US20110100617A1 - Air-conditioning apparatus - Google Patents

Air-conditioning apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20110100617A1
US20110100617A1 US12/768,936 US76893610A US2011100617A1 US 20110100617 A1 US20110100617 A1 US 20110100617A1 US 76893610 A US76893610 A US 76893610A US 2011100617 A1 US2011100617 A1 US 2011100617A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
air
room
pressure
temperature
supply
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/768,936
Inventor
Albert Bauer
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from DE19654542A external-priority patent/DE19654542C2/en
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US12/768,936 priority Critical patent/US20110100617A1/en
Publication of US20110100617A1 publication Critical patent/US20110100617A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F3/00Air-conditioning systems in which conditioned primary air is supplied from one or more central stations to distributing units in the rooms or spaces where it may receive secondary treatment; Apparatus specially designed for such systems
    • F24F3/044Systems in which all treatment is given in the central station, i.e. all-air systems
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F11/00Control or safety arrangements
    • F24F11/30Control or safety arrangements for purposes related to the operation of the system, e.g. for safety or monitoring
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F11/00Control or safety arrangements
    • F24F11/62Control or safety arrangements characterised by the type of control or by internal processing, e.g. using fuzzy logic, adaptive control or estimation of values
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F11/00Control or safety arrangements
    • F24F11/70Control systems characterised by their outputs; Constructional details thereof
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F11/00Control or safety arrangements
    • F24F11/70Control systems characterised by their outputs; Constructional details thereof
    • F24F11/72Control systems characterised by their outputs; Constructional details thereof for controlling the supply of treated air, e.g. its pressure
    • F24F11/74Control systems characterised by their outputs; Constructional details thereof for controlling the supply of treated air, e.g. its pressure for controlling air flow rate or air velocity
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F11/00Control or safety arrangements
    • F24F11/70Control systems characterised by their outputs; Constructional details thereof
    • F24F11/72Control systems characterised by their outputs; Constructional details thereof for controlling the supply of treated air, e.g. its pressure
    • F24F11/74Control systems characterised by their outputs; Constructional details thereof for controlling the supply of treated air, e.g. its pressure for controlling air flow rate or air velocity
    • F24F11/76Control systems characterised by their outputs; Constructional details thereof for controlling the supply of treated air, e.g. its pressure for controlling air flow rate or air velocity by means responsive to temperature, e.g. bimetal springs
    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05DSYSTEMS FOR CONTROLLING OR REGULATING NON-ELECTRIC VARIABLES
    • G05D23/00Control of temperature
    • G05D23/19Control of temperature characterised by the use of electric means
    • G05D23/1919Control of temperature characterised by the use of electric means characterised by the type of controller
    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05DSYSTEMS FOR CONTROLLING OR REGULATING NON-ELECTRIC VARIABLES
    • G05D23/00Control of temperature
    • G05D23/19Control of temperature characterised by the use of electric means
    • G05D23/1927Control of temperature characterised by the use of electric means using a plurality of sensors
    • G05D23/193Control of temperature characterised by the use of electric means using a plurality of sensors sensing the temperaure in different places in thermal relationship with one or more spaces
    • G05D23/1932Control of temperature characterised by the use of electric means using a plurality of sensors sensing the temperaure in different places in thermal relationship with one or more spaces to control the temperature of a plurality of spaces
    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05DSYSTEMS FOR CONTROLLING OR REGULATING NON-ELECTRIC VARIABLES
    • G05D27/00Simultaneous control of variables covered by two or more of main groups G05D1/00 - G05D25/00
    • G05D27/02Simultaneous control of variables covered by two or more of main groups G05D1/00 - G05D25/00 characterised by the use of electric means
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F11/00Control or safety arrangements
    • F24F11/0001Control or safety arrangements for ventilation
    • F24F2011/0002Control or safety arrangements for ventilation for admittance of outside air
    • F24F2011/0004Control or safety arrangements for ventilation for admittance of outside air to create overpressure in a room
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F2110/00Control inputs relating to air properties
    • F24F2110/40Pressure, e.g. wind pressure

