom section
405, to cool the vapors exiting the oven chamber
105.
[0076] The oven control unit
423 then determines whether the cooking process has terminated (decision block
955): if not (exit branch
N of decision block
955), the operation flow jumps back to block
923 (where the oven control unit
423 obtains a new reading of the temperature sensor
425; if instead the oven control unit
423 determines that the cooking process has terminated (exit branch
Y of decision block
955), the oven control unit
423 obtains (through the temperature sensor
425) the temperature of the vapors entering into the vapor exhaust tower
155 (block
960), and then the oven control unit
423 checks whether the temperature of the vapors exceeds the pre-set intervention temperature
(decision block
965): until the vapors temperature stays above the pre-set intervention temperature (exit
branch
Y of decision block
965), the electrovalve
420 is kept open, and the oven control unit
423 continues to monitor the vapor temperature. When the vapor temperature falls below
the pre-set intervention temperature (exit branch
N of decision block
965) the electrovalve
420 is closed (block
933) and the same operations described above (blocks
935 and
940) are performed. The operation flow returns to block
905.
[0077] In other words, the injection of cooling water into the exhaust tower bottom section
405 (i.e., into the first control region of the vapor exhaust system) is selectively
enabled based on an assessment of the temperature of the vapors that leaves the oven
chamber
105 and enters into the vapor exhaust tower. Also the activation of the fan
180 is selective, depending on the cooking process.
[0078] The vapor exhaust system according to the described embodiment of the present invention
comprises a sinuous, tortuous, labyrinthic vapors conduit arranged vertically, into
which cooling water can (selectively) be injected. The tortuous shape of the conduit,
thanks to the depression generated by a fan downstream the first control region (in
the shown example, the fan
180) allows exploiting the inertia of the particles of vapor/fat, pushing them against
the baffles
177 (in particular, against the first ones, proximate to the bottom of the exhaust tower
bottom section
405). The spray of nebulized cooling water allows capturing the finest particulate (and
this effect is also promoted by the baffles
177 proximate to the top of the exhaust tower bottom section
405, which are cooled down by the water spray).
[0079] Experimental trials carried out by the Applicant have shown that the temperature
of the vapor flow exiting the vapor exhaust system according to the described embodiment
of the present invention, also in critical operating conditions (oven chamber temperature
set to 250 °C and 100% of humidity), did not exceed 30 °C at a relative humidity of
25% (with 19 °C of ambient air temperature).
[0080] In
FIG. 10 there is depicted, schematically as in
FIG. 4, a vapor exhaust tower according to a slightly different embodiment of the present
invention; components, parts and elements that are identical, similar or equivalent
to those described in connection with the previous embodiment are denoted with same
reference numerals. A difference of the embodiment of
FIG. 10 compared to the previous embodiment resides in that at least part (one, more than
one, possibly all) of the baffles
177, like the baffles
1077 visible in the figure, are hollow at their interior and arranged to be run through
by a relatively cold heat-exchange fluid
1005 (
e.g., liquid, like water), which receives heat released from the vapors passing through
the first control volume
405. In this way, the heat released by the vapors leaving the oven chamber can be at least
partly collected by the heat-exchange fluid, instead of being only dissipated.
[0081] Another difference in the embodiment of
FIG. 10 compared to the previous embodiment is the different position of the nozzle
415 (which in this embodiment is not at the top of the first control region) and of the
temperature sensor
425 (which in this embodiment is not at the bottom of the first control region). In particular,
differently from the previous embodiment, in this embodiment the nozzle
415 is associated to a lower portion of the bottom section
405 with respect to the temperature sensor
425.
[0082] In
FIG. 10 just one opening in the exhaust tower top section
410 is shown; this single opening may schematize the two openings
433 and
435 of the previous embodiment, but it might also be possible that through such single
opening both of the two cooling air fluxes enter into the vapor exhaust tower. In
still other embodiments, one of the two cooling air fluxes might be absent.
[0083] Also with the vapor exhaust tower of the embodiment of
FIG. 10, the oven
100 may operate as described in connection with the previous embodiment (flowchart of
FIG. 9).
[0084] In the foregoing, exemplary embodiments of the present invention have been presented
and described in detail. Several modifications to the described embodiments, as well
as alternative ways of practicing the invention are conceivable, without departing
from the protection scope defined by the appended claims.