Definitions

  • the invention relates to an air-conditioning apparatus which regulates the temperature in at least one room by ventilation with heated or cooled air to a predetermined desired temperature value.
  • Air-conditioning apparatuses are used to create in the air-conditioned rooms comfortable conditions of occupation at any time of year, as they hold the temperature and humidity of the room air within fixed limits and provide for a sufficient ventilation with fresh air.
  • the supply air temperature is higher than the room air temperature when the air is also meant to warm the room, and in summer the supply air is injected at a lower temperature in order to hold the room at the desired cooled room air temperature.
  • a conventional air-conditioning apparatus circulates too high an amount of air, the temperature of which has been adapted to the heating and cooling requirement. This is regarded as disadvantageous as a large volume of air is circulated even after the desired temperature has already been reached. Moreover, the danger exists that the supply air will be blown into the room through the supply air channel and will immediately leave the room to be air-conditioned through the exhaust air channel. There takes place very minimal mixing of the new supply air with the air present in the room.
  • Underlying the present invention is the problem of providing an air-conditioning apparatus which operates economically, ensures more comfortable room conditions and an optimal mixing of the room air with the supply air, in order to achieve a rapid adaptation to the desired heating, cooling, humidifying and dehumidifying values.
  • an air-conditioning apparatus which regulates the temperature in at least one room to a predetermined desired temperature value by ventilation with heated or cooled air.
  • the apparatus is provided with a supply air motor which feeds the supply air through a supply air channel to the room to be air-conditioned, with a cooling and/or heating device introduced into the supply air channel for the cooling or warming of the supply air, and with an exhaust air motor which draws the exhaust air through an exhaust channel out of the room to be air-conditioned, in which the desired value for the regulator of the exhaust air motor builds up a room excess pressure established with respect to the outside pressure.
  • Underlying the invention is the perception that the greater the excess pressure is in a room to be air-conditioned, the better is the ventilation by the supply air blown through the room. Therefore, the room warms up faster, the efficiency of the installation is improved and great temperature fluctuations in the room are avoidable for example, very warm at the top and very cool at the bottom, as are also temperature differences over the length and width of the room.
  • a good flow of air through the room ensures that in the shortest possible time and with a smaller amount of air, a room is heated, cooled, humidified or dehumidified.
  • the smaller amount of supply air blown in is found pleasant. Because of the faster adaptation to the desired heating, cooling, humidifying and dehumidifying values, the efficiency of the air-conditioning apparatus is improved.
  • the desired value for the regulator of the exhaust air motor is determined in dependence on the outside temperature and/or on the supply air temperature and/or on the supply air pressure.
  • This regulating of the exhaust air motor, in dependence on the outside temperature and/or on the supply air temperature and/or on the supply air pressure, is important for the optimization of the air flow.
  • the actual value for the regulator of the exhaust air motor is determined by a pressure difference between the channels, which is calculated from the difference between the absolute value of the pressure in the supply air channel and the absolute value of the pressure in the exhaust air channel. It will then be the case that, for example, excess pressure disturbances will occur in the air-conditioning apparatus in several rooms as a result of opening of windows in individual rooms, and therefore this results in an undesired rise in the excess pressure in the other rooms, taking place through the regulation of the exhaust air motor, by reason of the pressure loss in one room.
  • the actual value for the regulator of the exhaust air motor is formed by the room pressure difference which is calculated from the difference between the outside pressure and the room pressure.
  • the room excess pressure varies exclusively over a predetermined temperature range of the outside temperature and/or of the supply air temperature, with a change in the outside temperature or of the supply air temperature, in which with an outside temperature below this temperature range, the room excess pressure has in each case a certain constant value, and, with an outside temperature or supply air temperature above this temperature range, the room excess pressure always has a further definite constant value.
  • the room pressure falls from a maximum excess pressure to a minimal excess pressure.
  • the room difference pressure is measured at a height or level over 0 (room height).
  • Room height corresponds to outside elevation in respect to sea level.
  • the temperature of the supply air and the channel pressure of the supply air are coupled with one another in such manner that both, in dependence on the value of the room temperature to the value of the supply air temperature and also in dependence on the value of the room temperature to the desired value of the room temperature, the channel pressure of the supply air is raised or lowered in the room, rooms or room zones.
  • heated air with the higher channel pressure is blown into the room only if the temperature of the supply air lies clearly above the predetermined desired temperature of the room and therewith, in the warming-up phase, lies far above the actual value of the room.
  • the channel pressure of the supply air into the room, the rooms, or the room zones is adjusted over the range of the supply air motor.
  • the channel pressure of the supply air is lowered with rising room temperature.
  • the channel pressure of the supply air is raised with rising supply air temperature.
  • the channel pressure is raised with falling supply air temperature.
  • the increase of the channel pressure of the supply air is found to be pleasant.
  • the efficiency of the heating and cooling apparatus is improved, as will be stated again further below.
  • the channel pressure of the supply air varies exclusively over a predetermined temperature range of the supply air temperature. If the supply air temperature presents a value below this temperature range, then the channel pressure of the supply air is allocated in each case to a certain constant magnitude. If the supply air temperature presents a value above the temperature range, then the channel pressure of the supply air is allocated in each case to a further determined constant magnitude.
  • the channel pressure rises over the predetermined temperature range of the channel pressure from its minimum performance up to its maximum performance with rising supply air temperature, and it correspondingly falls with falling supply air temperature.
  • the regulating circuit which regulates the channel pressure of the supply air is subordinated to the temperature regulating circuit; the desired supply channel pressure value being set in a fixed relation to the actual value of the supply air temperature.
  • the room temperature swings back faster to the desired temperature value.
  • the heated supply air is made available over a common supply air channel.
  • each room has a different heating requirement.
  • the individual rooms or room zones are connected in each case through a supply air and an exhaust air line allocated to them from the central supply air and exhaust air channels, and in the individual supply air and/or exhaust air lines, throttle control valves are arranged through which the channel pressure of the supply air is adjusted in the rooms or room zones.
  • the regulation of the control valves can occur additionally in dependence on supply air pressure or on the speed of the supply air motor.
  • the exhaust air channel and the supply air channel are connected with one another over a return air channel, in which case at least one air exhaust throttle control valve is provided in the return air channel, and at least one fresh air throttle control valve is provided in the fresh air channel engaged ahead of the supply air channel.
  • the minimum cross section of the throttle control valves is adjusted in dependence on the opening of the fresh air throttle control valve, of the exhaust air throttle control valve and of the mixing air throttle control valve, so that in each regulation situation there is ensured the minimum amount of fresh air.
  • the opening positions of the throttle control valves allocated relative to one another in a room or in a room zone are equal.
  • regulators are used for the temperature regulation. In practice, these regulators tend to an overswinging and underswinging of the regulating magnitude.
  • the setting value of at least one regulator is connected to a subordinated switching arrangement, and the switching arrangement, in the case of an overswinging (exceeding) of the regulating magnitude, selects a value predetermined for it, as the setting magnitude, which clearly lies under the value chosen simultaneously by the regulator.
  • Such a behavior can advantageously be obtained by an additional control arrangement and a minimum-selection arrangement.
  • This additional control arrangement delivers, in dependence on the regulating difference, a predetermined minimal value for the setting magnitude when an overswinging of the regulating magnitude occurs, and a predetermined maximal value of the setting magnitude when the actual value of the temperature (the regulating magnitude) lies below the desired value.
  • the minimum selection arrangement then in each case selects the minimum, from the values made available by the regulator and the additional control arrangements and forwards the selected value as setting magnitude. In this manner the additional control arrangements always take over the control of the setting magnitude when by reason of the setting magnitude of the regulator, an overswinging (exceeding) occurs in the regulating magnitude.
  • a fresh air control valve in a fresh air channel engaged on inlet side of the supply air channel a mixed air control valve in a return air channel connecting the supply air channel with the exhaust air channel, and a discharge air control valve in a discharge air channel connecting to the exhaust air channel, in which situation the settings of the fresh air control valve, of the discharge air control valve and of the mixed air control valve are regulated in common dependence on the speed of the supply air motor or on the channel pressure of the supply air, and in which up to a certain minimal opening for the ensuring of a fresh air minimum, with increasing speed of the supple air motor and/or with rising channel pressure of the supply air, the opening cross sections of the fresh air control valve and of the discharge air control valve can be reduced and the opening cross section of the mixed air control valve can be increased.
  • the opening position of the fresh air control valve and the opening position of the exhaust air control valve are always of equal size.
  • the opening position of the mixed air control valve is always the difference of the opening position or the fresh air or exhaust air control valve to 100%, for example, if the opening positions of the fresh air control valve and exhaust air throttle control valve are each case 70%, then the opening position of the mixed air control valve is 30%. If the mixed air control valve has an opening position of 70%, then the opening positions of the fresh air and exhaust air control valves are in each case 30%.
  • more than one room is air-conditioned from a central installation.
  • the actual temperature of each room is fed to a central regulating arrangement, and a temperature value to be determined individually from these individual actual values, is supplied as an actual value for the heating regulator
  • a humidifying arrangement which humidifies the supply air in the supply air channel, in which process the humidifying arrangement is regulated both in dependence on the room moisture or the exhaust air moisture as well in dependence on the supply air temperature.
  • a first heating device installed in the supply air channel, a cooling device located after the first heating device in the supply air channel, and a second heating device installed after the cooling device in the supply air channel for the heating, cooling and dehumidifying of the supply air, the second heating device being regulated for the desired moisture value in dependence on the actual moisture value.
  • the heating performance of the second heating device rises.
  • the heating performance of the second heating device is regulated either with a regulator or it climbs with rising actual moisture value over a predetermined moisture range of the room moisture; at a room moisture content below this moisture range, the heating performance has in each case a certain constant magnitude and at a room moisture above the moisture range, the heating performance has in each case a further determined constant magnitude.
  • a dehumidifying is brought about over a rising room temperatures insofar as the actual value of the room temperature remains under the limit value from which the cooling process is initiated. Cooling starts only when the actual value of the room temperature is greater than the desired value of the room temperature plus the temperature displacement dependent on the outside temperature.
  • the channel pressure of the supply air is not raised during the dehumidifying process.
  • the regulation of the fresh air control valve and of the discharge air control valve occurs in dependence on the opening position of the mixed air control valve.
  • FIG. 1 shows a schematic representation of the air circulation in an air-conditioning apparatus according to the invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a block circuit diagram with the most important elements of the regulating and control arrangements in an example of execution.
  • FIG. 3 is a block circuit diagram with important elements of the temperature regulating circuit from FIG. 2 .
  • FIG. 4 is a block circuit diagram of a conveyance volume regulating circuit of the supply air from FIG. 2 .
  • FIG. 5 is a block circuit diagram of an individual temperature regulating circuit for each room from FIG. 2 .
  • FIG. 6 a shows the relation between the supply air temperature and the supply air pressure for the example of execution when the room actual temperature is less than the desired room temperature value.
  • FIG. 6 b shows the relation between the room temperature and the supply air pressure for the example of execution when the actual vacuum room temperature is greater than or equal to the desired room temperature value.
  • FIG. 7 is a block circuit diagram of the temperature regulator of the example of execution.
  • FIG. 8 a is a block circuit diagram of the regulator of the exhaust air motor of the example of execution.
  • FIG. 8 b is a block circuit diagram with the most important elements from FIG. 8 a.
  • FIG. 8 c shows the relation between the desired value of the room difference pressure for the regulator of the exhaust air motor.
  • FIG. 9 shows the relation between the room exhaust air moisture and the setting magnitude for the after-heater.
  • FIG. 10 is a run-off diagram with the most important block circuit diagram elements participating in the heating-up process.
  • FIG. 1 there is schematically represented the air circulation of a multi-room air-conditioning system. From the rooms 1 to be air-conditioned there lead, on the one hand, supply air lines 5 to a supply air channel 10 and, on the other hand, exhaust air lines 6 to an exhaust air channel 11 .
  • the supply air channel 10 and the exhaust air channel 11 are connected with one another through a return air channel 12 .
  • a fresh air throttle control valve 70 in the return air channel 12 a mixed air throttle control valve 72 and in the exhaust air channel 21 an exhaust air throttle control valve 71 .
  • the supply air channel 10 there are arranged successively in flow direction of the air a first heating device 30 , a cooling device 40 , a second heating device 33 , a supply air motor 15 and a humidifying device 50 .
  • the pure airing case office operation
  • the drawn off room air i.e. the exhaust air
  • the exhaust air channel 21 to the outer atmosphere
  • the fresh air channel 20 the required supply air is drawn as fresh air into the supply air channel 10 .
  • the fresh air throttle control valve 70 and the exhaust throttle air control valve 71 are opened and the mixed air throttle air control valve 72 is closed.
  • the fresh air throttle control valve 70 and the exhaust air throttle control valve 71 always have equal opening settings.
  • the drawn-in fresh air flows through the first heating device 30 (preheater) through which drawn-in air is brought according to a heating requirement to the requisite supply air temperature T ZU .
  • the disengaged cooling device 40 and the second heating device 33 Afterheater, it is fed to the humidifying arrangement 50 , which supplies the necessary moisture to the air.
  • the cooling device 40 is in operation.
  • the afterheater 33 is in operation for the dehumidifying.
  • both the first heating device 30 and also the second heating device 33 can be in operation. This, however is possible for the heating case, not for the dehumidifying case.
  • the air worked-up in this way is fed to the individual rooms to be air-conditioned, through the supply air motor 15 , the supply air channel 10 and the supply air lines 5 , with the throttle control valves 60 .
  • the volume of the air blown-in and drawn off from each individual room can be regulated by the throttle control valves 60 , 61 arranged in the supply air lines 5 and in the exhaust air lines 6 individually.
  • a setting value Yv is calculated and supplied to the air throttle control valves 550 in FIG. 2 , or 70 , 71 , 72 in FIG. 1 .
  • the mixed air throttle control valve 72 in the return air channel 12 is supplied the exactly opposite control signal.
  • the open position of the mixed air throttle control valve 72 is always the difference between the open position of the fresh air control valve 70 or of the exhaust air control valve 71 and 100%.
  • the open position of the fresh air control valve 70 and of the exhaust air control valve 71 amounts in each case to 70%, then the open position of the mixed air control valve 30 amounts to 30%. If the mixed air control valve has an open position of 70%, then the open position of the fresh air control valve 70 and of the exhaust air control valve 71 is in each case 30%.
  • the lowest value T RAUM IST MIN is determined and used for the calculation of the heating requirement.
  • the actual temperature T RAUM IST MIN in the block circuit diagram element 100 is subtracted from the predetermined (maximal) desired temperature T RAUM SOLL (of all the rooms).
  • T regulating difference
  • y′ for the heating valve 170 of the heating device 30 in FIG. 1 .
  • the setting value Yr calculated in FIG. 3 for the temperature regulation is monitored by the circuited arrangement 125 arranged on an outlet side in order largely to prevent an overswinging of the temperature usual with conventional regulators.
  • the arrangement 125 forwards the setting value Y R unaltered as y′ onward to the heating valve 170 . If, however, T RAUM IST MIN exceeds the desired temperature T RAUM SOLL then, instead of Y R a much smaller setting value y′ will be forwarded on to the heating valve 170 .
  • the value of the setting magnitude y′ assures in this case the minimally required supply air temperature T ZU MIN , which is dependent on the outside temperature T A . In this manner with the example of execution, there is achieved a maximal overswinging of the desired temperature by only 0.3° C.; a falling below this virtually does not take place.
  • the monitoring of the setting signal Y R of the regulator 120 is executed in the example of execution by a switching arrangement 127 in FIG. 7 and a minimum selection arrangement 128 .
  • the control arrangement simultaneously generates, for the regulator 120 , a setting signal Y S which takes on a maximally great value as long as the desired temperature T RAUM SOLL lies above the actual temperature T RAUM IST and down to the very low setting Y S MIN as soon as the actual temperature exceeds the desired value.
  • the setting value Y S MIN of the control arrangement 128 is adjusted by the computing arrangement 129 for the cutting-off of the otherwise occurring underswinging of the temperature regulation in dependence on the outside temperature T A with which the fresh air is drawn in.
  • the minimum selection arrangement 128 in each case selects, from the two setting value signals Y R and Y S at its disposal, the smaller one and forwards this onward as y′ to the heating valve 170 . In this manner there is prevented, insofar as possible, an overswinging of the temperature to be regulated.
  • the conveyance of the supply air motor 15 is adjusted over the generated supply air pressure P ZU .
  • P ZU SOLL value calculating arrangement 200 shown in FIG. 2 there is determined a desired value P ZU SOLL for the supply air pressure.
  • the relation between the supply air temperature T ZU and the supply air pressure P ZU SOLL is given in FIG. 6 a , for the case in which the room temperature T RAUM IST is less than the desired value of the room temperature T RAUM SOLL .
  • the relation between the room temperature T RAUM IST and the desired value of the supply air pressure P ZU SOLL is represented in FIG. 6 b , for the case in which the room temperature T RAUM IST is greater than the desired value of the room temperature T RAUM SOLL , or is equal to the desired value for the supply air temperature T RAUM SOLL.
  • the desired supply air pressure P ZU SOLL determined by the P ZU SOLL value calculating arrangement 200 in FIG. 2 is compared in the block circuit diagram element 230 with supply air actual pressure P ZU IST .
  • the pressure difference P is supplied to the pressure regulation 250 .
  • the complete pressure regulating circuit is represented in FIG. 4 .
  • the regulating difference ⁇ P is fed to the regulator 240 , which sets-in the setting magnitude Y P .
  • a limit value switch 245 monitors the setting value Y P , so that a predetermined minimum pressure P ZU MIN which corresponds to a predetermined minimum ventilation volume is not gone below.
  • the setting value Y P of the limit value switch 245 controls the air supply motor 285 in FIG. 4 or 15 in FIG. 1 , which generates the pressure of the regulating controller 286 .
  • the tempered supply air in the supply air channel 10 is available over the supply air lines 5 for the ventilating and heating-up of all the rooms 1 .
  • the volume of the air blown in or drawn off in each room is adapted to the particular actual heating requirement. For this in each case there are used the desired temperature, the actual temperature, the supply air temperature and the minimum ventilation volume for the setting of the throttle valves.
  • This regulating circuit represented in FIG. 2 as a block circuit forming element 300 , is reproduced in FIG. 5 .
  • the individual desired temperature T SOL N is compared with the corresponding actual temperature T ISTN ; the regulating difference T N ascertained there is supplied to the regulator 320 .
  • the temperature difference, ⁇ T N of the supply air temperature T ZU and of the supply air pressure P ZU , this generates a setting signal Y T which must not fall below a minimal value which is yielded from the actual supply air pressure P ZU and from the minimal pressure P ZU MIN .
  • the setting signal Y T N is fed to the throttle valves 330 in FIG. 5 , and 60 , 61 in FIG. 1 .
  • the regulating controller of this individual temperature regulating circuit is represented by the block circuit element 340 .
  • the throttle valves 60 , 61 are regulated, therefore, in dependence on the temperature desired value T RAUM SOLL in each room individually, on the temperature actual value T RAUM IST measured in each individual room, of the temperature value of the supply air temperature T ZU , as well as in dependence on the supply air pressure P ZU and/or the speed of the supply air motor.
  • the regulating circuit ensures, for the adjustment of the opening cross section of the throttle valves 60 , 61 , a certain minimum opening cross section yielded in dependence on the supply air pressure, which cross section is not gone below in the adjustment of the throttle valves 60 , 61 .
  • This minimum opening cross section is adjusted there in such manner that each room receives a predetermined absolute minimum fresh air volume.
  • the minimum opening cross section of the throttle valves 60 , 61 is likewise adjusted in dependence on the opening of the fresh air valve 70 , of the exhaust air valve 71 and of the mixed air valve 72 .
  • the opening settings of the throttle valves 60 , 61 allocated to one another in a room 1 are equal.
  • the desired value for the exhaust air motor is calculated on dependence on the outside temperature in the P DIFF SOLL value calculating arrangement 710 , in which operation this desired value forms a room excess pressure P DIFF SOLL established in respect to the outside pressure P A in dependence on the outside temperature.
  • the desired value P AB SOLL can also be determined in dependence on the supply air temperature and/or on the supply air pressure.
  • the outside temperature T A exceeds a certain limit value, for example an outside temperature of ⁇ 10° C.
  • the desired value P DIFF SOLL of the exhaust air motor falls with rising outside temperature from its maximum P DIFF SOLL MAX to its minimum P DIFF SOLL MIN with a further limit value, for example with an outside temperature of +15° C.
  • the desired value of the exhaust air motor P DIFF SOLL corresponds either to the maximal room difference pressure D DIFF SOLL MAX or to the minimal room difference pressure P DIFF SOLL MIN .
  • the desired value of the exhaust air motor P DIFF SOLL determined by the value calculating arrangement 710 in FIG. 8 a is compared in the block circuit diagram 700 with the room difference actual pressure value P DIFF IST in one room and in several rooms with the supply air and exhaust air channel pressure differential.
  • the pressure difference ⁇ P is fed to the pressure regulation 730 .
  • the complete pressure regulating circuit is presented in FIG. 8 b .
  • the regulating difference ⁇ P DIFF is fed to the regulator 740 , which adjusts the setting magnitude Y P DIFF . If in a large room several windows are open, the exhaust fan can be shut off entirely—only in this way is it possible to maintain a slight excess pressure.
  • the exhaust air motor 785 in FIG. 8 b , or 16 in FIG. 1 which generates the pressure is controlled by the regulating controller 786 .
  • the room difference pressure P DIFF IST is measured there at a level above 0 (sea level).
  • the air humidity in the air-conditioned rooms is regulated. It is measured preferably as relative air moisture (in percent of the vapor pressure at full saturation) and expressed by a simplified designation F in the following. It is entirely possible, however, to use instead of the relatively humidity, the absolute humidity (g of water vapor per m 3 of air), the vapor pressure, the specific moisture (in g H 2 O per kg of moist air) or as mixture ratio (in g H 2 O per kg of dry air). With use of the relative humidity, the dependence on the saturation limit is advantageously integrated into the value. According to the VDI ventilation rules, air humidity should amount in winter, at 20° C. room temperature, to 35% to 70% relative air humidity, and, in summer, at 22° C. air temperature, to 70%, and at 25° C., to 60%.
  • the difference between the desired air moisture F AB SOLL and actual air moisture F AB IST in which representationally for the air moisture in the individual rooms in the example of execution, the moisture of the exhaust air F AB is measured and adjusted.
  • the determined moisture difference ⁇ F AB is first introduced into a limit value circuit device 610 , which on the basis of predetermined minimal and maximal moisture F AB MIN and F AB MIN in dependence on the supply and exhaust air temperature, prevents the saturation limit from being exceeded in any place in the air circulation. From this limit value switching device 610 , a corrected regulating difference ⁇ F AB , is now led to the regulator 620 , which controls the air moistener 630 over the control signal Y L . Thereby, the moisture of the supply air F ZU is adjusted.
  • the regulating controller is represented by the block circuit diagram element 640 .
  • the second heating device 33 in the heating case, may also contain the signal Y′ of the first heating device 30 .
  • the second heating device ( 33 ) serves, however, as an after-heater essentially for the dehumidifying.
  • This second heating device ( 33 ) is regulated in dependence on the actual value moisture F IST for the desired value moisture, in which with rising actual value moisture F IST over the desired value moisture F SOLL the heating performance of the second heating device ( 33 ) rises.
  • the rise of the heating performance of the second heating device ( 33 ) moves over a predetermined moisture range of the room moisture F IST . This relation is represented in FIG. 9 . At a room moisture F IST before this moisture range, the second heating device ( 33 ) is not in operation.
  • control arrangement it is made certain that the conveyance volume of the supply air is not increased during the dehumidifying process and that only a minimum amount of fresh air is blown in.
  • FIG. 10 For a better illustration of the regulating system, in the following there is described, by way of example, a warming-up process such as ordinarily takes place in the morning.
  • the block circuit diagram elements participating in the run-off of the regulation are represented in FIG. 10 .
  • the actual temperatures of all the rooms 1 and the temperature of the drawn-in fresh air lie far above the desired temperature for the rooms 1 . Since the temperature of the supply air is still very low, no more supply air is blown into the rooms. For this, a minimal air pressure P ZU MIN , corresponding to the minimum of fresh air volume, is generated.
  • the regulator At a lower outside temperature below 16° C., the regulator is prior-occupied at the start with a value according to the outside temperature, so that the installation will show no frost disturbance when starting.
  • the minimum-selection arrangement 400 selects the lowest value and conducts this to the block circuit diagram element 100 .
  • the regulating difference ⁇ T between the desired and actual value of the room air temperatures is formed and supplied to the regulator 120 and the control arrangement 127 .
  • the regulator 120 determines a setting value Y R .
  • a setting value Y S is determined, which takes on a maximally great value as long as the desired temperature lies above the actual temperature.
  • the selection arrangement 128 selects the smaller one, at this time point the setting value Y R of the regulator 120 , and conducts it onward to the heating device ( 30 ). This warms up the air flowing through the air supply channel ( 10 ). Therewith, the air supply temperature T ZU rises continuously. From a predetermined temperature threshold value of the air supply, for example T M SOLL +5° C., with further rising air supply temperature, the air supply pressure also is increased, since the regulation of the air supply pressure occurs in dependence on the temperature of the air supply. The conveyance volume increases and there takes place a maximally rapid heating-up of all the rooms.
  • the increased air volume consists not only of fresh air, but a part of the exhaust air again is conducted to the supply air through the environmental air channel 12 in FIG. 1 . In this manner, the rooms 1 are sufficiently ventilated and, simultaneously, it is not necessary to heat up much fresh air needlessly.
  • the fresh air constituent is only—at least—such that the requisite excess pressure is achieved.
  • the heating-up process When the heating-up process is concluded, usual commercial regulators do not lower the setting value rapidly enough to prevent a rise of the actual temperatures of the rooms I over the desired temperature. For this reason the setting value Y S of the control arrangement 127 on exceeding of the desired temperature falls to a predetermined minimal value Y S MIN . Now the minimum selection arrangement 128 selects the value Y S of the control arrangement 127 and passes it onward as y′ to the heating device 30 . Thereupon the air supply temperature again falls, and after a short time the rooms again receive only the minimum fresh air volume that is sufficiently tempered to prevent a lowering of the actual temperature of the air supply below the desired temperature of the air supply. The regulator can therefore slowly reduce its output.
  • the selection arrangement 400 selects the lowest actual temperature of the unheated rooms and passes it on to the block circuit diagram element 100 .
  • a setting value y′ is set in and the supply air pressure rises correspondingly. So that the rooms will not be supplied with very warm supply air which have already reached the desired temperature, however, the individual room temperature regulation 300 regulates the blow-in air volume of the throttle valves 60 , 61 for each room separately. In this manner the throttle valves 60 , 61 of the rooms in which the actual temperature are closed to the minimum opening, which ensures that the rooms are sufficiently ventilated.
  • the throttle valves 60 , 61 of the room being heated rising T zu is opened up by the P DiFF , up to 100%, in order to make possible a rapid heating-up. Only when this room has reached its desired temperature does the air-conditioning regulation again set in the minimum ventilation and desired temperature holding state.

Abstract

The invention relates to an air-conditioning apparatus which regulates at least the temperature of at least one room to a predetermined temperature desired value (TRAUM SOLL) by ventilation with heated or cooled supply air. The air-conditioning apparatus has a supply air motor (15) which feeds the supply air over a supply air channel (10) to the room (1) to be air-conditioned, a cooling and/or heating device (30, 40 33) for the cooling or warming of the supply air, and an exhaust air motor (16) which draws the exhaust air from the room (1) to be air-conditioned over an exhaust air channel (11). According to the invention, the desired value (PAB SOLL) for the regulator of the exhaust air motor (16) forms a room excess pressure established with respect to the outside pressure (PA).

Description

    CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/998,507, filed Dec. 26, 1997, now pending and related to application Ser. No. 10/273,068, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,929,062.
  • FIELD OF INVENTION
  • The invention relates to an air-conditioning apparatus which regulates the temperature in at least one room by ventilation with heated or cooled air to a predetermined desired temperature value.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • Air-conditioning apparatuses are used to create in the air-conditioned rooms comfortable conditions of occupation at any time of year, as they hold the temperature and humidity of the room air within fixed limits and provide for a sufficient ventilation with fresh air.
  • In winter the supply air temperature is higher than the room air temperature when the air is also meant to warm the room, and in summer the supply air is injected at a lower temperature in order to hold the room at the desired cooled room air temperature.
  • Ordinarily, to achieve this, a conventional air-conditioning apparatus circulates too high an amount of air, the temperature of which has been adapted to the heating and cooling requirement. This is regarded as disadvantageous as a large volume of air is circulated even after the desired temperature has already been reached. Moreover, the danger exists that the supply air will be blown into the room through the supply air channel and will immediately leave the room to be air-conditioned through the exhaust air channel. There takes place very minimal mixing of the new supply air with the air present in the room.
  • Further, when air-conditioning several rooms, there is the problem that different desired temperatures are sought in the different rooms. An adaptation of the temperatures which takes into consideration the comfort in each room is possible only with difficulty.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • Underlying the present invention is the problem of providing an air-conditioning apparatus which operates economically, ensures more comfortable room conditions and an optimal mixing of the room air with the supply air, in order to achieve a rapid adaptation to the desired heating, cooling, humidifying and dehumidifying values.
  • This problem is solved according to the invention by an air-conditioning apparatus which regulates the temperature in at least one room to a predetermined desired temperature value by ventilation with heated or cooled air. The apparatus is provided with a supply air motor which feeds the supply air through a supply air channel to the room to be air-conditioned, with a cooling and/or heating device introduced into the supply air channel for the cooling or warming of the supply air, and with an exhaust air motor which draws the exhaust air through an exhaust channel out of the room to be air-conditioned, in which the desired value for the regulator of the exhaust air motor builds up a room excess pressure established with respect to the outside pressure. Further advantageous embodiments of the invention form the objects of the subclaims.
  • Underlying the invention is the perception that the greater the excess pressure is in a room to be air-conditioned, the better is the ventilation by the supply air blown through the room. Therefore, the room warms up faster, the efficiency of the installation is improved and great temperature fluctuations in the room are avoidable for example, very warm at the top and very cool at the bottom, as are also temperature differences over the length and width of the room.
  • A good flow of air through the room ensures that in the shortest possible time and with a smaller amount of air, a room is heated, cooled, humidified or dehumidified. The smaller amount of supply air blown in is found pleasant. Because of the faster adaptation to the desired heating, cooling, humidifying and dehumidifying values, the efficiency of the air-conditioning apparatus is improved.
  • In particular, the desired value for the regulator of the exhaust air motor is determined in dependence on the outside temperature and/or on the supply air temperature and/or on the supply air pressure. This regulating of the exhaust air motor, in dependence on the outside temperature and/or on the supply air temperature and/or on the supply air pressure, is important for the optimization of the air flow. The higher the supply air temperature or the supply air pressure is, the greater the excess pressure would have to be for a favorable flow of air through the room to be air-conditioned with the supply air. The lower, however, the outside temperature is, the higher as a rule, therefore, the excess pressure in the room to be air-conditioned has to be. There must, therefore, be present a greater excess pressure for ensuring an optimal flow of air through the room with the blown-in supply air.
  • On the one hand, preferably the actual value for the regulator of the exhaust air motor is determined by a pressure difference between the channels, which is calculated from the difference between the absolute value of the pressure in the supply air channel and the absolute value of the pressure in the exhaust air channel. It will then be the case that, for example, excess pressure disturbances will occur in the air-conditioning apparatus in several rooms as a result of opening of windows in individual rooms, and therefore this results in an undesired rise in the excess pressure in the other rooms, taking place through the regulation of the exhaust air motor, by reason of the pressure loss in one room.
  • On the other-hand, preferably the actual value for the regulator of the exhaust air motor is formed by the room pressure difference which is calculated from the difference between the outside pressure and the room pressure.
  • Here above all, the room excess pressure varies exclusively over a predetermined temperature range of the outside temperature and/or of the supply air temperature, with a change in the outside temperature or of the supply air temperature, in which with an outside temperature below this temperature range, the room excess pressure has in each case a certain constant value, and, with an outside temperature or supply air temperature above this temperature range, the room excess pressure always has a further definite constant value. Above all, with rising outside temperature, in that temperature range, the room pressure falls from a maximum excess pressure to a minimal excess pressure.
  • Thereby account is taken of two opposite demands. On the one hand, for a good flow of air through the room to be air conditioned, it is required that the excess pressure be as high as possible. On the other hand, the excess pressure must not be too great, because it is otherwise felt to be disagreeable, and with too great excess pressure doors open themselves or no longer can be opened or closed without a high expenditure of force.
  • So that a comfortable regulation will be accomplished and an excess pressure will be ensured independently from the height or the floor level of the room to be air-conditioned, the room difference pressure is measured at a height or level over 0 (room height). Room height corresponds to outside elevation in respect to sea level.
  • According to one embodiment of the invention, the temperature of the supply air and the channel pressure of the supply air are coupled with one another in such manner that both, in dependence on the value of the room temperature to the value of the supply air temperature and also in dependence on the value of the room temperature to the desired value of the room temperature, the channel pressure of the supply air is raised or lowered in the room, rooms or room zones.
  • The advantages herewith achieved lie especially in that a great volume of air-conditioned air is not unnecessarily circulated, but always only that volume is used that is required for a maximally rapid adaptation of the actual room values to the predetermined desired values.
  • In this manner not only are savings in energy achieved, but people in the room find it considerably more agreeable when a relatively strong air movement takes place only when the temperature of the blown-in air deviates from the actual temperature. With conventional air-conditioning apparatuses, in contrast, especially during the morning warming-up phase, even at a room temperature that lies far below the desired value only slightly warmed supply air is blown into the rooms at a high channel pressure. This was hitherto felt to be disagreeable by the persons concerned, but it was regarded as unavoidable.
  • According to the present embodiment of the invention, heated air with the higher channel pressure is blown into the room only if the temperature of the supply air lies clearly above the predetermined desired temperature of the room and therewith, in the warming-up phase, lies far above the actual value of the room. By a relation regulation in which the channel pressure of the supply air is set in a fixed relation to the supply air temperature, a corresponding coupling of channel pressure of the supply air pressure to the supply air temperature can be realized especially advantageously.
  • Preferably the channel pressure of the supply air into the room, the rooms, or the room zones is adjusted over the range of the supply air motor.
  • For a selecting arrangement a choice can be made between two delivery volume relations.
  • In the first place, for the heating case in which the desired value of the room temperature is less than the actual value of the room temperature, the channel pressure of the supply air is lowered with rising room temperature. Correspondingly, for the cooling case in which the desired value of the room temperature is greater than the actual value of the room temperature, the channel pressure of the supply air is lowered with falling room temperature. In the second place, for the heating case in which the desired value or the actual value of the room temperature is less than the supply air temperature and the actual value of the room temperature is less than the desired value of the room temperature, the channel pressure of the supply air is raised with rising supply air temperature. Correspondingly, for the cooling case in which the desired value or actual value of the room temperature is greater than the supply air temperature and the actual value of the room temperature is greater than the desired value of the room temperature, the channel pressure is raised with falling supply air temperature. The increase of the channel pressure of the supply air is found to be pleasant. Moreover, the efficiency of the heating and cooling apparatus is improved, as will be stated again further below.
  • According to a further embodiment of the invention, the channel pressure of the supply air varies exclusively over a predetermined temperature range of the supply air temperature. If the supply air temperature presents a value below this temperature range, then the channel pressure of the supply air is allocated in each case to a certain constant magnitude. If the supply air temperature presents a value above the temperature range, then the channel pressure of the supply air is allocated in each case to a further determined constant magnitude.
  • In particular, with a supply air temperature higher with respect to the room temperature, the channel pressure rises over the predetermined temperature range of the channel pressure from its minimum performance up to its maximum performance with rising supply air temperature, and it correspondingly falls with falling supply air temperature.
  • Through the two regulating systems of the supply air channel pressure behavior, on the one hand it is made possible for the efficiency of the air-conditioning apparatus to be improved. With higher channel pressure of the supply air, there is achieved also a more rapid and better flow through the room, and therewith a faster heating up of the rooms. On the other hand, for reasons of comfort, too great an air flow should be avoided, since this is felt to be disagreeable. The opposite demands are now optimally satisfied.
  • Here, the regulating circuit which regulates the channel pressure of the supply air is subordinated to the temperature regulating circuit; the desired supply channel pressure value being set in a fixed relation to the actual value of the supply air temperature. Herewith there is avoided any excessive increasing or decreasing in the temperature regulation. The room temperature swings back faster to the desired temperature value.
  • With air-conditioning for several rooms, the heated supply air is made available over a common supply air channel. In case of different desired and actual temperatures of all the rooms, however, each room has a different heating requirement. In order to take this circumstance into account, according to a further form of execution of the invention, in the simultaneous air-conditioning of several rooms or room zones, the individual rooms or room zones are connected in each case through a supply air and an exhaust air line allocated to them from the central supply air and exhaust air channels, and in the individual supply air and/or exhaust air lines, throttle control valves are arranged through which the channel pressure of the supply air is adjusted in the rooms or room zones.
  • Thereby undesired air movements are avoided in rooms, the actual and desired values of which are alike or approximately alike. Moreover it is achieved that, for example, in the case of a fully open fresh air control valve, an excessive amount of fresh air is not worked up.
  • The regulation of the control valves can occur additionally in dependence on supply air pressure or on the speed of the supply air motor.
  • In such an independent regulation of supply air temperature and individual room temperature, a situation can arise in which a single room has to be heated as rapidly as possible, but other rooms that already lie at their desired temperature are to be heated up as little as possible. When the supply air temperature rises, the individual regulation of these warm rooms will tend to close the control valves. Therewith, however, these rooms and the persons present in them are cut off from the fresh air supply.
  • This problem is advantageously solved according to a further embodiment, in which at a supply air temperature that lies above the desired temperature, in rooms the actual temperature of which corresponds to the desired temperature, the requisite minimum volume of fresh air also is blown. In this manner it is achieved that these rooms are supplied with sufficient fresh air; nevertheless, a possible warming of the rooms by reason of a supply air temperature that lies above the desired temperature is avoided insofar as possible. The minimum opening required for the prescribed minimum fresh air volume depends on the supply air temperature and on the fresh air component of the supply air, for the fresh air component of the supply air is reduced, if possible, during the warming-up phase in the morning for a maximally rapid heating up, being replaced by return air.
  • According to one embodiment, the exhaust air channel and the supply air channel are connected with one another over a return air channel, in which case at least one air exhaust throttle control valve is provided in the return air channel, and at least one fresh air throttle control valve is provided in the fresh air channel engaged ahead of the supply air channel.
  • According to a further embodiment, the minimum cross section of the throttle control valves is adjusted in dependence on the opening of the fresh air throttle control valve, of the exhaust air throttle control valve and of the mixing air throttle control valve, so that in each regulation situation there is ensured the minimum amount of fresh air.
  • With regulated channel pressure for the supply air and for the exhaust air, the opening positions of the throttle control valves allocated relative to one another in a room or in a room zone are equal.
  • Analogously to the heating regulation, there can also take place a cooling regulation.
  • For the temperature regulation, regulators are used. In practice, these regulators tend to an overswinging and underswinging of the regulating magnitude.
  • According to a further embodiment of the invention, in each case the setting value of at least one regulator, especially of the temperature regulator, is connected to a subordinated switching arrangement, and the switching arrangement, in the case of an overswinging (exceeding) of the regulating magnitude, selects a value predetermined for it, as the setting magnitude, which clearly lies under the value chosen simultaneously by the regulator.
  • Such a behavior can advantageously be obtained by an additional control arrangement and a minimum-selection arrangement. This additional control arrangement delivers, in dependence on the regulating difference, a predetermined minimal value for the setting magnitude when an overswinging of the regulating magnitude occurs, and a predetermined maximal value of the setting magnitude when the actual value of the temperature (the regulating magnitude) lies below the desired value. The minimum selection arrangement then in each case selects the minimum, from the values made available by the regulator and the additional control arrangements and forwards the selected value as setting magnitude. In this manner the additional control arrangements always take over the control of the setting magnitude when by reason of the setting magnitude of the regulator, an overswinging (exceeding) occurs in the regulating magnitude.
  • According to a further embodiment of the invention there are provided a fresh air control valve in a fresh air channel engaged on inlet side of the supply air channel, a mixed air control valve in a return air channel connecting the supply air channel with the exhaust air channel, and a discharge air control valve in a discharge air channel connecting to the exhaust air channel, in which situation the settings of the fresh air control valve, of the discharge air control valve and of the mixed air control valve are regulated in common dependence on the speed of the supply air motor or on the channel pressure of the supply air, and in which up to a certain minimal opening for the ensuring of a fresh air minimum, with increasing speed of the supple air motor and/or with rising channel pressure of the supply air, the opening cross sections of the fresh air control valve and of the discharge air control valve can be reduced and the opening cross section of the mixed air control valve can be increased.
  • The opening position of the fresh air control valve and the opening position of the exhaust air control valve are always of equal size. The opening position of the mixed air control valve is always the difference of the opening position or the fresh air or exhaust air control valve to 100%, for example, if the opening positions of the fresh air control valve and exhaust air throttle control valve are each case 70%, then the opening position of the mixed air control valve is 30%. If the mixed air control valve has an opening position of 70%, then the opening positions of the fresh air and exhaust air control valves are in each case 30%.
  • In a further preferred embodiment of the invention, more than one room is air-conditioned from a central installation. In the case of different heating requirements for the individual rooms, it is also necessary to make available over the supply air a sufficient heating capacity for all the rooms. This can be achieved inter alia by the means that the heating required is measured in accordance to the actual temperature of the coldest room, in order to bring also this room to the desired temperature in a short time. Accordingly, in one form of execution of the invention, in the simultaneous air-conditioning of several rooms, the actual temperature of each room is fed to a central regulating arrangement, and a temperature value to be determined individually from these individual actual values, is supplied as an actual value for the heating regulator
  • According to a further embodiment of the invention, a humidifying arrangement is provided which humidifies the supply air in the supply air channel, in which process the humidifying arrangement is regulated both in dependence on the room moisture or the exhaust air moisture as well in dependence on the supply air temperature.
  • According to a further embodiment of the invention, there are provided a first heating device installed in the supply air channel, a cooling device located after the first heating device in the supply air channel, and a second heating device installed after the cooling device in the supply air channel for the heating, cooling and dehumidifying of the supply air, the second heating device being regulated for the desired moisture value in dependence on the actual moisture value.
  • In particular with a rising actual humidity value which already lies above the desired humidity value, the heating performance of the second heating device rises.
  • The heating performance of the second heating device is regulated either with a regulator or it climbs with rising actual moisture value over a predetermined moisture range of the room moisture; at a room moisture content below this moisture range, the heating performance has in each case a certain constant magnitude and at a room moisture above the moisture range, the heating performance has in each case a further determined constant magnitude.
  • It is hereby achieved that a dehumidifying is brought about over a rising room temperatures insofar as the actual value of the room temperature remains under the limit value from which the cooling process is initiated. Cooling starts only when the actual value of the room temperature is greater than the desired value of the room temperature plus the temperature displacement dependent on the outside temperature. By this heating-up, and therewith, the dehumidifying of the room over the rising temperature, the room is rapidly dehumidified with a relatively low expenditure of energy.
  • The channel pressure of the supply air is not raised during the dehumidifying process.
  • In order to guarantee a minimum amount of fresh air in the room or the rooms, the regulation of the fresh air control valve and of the discharge air control valve occurs in dependence on the opening position of the mixed air control valve.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • The following drawings, which are included to provide further understanding of the present invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate the preferred embodiments of the invention and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the invention.
  • In the simplest case, a single room is tempered and ventilated with the air-conditioning apparatus. The regulation of a multi-room air-conditioning is described in the example of execution with the aid of the drawings, in which:
  • FIG. 1 shows a schematic representation of the air circulation in an air-conditioning apparatus according to the invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a block circuit diagram with the most important elements of the regulating and control arrangements in an example of execution.
  • FIG. 3 is a block circuit diagram with important elements of the temperature regulating circuit from FIG. 2.
  • FIG. 4 is a block circuit diagram of a conveyance volume regulating circuit of the supply air from FIG. 2.
  • FIG. 5 is a block circuit diagram of an individual temperature regulating circuit for each room from FIG. 2.
  • FIG. 6 a shows the relation between the supply air temperature and the supply air pressure for the example of execution when the room actual temperature is less than the desired room temperature value.
  • FIG. 6 b shows the relation between the room temperature and the supply air pressure for the example of execution when the actual vacuum room temperature is greater than or equal to the desired room temperature value.
  • FIG. 7 is a block circuit diagram of the temperature regulator of the example of execution.
  • FIG. 8 a is a block circuit diagram of the regulator of the exhaust air motor of the example of execution.
  • FIG. 8 b is a block circuit diagram with the most important elements from FIG. 8 a.
  • FIG. 8 c shows the relation between the desired value of the room difference pressure for the regulator of the exhaust air motor.
  • FIG. 9 shows the relation between the room exhaust air moisture and the setting magnitude for the after-heater.
  • FIG. 10 is a run-off diagram with the most important block circuit diagram elements participating in the heating-up process.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • In FIG. 1 there is schematically represented the air circulation of a multi-room air-conditioning system. From the rooms 1 to be air-conditioned there lead, on the one hand, supply air lines 5 to a supply air channel 10 and, on the other hand, exhaust air lines 6 to an exhaust air channel 11.
  • In the supply air line 5 there is arranged in each case a throttle control valve 60 and in the exhaust air line 6 in each case a throttle control valve 61
  • The supply air channel 10 and the exhaust air channel 11 are connected with one another through a return air channel 12.
  • On inlet side of the supply air channel 10 there is engaged a fresh air channel 20 and on the outlet side of the exhaust air channel 11 there is engaged an exhaust air channel 21.
  • In the fresh air channel 20 there is provided a fresh air throttle control valve 70, in the return air channel 12 a mixed air throttle control valve 72 and in the exhaust air channel 21 an exhaust air throttle control valve 71.
  • In the supply air channel 10 there are arranged successively in flow direction of the air a first heating device 30, a cooling device 40, a second heating device 33, a supply air motor 15 and a humidifying device 50.
  • In the supply air channel there is generated by the supply air motor 15 an air pressure PZU which provides that the supply air is blown with sufficient conveyance volume into the rooms 1 to be air-conditioned.
  • Correspondingly in the exhaust air channel 11 there is generated by the exhaust air motor 16 a subpressure PAB, which draws off the room air.
  • In the simplest case, the pure airing case (office operation), the drawn off room air (i.e. the exhaust air) is taken off through the exhaust air channel 11 and the exhaust air channel 21 to the outer atmosphere, and through the fresh air channel 20, the required supply air is drawn as fresh air into the supply air channel 10. For this, the fresh air throttle control valve 70 and the exhaust throttle air control valve 71 are opened and the mixed air throttle air control valve 72 is closed. The fresh air throttle control valve 70 and the exhaust air throttle control valve 71, always have equal opening settings.
  • In order to make possible a warming-up of the air-conditioned rooms 1, the drawn-in fresh air flows through the first heating device 30 (preheater) through which drawn-in air is brought according to a heating requirement to the requisite supply air temperature TZU. After passing the disengaged cooling device 40 and the second heating device 33 (afterheater), it is fed to the humidifying arrangement 50, which supplies the necessary moisture to the air.
  • Instead of the first heating device 30, in a required cooling of the rooms to be air conditioned, the cooling device 40 is in operation. In the case of excessive humidity, instead of the moistening device 50, the afterheater 33 is in operation for the dehumidifying. In order to ensure a more rapid heating-up, both the first heating device 30 and also the second heating device 33 can be in operation. This, however is possible for the heating case, not for the dehumidifying case.
  • The air worked-up in this way is fed to the individual rooms to be air-conditioned, through the supply air motor 15, the supply air channel 10 and the supply air lines 5, with the throttle control valves 60. The volume of the air blown-in and drawn off from each individual room can be regulated by the throttle control valves 60, 61 arranged in the supply air lines 5 and in the exhaust air lines 6 individually.
  • In the case of increased heat requirement, for example in the morning warm-up phase, it is advantageous to supply the rooms not only with drawn-in fresh air, but to use a part of the drawn-off room air repeatedly, for in the simultaneous warming-up and ventilation the required supply air volume lies far above the fresh air minimum volume. For this reason, in dependence on the supply air temperature TZU over a control arrangement 500 in FIG. 2, a setting value Yv is calculated and supplied to the air throttle control valves 550 in FIG. 2, or 70, 71,72 in FIG. 1.
  • While the fresh air throttle control valve 70 and the exhaust air throttle control valve 71 receive the same control signal, the mixed air throttle control valve 72 in the return air channel 12, is supplied the exactly opposite control signal. The open position of the mixed air throttle control valve 72 is always the difference between the open position of the fresh air control valve 70 or of the exhaust air control valve 71 and 100%. For example, the open position of the fresh air control valve 70 and of the exhaust air control valve 71 amounts in each case to 70%, then the open position of the mixed air control valve 30 amounts to 30%. If the mixed air control valve has an open position of 70%, then the open position of the fresh air control valve 70 and of the exhaust air control valve 71 is in each case 30%.
  • In this manner it is possible again to feed a certain proportion of the drawn-off room air through the return air channel 12 to the supply air. Simultaneously through the fresh air channel 20 and the fresh air control valve 70, a corresponding fresh air component is supplied to the supply air. This fresh air component amounts in the example of execution in the airing case (during the office hours) to up to 100%. During office hours, therefore, the mixed air control valve 72 as a rule is not opened, and the fresh air control valve 70 and the exhaust air control valve 71 are normally opened to 100% each. With increased heating requirement and a maximal supply air pressure PZU MAX the fresh air component falls to approximately 10%—warming-up phase in the morning.
  • In the air-conditioning, from the measured room temperatures TRAUM ISTI, TRAUM IST2 or TRAUM IST N in the minimal selection arrangement 400 in FIG. 2, the lowest value TRAUM IST MIN is determined and used for the calculation of the heating requirement. For this the actual temperature TRAUM IST MIN in the block circuit diagram element 100 is subtracted from the predetermined (maximal) desired temperature TRAUM SOLL (of all the rooms). On the basis of the temperature difference T (regulating difference), by the temperature regulation 130, there is determined a suitable desired value y′ for the heating valve 170 of the heating device 30 in FIG. 1.
  • The setting value Yr calculated in FIG. 3 for the temperature regulation is monitored by the circuited arrangement 125 arranged on an outlet side in order largely to prevent an overswinging of the temperature usual with conventional regulators. In the normal case, as long as TRAUM IS MIN lies below TRAUM SOLL, the arrangement 125 forwards the setting value YR unaltered as y′ onward to the heating valve 170. If, however, TRAUM IST MIN exceeds the desired temperature TRAUM SOLL then, instead of YR a much smaller setting value y′ will be forwarded on to the heating valve 170. The value of the setting magnitude y′ assures in this case the minimally required supply air temperature TZU MIN, which is dependent on the outside temperature TA. In this manner with the example of execution, there is achieved a maximal overswinging of the desired temperature by only 0.3° C.; a falling below this virtually does not take place.
  • The monitoring of the setting signal YR of the regulator 120 is executed in the example of execution by a switching arrangement 127 in FIG. 7 and a minimum selection arrangement 128. The control arrangement simultaneously generates, for the regulator 120, a setting signal YS which takes on a maximally great value as long as the desired temperature TRAUM SOLL lies above the actual temperature TRAUM IST and down to the very low setting YS MIN as soon as the actual temperature exceeds the desired value.
  • The setting value YS MIN of the control arrangement 128 is adjusted by the computing arrangement 129 for the cutting-off of the otherwise occurring underswinging of the temperature regulation in dependence on the outside temperature TA with which the fresh air is drawn in.
  • The minimum selection arrangement 128 in each case selects, from the two setting value signals YR and YS at its disposal, the smaller one and forwards this onward as y′ to the heating valve 170. In this manner there is prevented, insofar as possible, an overswinging of the temperature to be regulated.
  • In dependence on the temperature of the supply air, the conveyance of the supply air motor 15 is adjusted over the generated supply air pressure PZU. For this first of all, in a PZU SOLL value calculating arrangement 200 shown in FIG. 2, there is determined a desired value PZU SOLL for the supply air pressure. The relation between the supply air temperature TZU and the supply air pressure PZU SOLL is given in FIG. 6 a, for the case in which the room temperature TRAUM IST is less than the desired value of the room temperature TRAUM SOLL.
  • Only when the supply air temperature lies clearly above the desired temperature value, in the example of execution by 5° C., is the desired pressure of the supply air increased. When this supply air temperature is below this threshold, only the volume of air necessary for the ventilation of the rooms is blown into the air-conditioned rooms.
  • The relation between the room temperature TRAUM IST and the desired value of the supply air pressure PZU SOLL is represented in FIG. 6 b, for the case in which the room temperature TRAUM IST is greater than the desired value of the room temperature TRAUM SOLL, or is equal to the desired value for the supply air temperature TRAUM SOLL.
  • With increasing actual room temperature TRAUM IST, when the room temperature is higher than the desired room temperature value TRAUM SOLL, the air supply temperature TZU falls and the supply air pressure PZU falls from its maximal pressure PZU SOLL MAX to its minimal pressure PZU SOLL MIN.
  • The desired supply air pressure PZU SOLL determined by the PZU SOLL value calculating arrangement 200 in FIG. 2 is compared in the block circuit diagram element 230 with supply air actual pressure PZU IST. The pressure difference P is supplied to the pressure regulation 250.
  • The complete pressure regulating circuit is represented in FIG. 4. The regulating difference ΔP is fed to the regulator 240, which sets-in the setting magnitude YP. A limit value switch 245 monitors the setting value YP, so that a predetermined minimum pressure PZU MIN which corresponds to a predetermined minimum ventilation volume is not gone below. The setting value YP of the limit value switch 245 controls the air supply motor 285 in FIG. 4 or 15 in FIG. 1, which generates the pressure of the regulating controller 286.
  • With the corresponding regulating circuit by an exhaust air motor 16 in the exhaust air channel 11 a subpressure PA B is generated which, for the maintaining of a predetermined excess pressure in the rooms, draws off a corresponding volume of air. The regulation of the exhaust air motor 16 will still be further described below.
  • The tempered supply air in the supply air channel 10 is available over the supply air lines 5 for the ventilating and heating-up of all the rooms 1. With the aid of the throttle valves 60, 61, the volume of the air blown in or drawn off in each room is adapted to the particular actual heating requirement. For this in each case there are used the desired temperature, the actual temperature, the supply air temperature and the minimum ventilation volume for the setting of the throttle valves. This regulating circuit, represented in FIG. 2 as a block circuit forming element 300, is reproduced in FIG. 5.
  • In the block circuit element 310, the individual desired temperature TSOL N is compared with the corresponding actual temperature TISTN; the regulating difference TN ascertained there is supplied to the regulator 320. On the basis of the temperature difference, ΔTN, of the supply air temperature TZU and of the supply air pressure PZU, this generates a setting signal YT which must not fall below a minimal value which is yielded from the actual supply air pressure PZU and from the minimal pressure PZU MIN. The setting signal YT N is fed to the throttle valves 330 in FIG. 5, and 60, 61 in FIG. 1. The regulating controller of this individual temperature regulating circuit is represented by the block circuit element 340.
  • The throttle valves 60, 61 are regulated, therefore, in dependence on the temperature desired value TRAUM SOLL in each room individually, on the temperature actual value TRAUM IST measured in each individual room, of the temperature value of the supply air temperature TZU, as well as in dependence on the supply air pressure PZU and/or the speed of the supply air motor.
  • As stated above, the regulating circuit ensures, for the adjustment of the opening cross section of the throttle valves 60, 61, a certain minimum opening cross section yielded in dependence on the supply air pressure, which cross section is not gone below in the adjustment of the throttle valves 60, 61. This minimum opening cross section is adjusted there in such manner that each room receives a predetermined absolute minimum fresh air volume.
  • The minimum opening cross section of the throttle valves 60, 61 is likewise adjusted in dependence on the opening of the fresh air valve 70, of the exhaust air valve 71 and of the mixed air valve 72.
  • With regulated conveyance volume of the supply air and of the exhaust air, the opening settings of the throttle valves 60, 61 allocated to one another in a room 1 are equal.
  • In the regulating of the exhaust air motor 785 according to FIG. 8 b, or 16 according to FIG. 1, the desired value for the exhaust air motor is calculated on dependence on the outside temperature in the PDIFF SOLL value calculating arrangement 710, in which operation this desired value forms a room excess pressure PDIFF SOLL established in respect to the outside pressure PA in dependence on the outside temperature. The desired value PAB SOLL can also be determined in dependence on the supply air temperature and/or on the supply air pressure.
  • The relation between the outside temperature TA and the desired value for the exhaust air motor/=desired value for the room excess pressure PDIFF SOLL, which is yielded from the difference between the desired value of the exhaust air pressure PAB SOLL and the outside pressure PA is represented in FIG. 8 c. If the outside temperature TA exceeds a certain limit value, for example an outside temperature of −10° C., the desired value PDIFF SOLL of the exhaust air motor falls with rising outside temperature from its maximum PDIFF SOLL MAX to its minimum PDIFF SOLL MIN with a further limit value, for example with an outside temperature of +15° C. At an outside temperature before or after this temperature range established by the two limit values, the desired value of the exhaust air motor PDIFF SOLL corresponds either to the maximal room difference pressure DDIFF SOLL MAX or to the minimal room difference pressure PDIFF SOLL MIN.
  • The desired value of the exhaust air motor PDIFF SOLL determined by the value calculating arrangement 710 in FIG. 8 a is compared in the block circuit diagram 700 with the room difference actual pressure value PDIFF IST in one room and in several rooms with the supply air and exhaust air channel pressure differential. The pressure difference ΔP is fed to the pressure regulation 730.
  • The complete pressure regulating circuit is presented in FIG. 8 b. The regulating difference ΔPDIFF is fed to the regulator 740, which adjusts the setting magnitude YP DIFF. If in a large room several windows are open, the exhaust fan can be shut off entirely—only in this way is it possible to maintain a slight excess pressure. With the setting value YP DIFF of the regulator 740, the exhaust air motor 785 in FIG. 8 b, or 16 in FIG. 1 which generates the pressure is controlled by the regulating controller 786.
  • The actual value for the regulator 740 of the exhaust air motor 16 or 785 is formed by the actual room difference pressure PDIFF IST, which is yielded from the difference between the outside pressure PA and the room pressure PRAUM IST=PAB IST. The room difference pressure PDIFF IST is measured there at a level above 0 (sea level).
  • The form of execution described can be used analogously for the cooling.
  • In an additional regulating circuit, the air humidity in the air-conditioned rooms is regulated. It is measured preferably as relative air moisture (in percent of the vapor pressure at full saturation) and expressed by a simplified designation F in the following. It is entirely possible, however, to use instead of the relatively humidity, the absolute humidity (g of water vapor per m3 of air), the vapor pressure, the specific moisture (in g H2O per kg of moist air) or as mixture ratio (in g H2O per kg of dry air). With use of the relative humidity, the dependence on the saturation limit is advantageously integrated into the value. According to the VDI ventilation rules, air humidity should amount in winter, at 20° C. room temperature, to 35% to 70% relative air humidity, and, in summer, at 22° C. air temperature, to 70%, and at 25° C., to 60%.
  • In the block circuit element 600 in FIG. 1, there is determined the difference between the desired air moisture FAB SOLL and actual air moisture FAB IST, in which representationally for the air moisture in the individual rooms in the example of execution, the moisture of the exhaust air FAB is measured and adjusted. The determined moisture difference ΔFAB is first introduced into a limit value circuit device 610, which on the basis of predetermined minimal and maximal moisture FAB MIN and FAB MIN in dependence on the supply and exhaust air temperature, prevents the saturation limit from being exceeded in any place in the air circulation. From this limit value switching device 610, a corrected regulating difference ΔFAB, is now led to the regulator 620, which controls the air moistener 630 over the control signal YL. Thereby, the moisture of the supply air FZU is adjusted. The regulating controller is represented by the block circuit diagram element 640.
  • The second heating device 33, in the heating case, may also contain the signal Y′ of the first heating device 30. The second heating device (33) serves, however, as an after-heater essentially for the dehumidifying. This second heating device (33) is regulated in dependence on the actual value moisture FIST for the desired value moisture, in which with rising actual value moisture FIST over the desired value moisture FSOLL the heating performance of the second heating device (33) rises. The rise of the heating performance of the second heating device (33) moves over a predetermined moisture range of the room moisture FIST. This relation is represented in FIG. 9. At a room moisture FIST before this moisture range, the second heating device (33) is not in operation.
  • At a room moisture FIST after this moisture range, the second heating device (33)—the after-heater—is in operation with its maximal performance.
  • By a control arrangement (not represented here) it is made certain that the conveyance volume of the supply air is not increased during the dehumidifying process and that only a minimum amount of fresh air is blown in.
  • For a better illustration of the regulating system, in the following there is described, by way of example, a warming-up process such as ordinarily takes place in the morning. The block circuit diagram elements participating in the run-off of the regulation are represented in FIG. 10. At the time point when the switching-on of the air-conditioning apparatus takes place, the actual temperatures of all the rooms 1 and the temperature of the drawn-in fresh air lie far above the desired temperature for the rooms 1. Since the temperature of the supply air is still very low, no more supply air is blown into the rooms. For this, a minimal air pressure PZU MIN, corresponding to the minimum of fresh air volume, is generated.
  • At a lower outside temperature below 16° C., the regulator is prior-occupied at the start with a value according to the outside temperature, so that the installation will show no frost disturbance when starting.
  • From the actual temperatures of all the rooms 1 to be air-conditioned, the minimum-selection arrangement 400 selects the lowest value and conducts this to the block circuit diagram element 100. Here the regulating difference ΔT between the desired and actual value of the room air temperatures is formed and supplied to the regulator 120 and the control arrangement 127. On the basis of the regulating difference ΔT, the regulator 120 determines a setting value YR. Simultaneously with the control arrangement 127, a setting value YS is determined, which takes on a maximally great value as long as the desired temperature lies above the actual temperature. Of the two setting values YS and YR, the selection arrangement 128 selects the smaller one, at this time point the setting value YR of the regulator 120, and conducts it onward to the heating device (30). This warms up the air flowing through the air supply channel (10). Therewith, the air supply temperature TZU rises continuously. From a predetermined temperature threshold value of the air supply, for example TM SOLL+5° C., with further rising air supply temperature, the air supply pressure also is increased, since the regulation of the air supply pressure occurs in dependence on the temperature of the air supply. The conveyance volume increases and there takes place a maximally rapid heating-up of all the rooms.
  • The increased air volume consists not only of fresh air, but a part of the exhaust air again is conducted to the supply air through the environmental air channel 12 in FIG. 1. In this manner, the rooms 1 are sufficiently ventilated and, simultaneously, it is not necessary to heat up much fresh air needlessly.
  • In the morning heating-up, the fresh air constituent is only—at least—such that the requisite excess pressure is achieved.
  • When the heating-up process is concluded, usual commercial regulators do not lower the setting value rapidly enough to prevent a rise of the actual temperatures of the rooms I over the desired temperature. For this reason the setting value YS of the control arrangement 127 on exceeding of the desired temperature falls to a predetermined minimal value YS MIN. Now the minimum selection arrangement 128 selects the value YS of the control arrangement 127 and passes it onward as y′ to the heating device 30. Thereupon the air supply temperature again falls, and after a short time the rooms again receive only the minimum fresh air volume that is sufficiently tempered to prevent a lowering of the actual temperature of the air supply below the desired temperature of the air supply. The regulator can therefore slowly reduce its output.
  • Now there is to be described in addition the case in which only one room has to be heated, while the other rooms have already reached the desired temperature. The selection arrangement 400 selects the lowest actual temperature of the unheated rooms and passes it on to the block circuit diagram element 100. On the basis of the regulating difference now a setting value y′ is set in and the supply air pressure rises correspondingly. So that the rooms will not be supplied with very warm supply air which have already reached the desired temperature, however, the individual room temperature regulation 300 regulates the blow-in air volume of the throttle valves 60, 61 for each room separately. In this manner the throttle valves 60, 61 of the rooms in which the actual temperature are closed to the minimum opening, which ensures that the rooms are sufficiently ventilated. Simultaneously, the throttle valves 60, 61 of the room being heated rising Tzu is opened up by the PDiFF, up to 100%, in order to make possible a rapid heating-up. Only when this room has reached its desired temperature does the air-conditioning regulation again set in the minimum ventilation and desired temperature holding state.
  • It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the air-conditioning apparatus of the present invention without deviating from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention cover the modifications and variations of this inventions provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.

Claims (26)

1. An air conditioning apparatus for controlling a temperature condition in at least one room to achieve a selected room temperature condition by ventilation using temperature adjusted supply air comprising:
a supply air motor for supplying air at a supply air pressure through a supply air channel to the at least one room;
cooling heating means for adjusting a temperature of the supply air;
means for regulating the temperature of the supply air as a function of the difference between the room temperature and the selected room temperature;
means for regulating a pressure in the at least one room, the pressure being adjustably varied relative to an outside pressure to increase or decrease the room pressure in dependence on the difference between the selected room temperature and the actual room temperature.
2. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a control arrangement for controlling the cooling heating means to adjust the temperature of the supply air.
3. (canceled)
4. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 1 wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by adjusting the supply air motor to alter the supply air pressure.
5. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a control valve disposed in the supply air channel and wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by adjusting the control valve.
6. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 1 wherein the pressure regulating means regulates room pressure by adjusting a speed of the supply air motor to supply a selected supply air pressure.
7. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 1 further comprising an exhaust air motor to withdraw air from the at least one room through an exhaust air channel.
8. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 7 further comprising means for regulating an amount of exhaust air withdrawn from the at least one room.
9. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 7 wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by adjusting the supply air motor to supply a set increased selected supply air pressure to the at least one room and by adjusting the exhaust air motor to withdraw a selected amount of exhaust air from the at least one room.
10. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 7 wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by increasing or decreasing a speed of the exhaust air motor, to adjust an amount of air withdrawn from the room through the exhaust air channel.
11-14. (canceled)
15. An air conditioning apparatus for conditioning the air in at least one room, a temperature condition of the at least one room controlled by ventilating the room with heated or cooled air delivered at a preset desired temperature value, the air conditioning apparatus comprising:
a supply air motor for supplying the temperature controlled air to the at least one room through a supply air duct;
cooling-heating means integrated with the supply air duct for controllably cooling or heating the air supplied through the supply duct to the at least one room;
pressure regulating means for adjustably controlling a differential pressure in the room relative to an outside pressure for increasing or decreasing the room differential pressure to blend the delivered supply air with the air in the at least one room, the pressure control means assuring that the room pressure does not go below a predetermined minimum excess or a predetermined maximum excess pressure over the outside air pressure.
16. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 further comprising a control arrangement for controlling the cooling—heating means to adjust the temperature of the supply air.
17. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by adjusting the supply air motor to increase or decrease the supply air pressure delivered to the room.
18. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 further comprising a control valve disposed in the supply air channel supplying the room and wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by adjusting the opening and closing of the control valve.
19. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 wherein the pressure regulating means regulates room pressure by adjusting a speed of the supply air motor to increase or decrease the speed to increase or decrease the pressure of the supply air delivered to the room.
20. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 further comprising an exhaust air motor for withdrawing air from the at least one room through an exhaust air channel connected thereto.
21. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 20 further comprising means for regulating an amount of exhaust air withdrawn from the at least one room.
22. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 20 wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by adjusting the supply air motor to supply a set increased selected supply air pressure to the at least one room and by adjusting the exhaust air motor to withdraw an adjustable amount of exhaust air from the at least one room, a differential in the amount of supply air versus the amount of exhaust air increasing or decreasing the room air pressure.
23. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 20 wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by increasing or decreasing a speed of the exhaust air motor, to adjust an amount of air withdrawn from the room through the exhaust air channel.
24. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 21 wherein the pressure regulating means adjusts the room pressure by adjusting the exhaust air regulating means to control the amount of exhaust air withdrawn from the room.
25. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 wherein the pressure regulating means effects an increase or decrease in room pressure only when an room temperature changes within a predetermined temperature range, and when the room temperature is lower than the predetermined temperature range, the pressure regulating means effects a room pressure having a first constant value, and when the room temperature is higher than the predetermined temperature range, the regulating means effects a room pressure having a second constant value.
26. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 25 wherein the pressure regulating means decreases the room pressure from a selected maximum room pressure to a selected minimum room pressure relative to an increase of the room temperature within the predetermined temperature range.
27. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 further comprising a control valve disposed in the exhaust air channel for withdrawing air from the at least one room and wherein the pressure regulating means regulates the room pressure by adjusting the opening and closing of the control valve.
28. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 further comprising humidifying-dehumidifying means integrated with the supply air duct for controllably humidifying or dehumidifying the air supplied through the supply duct to the at least one room, a relative humidity condition of the at least one room controlled by ventilating the room with humidified or dehumidified air delivered at a preset desired relative humidity value.
29. The air conditioning apparatus of claim 15 further comprising humidifying-dehumidifying means integrated with the supply air duct for controllably humidifying or dehumidifying the air supplied through the supply duct to the at least one room, based on a temperature, a pressure and a relative humidity of the at least one room.
US12/768,936 1996-12-27 2010-04-28 Air-conditioning apparatus Abandoned US20110100617A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/768,936 US20110100617A1 (en) 1996-12-27 2010-04-28 Air-conditioning apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE19654955A DE19654955C2 (en) 1996-12-27 1996-12-27 Air conditioning device
DE19654542A DE19654542C2 (en) 1996-12-27 1996-12-27 Air conditioning device
DE19654542 1996-12-27
DE19654955 1997-10-15
US99850797A 1997-12-26 1997-12-26
US12/768,936 US20110100617A1 (en) 1996-12-27 2010-04-28 Air-conditioning apparatus

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US99850797A Continuation 1996-12-27 1997-12-26

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20110100617A1 true US20110100617A1 (en) 2011-05-05

Family

ID=7816334

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/273,068 Expired - Lifetime US6929062B2 (en) 1996-12-27 2002-10-17 Air-conditioning apparatus
US12/768,936 Abandoned US20110100617A1 (en) 1996-12-27 2010-04-28 Air-conditioning apparatus

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/273,068 Expired - Lifetime US6929062B2 (en) 1996-12-27 2002-10-17 Air-conditioning apparatus

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (2) US6929062B2 (en)
KR (1) KR100532563B1 (en)
DE (2) DE19654955C2 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20100161135A1 (en) * 2005-12-01 2010-06-24 Helmut Nerling Air density comparison control

Families Citing this family (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE19914103C2 (en) * 1999-03-22 2003-04-10 Ingo Bruchhold Ventilation and heating system
DE19947945C2 (en) * 1999-10-06 2003-04-30 Gerd Arnold Method for controlling ventilation from an interior
DE10014497C1 (en) * 2000-03-23 2001-08-09 Daimler Chrysler Ag System for improving person's condition regulates air pressure in essentially closed occupied space so e.g. chaotic external air pressure fluctuations are kept away from occupied space
DE10057410C1 (en) * 2000-11-20 2002-04-25 Albert Bauer Central cooling and/or heating device for building has flow valve controlled by pressure difference between feed and return flows for pressure stabilisation
DE10317471B3 (en) * 2003-04-16 2004-09-30 Hanning Elektro-Werke Gmbh & Co. Kg Building venting method in which the speed of a venting fan is adjusted dependent on the pressure in a venting channel and whereby if either the fan speed or venting channel pressure exceed threshold vales a fault is diagnosed
FI20035225A0 (en) * 2003-12-03 2003-12-03 Ossi Pekka Olavi Tiihonen Control systems and devices for a ventilation system
US20060099904A1 (en) * 2004-11-10 2006-05-11 David Belt Indoor environmental parameter balancing apparatus and method to do the same
WO2006077696A1 (en) * 2005-01-18 2006-07-27 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Wireless communication apparatus, mobile terminal and wireless communication method
WO2007075161A1 (en) * 2005-12-28 2007-07-05 Otis Elevator Company Building pressure management to adjust the stack effect in a vertical shaft
DE102007006418B3 (en) * 2007-01-17 2008-11-27 Schako Klima Luft Ferdinand Schad Kg Zweigniederlassung Kolbingen Aeration and ventilation procedure, especially for laboratory or clean room, involves regulating air volume flow in air duct
DE102007049333B4 (en) * 2007-10-12 2009-10-15 Imtech Deutschland Gmbh & Co. Kg Air conditioning, in particular for ships
US8326464B2 (en) * 2008-08-29 2012-12-04 Trane International Inc. Return fan control system and method
US8434804B2 (en) * 2008-12-04 2013-05-07 I O Data Centers, LLC System and method of providing computer resources
EP2317235B1 (en) * 2009-10-27 2013-12-11 Dimplex Lüftungssysteme Zweigniederlassung der Applied Energy Products Limited Method and safety device for controlling the air pressure in a room with a fireplace
DE102010039497A1 (en) * 2010-08-19 2012-02-23 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Arrangement and method for room air conditioning
DE102011053300A1 (en) * 2011-09-06 2013-03-07 Schako Klima Luft, Ferdinand Schad Kg Method for controlling the ventilation of rooms
CN103574829B (en) * 2012-07-18 2016-04-13 同方泰德国际科技(北京)有限公司 A kind of energy-saving control method of air-conditioner set
DE102012020202A1 (en) * 2012-10-16 2014-04-17 Schilling Engineering GmbH Cleanroom System
DE102013100330A1 (en) * 2013-01-14 2014-07-17 Robert Bosch Gmbh Multichannel air conditioning
DE102014015181A1 (en) 2014-10-15 2016-04-21 Stefan Plüth Method for room air conditioning in a building and device therefor
US11243001B2 (en) * 2017-12-26 2022-02-08 1236220 B.C. Ltd Common venting system for heating, cooling and domestic hot water systems
US11131467B2 (en) * 2019-04-11 2021-09-28 Gene Osheroff HVAC system with volume modulating valve

Citations (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4186655A (en) * 1978-05-22 1980-02-05 Dean Bob W Method and apparatus for controlling forced air heating and/or cooling
US4189094A (en) * 1977-02-10 1980-02-19 E.S.G. Controls Limited Control of heating and ventilation systems
US4257318A (en) * 1979-04-30 1981-03-24 Mcquay-Perfex Inc. Variable dead band pressure control system
US4347712A (en) * 1980-11-03 1982-09-07 Honeywell Inc. Microprocessor discharge temperature air controller for multi-stage heating and/or cooling apparatus and outdoor air usage controller
US4437608A (en) * 1982-05-17 1984-03-20 Smith Robert B Variable air volume building ventilation system
US4705457A (en) * 1984-01-18 1987-11-10 Belvin Properties Limited Monitoring of fluid flow
US4781107A (en) * 1986-12-09 1988-11-01 Nilsson Nils Johan Method and apparatus for maintaining a zero-pressure type plant
US4995307A (en) * 1989-09-11 1991-02-26 Bobby Floyd Variable air volume ventilation system and method
US5336131A (en) * 1993-01-05 1994-08-09 Hired Hand Manufacturing, Inc. Differential pressure control apparatus for livestock houses
US5344069A (en) * 1991-11-30 1994-09-06 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Air conditioning apparatus for distributing primarily-conditioned air to rooms
US5356335A (en) * 1991-07-05 1994-10-18 Taikisha, Ltd. Pressure gradient control system
US5545086A (en) * 1994-08-18 1996-08-13 Phoenix Controls Corporation Air flow control for pressurized room facility
US5761908A (en) * 1994-06-10 1998-06-09 Air Quality Engineering Apparatus suited for ventilating rooms contaminated with infectious disease organisms
US5820456A (en) * 1996-10-24 1998-10-13 Sandy J. Pangle Paint spray booth
US5884500A (en) * 1996-09-25 1999-03-23 Floratech Industries, Inc. Self-contained air conditioner with discharge-air filter
US5951394A (en) * 1994-11-22 1999-09-14 Lighthouse Associates, Inc. Controller to maintain a certain set of environmental parameters in an environment
US5971067A (en) * 1996-02-15 1999-10-26 Carrier Corporation Air quality control system
US6095426A (en) * 1997-11-07 2000-08-01 Siemens Building Technologies Room temperature control apparatus having feedforward and feedback control and method

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB344914A (en) * 1929-12-09 1931-03-09 Carrier Engineering Co Ltd Improvements relating to the ventilation of enclosures
JPS5892738A (en) * 1981-11-25 1983-06-02 Hitachi Plant Eng & Constr Co Ltd Positive and negative pressure switching ventilating equipment

Patent Citations (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4189094A (en) * 1977-02-10 1980-02-19 E.S.G. Controls Limited Control of heating and ventilation systems
US4186655A (en) * 1978-05-22 1980-02-05 Dean Bob W Method and apparatus for controlling forced air heating and/or cooling
US4257318A (en) * 1979-04-30 1981-03-24 Mcquay-Perfex Inc. Variable dead band pressure control system
US4347712A (en) * 1980-11-03 1982-09-07 Honeywell Inc. Microprocessor discharge temperature air controller for multi-stage heating and/or cooling apparatus and outdoor air usage controller
US4437608A (en) * 1982-05-17 1984-03-20 Smith Robert B Variable air volume building ventilation system
US4705457A (en) * 1984-01-18 1987-11-10 Belvin Properties Limited Monitoring of fluid flow
US4781107A (en) * 1986-12-09 1988-11-01 Nilsson Nils Johan Method and apparatus for maintaining a zero-pressure type plant
US4995307A (en) * 1989-09-11 1991-02-26 Bobby Floyd Variable air volume ventilation system and method
US5356335A (en) * 1991-07-05 1994-10-18 Taikisha, Ltd. Pressure gradient control system
US5344069A (en) * 1991-11-30 1994-09-06 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Air conditioning apparatus for distributing primarily-conditioned air to rooms
US5336131A (en) * 1993-01-05 1994-08-09 Hired Hand Manufacturing, Inc. Differential pressure control apparatus for livestock houses
US5761908A (en) * 1994-06-10 1998-06-09 Air Quality Engineering Apparatus suited for ventilating rooms contaminated with infectious disease organisms
US5545086A (en) * 1994-08-18 1996-08-13 Phoenix Controls Corporation Air flow control for pressurized room facility
US5951394A (en) * 1994-11-22 1999-09-14 Lighthouse Associates, Inc. Controller to maintain a certain set of environmental parameters in an environment
US5971067A (en) * 1996-02-15 1999-10-26 Carrier Corporation Air quality control system
US5884500A (en) * 1996-09-25 1999-03-23 Floratech Industries, Inc. Self-contained air conditioner with discharge-air filter
US5820456A (en) * 1996-10-24 1998-10-13 Sandy J. Pangle Paint spray booth
US6095426A (en) * 1997-11-07 2000-08-01 Siemens Building Technologies Room temperature control apparatus having feedforward and feedback control and method

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20100161135A1 (en) * 2005-12-01 2010-06-24 Helmut Nerling Air density comparison control
US8554375B2 (en) 2005-12-01 2013-10-08 Delta Green Box Patent Gmbh & Co. Kg Air density comparison control

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
KR19980064623A (en) 1998-10-07
KR100532563B1 (en) 2006-03-22
DE19654955C2 (en) 2000-11-16
US6929062B2 (en) 2005-08-16
US20030042013A1 (en) 2003-03-06
DE19654955A1 (en) 1998-07-02
DE59711297D1 (en) 2004-03-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20110100617A1 (en) Air-conditioning apparatus
AU736822B2 (en) Air conditioning apparatus
US5976010A (en) Energy efficient air quality maintenance system and method
US7266960B2 (en) Single integrated humidity and ventilation control in an HVAC system
DE4244137C2 (en) Air conditioning with a heat pump for motor vehicles
US4437608A (en) Variable air volume building ventilation system
US4876858A (en) Air conditioner and method of dehumidifier control
KR20000005900A (en) Apparatus and method of operating a heat pump to improve heating supply air temperature
US6823685B2 (en) Vehicle air conditioning device
US4142574A (en) Optimized air conditioning system
US6186883B1 (en) Climate control arrangement and a method of controlling that arrangement
JPS622225B2 (en)
US5127877A (en) Ventilation system for a motor vehicle
JP3263324B2 (en) Operation control method of floor blow air conditioning system and air conditioning system thereof
JPS5938120A (en) Method of compensating operation of internal and external air changeover door in terms of introduced air speed
JPS6291751A (en) Warm-air heater
JP2563549B2 (en) Air conditioner operation control method
JP3073689B2 (en) Booster coil type air conditioning system
CN113883611B (en) Control method and device of constant temperature and humidity air conditioning system
JPS5918015A (en) Air conditioner for vehicle
US3441080A (en) Air conditioning apparatus
US4913036A (en) Mixing box
JPS5869343A (en) Air conditioner
JPH05141749A (en) Air conditioner
JPH05280791A (en) Air conditioner

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION